Hundreds and 53 parishes. The four smaller parishes in Sydney city are not displayed. There were thirteen
hundreds in Cumberland County, which were published in a
government gazette on 27 May 1835, but repealed on 21 January 1888. Unlike
South Australia, the hundreds were never
adopted anywhere else in
New South Wales. The hundreds: •
Bringelly •
Campbelltown •
Dundas •
Evan •
Hardinge •
Liverpool •
Packenham •
Parramatta •
Richmond •
Southend •
Hundred of Sydney •
Windsor •
Woronora (shown as
Heathcote on some
maps)
Parishes In 1835, Cumberland County was subdivided into 57 parishes. Previously, the subdivisions of the area since the beginning of the colony were called districts. Many of the parishes founded in 1835 kept the name of the district. Others were named after Anglican churches in the same area. This included three of the four small parishes in the Sydney city area: The
Parish of St Philip, which is named after
St Philip's Church; the
Parish of St James, which is named after
St James Church, and is still the name of the region today; and finally the
Parish of St Andrew which is named after
St Andrew's Cathedral. However, the
Parish of St Lawrence gave its name to
the church, rather than the other way around. Further out of the city, the parishes of St John, St Luke, St Peter and St Matthew, in the
Parramatta,
Liverpool,
Campbelltown and
Windsor areas respectively, have Anglican churches which bear the same saints names; St John's in Parramatta (opened 1803); St.Luke's in Liverpool (building began 1818); St.Peter's in Campbelltown (opened 1823, the third oldest Anglican church in Australia); and St. Matthew's in Windsor (consecrated in 1822) A full list of parishes found within this county; the
LGAs which the parish is mostly in (most parish boundaries do not match LGA boundaries exactly), and mapping coordinates to the approximate centre of each location is as follows:
Districts The first subdivisions of the county were called districts, shown in early maps from the period, such as 21 districts on an 1810 map and 37 districts on an 1824 map (not including Philip which was across the
Nepean River and not part of the county). The districts in use in 1824: ==References==