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Brandy Hill, New South Wales


FieldValue
typesuburb
nameBrandy Hill
statensw
imageBrandyhillview.jpg
image_upright0.9
captionLooking from Brandy Hill across the site of Ahalton Farm, towards Mount Kanwary.
coordinates
pushpin_label_positionleft
est1986
postcode2324
area6.5
area_footnotesArea calculation is based on 1:100000 map 9232 Newcastle.
timezoneAEST
utc+10
timezone-dstAEDT
utc-dst+11
dist1175
dir1N
location1Sydney
dist236
dir2NNW
location2Newcastle
dist310.7
dir3NW
location3Raymond Terrace
dist420
dir4NW
location4Maitland
lgaPort Stephens Council
regionHunter
countyDurham
parishSeaham
stategovPort Stephens
fedgovLyne
maxtemp29.6
maxtemp_footnotes
mintemp6.1
mintemp_footnotes
rainfall925.2
rainfall_footnotes
near-nSeaham
near-neSeaham
near-eSeaham
near-seNelsons Plains
near-sNelsons Plains
near-swWallalong, Nelsons Plains
near-wSeaham
near-nwSeaham
local_mapyes
zoom12

| timezone-dst = AEDT | utc-dst = +11 | near-n = Seaham | near-ne = Seaham | near-e = Seaham | near-se = Nelsons Plains | near-s = Nelsons Plains | near-sw = Wallalong, Nelsons Plains | near-w = Seaham | near-nw = Seaham Brandy Hill is a suburb of the Port Stephens local government area in the Hunter Region of New South Wales, Australia. It was originally farmland but was subdivided in the 1980s and now supports a population of over 700 people living on large, primarily residential, blocks. It overlooks working farmland and offers superb views of the greater Morpeth area, with visibility extending to Maitland.

Geography

Brandy Hill is primarily an elevated suburb, with the residential area approximately 20 - above sea level.Elevations are based on 1:100000 map 9232 Newcastle. To the north and east the suburb is bordered by Seaham, while to the south and west the suburb is surrounded by the Hunter River floodplains in Nelsons Plains, Wallalong and Seaham.

History

First inhabitants

In 1938, Walter John Enright wrote of the district's traditional owners:

On the impacts of colonisation in the Seaham district, Enright says:

On the subject of massacres of Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islander people by settlers following colonisation, Enright writes:

The Seaham district and environs, however, may not have been entirely without such "frightful blots" on its history. In 1877, a massacre at nearby Wallalong was recounted in correspondence published by the Maitland Mercury and Hunter River General Advertiser:

Reflecting on the massacre, the correspondent goes on to remark that:

While the exact location of the massacre is not provided, an account of floods in 1857 describes how "the first breach it made was at Wallalong, whence the water gradually found its way over a considerable portion of Bowthorne, Hopewell, Barty's Swamps (sic), and all the low lands in that direction". To the east, Wallalong is separated from the "high land" of Brandy Hill, previously known as Ahalton and Warren's Station Paddock, by Barties Swamp. It is possible that the shootings and drownings described as occurring "between the brush and the high land" took place on or about Barties Swamp, below present-day Brandy Hill.

Ahalton and The Station Paddock (c1823-1870s)

Modern-day Brandy Hill is located on the site of Ahalton Farm and Warren's Station Paddock.{{Citation | access-date=7 June 2021

In correspondence dated 23 September 1823, James McClymont was informed that he would be granted 2000 acres in any part of the colony already surveyed as well as six convict servants who would be victualled from government stores. The land was granted in two portions – 1470 acres of land in the parish of Seaham and 530 acres in the parish of Butterwick. The property, totalling 2000 acres and covering much of present-day Brandy Hill, Wallalong, and the lowlands between, was known as "Ahalton Farm".

The McClymont's time at Ahalton, however, was to be short-lived. On or about 26 July 1825, a "desperate gang" of eleven bushrangers "plundered" the McClymont farm house, and the young family left the district soon thereafter. Upon McClymont's early death in 1829, aged 30, "Ahlaton" was advertised to be let for a term of seven years. The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser described the property as thus:

Gone too, it seems, was the "desperate gang" that had driven McClymont and his family out of "Ahalton" only four years prior:

Plains, Wallis' Plains, and William's River, being to each only six miles.}}

In 1847, a Free Presbyterian Church was built at "Ahalton", close to present-day Ralston Road. Approval to sell the Ahalton Church was granted by the Synod in November 1868.

Before the construction of the Maitland Junction to Dungog branch of the North Coast Line, a railway through Morpeth and Seaham was proposed. Although the line would have posed fewer engineering obstacles than the two alternatives, there were concerns that a bridge at Morpeth would hinder shipping and that a railway through Brandy Hill was superfluous on account of it servicing only "wallabies and bandicoots [living on] land [that is] unfit for the support of any other kind of population".

Just north of Brandy Hill is the Brandy Hill quarry, which is named after the nearby hill that is approximately 180 m high. Travelling between the quarry and Raymond Terrace meant travelling a circuitous route through the Seaham township so Brandy Hill Drive was constructed to provide a shorter and more direct route. At moment many local residents are fighting the expansion of Brandy Hill due to destruction of koala breeding habitat.

Subdivision and suburb

In the 1980s the land around Brandy Hill Drive was subdivided and renamed "Brandy Hill", after the hill, which is more than 2 km from the northern extremity of the suburb and still in Seaham, and the quarry. Brandy Hill Drive continues to be used as an access route to the quarry, which is now operated by Hanson Australia.

On 16 April 1993 the boundaries of Brandy Hill were gazetted and on 7 April 2000 the subdivision was formerly approved as a locality and became a suburb in its own right. The suburb is almost surrounded by Seaham.

Notes

References

References

  1. "Suburb Search – Local Council Boundaries – Hunter (HT) – Port Stephens". [[New South Wales Division of Local Government]].
  2. "Brandy Hill (locality)".
  3. "Port Stephens". [[New South Wales Electoral Commission]].
  4. (2025). "Division Finder, New South Wales". [[Australian Electoral Commission]].
  5. {{BoM Aust stats
  6. (6 October 1938). "The life and habits of natives". [[The Maitland Daily Mercury]].
  7. (25 August 1877). "Original correspondence". [[The Maitland Mercury and Hunter River General Advertiser]].
  8. (5 August 1857). "Morpeth, Narrowgut, and Phoenix Park". [[Empire (newspaper).
  9. Ancestry.com. New South Wales, Australia, Colonial Secretary's Papers, 1788–1825. Series: (NRS 937) Copies of letters sent within the Colony, 1814-1825 Item: 4/3509 Page: 304
  10. Index to map of the country bordering upon the River Hunter... by Henry Dangar (London : Joseph Cross, 1828). p13
  11. (10 December 1829). "Classified Advertising". [[The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser]].
  12. (4 August 1825). "BUSHRANGERS.". [[The Australian (1824 newspaper).
  13. (25 November 1867). "Synod of Eastern Australia". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  14. (12 October 1882). "The North Coast Railway". [[Maitland Mercury]].
  15. "Brandy Hill (hill)".
  16. Kelly, Matthew. (2020-09-06). "Poo trail points to Brandy Hill breeding ground".
  17. {{DoL suburb image|name=Brandy Hill|codename=Brandy%20Hill|access-date=23 May 2008}}
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