The Royal George is located on a parcel of the original European grant to James Edrop in 1837. A map of 1843 indicates that the Patent Slip Wharf and a building occupied the Sussex Street frontage. The Patent Slip Hotel was located on the north-west corner of Sussex and King Street, the site of the present Royal George Hotel. Around 1869, this site was vacant. The area of the Patent Slip occupied part of the western half of the present hotel site, used in the repair of small vessels. The first occupant of the Patent Slip was John Cuthbert in 1867. A second building on the site was leased to the publican of the Patent Slip Inn and may have been on the site of the present Royal George Hotel. This building was owned by James Edrop. In 1882 the Patent Slip Hotel changed its name to the New Wharf Hotel, then in 1888 to the Royal George Hotel. The property title was transferred to Edward John Edrop in 1896 and leased to Andrew Cockrane, who named it Cockrane's Hotel. The site of the present hotel was resumed by the
Government of New South Wales in 1900 after the outbreak of plague, which then passed to the
Sydney Harbour Trust. It was leased by Edmund Resch, Sydney brewer (later incorporated as
Resch's Limited) in 1903, and to Maitland Brewing Co. in 1912. In 1904 Day Street was widened and extended ending the waterfront connection. Ownership of the site passed to the
Maritime Services Board in 1939. It was leased it to
Tooth & Co and the licensee was Mary Glasheen. A Robert Hughes mural adorned a wall of the hotel for a period. The hotel's Side Bar was largely a gay venue during this period. In 1969 the property was resumed by the
Department of Main Roads for realignment of Day Street, at which time the licensee was Sidney Willis. In 1975 the licensee was Colin Briggs; 1980 Kevin James; 1982 J. & L Ferris and C. James; 1984 P. Randall, P. and M. Lloyd. The property was put up for sale in 1985. It sold to Harry Galleia in October 1985, who later sold it to the former leaseholders. In 1991, the owners went into receivership after a failed sale attempt and reported trading problems caused by construction in the area. It was still trading in its original incarnation in May 1993, but had its hotel license transferred to the new CBD Hotel in August 1993. It was refurbished for conversion into a restaurant, but remained vacant. It reopened as the
Slip Inn in late 1997 after a $5 million refurbishment. The refurbished hotel attracted a number of prominent celebrities, with
Jack Nicholson,
Kevin Costner,
Keanu Reeves,
U2 and
Helena Christensen among those to visit in the first year. The hotel was later subject to international attention as a result of
Frederik X, King of Denmark having met his future wife,
Mary, Queen of Denmark at the hotel during the
2000 Summer Olympics. The hotel ran a "Meet your prince at the Slip" marketing campaign to capitalise on the attention.
107–113 Sussex Street The building at 107–113 Sussex Street, while historically separate from the hotel, has been incorporated into it in recent decades. It is assumed to have been built in 1867, as incised on the parapet, by John Cuthbert, the then-occupier of the adjacent Patent Slip (built by John Booth in 1864). Cuthbert was one of Sydney's prominent boat and ship builders. The Sussex Street level of this building was occupied by commission agents and produce merchants. By the middle of the 1880s the Patent Slip and wharf were occupied by timber merchants. In 1886 W. Howard Smith & Son redeveloped the Patent Slip as a wharf. At the turn of the century the building had a bull-nosed corrugated iron awning with a sign `J. Smith Co Ltd' on the southern panel. In 1900 the site was resumed by the State government for the
Sydney Harbour Trust and in 1904 Day Street was widened and extended, cutting off the Sussex Street premises from the waterfront. In 1921 the rear of the site and the lower levels were occupied by Mercantile & Sussex Free Stores Ltd. Maritime Services Board acquired the site in 1936 and the Sussex Street level was used as storage and an office. The 1970s construction of the
Western Distributor and creation of Slip Street caused the resumption of some of the site. In 1987 there were major alterations to the building, including partial use as a restaurant, as well as erection of the garage structure facing Slip Street. ==Description==