Named in 1829 after William Wilberforce, a British politician, and leader of the movement to abolish the slave trade, Wilberforce has various heritage-listed sites and is the birthplace of bushranger Captain Thunderbolt.
The name used for the area around Wilberforce by Aboriginal people was recorded as, Wangie.
The Australiana Pioneer Village is an Open Air Museum set on 28 acres at Wilberforce, NSW.
Dharug (Darkiñung) Aboriginal People
The Aboriginal name for the Hawkesbury River, Deerubbin, is believed to mean "wide, deep water". Wilberforce was called Wangie, and Sackville was Dorumbolooa. (Rev. McGarvie)
Dharug (Darkiñung) Aboriginal People
Some Totems: Mulgoa - Black Swan, Wuban-Burumin - Possum, Guyun - Sun.
According to lists compiled in 1829 by Presbyterian minister Reverend John McGarvie, on the west side of the Hawkesbury River between Sackville and Wilberforce, there are 16 lagoons and four different Aboriginal words applying to the lagoons: Warretya, Warang, Warradé, Warrakia.
In traditional Aboriginal society, marriages were arranged mostly, by the older men (elders) and often involved the betrothal of a young girl to an older man.
Many marriages were polygynous (with a husband having two or more wives). (2.). A man and his mother-in-law were forbidden to directly address or look at each other. This mother-in-law taboo was likely due to the son-in-law and mother-in-law being of a similar age.
Aboriginal people of the region sheltered in two-sided bark structures (gunyahs) and sometimes rock overhangs.
Weapons and tool types included spears, shields, clubs, boomerangs, digging sticks, bark containers and net bags. Watkin Trench in 1789 found a possum cloak near Richmond Hill, Hawkesbury. William Bradley a pastoralist, born in 1800 at Windsor, described a skin cloak seen in the vicinity of the Nepean-Hawkesbury River.
Burning the vegetation to flush out animals and increase bush regeneration was a strategy used. Notches were made in tree trunks to gain access to possums as food sources. Dingoes were used in hunting kangaroos.
The karadji (medicine-men) were important in ceremonial rituals and as healers. They had greater status and authority.
There are engravings, grinding grooves and rock shelters located in the region.
Read More:
NAIDOC Week, Gadigal, Eora
They exchanged gifts of animal hair and a spear for a hatchet and newly shot duck.
In April 1791, Governor Arthur Phillip led a party of 21 overland to try and find Richmond Hill by travelling from Parramatta. They wanted to determine if the Nepean and Hawkesbury were the same river.
The diary of Captain Watkin Tench, who accompanied Phillip, published as "Sydney’s First Four Years 1788-1791", reported that Governor Phillip, along with two Sydney Aboriginal people, Colebee and Boladeree, acting as guides, led a party of men to the Hawkesbury via Baulkham Hills, through Maraylya and Cattai, to Pitt Town Bottoms and then to the Hawkesbury River. (a memorial is located on Pitt Town Bottoms Road)
Thomas Rose (1754?-1833), a farmer, born at Blandford, Dorset, England, and his family together with four other free settlers sailed in the Bellona for New South Wales, arriving in 1793. At first, the Rose family settled on the Liberty Plains, now the Strathfield-Homebush district, then Prospect.
Moving to the fertile Hawkesbury region, they proceeded to farm the land on which Rose Cottage is now situated, originally part of a 30 acre grant to William Mackay made by Governor Hunter in 1797. Rose Cottage is recognised as Australia's oldest known timber slab house still situated on it's original site. The family occupied the cottage continuously until 1961.
On 8th June, 1811, Rev. R. Cartwright was appointed a magistrate for Wilberforce, which position he held untill 1817.
Severe drought began in 1812 creating more pressure on settlers and Aboriginal people.
A ferry or punt operated by Michael Nowland commenced between Pitt Town and Wilberforce on 25 April 1812. The ferry continued until June 1921.
More skirmishes between 1814–16. Military detachments permanently in the district.Surgeon James Mileham arrived on the Ganges, 2nd June, 1797, located at Wilberforce 1815-20.
Read More:
The Original People of the Hawkesbury / Blue Mountains: - The Aboriginal Identification from Colonial History G.E. Ford, 2013, here
"People of the River: Lost Worlds of Early Australia", by Grace Karskens
1788
The first fleet arrived in January 1788. Captain Arthur Phillip established a convict settlement at Sydney Cove on January 26, 1788.Lithograph of the First Fleet entering Port Jackson, 26 January 1788, by Edmund Le Bihan |
1789
The first Governor of New South Wales, Gov. Arthur Phillip, who founded the city of Sydney, set off on a boat expedition along the Branches of what became the Hawkesbury River in 1789.Arthur Phillip, first Governor of New South Wales and Royal Navy Admiral. (The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay |
Capt. John Hunter noticed Aboriginal people picking up root tubers (yams). Phillip's party camped at Sackville with local Aboriginal men Gomebeere and Yellowmundy. David Collins recorded the speech. Gov. Phillip wrote on his return:
"I found on the banks of the Hawkesbury, people who made use of several words we could not understand, & it soon appeared that they had a language different from that used by those natives we have hitherto been acquainted with......"
The Name of this Aboriginal group was not recorded at the time but they were referred to as “The Branch” natives and and "Wollombi tribe". (Descendants of Gombeeree and Yellowmundi still live in the area)
1790s
Aboriginal people in canoes and fires were observed. They camped overnight with Aboriginal men Gombeeree, Yellomundi and Deeimba at Bardenarang Creek.
The small pox of 1791 devastated Aboriginal populations who had no immunity.
Tench referred to the Aboriginal people whom they met in this area as "friends". As they parted company Tench wrote:
"they bade us adieu, in unabated friendship and good humour … we shook them by the hand, which they returned lustily".
Major Francis Grose initiated the plan to settle the Hawkesbury. Grose reported in 1794: “I have settled on the banks of the Hawkesbury twenty two settlers, who seem very much pleased with their farms."
The farms in the Hawkesbury area are Australia's oldest farms still under cultivation.
1874, trustees appointed: Wilberforce Common.—J.H. Fleming, S.J. Dunston, R. Greentree.
Captain Paterson's report, 15th June 1795, stated:
"The number of settlers on the banks of the Hawkesbury, with their families, amounts to upwards of four hundred persons, and their grounds extend nearly thirty miles along the banks on both sides of the river. They have for some time past been annoyed by the natives, who have assembled in large parties for the purpose of plundering them of their corn; and from the impossibility of furnishing each settler with firearms for his defence, several accidents have happened. Within a few weeks five people have been killed and several wounded. It therefore became absolutely necessary to take some measures which might secure to the settlers the peaceable possession of their estates, and without which, from the alarm these murders have created, I very much feared they would have abandoned the settlement entirely, and given up the most fertile spot which has yet been discovered in the colony. I therefore sent a detachment of two subalterns and sixty privates of the New South Wales Corps to the river, as well as to drive the natives to a distance, as for the protection of the settlers.
It gives me concern to have been forced to destroy any of these people, particularly as I have no doubt of their having been cruelly treated by some of the first settlers who went out there; however, had I not taken this step, every prospect of advantage which the colony may expect to derive from a settlement formed on the banks of so fine a river as the Hawkesbury would be at an end."
John Cobcroft, born Yorkshire, UK, was initially sentenced to death at the 7 May 1788 Old Bailey sessions for highway robbery, but was instead transported to New South Wales for life. He was granted a conditional pardon on 12 December 1794 by Lieutenant Governor Francis Grose. On 22 July 1795, he was granted 30 acres of land at Wilberforce, New South Wales, by Lieutenant-Governor William Paterson.
John Frederick Cobcroft was born in Wilberforce, NSW on the 5th of March. 1797, and baptised there on the 6th of November, 1797. He was the son of convict John Cobcroft and free settler Sarah Smith. He was a Chief Constable in the Police.
John married Mary Crew, daughter of convicts William Crew and Mary Cassidy, at St Matthew's, Windsor, in 1817.
Meehan laid out 2 acres for a burial ground at Wilberforce and on 2 February 1811, Macquarie instructed Reverend Samuel Marsden to consecrate the burial grounds.
Violent clashes would soon begin in 1795 when British settlers established farms along the Hawkesbury River, resulting in competition for food sources. The total deaths over the first 9 years of the Hawkesbury settlement were 30–34 Aboriginal people and 18 Europeans.
An illustration from The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay, 1789 |
"The number of settlers on the banks of the Hawkesbury, with their families, amounts to upwards of four hundred persons, and their grounds extend nearly thirty miles along the banks on both sides of the river. They have for some time past been annoyed by the natives, who have assembled in large parties for the purpose of plundering them of their corn; and from the impossibility of furnishing each settler with firearms for his defence, several accidents have happened. Within a few weeks five people have been killed and several wounded. It therefore became absolutely necessary to take some measures which might secure to the settlers the peaceable possession of their estates, and without which, from the alarm these murders have created, I very much feared they would have abandoned the settlement entirely, and given up the most fertile spot which has yet been discovered in the colony. I therefore sent a detachment of two subalterns and sixty privates of the New South Wales Corps to the river, as well as to drive the natives to a distance, as for the protection of the settlers.
It gives me concern to have been forced to destroy any of these people, particularly as I have no doubt of their having been cruelly treated by some of the first settlers who went out there; however, had I not taken this step, every prospect of advantage which the colony may expect to derive from a settlement formed on the banks of so fine a river as the Hawkesbury would be at an end."
It must be noted, that Aboriginal people depended on the environment and climate to provide food and other resources, such as vegetable roots, seeds and berries, possums and kangaroos.
The river frontage along Wilberforce Reach, close to the future town, was occupied by the end of 1794 and the area along the north-eastern part of York Reach was being farmed by 1795.
In April 1796, a cottage was constructed for the commanding officer of the garrison of soldiers stationed at Green Hills ( Windsor).
View of Wilberforce on the banks of the River Hawkesbury, New South Wales, Lycett, Joseph, approximately 1775-1828 |
John married Mary Crew, daughter of convicts William Crew and Mary Cassidy, at St Matthew's, Windsor, in 1817.
1800s
David Collins, deputy judge advocate and lieutenant-governor, recorded in 1800: "The natives of the coast, whenever speaking of those of the interior, constantly expressed themselves with contempt and marks of disapprobation. Their language was unknown to each other, and there was not any doubt of their living in a state of mutual distrust and enmity."Drought began in 1803.
Clashes and violence escalate.
In May 1804, Matthew Everingham, his wife and servant on their Sackville Reach farm were attacked by Aboriginal people He, his wife, and a servant were wounded by spears, and his house was burnt down.
John Howe at Swallow Rock Reach farm were wounded. Governor King sent troops with orders for constables and settlers to support the Portland Head settlers.
Governor Macquarie set out in November 1810 on a "tour of inspection" to the outer western Sydney districts. Travelling with Mrs Macquarie and a group of aides and surveyors, including Captain Antill, Dr Redfern and Mr Evans, their route followed the Hawkesbury and Nepean Rivers, with Macquarie surveying the land.
On the 6th December 1810, Macquarie recorded in his journal: “After dinner I christened the new townships…I gave the name of Windsor to the town intended to be erected in the district of the Green Hills…the township in the Richmond district I have named Richmond…” The district reminded Macquarie of those towns in England, whilst Castlereagh, Pitt Town and Wilberforce were named after English statesmen.Magistrates Samuel Marsden and Thomas Arndell give food and clothing to two Aboriginal men of Richmond Hill, Yaragowhy and Yaramandy [Yarramundi], and ask them to help putting an end to "mischiefs".
On 5 January 1811, James Meehan laid out Wilberforce, in a perfect symmetry of three rows, each containing five sections.
The earliest burials in Wilberforce Cemetery were three drowned men, James Hamilton (Hambleton), Joseph Ware and John Tunstal on 13 December 1811, whose gravesites are unknown.
Wilberforce Park at 47 George Road is also known as Great Square, Reserved Square and the Recreation Ground.
Wilberforce developed as an area of small farms.
Rose Cottage, Wilberforce, NSW, The oldest known timber slab dwelling in Australia still standing on it’s original site |
At Wilberforce a school was taught by Mr P. Thompson (1815-20), then by William Gow (1822-42).
Governor Lachlan Macquarie issued a proclamation on 4 May 1816, declaring that no Aboriginal person could carry "offensive weapons" within a mile of settlements.
Fighting ceased on the Hawkesbury Nepean River system in 1816.
Captain Brabyn in 1817 was appointed Magistrate for Wilberforce.
John Cobcroft kept the George and Dragon public house, Wilberforce Road, Wilberforce, from around 1822-1846.
William Greentree leased 30 acres at Wilberforce, and in 1822, it was reported that he had 5 acres under wheat, 5 under maize, 2 under barley, 3 under oats, ¾ of an acre under peas and beans, 1 acre under potatoes, ½ acre used for a garden and an orchard and a further 10 acres of cleared ground; he also owned a horse.
In 1829, the Reverend John McGarvie made a handwritten list of 178 Aboriginal place names along the Hawkesbury River. Rev. McGarvie also noted geographic features and the names of settler’s farms. A sketch of a gunya (shelter) he saw Aboriginal people building near his house can be seen here.
Stannix Park House, built from sandstone, was constructed in 1839 on a 1280 acre grant to William Hall dated 1837.
In 1871 Aboriginal people were included in the total population of the colony, although only including people in settled areas.
James Tuckerman, who lived at Sackville published a list of local Aboriginal words in 1887.
The engraving located in Wilberforce depicts a white settler wearing a cabbage-tree hat and carrying a metal axe. Barber said that the engraving was made by an Aboriginal man, called "Hiram" in the 1850s, with a European axe instead of traditional tools.
Robert Mathews published a record of the Hawkesbury Aboriginal language spelt by Matthews as Darkiñung in 1903. According to G.E. Ford (2010), the people of the Hawkesbury were misidentified as Dharug, which was mistakingly applied it to the Darkiñung of the Hawkesbury and Blue Mountains. (1.)
1904: Old Wilberforce Revived. [By WILLIAM FREAME] Read
Floods during 1816.
Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1803 - 1842), Saturday 16 November 1816 |
Matthew James Everingham (1768-1817) Wilberforce, NSW |
"Corroboree around a campfire" by Joseph Lycett (ca. 1817) National Library of Australia, |
St John's Anglican Church and Macquarie Schoolhouse was designed by Edmund Blacket and built from 1819 to 1859 by James Atkinson (senior). The schoolhouse was built by John Brabyn.
1820s
Aboriginal group at Windsor, 1815. Detail of 'A view of Hawkesbury and the Blue Mountains'. Drawn by Captain James Wallis, probably in 1815, and engraved by William Preston in 1820. |
1830s
New South Wales Government Gazette (Sydney, NSW : 1832 - 1900), Wednesday 30 October 1833 |
Surveyor General's Sketch books.Wilberforce inhabitants petition for roads. Dated: 20/05/1836 |
Stannix Park House, built from sandstone, was constructed in 1839 on a 1280 acre grant to William Hall dated 1837, Wilberforce, NSW |
1840s
1850s
New South Wales Government Gazette (Sydney, NSW : 1832 - 1900), Friday 22 July 1859 |
The historic St John's Anglican Church, designed by Edmund Thomas Blacket and built by J. Atkinson of Windsor. was constricted 1856-9.
1870s
Captain Thunderbolt (Frederick Ward) was born in Rose Street, Wilberforce, NSW, in 1835, going on to become an Australian bushranger renowned for escaping from Cockatoo Island, and also for his reputation as the "gentleman bushranger".
1880s
The Windsor and Richmond Gazette owned by John Charles Lucas Fitzpatrick commenced publication in 1888 and continued until 1982 when the name was changed to the Hawkesbury Gazette.
In 1889 an Aboriginal Reserve was established on 150 acres at Sackville.
1890s
Robert Mathews, who worked with Aboriginal people recording their languages and cultures, met a Darkinjung man called Andy Barber, who led him to a rock engraving that he remembered being made in the 1850s.Grape pickers, including Aboriginal employees, from the Tizzana Winery at Sackville Reach, NSW, on the Hawkesbury River |
1900s
Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1870 - 1919), Wednesday 14 December 1910 |
Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1870 - 1919), Wednesday 14 December 1910 |
Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965), Saturday 29 April 1911 |
WWI
1920s
THE WILBERFORCE DISTRICT, NSW, WITH THE DURAL RIDGE IN THE BACKGROUND, Sydney Mail (NSW : 1912 - 1938), Wednesday 24 August 1921 |
MACQUARIE CHURCH-SCHOOL HOUSE AT WILBERFORCE, N.S.W, Sydney Mail (NSW : 1912 - 1938), Wednesday 5 January 1921 |
Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965), Friday 23 May 1924 |
On Sundays this draught horse invites itself to the table of parties at Wilberforce (NSW) picnic grounds.Daily Telegraph (Sydney, NSW : 1883 - 1930), Tuesday 16 November 1926 |
Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965), Friday 13 January 1928 |
Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965), Friday 18 October 1929 |
1930s
Wilberforce School of Arts or Literary Institute hall, built 1930, and used as a theatre.
A racecourse existed at Wilberforce.
Joshua Vickery married Mary Ann Dunstan in 1841, the widow of Stephen Dunstan of Wilberforce (and daughter of Wilberforce’s Catherine Johnson). Mary Ann ran a general store in the two-storey residence they built in the township whilst Joshua worked Moore Farm.
Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965), Friday 6 March 1931 |
Typical cave in the Hawkesbury district, where many specimens of the {A}boriginal art are found. Sun (Sydney, NSW : 1910 - 1954), Sunday 20 November 1932 |
Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965), Friday 4 August 1933 |
Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965), Friday 4 August 1933 |
SOME OLD IDENTITIES SNAPPED AT WILBERFORCE, NSW, Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965), Friday 4 August 1933 |
A COUNTRY LANE AT THE OLD SETTLEMENT OF WILBERFORCE, NEAR THE HAWKESBURY RIVER. Sydney Mail (NSW : 1912 - 1938), Wednesday 12 September 1934 |
ST. JOHN'S OLD SCHOOL HOUSE, WILBERFORCE.: Where the 15th and last 'Rector of Pitt Town and Wilberforce was recently entertained. Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965), Friday 19 June 1936 |
1940s and WWII
Missing in Malay, Pte. C. E. Gill (Wilberforce, NSW).
Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965), Wednesday 5 August 1942
1950s
1960s
Hawkesbury pioneers and
born at Wilberforce 74
years ago, he is Mr Fred
Turnbull, who will be one
of scores of Anzacs' who
are expected to make the
1965 Gallipoli pilgrimage.
Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW : 1888 - 1965) 19 August 1964
Tropicana Hotel Wilberforce, fire, afternoon 25 March 2002.
2000s
2020s
Water stretching for kilometres covered the new Windsor Bridge, NSW, inundated homes and blocked roads near the Hawkesbury River and Wilberforce, NSW (Australian Pioneer Village) |
Around Wilberforce
The original homestead at Wilberforce, NSW,was built by early settler William Hall who had travelled to Australia as an aide to chaplain Samuel Marsden (built in 1839) |
St John's Church c1859, & Macquarie Schoolhouse c1819, Wilberforce, NSW |
Wilberforce Cemetery, NSW |
St John's Anglican Church, Wilberforce, NSW |
Wilberforce School of Arts or Literary Institute hall, built 1930, and used as a theatre |
Rose Cottage at Wilberforce built c 1811, is one of the earliest examples of a slab walled structure still standing, Wilberforce, NSW |
Australian Pioneer Village at Wilberforce, NSW |
Australian Pioneer Village at Wilberforce, NSW |
Steampunkers at Australian Pioneer Village at Wilberforce, NSW |
Australian Pioneer Village at Wilberforce, NSW |