Bradfield, New South Wales
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Bradfield, the western portion of which was also known as Bradfield Park, was a suburb on the North Shore of Sydney, Australia between 1924 and 1977, since absorbed by neighbouring Lindfield. As of 2021, Bradfield is also the proposed name for a section of
Bringelly Bringelly is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is located on the Northern Road between Penrith and Camden. It has a public school. Bringelly is also the name of a local hill. History Bringelly was a name given to ...
in
South Western Sydney South Western Sydney is a region of the metropolitan area in southwest Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is part of the predominantly working class area of Greater Western Sydney. The region lies in the Cumberland Plain. Local government ...
. Both names commemorate Dr John Job Crew Bradfield, who oversaw design and construction of the
Sydney Harbour Bridge The Sydney Harbour Bridge is a steel through arch bridge in Sydney, spanning Port Jackson, Sydney Harbour from the Sydney central business district, central business district (CBD) to the North Shore (Sydney), North Shore. The view of the bridg ...
between 1913 and 1932.


Bradfield subdivision

The North Shore suburbs north of Chatswood initially developed as a narrow ribbon straddling the
North Shore railway line The North Shore Line is a railway line serving the North Shore in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The North Shore Line extends from Sydney Central station through the western limb of the City Circle, across the Sydney Harbour Bridge an ...
. These early subdivisions were fringed by orchards, vineyards and scrub. Following
World War I World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, the United States, and the Ottoman Empire, with fightin ...
, wider availability of private motor vehicles and new privately owned bus services made it possible to live further from the railway stations. Construction commenced on the Sydney Harbour Bridge in 1923. The project meant that the Shore would at last have a direct road, rail and tramway connection to Sydney's central business district. Seizing the opportunity, in 1924 Ku-ring-gai Shire Deputy President Christopher Thistlethwayte proposed that his fellow councillors allow the Moore Estate, of which his family owned a share, to be subdivided for residential development. The Estate was made up of around 250 hectares on the western side of Lindfield, in the ridges and valleys leading down to an old racecourse and the
Lane Cove River The Lane Cove River, a northern tributary of the Parramatta River, is a tide-dominated, drowned valley estuary west of Sydney Harbour, located in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The river is a tributary of the Parramatta River, winding thro ...
beyond. To ensure that prospective buyers did not miss the link between the bridge's completion and the future value of the land, he proposed that it be named after the project's high-profile chief engineer, John Bradfield. The Council agreed to Thistlethwayte's plan: shire president John Lockley considered the engineer, who lived in nearby
Gordon Gordon may refer to: People * Gordon (given name), a masculine given name, including list of persons and fictional characters * Gordon (surname), the surname * Gordon (slave), escaped to a Union Army camp during the U.S. Civil War * Clan Gordon, ...
, to be "Ku-ring-gai’s greatest citizen". Bradfield's wife Edith officiated at the naming ceremony, held on 19 July 1924. One of the attendees, local MP and future premier Tom Bavin, predicted that "Dr Bradfield's name would be closely connected with the bridge itself and North Shore generally for all time." A plan of the suburb was drawn up by a "prominent town-planner" and the first lots, along Provincial Road between Primula Street and Fiddens Wharf Road, were auctioned in 1927. The following year, the ''Sunday Times'' real estate section enthused:
Because of its mountain air, and its lovely forest areas, this region is becoming more and more popular with people who wish to make their homes handy to the city, and yet be able to get into a quiet and restful atmosphere once they late left shop, office, or factory. For the home-maker, there is no more desirable locality than this. It is about above sea level, is situated in undulating country, possesses charming scenic surroundings, and most attractive sites for homes. It has been correctly described as a
garden suburb The garden city movement was a 20th century urban planning movement promoting satellite communities surrounding the central city and separated with greenbelts. These Garden Cities would contain proportionate areas of residences, industry, and ...
. In this region people get the benefit of mountain air and escape the humidity of places nearer the sea.
The subdivision was promoted heavily on the basis of its proximity to Killara Golf Course and the future completion of the Bridge. But with the latter still years away, interest in the suburb was slow to build. In 1928, Highfield Road was extended west, and lots were offered on the new Bell Avenue, Bradfield Road, Dorman Crescent and Moore Avenue. Moore Avenue, which led south through the estate to
Fullers Bridge Fullers Bridge, officially called the Fullers Creek Bridge, is a road bridge that carries Delhi Road to Millwood Avenue across the Lane Cove River, in , Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The concrete beam bridge is located northwest of the ...
, was planned to form part of a secondary route north parallel to what later became the Pacific Highway. This road, championed by local councils along the route but never completed, was known as "The Broadway". Access to the area improved further in 1933, when Moore Avenue/Broadway was extended north to
De Burghs Bridge De Burghs Bridge is a road bridge that carries the Lane Cove Road, part of the A3, across the Lane Cove River in Macquarie Park, Sydney, Australia. The bridge stretches from Macquarie Park in the south to West Pymble in the north. History T ...
. It was renamed Lady Game Drive in honour of the Governor's wife Gwendolen. The next area to develop was on the western fringe of the estate: what is now Carramar Road (until the 1960s known as Cooyong Road), Charles Street, Edmund Street, Johnson Street and Knox Street. In the centre of the suburb, the wedge-shaped area of open space between Bradfield Road and Lady Game Drive became known as 'Bradfield Park'. The site played host to the Australasian Jamboree of
Boy Scouts Boy Scouts may refer to: * Boy Scout, a participant in the Boy Scout Movement. * Scouting, also known as the Boy Scout Movement. * An organisation in the Scouting Movement, although many of these organizations also have female members. There are ...
in December 1938 to January 1939.


Bradfield Park

Bradfield Park's life as a recreation reserve was brief. In 1939, the site was acquired by the
Commonwealth Government The Australian Government, also known as the Commonwealth Government, is the national government of Australia, a federal parliamentary constitutional monarchy. Like other Westminster-style systems of government, the Australian Government ...
and used to build a
Royal Australian Air Force "Through Adversity to the Stars" , colours = , colours_label = , march = , mascot = , anniversaries = RAAF Anniversary Commemoration ...
and
Women's Auxiliary Australian Air Force The Women's Auxiliary Australian Air Force (WAAAF) was formed in March 1941 after considerable lobbying by women keen to serve, as well as by the Chief of the Air Staff, who wanted to release male personnel serving in Australia for service ov ...
training camp, RAAF Station Bradfield Park. The base became the largest air force instruction centre in the country, with capacity for 1,000 recruits.


Post-war housing crisis

The Great Depression and
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing ...
had brought a halt to almost all residential construction in Australia. When the war ended, Sydney was estimated to be 'short' 90,000 houses. The NSW Government exacerbated the situation. Not only did it add to homelessness by undertaking
slum clearance Slum clearance, slum eviction or slum removal is an urban renewal strategy used to transform low income settlements with poor reputation into another type of development or housing. This has long been a strategy for redeveloping urban communities; ...
before replacement homes had been built; it crippled the private rental market by enforcing
rent controls Rent regulation is a system of laws, administered by a court or a public authority, which aims to ensure the affordability of housing and tenancies on the rental market for dwellings. Generally, a system of rent regulation involves: *Price cont ...
. This ensured no new rental properties would be built, while incentivising landlords to find ways to evict incumbent tenants. Like its counterparts in other states, the recently-established
NSW Housing Commission Housing NSW, formerly the Housing Commission of New South Wales and before that the New South Wales Housing Board, was an agency of the Department of Communities and Justice that was responsible for the provision and management of public housing s ...
sought to take over empty military camps for use as temporary accommodation. The Commonwealth agreed to lease only part of the Bradfield Park site to the Commission: its own
Assisted Passage Migration Scheme Ten Pound Poms (or Ten Pound tourists) is a colloquial term used in Australia and New Zealand to describe British citizens who migrated to Australia and New Zealand after the Second World War. The Government of Australia initiated the Assisted ...
meant that it was now responsible for housing thousands of immigrants from Europe. For the Commission, Bradfield Park was to become one of three so-called "Community Housing Centres" (the others were
Herne Bay Herne Bay is a seaside town on the north coast of Kent in South East England. It is north of Canterbury and east of Whitstable. It neighbours the ancient villages of Herne and Reculver and is part of the City of Canterbury local governmen ...
and Hargrave Park in Western Sydney) that together accommodated 12,500 people at any given time. The first homeless Sydney families arrived at Bradfield Park in 1947. Some had been relocated ahead of the razing of Waterloo; most had simply fallen on hard times. Though they both faced a similar need to urgently provide temporary accommodation for thousands of people, and both operated from the Bradfield Park site, the Housing Commission and the Commonwealth
Department of Labour and National Service The Department of Labour and National Service was an Australian government department that existed between October 1940 and December 1972. Scope Information about the department's functions and/or government funding allocation could b ...
had radically different approaches. The Commonwealth used a wide range of former defence structures, including
nissen hut A Nissen hut is a prefabricated steel structure for military use, especially as barracks, made from a half-cylindrical skin of Corrugated galvanised iron, corrugated iron. Designed during the First World War by the American-born, Canadian-British ...
s and tents, to accommodate its tenants. Meals were provided centrally in a
mess hall The mess (also called a mess deck aboard ships) is a designated area where military personnel socialize, eat and (in some cases) live. The term is also used to indicate the groups of military personnel who belong to separate messes, such as the o ...
; tenants shared amenity blocks. The Housing Commission wanted to provide each family with its own bathroom and kitchen, even in temporary accommodation, and so only used the "P1" huts – timber framed, rectangular buildings measuring 5.4 by 18.2 metres. Despite the enhanced privacy, the buildings were still very rudimentary: all were roofed with
corrugated iron Corrugated galvanised iron or steel, colloquially corrugated iron (near universal), wriggly tin (taken from UK military slang), pailing (in Caribbean English), corrugated sheet metal (in North America) and occasionally abbreviated CGI is a ...
or
asbestos cement Asbestos cement, genericized as fibro, fibrolite (short for "fibrous (or fibre) cement sheet") or AC sheet, is a building material in which asbestos fibres are used to reinforce thin rigid cement sheets. Although invented at the end of the 19t ...
; none had ceilings or internal lining. Tenants shared common laundries. Conditions were squalid. Bradfield Park's internal roads were unpaved. Buildings built to temporarily accommodate airmen in 1939 were falling apart by 1955. Visiting the facility, MP Roger de Bryon-Faes described "breeding grounds for disease, unhappiness, social misfits and
communism Communism (from Latin la, communis, lit=common, universal, label=none) is a far-left sociopolitical, philosophical, and economic ideology and current within the socialist movement whose goal is the establishment of a communist society, a ...
, in which human beings degenerate and become frustrated and bereft of all hope, initiative and ambition ... These hovels must be the most miserable place in Australia." By contrast, actor
Bryan Brown Bryan Neathway Brown AM (born 23 June 1947) is an Australian actor. He has performed in over eighty film and television projects since the late 1970s, both in his native Australia and abroad. Notable films include '' Breaker Morant'' (1980), ...
, whose family lived at Bradfield Park for 12 months after moving from Britain, recalled the time fondly. "The great thing was there was a massive amount of bush around," he told a journalist in 2018. Hogan observes that Sydney was also home to shanty towns during this period, in which conditions were far dirtier and more dangerous – to have closed the Community Housing Centres would have been to force more people into makeshift dwellings. From 1949 the Commission tenants were joined by the first wave of postwar European immigrants, roughly 450 people from Eastern Europe. In the early days, many of the immigrants were housed in a rows of tents stretching along Lady Game Drive. In 1951, the Commonwealth
Department of Labour and National Service The Department of Labour and National Service was an Australian government department that existed between October 1940 and December 1972. Scope Information about the department's functions and/or government funding allocation could b ...
announced that the Eastern Europeans would be moved to hostels elsewhere in Sydney, to make way for '
Ten Pound Poms Ten Pound Poms (or Ten Pound tourists) is a colloquial term used in Australia and New Zealand to describe British citizens who migrated to Australia and New Zealand after the Second World War. The Government of Australia initiated the Assisted ...
', participants in the Assisted Passage Migration Scheme. Around 200 refused to move and sought a court order allowing them to stay. When this failed, they left the site. As the Housing Commission opened its vast new estates around Campbelltown,
Mount Druitt Mount Druitt is a suburb A suburb (more broadly suburban area) is an area within a metropolitan area, which may include commercial and mixed-use, that is primarily a residential area. A suburb can exist either as part of a large ...
, Redfern and Riverwood, pressure on the Community Housing Centres eased. The softening of rent controls from 1952 onwards assisted in reviving the private rental market. The last Commission tenants left Bradfield Park in 1964. With the population of the site falling, the Commonwealth subdivided the southernmost parts of the land. These became Boorabba and Guyong avenues and, beside the national park, the Presbyterian Church's new Naamaroo Conference Centre (now Uniting Venues). The Commonwealth's migrant hostel continued operating until 1971. In its final years, the British immigrants were replaced with
New Australians New Australians were non-British migrants to Australia who arrived in the wave of immigration following World War II. The term initially referred to newly arrived immigrants, generally refugees, who were expected to eventually become mainstream ...
from
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.


Village centre

Bradfield faced the affluent suburb of
Killara Killara is a suburb on the Upper North Shore of Sydney in the state of New South Wales, Australia north-west of the Sydney Central Business District in the local government area of Ku-ring-gai Council. East Killara is a separate suburb and ...
across Fiddens Wharf Road. School students from the two sides were strictly separated: migrant and low-income children went to Bradfield Park Public School, West Killara's kids went to Beaumont Road Public (opened 1953). Nevertheless, the two shared a little row of shops, built between 1950 and 1955 on the north side of Moore Street, just south of the boundary. This was a dual carriageway section of Lady Game Drive until about 1970, before through traffic was redirected one block to the north. The southbound carriageway nearest the shops was repurposed as a car park. With Council support, the community funded construction of the Lady Game Community Centre at the end of Moore Street, also on the Bradfield side. The centre opened in 1961.


Disappearance of the name

The department bulldozed what remained of the migrant hostel in 1973. Part of the site was turned over to the
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) is an Australian Government agency responsible for scientific research. CSIRO works with leading organisations around the world. From its headquarters in Canberra, CSIRO ...
(CSIRO). CSIRO had determined that the site, relatively distant from major roads, enjoyed sufficiently low levels of vibration to house a new National Measurement Laboratory. The laboratory opened in 1978, and the remainder of the Commonwealth land was sold for private housing. The presence of migrant and low-income families had, in the eyes of residents, affected perceptions of the area; despite Dr Bradfield's considerable achievements, his surname now carried a certain stigma. The West Lindfield-West Killara Progress Association waged a successful campaign for the name Bradfield to be dropped. (The Progress Association had itself been named Bradfield from its foundation in 1947 until 1949.) When the names and boundaries of Ku-ring-gai's suburbs were formalised in 1977, Bradfield was not among them. Hogan notes that Herne Bay and Hargrave Park were also erased from the map, disappearing into Riverwood and
Warwick Farm Warwick Farm is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Warwick Farm is located 30 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Liverpool and is part of the Sou ...
. Indeed, very little documentary evidence of their existence remains in the State Archives. The Commonwealth Government continued to refer to the area as Bradfield Park as late as 1979, however, thereafter reverting to "Lindfield". The local licensed post office, a newsagency in Moore Street, is known as Lindfield West.


Aerotropolis Core

In March 2021, the
NSW Government The Government of New South Wales, also known as the NSW Government, is the Australian state democratic administrative authority of New South Wales. It is currently held by a coalition of the Liberal Party and the National Party. The Governmen ...
announced that a 100-hectare section of
Bringelly Bringelly is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is located on the Northern Road between Penrith and Camden. It has a public school. Bringelly is also the name of a local hill. History Bringelly was a name given to ...
, referred to planning documents as '
Aerotropolis An aerotropolis is a metropolitan subregion whose infrastructure, land use, and economy are centered on an airport. It fuses the terms "aero-" (aviation) and "metropolis". Like the traditional metropolis made up of a central city core and its out ...
Core', would be named in Dr Bradfield's honour as well. The new Bradfield will be adjacent to the future
Western Sydney Airport Western Sydney International Nancy-Bird Walton Airport, also known as Western Sydney Airport or Badgerys Creek Airport, is a new international airport currently under construction within the suburb of Badgerys Creek, New South Wales, Australia. ...
, and is intended to emerge as the city's third commercial centre behind Sydney and
Parramatta Parramatta () is a suburb and major Central business district, commercial centre in Greater Western Sydney, located in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is located approximately west of the Sydney central business district on the ban ...
. The name was chosen by a committee following a call for public submissions in 2020. Announcing the new name, Premier
Gladys Berejiklian Gladys Berejiklian (born 22 September 1970) is an Australian former politician who served as the 45th premier of New South Wales and the leader of the New South Wales division of the Liberal Party from 2017 to 2021. Berejiklian became a member ...
said "The name Bradfield is synonymous with delivering game-changing infrastructure".


References


External links


Western Parkland City Authority
{{coord, -33.845, 151.213, type:adm3rd_globe:earth_region:AU, display=title Suburbs of Sydney History of Sydney 1924 establishments in Australia Populated places established in 1924 Lane Cove River Ku-ring-gai Council Immigration to Australia