The Springwood area was first occupied by the Oryang-Ora Aboriginal people belonging to the wider Dharug Aboriginal people of the wider Sydney region. They settled the area about 40,000 years ago, with many rock carvings and art sites in the area. At the time of European settlement the chief of the clan was Oryang Jack who was drawn by French artist Pellier. "Oryang-Ora" was also the reference to the area that marked the dividing ridge line between the
Dharug peoples of the north and the
Gundungurra peoples to the south in the Blue Mountains area. In 1815, Governor
Lachlan Macquarie and his wife stopped by what Macquarie called a spring. The place was later named Springwood: "Spring" from the springs in the area, and "wood" from the local Mountain Blue Gums (Eucalyptus deanei) of the area. As a town developed, the main street was named Macquarie Road, after Governor Macquarie. The first railway line was put through the Blue Mountains in 1867, and the Springwood station was built in 1868. This station was replaced by a more substantial building in the Victorian Gothic style, constructed in 1884 under the direction of
John Whitton, Chief Engineer of NSW Railways; a porter's cottage was constructed just west of the station. Springwood Station is the second-oldest surviving station in the Blue Mountains. It is listed on the (now defunct)
Register of the National Estate as well as having a New South Wales heritage listing. Christ Church Anglican Church was built on the Great Western Highway from 1888 to 1889, with extensions in the 1960s and 1980s. It was designed by the architect Sir
John Sulman, who had a holiday residence at
Lawson. Designed in the Victorian Academic Gothic style, the church is the oldest Anglican church building in the Blue Mountains and is heritage-listed. The house originally built as a vicarage, but only used as a private residence known as
Southall, is also heritage-listed. The Presbyterian Church building, a sandstone Gothic building located on Macquarie Road, was built in 1895. The Catholic community was originally part of the
Penrith parish, but were given their own building in 1892:
St Thomas Aquinas Church. The church has since relocated to St Columba's grounds, Winmalee. == Heritage listings ==