Indigenous settlement Near
Penrith, numerous Aboriginal stone tools were found in Cranebrook Terraces gravel sediments dating to
50,000–45,000 BP. For more than 30,000 years,
Aboriginal people from the
Gandangara tribe have lived in the
Fairfield area. Prior to the arrival of the Europeans, the Penrith area was home to the Mulgoa tribe of the
Dharug people, who spoke the
Dharug language. They lived in makeshift huts called
gunyahs, hunted native animals such as kangaroos, and fished in the Nepean River. The
Auburn area was once used by Dharug people as a market place for the exchange of goods between them and
Dharawal people on the coast. The area that later became Campbelltown was inhabited prior to
European settlement by the
Tharawal people. The people of what is now known as
Carlingford, a suburb on the eastern peripheries of the greater west, were the
Wallumedegal people, who practised
fire-stick farming along the northern banks of the Parramatta River, which encouraged animals to
graze, thus enhancing the ease of
hunting and gathering. Most of the natives died due to introduced diseases, such as
smallpox, following the arrival of the
First Fleet, and the remainder were largely relocated to government farms and a series of settlements.
British colony of 1804 in 1823, with
Parramatta River in foreground In 1788, Governor
Arthur Phillip had reconnoitred several places before choosing Parramatta as the most likely place for a successful large farm, making it the second European settlement in Australia, after Sydney.
Old Toongabbie was established in the same year. The
Sydney Cove region originally settled in 1788 turned out to be unsuitable for farming, and after a number of years of near-
famine in the colony, efforts were made to relocate
food production inland to hopefully more climatically stable regions. Phillip sent exploratory missions in search of better soils and fixed on the Parramatta region as a promising area for expansion and moved many of the
convicts from late 1788 to establish a small township, which became the main centre of the colony's economic life. Nevertheless, poor equipment and unfamiliar
soils and climate continued to hamper the expansion of farming from Farm Cove to Parramatta and
Toongabbie. In February 1793, the Auburn area was established as the first free-agricultural settlement thanks to Governor Phillip's repeated applications to the British government for free settlers, and by the end of that decade
Prospect,
West Pennant Hills,
Baulkham Hills and
Greystanes were established. Eighteen months after the landing of the First Fleet, an exploring party led by Captain
Watkin Tench set out to further findings made by Governor Phillip where, in 1789, they discovered the broad expanse of the
Nepean River and
Penrith.
Windsor Road, one of the oldest roads in Sydney, was opened in 1794. In 1795,
Matthew Flinders and
George Bass explored up the
Georges River for about 20 miles beyond what had been previously surveyed, and reported favourably to Governor
John Hunter of the land on its banks. The earliest recorded
white settlement in the Fairfield district is described in
William Bradley's Journal where he noted an expedition from
Rose Hill to
Prospect Creek to determine whether Prospect Creek led to
Botany Bay. The
Battle of Parramatta, a major battle of the
Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars, occurred in March 1797 where
resistance leader
Pemulwuy led a group of
Bidjigal warriors, estimated to be at least 100, in an attack on a government farm at Toongabbie, challenging the
British Army to fight. On 4 March 1804 Irish convicts rose up in
Rouse Hill as one, in what was to become known as the
Castle Hill convict rebellion. Governor
Lachlan Macquarie and Mrs Macquarie preferred the clean air of rural Parramatta to the
unsanitary and crime-ridden streets of Sydney and transformed
Old Government House, Parramatta, into an elegant
Palladian-style home in the English manner. Originally constructed under Governor Hunter in 1799 to reflect the economic importance of the Parramatta district, the building remains today Australia's oldest public building and was given World Heritage Listing by
UNESCO in 2010. In 1803 a government stock farm was established in what was to become the
Riverstone/
Marsden Park area, on the basis of the abundant water supply and good grazing land there, and also in
Smithfield, due to its good soil and dependable
water supply.
Windsor is the fourth-oldest place of
British settlement on the
Australian continent, where European settlers utilised the fertile river flats for agriculture. Governor
Phillip Gidley King began granting land in the area to settlers in 1804 with Captain
Daniel Woodriff's on the banks of the river the first land grant in the area.
Fairfield railway station was opened in 1856 and has the oldest surviving railway building in New South Wales.
Quarrying in the
Prospect area began in the 1820s and naturalist
Charles Darwin visited
Prospect Hill in January 1836, to observe the geology. Designed and constructed by the
NSW Public Works Department,
Prospect Reservoir was built as Sydney's main water supply in the 1880s. The
Upper Nepean Scheme was commenced in 1880 after it was realised that the
Botany Swamps scheme was insufficient to meet Sydney's water supply needs. By the latter part of the nineteenth century coarse-grained
picrite, and other
dolorite rock types were being extracted from
William Lawson's estate on the west and north sides of Prospect Hill.
Lansvale was a popular recreational site of the early 20th century due to its waterways and meadows. During World War II,
Bankstown Airport was established as a key strategic air base to support the war effort and the control of Bankstown Airport was handed to
US Forces. Campbelltown was designated in the early 1960s as a
satellite city by the New South Wales Planning Authority, and a regional capital for the south west of Sydney. Until the 1950s, Liverpool was still a satellite town with an agricultural economy based on poultry farming and
market gardening. However the
urban sprawl of Sydney across the
Cumberland Plain soon reached Liverpool, and it became an outer suburb of metropolitan Sydney with a strong working-class presence and manufacturing facilities. In the 1950s and 1960s, there was a large amount of suburban development both in the current suburb of
Blacktown and the new suburbs that sprung up around it, which led to civic development in the town centre with the
Blacktown Hospital opening in 1965.
Migrant communities In the 1960s and 1970s, migration from south-east Asia as a result of the
Vietnam War transformed
Cabramatta into a thriving Asian community. Also in the 1970s, an influx of Middle Eastern immigrants, namely
Lebanese people, settled in
Lidcombe,
Bankstown and the surrounding suburbs. Opened in December 1985, in
Eastern Creek,
Wonderland Sydney was the largest
amusement park in the southern hemisphere until its closure in 2004. In 2015, the
Abbott government granted 12,000 extra humanitarian visas to
persecuted Christians, largely the
Assyrians, in the war-torn Middle Eastern countries, which were admitted to Australia as part of its one-off humanitarian intake, with half of them primarily settling in Fairfield and also Liverpool. == Geography ==