35 Redmyre Road

’Selbridge’ 35 Redmyre Road Strathfield

By Cathy Jones

The land bounded by Ardittos Lane to the north, Elva Street to the east, Redmyre Road to the south and Homebush Road to the west was purchased by Robert Joshua King and Mary Ann Balmain, wife of surveyor and Strathfield Council Town Clerk John Hope Balmain, in 1903.  Prior to this time, it was largely considered unusable due to the presence of a watercourse and creek (which is now a Sydney Water closed stormwater conduit).  King and Balmain subdivided the two allotments into 66 feet wide blocks fronting Redmyre Road and The Avenue (later Churchill Avenue), a new street to link Elva Street and Homebush Road.  The land was auctioned as the ‘King Estate’.

The land was gradually taken up with the last allotments sold in 1914.  Many of the sales did not correspond with the original subdivisions, a number of purchasers preferring narrower frontages.  A convenant was placed on most sales requiring ‘one main building only on the said land and such building shall be a double fronted…and be built of brick and/stone with roof of slates and/or tiles and shall not cost less than £300”.

21 to 67 Redmyre Road are built on the ‘King Estate’.

Part lots 55 and 56 were sold to Ellen O’Brien on 10 April 1912 by King and Balmain.  Council records indicate that a house was built in 1913.  The house was named ‘Woodlawn’.

O’Brien sold the house in March 1914 to Mary Herman, wife of Arthur Herman, a motor garage proprietor.  In June 1915, the house was sold to Florence Gee, wife of Ernest Gee, a works chemist.  The house was renamed ‘Selbridge’.  The house remained in the ownership of the Gee family until at least the 1960s.

References

Department of the Valuer General NSW – Valuation List – Valuation District of Strathfield 1924, 1930 and 1960

Fox & Associates, Strathfield Heritage Study, 1986

Land Titles Register

Sands Directory for Sydney and Suburbs 1900-1932

Strathfield Council Valuation Lists 1894 to 1920

Strathfield Council Notices of Land Transfer (1927-1960s)

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