Liverpool Courthouse

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Location251 Bigge Street, Liverpool, City of Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates33°55′28″S 150°55′32″E / 33.9244°S 150.9256°E / -33.9244; 150.9256
Built1820
Architectural styleColonial Georgian
Liverpool Courthouse
Former court house, pictured in 2013
Location251 Bigge Street, Liverpool, City of Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates33°55′28″S 150°55′32″E / 33.9244°S 150.9256°E / -33.9244; 150.9256
Built1820
Architectural styleColonial Georgian
Official nameLiverpool Courthouse (former) and Potential Archaeological Site
TypeState heritage (built)
Designated3 November 2017
Reference no.1999
TypeCourthouse
CategoryLaw Enforcement
Liverpool Courthouse is located in Sydney
Liverpool Courthouse
Location of the former Liverpool Courthouse in greater Sydney
Liverpool Courthouse is located in Australia
Liverpool Courthouse
Liverpool Courthouse (Australia)

Liverpool Courthouse is a heritage-listed former courthouse at 251 Bigge Street, Liverpool, City of Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia. It was built during 1820. It is also known as Liverpool Courthouse (former) and Potential Archaeological Site. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 3 November 2017.[1]

The former Liverpool Courthouse building was adapted, over time, from the old Liverpool gaol house built c:1820. The gaol house was one of many convict era buildings that Governor Lachlan Macquarie had built in Liverpool before his departure in 1822. A convict and soldier barracks were also built next to the gaol house. The area has the potential to contain a range of archaeological remains associated with the earliest use of the site. These remains are considered to be of state heritage significance and may provide information about early colonial and convict life in Liverpool.

Surveyor Robert Hoddle's 1827 map of Liverpool clearly shows the complex of buildings on the site. In 1836 James Backhouse visited the Liverpool gaol and described it as:[2]

A brick building of two large rooms for prisoners of common order, one for debtors, another for females, which is small: also three good cells, but all opening into one common yard, along with the dwellings of the turnkey and overseer, and the cooking-place, and other offices.

An 1840 plan also show these buildings.[1]

Later alterations and additions occurred, most significantly a police station to the rear of the courthouse and likely outside, or adjacent to the wall of the barracks visible in Hoddle's 1827 map and the 1840 plan. This police station remained until after the mid-20th century.[1]

Overview of Archaeological Potential: there is a high potential for archaeological remains associated with the barracks buildings shown on the 1827 and 1840 plans.[1][3]:14

The land around the Georges River and Liverpool was occupied by the Darug Aboriginal people prior to the arrival of British settlers in 1788. The Liverpool district was home to what the early Europeans mistakenly called the Liverpool Tribe, who were in fact the Cabrogal clan of the Darug Tribe.[1]

Governor Macquarie selected a site for a town at Liverpool on 7 November 1810. After establishing a site in the centre of the proposed town for a church, he left the details of laying out the town in the hands of surveyor James Meehan. After the departure of Governor Macquarie in 1821, Governor Brisbane began the relocation of convict labour from public works to assignment on private properties, on the recommendations of the Bigge Report. The official end of transportation in 1840 led to the winding down of the convict system and an economic decline for Liverpool.[1]

The development of Liverpool in the second half of the 19th century was driven by the establishment of the railway in 1856, although substantial expansion did not occur until the end of the 1880s when there was a growth in workers housing and subdivision of previously vacant land.[1][3]

Description

A single-storey Colonial Georgian style government building with hipped roof, with L-shaped plan, probably incorporating main block of convict gaol built early 1820s. Sandstock brick construction on sandstone foundations with articulated sandstone quoins, decorative timber verandah with valance and iron roofs. Twelve pane double hung windows and four panel doors doors. Original structure appears altered and extended about 1855 using part of gaol wall on south east portion of site. Two bays remain of impressive iron palisade with stone gate piers.[1]

Heritage listing

See also

References

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