Government House , the official residence of the governor On his arrival in Sydney in 1788, Governor Phillip resided in a temporary wood and canvas house before the construction of
a more substantial house on a site now bounded by
Bridge and
Phillip Streets. This first Government House was extended and repaired by the following eight governors, but was generally in poor condition and was vacated when the governor relocated to the new building in 1845, designed by
Edward Blore and
Mortimer Lewis. With the federation of the Australian colonies in 1901, it was announced that Government House was to serve as the secondary residence of the new governor-general of Australia. As a consequence the NSW Government leased the residence of
Cranbrook, Bellevue Hill as the residence of the governor. This arrangement lasted until 1913 when the NSW Government terminated the Commonwealth lease of Government House (the governor-general moved to the new Sydney residence of
Admiralty House), the governor from 1913 to 1917, Sir
Gerald Strickland, continued to live in Cranbrook and on his departure his successor returned to Government House. On 16 January 1996, Premier
Bob Carr announced that the next governor would be
Gordon Samuels, that he would not live or work at Government House and that he would retain his appointment as chairman of the New South Wales Law Reform Commission. On these changes, Carr said: "The Office of the Governor should be less associated with pomp and ceremony, less encumbered by anachronistic protocol, more in tune with the character of the people." The state's longest-serving governor, Sir
Roden Cutler, was also reported as saying: "It's a political push to make way in New South Wales to lead the push for a republic. If they decide not to have a Governor and the public agrees with that, and Parliament agrees, and the Queen agrees to it, that is a different matter, but while there is a Governor you have got to give him some respectability and credibility, because he is the host for the whole of New South Wales. For the life of me I cannot understand the logic of having a Governor who is part-time and doesn't live at Government House. It is such a degrading of the office and of the Governor." In October 2011, the new premier,
Barry O'Farrell, announced that the Governor, now Dame
Marie Bashir, had agreed with O'Farrell's offer to move back into Government House: "A lot of people believe the Governor should live at Government House. That's what it was built for ... [A]t some stage a rural or regional Governor will be appointed and we will need to provide accommodation at Government House so it makes sense to provide appropriate living areas". With the Governor's return, management of the residence reverted to the Office of the Governor in December 2013.
Summer residence In addition to the primary Sydney Vice-Regal residence, many Governors had also felt the need for a 'summer retreat' to escape the hard temperatures of the Sydney summers. In 1790, Governor Phillip had a secondary residence built in the township of
Parramatta. In 1799 the second governor,
John Hunter, had the remains of Arthur Phillip's cottage cleared away, and
a more permanent building erected on the same site. This residence remained occupied until the completion of the primary Government House in 1845, however the hard summers and growing size of Sydney convinced successive governors of the need for a rural residence. The governor from 1868 to 1872, the
Earl Belmore, used Throsby Park in
Moss Vale as his summer residence. His successor, Sir
Hercules Robinson, often retired privately to the same area, in the
Southern Highlands, for the same reason. In 1879 it was then decided that the colony should purchase a house at
Sutton Forest for use as a permanent summer residence, and in 1881 the NSW Government purchased for £6000 a property known as "Prospect" that had been built by Robert Pemberton Richardson (of the firm
Richardson & Wrench). This was renamed "
Hillview", and became the primary summer governor's residence from 1885 to 1957. In 1957, seen as unnecessary and expensive, Hillview was put up for sale and purchased from the state government by Edwin Klein. Hillview was returned to the people of NSW in 1985 and is currently leased under the ownership of the Environment and Heritage Group of the
Department of Planning & Environment.
Household The viceregal household aids the governor in the execution of the royal constitutional and ceremonial duties and is managed by the Office of the Governor, whose current
official secretary and chief of staff is Michael Miller LVO, RFD. These organised offices and support systems include
aides-de-camp,
press officers, financial managers, speech writers, trip organisers, event planners and protocol officers, chefs and other kitchen employees, waiters, and various cleaning staff, as well as tour guides. In this official and bureaucratic capacity, the entire household is often referred to as
Government House. These departments are funded through the annual budget, as is the governor's salary of $529,000. == List of Governors of New South Wales ==