The
Awabakal and
Worimi people were the first to live in Newcastle.
Early years New Lambton was originally a coal mining township, with the New Lambton Colliery situated to the east across the railway in what is now
Adamstown. On 8 January 1889 New Lambton was incorporated as a
municipality covering .
1901 In 1901 New Lambton had a population of 1,464. The municipal council consisted of the following: • Mayor – George Errington •
Justice of the Peace •
Town Clerk – Henry J. Noble •
Aldermen – John Williams, Benjamin Bradley, John Butterworth, Charles Dagwell, Richard Lay, Michael Gray, J.P., Joseph Cartright and Alexander Sneddon. The council derived a considerable revenue from the district's largest mine, the Scottish-Australian Coal Mining Company's Lambton Colliery, managed by the three Croudace brothers, Frank, Thomas, & Sydney, which although closer to
Lambton fell within the New Lambton municipality. One of the district's principal thoroughfares today is Croudace Street. The town was free of debt, and had a telegraph office,
council chambers (erected at a cost of £550), the New Lambton Mechanics Institute, a reading room, fire brigade, public school, and "many signs of advancement". The Member for
Kahibah in the
New South Wales Legislative Assembly, including New Lambton, was
Alfred Edden.
Later years In 1938 an act of the
Parliament of New South Wales created the "City of Greater Newcastle", which incorporated eleven municipalities, including New Lambton, into one local government area. During
World War II, New Lambton Public School was requisitioned by the government and used as
No. 2 Fighter Sector Headquarters. In recognition of this, the school was granted permission in 1995 to fly the
Royal Australian Air Force Ensign and is the only school in Australia allowed to do so. New Lambton once had an
art deco cinema, The Savoy, now the New Lambton Community Centre. == Transport ==