City of Sydney Archives
- GPO Box 1591Sydney
- 02 9265 9618
- [email protected]
We make an active contribution to original research about the local area.
Our history team commissioned and published the following titles.
You can buy copies from the City of Sydney Archives or at our library branches.
All prices are in Australian dollars and include GST.
Sydney Town Hall is one of Sydney's most recognised landmarks. Written by the Town Hall's curator, Margaret Betteridge, this book presents a lavishly illustrated architectural tour of the building and its glorious interiors. It also showcases the our collection of artworks, historical items and civic traditions. Margaret Betteridge Sydney (City of Sydney) 2008 248pp includes index, bibliography, colour photographs ISBN 9780975119648 (paperback) $50 |
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From the 18th to 21st centuries Glebe's character has changed with the growth of Sydney and the development of society. Today's inner suburb – teeming with life, crowded with terraces, shops, pubs, schools and churches – was once a country retreat for affluent families from the young city nearby. As gold rushes, depressions, wars, gentrification and globalisation left marks, Glebe maintained a tough local identity. Max Solling Sydney (Halstead Press) 2007 293pp includes index, bibliographical references, black & white photographs ISBN 9781920831387 (hardback) $35 |
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Millers Point was once an exotic seaport village where whaling, sealing and sandalwood crews thronged the rowdy pubs, and mansions housed wealthy merchants. Later, the suburb was mostly peopled by wharfies and their families scraping a living from the Hungry Mile. Plague reached Sydney and the area was temporarily quarantined. Ever since, government action has determined the fate and fortunes of the historic district nestling below the approaches of the Harbour Bridge. Shirley Fitzgerald & Christopher Keating 144pp includes index, bibliographical references, black & white photographs $30 |
Pyrmont and Ultimo were once known for their railway yards, wool stores, mills, wharves, powerhouses and quarries. The landscape of these 2 neighbouring suburbs was degraded by industrialisation and redevelopment, which caused the community to become disjointed. Now that the area is teeming with new residents and workplaces, this revised edition brings the story of Pyrmont and Ultimo into the 21st century. Shirley Fitzgerald & Hilary Golder 160pp includes index, bibliographical references, black & white photographs $30 |
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Originally this fertile and well-watered area was once coveted by industrialists who manufactured Sydney's sugar, beer and gin. Other industries followed and soon pollution, planning disasters, illegal subdivisions, sub-standard buildings and floods that poured filth into the unsewered slums all contributed to degrade Chippendale throughout the 19th century. Chippendale today, wedged between Central station and Sydney University, attracts residents to quiet streets thanks to its proximity to the city centre and educational institutions. Factory noise and the heavy atmosphere of brewing hops no longer hang over the area, with the huge brewery site about to welcome a huge influx of new locals. Shirley Fitzgerald 144pp includes index, bibliographical references, black & white photographs $30 |
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Writers such as Ruth Park and Kylie Tennant made Surry Hills notorious as the inner-city home of battlers, larrikins, crime bosses and the rag trade. In this new edition of Surry Hills: The City's Backyard, Christopher Keating contrasts the well-heeled residents and ultra-chic businesses that cram into today's Surry Hills with the shady past and planning disasters that once put the whole area under threat of demolition. Christopher Keating 143pp includes index, bibliographical references, black & white photographs $30 |
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One of the few free settlers attracted to Australia in 1818 was Mak Sai Ying, who has descendents living in Sydney today. He bought land, married, and took up a pub licence. Since then, Chinese people have had a colourful and conspicuous place in Australia's oldest city. Success in work and commerce made them a target of business, jealousy, racist agitation in the labour movement and discriminatory measures including the White Australia Policy. Shirley Fitzgerald's popular and scholarly book traces the feats and fortunes of Australia's largest Chinese community. Shirley Fitzgerald 248pp includes index, bibliographical references, black & white photographs $30 |
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The City of Sydney was first sacked in 1853. Back then the NSW government said it was ‘pernicious to the citizens’. It was sacked again in the 1920s, being described as a ‘cauldron of corruption’. In 1967 the Askin Liberal government accused the Labor party of running the City of Sydney as a closed shop and frustrating city development and it was sacked again. In 1987 the Unsworth Labor government returned the compliment. Weaving through the story of these sackings are the endless changes to the City’s boundaries, as amalgamations and de-amalgamations with neighbouring councils occurred with astounding regularity. Hilary Golder 232pp includes index, bibliographic references, black & white illustrations $5 Remaindered |
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70 people were interviewed by Sue Rosen about their experience of life, politics, economics and fun in the South Sydney area when they were growing up. This book presents edited extracts from these oral histories, creating a vivid and rich picture of life in the area. It chronicles events and conveys a strong sense of what it was like to live through the experiences of 20th-century urban life. Sue Rosen 240pp includes index, black & white photographs |
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Lisa Murray presents a warts-and-all history of the planning issues, the political manoeuvres and the philosophical battles that eventually led to the Capitol Theatre being restored and reopened in 1995. Lisa Murray 64pp includes bibliographic references, black & white illustrations plus a colour spread $5 Remaindered |
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This book focuses primarily on Town Hall's relationship with the people of Sydney and the many events that have taken place in the hall. They range from the humble, everyday and personal, to lavish public celebrations of national and international significance. The book is generously illustrated with historic photographs, presenting a lively account of the building's social history. Margo Beasley 128pp includes index, bibliographic references, black & white illustrations $5 Remaindered |
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Sydney has achieved the status (long sought by its promoters, elites and cultural cringers) of a first-class world city and clinched its claim to being Australia’s premier capital and international gateway. This book looks at the 12.95 square kilometres that constitute the City of Sydney today, and examines the influence that planners and planning have had on this part of the world. Paul Ashton 128pp includes index, bibliographic references, black & white illustrations $5 |
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