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The hedge along the fence-line of the eastern boundary of the property along Bradwardine Road has not been planted, and the boundary was a low timber post and rail fence. It appears that this fence is still present, although the boundary fence for the property is now a higher metal fence that is located inside the hedge and timber post and rail ...
Two boundary lines, which are curved around the edge of the field and connect the two goal-lines. Together, the boundary-lines and the goal-lines mark out the playing area, in a slightly truncated oval. Two goal squares, one at each end of the field, which are 6.4 m × 9 m (7 yd × 10 yd) in front of each goal-face.
The first discovery of incorrectly allocated land was in 1884 when surveyor Johnson was instructed to survey a 40-acre (160,000 m 2) Conditional Purchase (No. 83–10) adjacent to the border at Tweed Heads for the NSW Government. [3] The area he surveyed had already been allocated and marked by the QLD Government surveyors.
"Australian Intellectual Property Laws". www.austrade.gov.au. Cole, George M.; Wilson, Donald A. (5 August 2016). Land Tenure, Boundary Surveys, and Cadastral Systems (Illustrated ed.). CRC Press. ISBN 9781315352961. "Old System Information and Search Guide" (PDF). NSW Land & Property Information. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016
the boundary line, 5-metre-wide (5.5 yd) from the fence, and curved except for the goal lines; a 50-metre-wide (55 yd) centre square; two concentric circles in the centre with diameters 3 m (3.3 yd) and 10 m (11 yd), bisected by one line, a 9 m × 6.4 m (10 yd × 7 yd) goal square at each end of the ground,
The Heritage Council of NSW approved a four-lot subdivision of the property on 7 March 1991, subject to moving the then-proposed eastern boundary of Lot 1 (containing Denfield homestead and slab hut and an original fence) further east by 3.8 metres (12 ft). [5]
A fence viewer is a town or city official who administers fence laws by inspecting new fences and settles disputes arising from trespass by livestock that had escaped enclosure. [ 1 ] The office of fence viewer is one of the oldest appointments in New England .
The Church and School Estate comprised approx 42,000 acres on the east side of the Shoalhaven River with a straight north–south boundary as the estate's east edge. This boundary line had significant ramifications for the subsequent land settlement pattern with Strathallan, Braidwood Farm and Coghill's land all granted east of this line.