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Glebe was originally inhabited by
the Cadigal clan which occupied a territory that embraced Sydney Cove
and stretched along the southern side of Port Jackson from South Head
to about Petersham. As Sydney Town expanded, Glebe's aboriginal population
dwindled and no evidence of the Cadigal's presence is found in modern
Glebe.
The places and people of the relatively more recent Glebe
are inextricably linked and this is reflected in its distinctive character.
In the early struggling years of the first settlement at Sydney Cove (1788),
Governor Phillip first surveyed, in 1790, the penal colony at Sydney town
and made a grant of 400 acres of land to the Church of England, in the
person of the Rev. Richard Johnson, Chaplain to the First Fleet. This
land became known as 'The Glebe' (or St Phillips Glebe) from the Latin
word glaeba (a clod of earth) and, through its ecclesiastical use,
signified church land.
From the 1830s onwards, people such as the stern philanthropist,
George Allen and his famous son, Sir George Wigram Allen, forged our local
history. Other notable figures included Dr. James Bowman and some of the
most famous colonial architects, Edmund Blacket, John Verge and James
Barnet.
Financial difficulty forced the church to sell some
of its land by 1856 and a two strata society began to develop: the homes
of the gentry were built on Glebe Point while many workers lived at The
Glebe. Gradually the big estates on the point were subdivided and the
professional and middle income groups changed The Glebe from a quiet peninsula
into a fashionable suburb.
During the early 20th century and especially during
the Depression years, The Glebe deteriorated and became shabby and overcrowded.
Despite this decline, the area retained a close and distinctive community.
Many of the lovely houses that were an important part of The Glebe were
demolished -- this destruction led to the formation in 1969 of The Glebe
Society, which sought (and still seeks) to restore and retain what is
left of the suburb's historical past.

"Glebe" painted by Bob
Phillips in Glebe in the late 1970’s or 1980. The painting captures the
feel
of inner west terrace houses of the times with characteristic
shutters, screens and iron tracery,
well before 21st century
renovators set to work.
Writing about the restoration of the Glebe Estate, former
Prime Minister, Gough Whitlam, has written that "few places in Australia
are richer in history than the inner-Sydney suburb of Glebe ..."
Click here for full extract.
Because of its proximity to the city, the harbour and
the University of Sydney, there has been a considerable revival of interest
in the area.
Click here
for our Index of People and Places
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