Botany Post Office

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Location2 Banksia Street, Botany, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates33°56′40″S 151°11′49″E / 33.9444°S 151.1970°E / -33.9444; 151.1970
Botany Post Office
Botany Post Office is located in Sydney
Botany Post Office
Location of Botany Post Office in Sydney
Location2 Banksia Street, Botany, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates33°56′40″S 151°11′49″E / 33.9444°S 151.1970°E / -33.9444; 151.1970
Official nameBotany Post Office
TypeListed place (Historic)
Designated8 November 2011
Reference no.106143

Botany Post Office is a heritage-listed post office at 2 Banksia Street, Botany, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It was added to the Australian Commonwealth Heritage List on 8 November 2011.[1]

An unofficial post office was opened at Botany in 1881, as the area maintained a small population throughout the 1880s. Large scale subdivision and settlement of land eventually occurred in the 1890s, with a town hall built in 1899. At that time, the postal facility was transferred to the new town hall in Botany Road, a little to the south of the current post office building. After World War I, commercial expansion generally took place along Botany Road. About two decades later, the local municipal council lobbied for a new purpose-built post office, and accordingly approached the Postmaster General's Department.[2] A new building was constructed on a site in Banksia Street.[1]

The date of construction for the current building has variously been attributed to 1917[3] and 1923.[4] If the first date is correct, the Botany Post Office would be one of the earliest designed and constructed by the Commonwealth Department of Works and Railways in New South Wales after assuming that responsibility (the states generally continued to design and build post offices up until 1916). However, given the later date is more likely, the post office would still be one of a series of comparatively early post offices built by the Commonwealth in the state.[1]

Although George Oakeshott was the architect in charge of Commonwealth Department of Works and Railways, the architect who actually designed the building was probably E. J. Henderson who had designed a number of post office buildings.[1]

In May 1939, the post office was robbed by breaking into the strongroom by blasting a gelignite charge, which created three loud explosions. Having obtained access to the safe, the men stole £50 worth of cash, postal notes and stamps, and well as other items in the post office to the value of £260. Although local residents saw the incident, they only watched on as they were too afraid to notify the police.[5][6][7] Three men were subsequently arrested,[8][9] but only one was found guilty and sentenced to 2 years imprisonment and the other two men were acquitted.[10]

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Heritage listing

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