The Sydney Harbour Trust : the early years
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O'Flanagan, Neil
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Urban Research Program. Research School of Social Science. Australian National University.
Abstract
This paper evaluates the role of the Sydney Harbour Trust in the first
decade of its existence. Although the Trust was formed in the aftermath of
the outbreak of bubonic plague in Sydney in 1900, the need for an overhaul
of the facilities in the port had been recognised for some time. Shipping
technology had been transformed in the last half century, mainly due to the
adaption of steel and iron for ships. However, the port had not kept up with
the changes occurring in shipping. The Harbour Trust, therefore, set about
reconstructing the harbour in response to the new technology.
A significant feature of the Sydney Harbour Trust was that it had no ties
whatsoever to the system of local government pertaining in Sydney at the
time. Nor was it a government department, although it was seen as another
arm of the state public works enterprise. The Sydney Harbour Trust was
therefore the first of the ad hoc authorities without local government links
formed in New South Wales.
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Australia (CC BY-NC 3.0 AU)
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