By Cathy Jones (2025)
Birriwa Avenue, Strathfield South, is built on land originally granted to James Morris on 1 January 1810. Part of this grant was later subdivided as the ‘Ripon Estate’. In 1927, Enfield Council approved a subdivision of part of the Ripon Estate, creating Birriwa Avenue and fifteen residential allotments. The avenue lies between Madeline Street and Chisholm Street.
Initially, Birriwa Avenue was situated in the western ward of the former Enfield Council. Following the amalgamation of the west Ward of Enfield with Strathfield Council in 1949, it came under the Strathfield Local Government Area. For many years Birriwa Avenue was located in the suburb of Enfield and then Belfield, but in 2023 the suburb boundaries were revised, and Birriwa Avenue was officially included in Strathfield South.
All land in Birriwa Avenue was originally owned by local builder William Francis (W.F.) Bush (1891–1970). He was the son of William Benjamin Christopher Bush (1869–1925), a builder and former Enfield alderman (1914-1925), and his wife Lillian (née Crawford). W.F. Bush married Sybil Mitchell and they lived in both Liverpool Road, Enfield, and later in Birriwa Avenue. A prolific builder in the Enfield district during the 1920s, he subsequently moved to Bathurst and also served in the Australian Army during the Second World War.
On 2 May 1928, the Daily Telegraph reported approval for W.F. Bush to construct fifteen brick cottages, along with a brick shop and dwelling, in Birriwa Avenue. The street first appears in the 1929 Sands Sydney Directory, an early form of residential and business directory. It seems likely that the first building completed was the shop and residence at 17 Birriwa Avenue, on the corner of Madeline Street. Building of the shop was likely intended to attract interest in the new housing estate, which soon saw the construction of the fifteen planned homes.
The wider development of this part of Enfield was influenced by the establishment of the Enfield Marshalling Yards in 1916, which generated substantial employment and stimulated residential growth in the local district. Many early residents of Birriwa Avenue had railway associated occupations and were likely employed at the Marshalling Yards or nearby Chullora Workshops.
8 Birriwa Avenue Strathfield South was built in 1929 on Lot 4 and is a brick interwar California Bungalow with a terracotta roof.
This land on which the house was built transferred to builder William F Bush in 1927 and in May 1928 approval was granted by Enfield Council to William F Bush to construct 15 houses in Birriwa Avenue. This house was built by 1929 and sold in September 1929 to Leonard Parkinson, of Enfield, an engineer. The house was originally addressed as 7 Birriwa Avenue. In 1957, the street was renumbered and the house number was changed to 8 Birriwa Avenue.
In 1951 the property was transferred to Rupert Ellis Marshall of Enfield, Railway employee and shortly after, transferred to Christophoros Coroneos of Gunning, freeholder. In 1959, the property transferred to Melba Coroneos, widow and James Coroneos, schoolteacher, both of Belfield, as joint tenants. In 1984, the property transferred to James Coroneos and was sold in the following year.
References
Department of Valuer General, Municipality of Enfield, Valuation Lists
Enfield Municipal Council Minutes 1928
NSW Land Registry Services