G032 : Ulinbawn | NSW Environment & Heritage

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G032 : Ulinbawn

Item details

Name of item: G032 : Ulinbawn
Other name/s: Breakfast Poin Refreshment Roomt; Durham's Collegiate School
Primary address: 6 Nepean Gardens Place, Glenbrook, NSW 2773
Local govt. area: Blue Mountains
All addresses
Street AddressSuburb/townLGAParishCountyType
6 Nepean Gardens PlaceGlenbrookBlue Mountains   Primary Address

Statement of significance:

Ulinbawn has layers of historical significance, all at the local level. It is associated with a prominent and faintly notorious politician, who built it; with a well-known local surveyor; and for half a century with one of the dominant families in the Glenbrook area, the Skarratts. It has close links with the first stage of the railway up the Lapstone Zig Zag as a refreshment room and with the first years of the RAAF at Glenbrook (G 030) as accommodation for personnel. It has also significance as a private school, representative of these on the mountains in the early twentieth century.

Ulinbawn is a rare extant example of a Victorian Georgian sandstone house in the Blue Mountains. It has good quality detailing and features including the french windows with the louvred shutters and the side stone entry stair. The mature erythrina in the front yard is a good surviving remnant of the original garden plantings.
Date significance updated: 28 Feb 00
Note: The State Heritage Inventory provides information about heritage items listed by local and State government agencies. The State Heritage Inventory is continually being updated by local and State agencies as new information becomes available. Read the OEH copyright and disclaimer.

Description

Construction years: 1877-1877
Physical description: Ulinbawn is a single storey gabled house on a north-south axis facing east to overlook Penrith and Sydney beyond. A single slope verandah encircles the house. A rear kitchen wing is at the south end of the west elevation.

The house has a symmetrical front with a central front door with sidelights and a toplight. French windows with louvred shutters are located either side of the door and on the north and south walls.

The roof is of corrugated steel and the walls of random sandstone, margined at the openings.

The verandah is supported on cast iron columns and approached by a generous sandstone stair centred on the east elevation.

A mature erythrina stands in the front yard.
Physical condition and/or
Archaeological potential:
Good
Date condition updated:17 Jan 00
Modifications and dates: Rear addition
First floor accommodation including dormer and gable windows
Swimming pool
Current use: Residence
Former use: Residence; Refreshment Rooms; School; Railway Halt

History

Historical notes: Ulinbawn was built on John Lucas’s 1870s land-holdings on the Lapstone escarpment above the original railway line. Lucas, a prominent and controversial Sydney politician, built a cottage for himself as a country retreat close to his private railway station called Lucasville. The reason for and the date of the construction of Ulinbawn also on Lucas’s land are not known, but presumably it was built for leasing. In 1877 another railway halt called Breakfast Point was established, through Lucas’s influence, close to Ulinbawn and the train-travellers were served food and drink by the lessees of Ulinbawn. It is possible, even probable, that Ulinbawn was built at the same time as the new rail-halt in 1877 specifically as a refreshment room.

Lucas sold Ulinbawn with 4 hectares (10 acres) of land to George Yeomans, a local surveyor, in 1883. Yeomans planned to develop upstairs rooms in the house, but was frustrated by the loss at sea of the staircase he had ordered. In 1892 the Lapstone Zig Zag was closed and replaced by the Glenbrook Tunnel: this meant that Ulinbawn was no longer on the rail line, lost its service function and was now accessible only by a rough track from Mount Street.

Donald Frederick Skarratt had spent time at Ulinbawn in the 1890s and early 1900s and liked the house sufficiently to lease it from Yeomans in 1906 and then to buy it in 1910. Skarratt had also bought Mountside (G 034) nearby and chose to live there with his wife and family. Ulinbawn was leased, as in Lucas’s time, for much of the period of Skarratt ownership, from 1910 until 1965, first to the Walls, then in the 1920s to Mr Durham who ran a Collegiate School there. When the RAAF took over the Lapstone Hill Hotel nearby in 1948, airforce personnel occupied Ulinbawn, the kitchen was relocated and in the 1950s a bathroom was added.

The house finally left Skarratt ownership in 1967. Since then it has been altered internally a good deal and the creation of a residential sub-division closely around it has radically altered its environment.

Historic themes

Australian theme (abbrev)New South Wales themeLocal theme
3. Economy-Developing local, regional and national economies Commerce-Activities relating to buying, selling and exchanging goods and services (none)-
3. Economy-Developing local, regional and national economies Transport-Activities associated with the moving of people and goods from one place to another, and systems for the provision of such movements (none)-
4. Settlement-Building settlements, towns and cities Land tenure-Activities and processes for identifying forms of ownership and occupancy of land and water, both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal (none)-
6. Educating-Educating Education-Activities associated with teaching and learning by children and adults, formally and informally. (none)-

Assessment of significance

SHR Criteria a)
[Historical significance]
Ulinbawn has layers of historical significance, all at the local level. It is associated with a prominent and faintly notorious politician, who built it; with a well-known local surveyor; and for half a century with one of the dominant families in the Glenbrook area, the Skarratts. It has close links with the first stage of the railway up the Lapstone Zig Zag as a refreshment room and with the first years of the RAAF at Glenbrook (G 030) as accommodation for personnel. It has also significance as a private school, representative of these on the mountains in the early twentieth century.
SHR Criteria c)
[Aesthetic significance]
Ulinbawn is a rare extant example of a Victorian Georgian sandstone house in the Blue Mountains. It has good quality detailing and features including the french windows with the louvred shutters and the side stone entry stair.

The mature erythrina in the front yard is a good surviving remnant of the original garden plantings.
Integrity/Intactness: Reasonable
Assessment criteria: Items are assessed against the PDF State Heritage Register (SHR) Criteria to determine the level of significance. Refer to the Listings below for the level of statutory protection.

Listings

Heritage ListingListing TitleListing NumberGazette DateGazette NumberGazette Page
Local Environmental PlanLEP2005G03207 Oct 05 122 
Heritage study G032   

Study details

TitleYearNumberAuthorInspected byGuidelines used
Blue Mountains Heritage Study1983G032Croft & Associates Pty Ltd & Meredith Walker  Yes
Heritage Study Review, Blue Mountains1992G032Tropman and Tropman  Yes
Blue Mountains Heritage Register Review1999G032Jack, R. I. for University of SydneyRIJ & PH Yes
Technical Audit BM Heritage Register2008G032Blue Mountains City CouncilCity Planning Branch No

References, internet links & images

TypeAuthorYearTitleInternet Links
WrittenPayne, David and Fuller, Colleen1998Ulinbawn National Trust Listing Sheet
Oral HistorySkarratt, Eric of Glenbrook2000Interview 24 February

Note: internet links may be to web pages, documents or images.

rez
(Click on thumbnail for full size image and image details)

Data source

The information for this entry comes from the following source:
Name: Local Government
Database number: 1170271


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