Federation, Great War and Great Depression illuminated at night for the Inauguration of the
Commonwealth of Australia, 1901When the six colonies federated on 1 January 1901, Sydney became the capital of the State of New South Wales. The spread of
bubonic plague in 1900 prompted the new state government to modernise the wharves and demolish inner-city slums. The outbreak of the First World War in 1914 saw more Sydney males volunteer for the armed forces than the Commonwealth authorities could process, and helped reduce unemployment in the city. Those returning from the war in 1918 were promised "homes fit for heroes" in new suburbs such as Daceyville and Matraville. "Garden suburbs" and mixed industrial and residential developments also grew along the rail and tram corridors. The city's main war memorial, the
Anzac War Memorial, opened in Hyde Park in 1934. lunges forward to beat Premier Jack Lang to the cutting of the ribbon to declare the
Sydney Harbour Bridge open.|left The population reached one million in 1926, after Sydney had regained its position as the most populous city in Australia. The government created jobs with massive public projects such as the electrification of the
Sydney rail network and building the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Sydney was more severely affected by the
Great Depression of the 1930s than regional NSW or Melbourne. New building almost came to a standstill, and by 1933 the unemployment rate for male workers was 28 per cent, but over 40 per cent in working class areas such as Alexandria and Redfern. Many families were evicted from their homes and shanty towns grew along coastal Sydney and Botany Bay, the largest being "Happy Valley" at
La Perouse. The Depression also exacerbated political divisions. In March 1932, when populist Labor premier
Jack Lang attempted to open the
Sydney Harbour Bridge he was upstaged by
Francis de Groot of the far-right
New Guard, who slashed the ribbon with a sabre. The Sydney Harbour Bridge, which links Sydney's northern and southern shores began construction in 1924 and took 1,400 men eight years to build at a cost of £4.2 million. Sixteen workers were killed during construction. In its first year, the average annual daily traffic was around 11,000 vehicles (by the beginning of the 21st century, the figure stood at around 160,000 vehicles per day). In January 1938, Sydney celebrated the
Empire Games and the sesquicentenary of European settlement in Australia. One journalist wrote, "Golden beaches. Sun tanned men and maidens...Red-roofed villas terraced above the blue waters of the harbour...Even Melbourne seems like some grey and stately city of Northern Europe compared with Sydney's sub-tropical splendours." Meanwhile, a congress of the "Aborigines of Australia", declared 26 January "A
Day of Mourning" for "the whiteman's seizure of our country."
Culture and recreation – a photo from from The
Powerhouse Museum. The world's first
Surf Life Saving club opened here in 1906.The first
Archibald Prize was awarded in 1921. Now regarded as the most important
portraiture prize in Australia, it originated from a bequest from
J. F. Archibald, the editor of
The Bulletin, who died in 1919. Administered by the Trustees of the
Art Gallery of New South Wales, it is awarded for "the best portrait, preferentially of some man or woman distinguished in Art, Letters, Science or Politics." Sydney's opulent
Capitol Theatre opened in 1928 and after restoration in the 1990s remains one of the nation's finest auditoriums. During the 19th century, Sydney's beaches had become popular seaside holiday resorts, but daylight
sea bathing was considered indecent until the early 20th century. In defiance of these restrictions, in October 1902,
William Gocher, wearing a neck to knee costume, entered the water at
Manly Beach only to be escorted from the water by the police – but the following year,
Manly Council removed restrictions on all-day bathing – provided neck to knee swimming costumes were worn. Arguably the world's first surf lifesaving club was founded at
Bondi Beach, Sydney, in 1906. In the summer of 1915,
Duke Kahanamoku of
Hawaii introduced
surf board riding to Sydney's
Freshwater Beach. In a
Sheffield Shield cricket match at the
Sydney Cricket Ground in 1930,
Don Bradman, a young New South Welshman of just 21 years of age, achieved the highest batting score in first-class cricket with 452 runs not out in just 415 minutes.
World War II on Sydney Harbour, 1942 With the outbreak of war in September 1939, Sydney experienced a surge in industrial development to meet the needs of a wartime economy. Unemployment virtually disappeared and women moved into jobs previously male preserves. Air raid shelters were built in Hyde Park, the Sydney Domain and the railway tunnels at Circular Quay.
Military establishments included the
Garden Island Tunnel System, the only
tunnel warfare complex in Sydney, and as well as the heritage-listed
fortification systems
Bradleys Head Fortification Complex and
Middle Head Fortifications, which were part of a total
defence system for Sydney Harbour. in
Port Jackson (Sydney Harbour) in 1945 After launching their
Pacific War in December 1941, the
Imperial Japanese Navy infiltrated New South Wales waters and on the night of 31 May–1 June 1942, three
midget submarines entered Sydney Harbour to attack shipping located there. One torpedo struck the sea wall against which the converted harbour ferry
HMAS Kuttabul was moored. The blast sank the Kuttabul, killing 19 Australian and two British naval personnel who were asleep on board. In the aftermath of the attack, the Harbour's defences were increased and the Australian population feared Japanese invasion. Amid great controversy, the bodies of the four Japanese submariners responsible for the raid were cremated with full military honors and returned to Japan. Eight days after the first attack, two submarines lying off shore fired shells on Sydney and Newcastle. The war in the Pacific made Sydney the port of choice for American servicemen on rest and recuperation leave, and about a million servicemen and women arrived in Sydney harbour. The city, Kings Cross and Lunar Park proved popular with the Americans and many intimate relationships developed with the women of Sydney. Thousands of Australian war brides moved to the United States with their American husbands after the war. The new Garden Island shipping dock was opened in March 1945, in time for the British Pacific Fleet to use it in its final push towards Japan.
Post war A post-war immigration and baby boom saw a rapid increase in Sydney's population and the spread of low-density housing in suburbs throughout the Cumberland Plain. Immigrantsmostly from Britain and continental Europeand their children accounted for over three-quarters of Sydney's population growth between 1947 and 1971. The newly created
Cumberland County Council oversaw low-density residential developments, the largest at
Green Valley and
Mount Druitt. Older residential centres such as Parramatta,
Bankstown and
Liverpool became suburbs of the metropolis. Manufacturing, protected by high tariffs, employed over a third of the workforce from 1945 to the 1960s. However, as the long post-war economic boom progressed, retail and other service industries became the main source of new jobs. Increasing high rise development in Sydney and the expansion of suburbs beyond the "green belt" envisaged by the planners of the 1950s resulted in community protests. In the early 1970s, trade unions and resident action groups imposed
green bans on development projects in historic areas such as The Rocks. Federal, State and local governments subsequently introduced a range of heritage and environmental legislation. The progressive reduction in tariff protection from 1974 began the transformation of Sydney from a manufacturing centre focused on the domestic market to a "world city" providing financial, commercial, cultural and educational services to local residents and Australian and overseas markets. From the 1980s, overseas immigration to Sydney grew rapidly, with Asia, the Middle East and Africa becoming major sources of immigrants. By 2021, the population of Sydney was over 5.2 million, with 40% of the population born overseas. China and India overtook England as the largest source countries for overseas-born residents.
Culture and entertainment Intellectuals such as those of the
Sydney Push (including feminist
Germaine Greer, author and broadcaster
Clive James and art critic
Robert Hughes) rose out of Sydney during the period, as did influential artists like painter
Brett Whiteley.
Paul Hogan went from painter on the
Sydney Harbour Bridge to local TV star, then global film star with his hugely successful
Crocodile Dundee in 1986 (a film which begins with scenes of Sydney) while theatre institutions like the
Sydney Theatre Company and
National Institute of Dramatic Art nurtured the budding careers of actors innumerable, some of whom forged their early careers in the city. In 1998,
Fox Studios Australia opened as a major movie studio, occupying the site of the
former Sydney Showground at
Moore Park – going on to produce such commercially viable films as
The Matrix films,
Moulin Rouge!,
Mission: Impossible 2 (set partly in Sydney), and the revived
Star Wars and
Superman film franchises. The traditional
Sydney Royal Easter Show was relocated to the
New Sydney Showground at Homebush.
Olympic City and the new millennium in the year 2000 , Sydney Harbour, 2004 and the
Sydney central business district in 2010 , which serves part of the
rapid transit system
Sydney Metro and opened in August 2024.
Stadium Australia (currently also known as ANZ Stadium due to
naming rights), a
multi-purpose stadium located in the
Sydney Olympic Park precinct of the redeveloped
Homebush Bay was completed in March 1999 at a cost of
A$690 million to serve as a venue for the
2000 Summer Olympics. Sydney captured global attention in the Year 2000 by hosting the
Summer Olympic Games. The
Opening Ceremony of the Sydney Olympics featured a theatrical rendering of Australian history through dance and a torch lighting by Aboriginal athlete
Cathy Freeman. At the Closing Ceremony,
President of the International Olympic Committee,
Juan Antonio Samaranch, declared: The Olympic mayor,
Frank Sartor, was the
Lord Mayor of Sydney, serving from 1991 to 2003 and his successor,
Lucy Turnbull, became the first woman to hold that office in 2003. She was in turn succeeded by independent
Clover Moore, Sydney's longest-serving mayor from 2004 – present. From 1991 to 2007, Sydneysiders governed as
Prime Minister of Australia – first
Paul Keating (1991–1996) and later
John Howard (1996–2007),
Tony Abbott (2013–2015),
Malcolm Turnbull (2015–2018),
Scott Morrison (2018–2022), and
Anthony Albanese (2022–present). Sydney has maintained extensive political, economic and cultural influence over Australia as well as international renown in recent decades. Following the Olympics, the city hosted the
2003 Rugby World Cup, the
APEC Leaders conference of 2007 and Catholic
World Youth Day 2008, led by
Pope Benedict XVI. Sydney's population officially hit 5 million people at the 2016 census. The city has gained a reputation for diversity and is Australia's most multicultural city. In the , 34 percent of the population reported having been born overseas. The city's first dedicated
rapid transit system is currently under construction, with two lines open and two other lines announced. The project has been hailed as "transformative" by journalists. Australia's first
rapid transit metro line, part of the
Sydney Metro, linking the suburb of Epping to the north-west of Sydney, opened on 26 May 2019. It is a first in Australian transportation, as no other Australian city currently has an automated underground metro. The first line serves the
north-western suburbs of the city, while the second line opened on 19 August 2024 and runs under Sydney Harbour from
the southwest into the central business district. A
third line, serving the western suburbs including
Rozelle and
Westmead, has been approved for construction. == See also ==