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Stroud House, used as a banking and later doctor's office, has remained a landmark building in the region. Today, Stroud House has been converted back to its original use as a dwelling and has returned to the hands of descendants of the AACo's commissioner from 1839 to 1849, Admiral Phillip Parker King, FRS, RN. [1]
In 2015, the organisation was tasked by the NSW Government to supply the equivalent of 20,000 new homesites over the following four years in response to Sydney’s growing population. [19] In 2018, the NSW Government reassigned UrbanGrowth NSW's portfolio, [20] with the retail land development portfolio remaining with Landcom. Henceforth ...
In 1824, this company received a grant of 1,000,000 acres (400,000 ha) of land between Port Stephens and the Manning River. This land was to be used for agriculture. Stroud was a self-contained village by 1832 and, as early as 1836, the company's storehouses and much of the convict labour force were located there.
The property is then put up for sale and the result is shown at the end of each episode. ... NSW" 94,000 #2 16: 20 March 2024 ... "Stroud, NSW" 2 March 2016 140,000 ...
The key from a typical cadastral map from the 1890s showed four types of subdivisions; the parish, county, land district and land division. This one is located in the County of Wallace. The Crown Lands Act of 1884 further divided New South Wales into three land divisions; Western, Central and Eastern; as well as Land Boards and Land Districts.
The AACo. headquarters was moved to Stroud in 1853 and the Estate was sold [6] to a Sydney stockbroker and investor, Robert Hoddley Driberg White (RHD White). [5] [1] In 1854 the directors decided to sell all the Port Stephens sheep, and by 1856 they were gone. Cattle breeding continued at Port Stephens and land sales were promoted around ...
Under the reforms unsurveyed land in an area which had been declared an agricultural reserve in designated unsettled areas could be selected and bought freehold in 40-to-320-acre (16–129 ha) lots of crown land, wherever situated at £1 per acre (£2 9s 5d/ha), on a deposit of five shillings per acre (12s 4d/ha), the balance to be paid within three years, an interest-free loan of three ...
Minister for Conservation and Land Management 6 June 1991 26 May 1993 Minister for Land and Water Conservation: George Souris: 26 May 1993 4 April 1995 1 year, 313 days Kim Yeadon Labor: 4 April 1995 1 December 1997 2 years, 241 days Richard Amery: 1 December 1997 21 November 2001 3 years, 355 days John Aquilina: 21 November 2001 2 April 2003