Hawthorne Canal

Hawthorne
Long Cove Creek
Canal
Hawthorne Canal looking downstream near Lord St, Haberfield.
Country Australia
State New South Wales
Municipality Sydney
Mouth Iron Cove
 - location Lilyfield
 - coordinates 33°52′19″S 151°9′2″E / 33.87194°S 151.15056°E / -33.87194; 151.15056Coordinates: 33°52′19″S 151°9′2″E / 33.87194°S 151.15056°E / -33.87194; 151.15056

Hawthorne Canal, a southern tributary of the Parramatta River, is an artificial waterway west of Sydney Harbour, in the innerwestern Sydney suburbs of Lewisham, Summer Hill, Haberfield, and Leichhardt in New South Wales, Australia.

Hawthorne Canal and Iron Cove Creek are two significant tributaries that flow into Iron Cove, where it flows into Parramatta River, before connecting with Port Jackson. The canal was originally a natural waterway known as Long Cove Creek, that has been straightened and given artificial banks.

History

In January 1890 a team of thirty men, employed by the Harbours and Rivers Department, began clearing the mangroves that lined the banks of Long Cove Creek. It was the beginning of the construction of the first stage of the canal. Within twelve months a navigable stretch of water would exist between Iron Cove and Marion Street. Some housing development had already occurred close to the banks of the creek when parts of the Dobroyd Estate were subdivided in the 1880s, and there was a good deal of local pressure for the extension of the canal to Battle Bridge on Parramatta Road so that the new waterway could be brought within reach of centres of denser population. However, the extension of the canal was never realised.[1]

The canal had a ferry service operating from 1903 through 1904. The service was operated by the Drummoyne - Leichhardt Ferry Company, and there were nine ferries operated each weekday and twelve on Sundays. The ferry wharf was on the eastern side of the canal aligned with Barton St, and a footbridge was built from the western side. The ferry service became impractical due to sedimentation in the canal, and competition from the tramway.[2]

The canal at the time of its construction was variously known as the Long Cove Canal, the Leichhardt Canal and the Hawthorne Canal. The name Hawthorne Canal was in honour of John Stuart Hawthorne MLA, who first agitated for the construction of the canal in parliament in 1890. The name Hawthorne Canal was officially gazetted in 1974.[3]

The Hawthorne name has also been used for several features around the canal. Hawthorne Canal Reserve is a park on the banks of the canal, Hawthorne Parade is a street running parallel to the canal in Haberfield and Hawthorne is the name of a light rail stop on the Dulwich Hill Line. The canal runs parallel to the light rail for most of its length.

References

  1. Coupe, Sheena & Robert (1988). Speed the Plough - Ashfield 1788-1988. Ashfield Municipal Council. pp. 123–28. ISBN 0-9595234-1-3.
  2. Sabolch, Mark (2006). Hawthorne Canal : the history of Long Cove Creek. Ashfield & District Historical Society. p. 72.
  3. Sabolch. p. 70. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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