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Seaham, New South Wales |
| Seaham New South Wales |
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The Presbyterian Church at Seaham, pictured about 1920. The building was destroyed by fire in 1939 and rebuilt in 1941. |
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| Population: | 372 1 (Seaham village only) | ||||||||||||
| Established: | 1822 | ||||||||||||
| Postcode: | 2324 | ||||||||||||
| Coordinates: | Coordinates: | ||||||||||||
| Area: | 46.2 km² (17.8 sq mi) | ||||||||||||
| Time zone:
• Summer (DST) |
AEST (UTC+10) | ||||||||||||
| Location: |
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| LGA: | Port Stephens Council2 | ||||||||||||
| Region: | Hunter2 | ||||||||||||
| County: | Durham3 | ||||||||||||
| Parish: | Seaham3 | ||||||||||||
| State District: | Maitland4 | ||||||||||||
| Federal Division: | Paterson5 | ||||||||||||
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Seaham is a suburb of the Port Stephens Local Government Area in the Hunter Region of New South Wales, Australia.26 It is located on the Williams River which flows into the Hunter River 14.6 kilometres (9.1 mi) downstream from Seaham village at Raymond Terrace.
It is a rural community supporting a small but expanding population. While the actual village of Seaham, which is located in the north-eastern corner of the suburb, is relatively compact and composed of only a handful of streets, the suburb itself covers an area of approximately 46.3 square kilometres (17.9 sq mi).6 Greater Seaham covers an even larger area and incorporates East Seaham, Brandy Hill, Eagleton and Eskdale Estate.
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Settled during 1822, the village boomed during the 1850s from growing river trade and by 1920 supported a hotel, School of Arts, public school, and three churches. It also offered running water to its moderate population. The town became recognized during the 1890s for its excellence in winemaking, the local vineyard, "Porphyry" sweeping up medals and awards in not only Australia but also in Europe.
In the 19th century, growth in the township had been concentrated around the riverside, particularly on North Crescent Street. Devastating floods during 1893 and 1913 highlighted the impracticality of a low-lying town centre, and by the 1920’s the town had been moved to higher ground.
At one time, North Crescent Street, (now nothing but a dirt track along the Williams River), had supported a hotel, post office, wharf and Mechanic's Institute with library.
The principal street in Seaham from about 1902 onwards was Warren Street, which has been the address of three former post offices, two churches, the public school, general store and School of Arts Hall. Warren Street also provides access to Seaham Swamp, an important natural wetland.78
On 14 January 1939 a disastrous bushfire swept through Seaham and reduced much of the town to rubble. The Presbyterian Church, Seaham Public School, as well as a number of historically significant homes were lost in the fire, meaning the destruction of not only important edifices but a wealth of Seaham’s history.
"Porphyry" House housed a collection of invaluable artifacts, furniture, manuscripts and other documents associated with the colonisation of Australia. Nothing was saved from the gutted home and as the house burnt to the ground, the floor gave way and the safe in which most of the artifacts were kept fell into the basement. After the fire, the ruins were covered over and presumably, all surviving artefacts are still underground.
As the fire swept across the only roads in and out of the town, road access was blocked and subsequently the town had to rely on the effort of local men to fight the fire. By noon most of the women and children had been evacuated by punt across the Williams River to East Seaham, leaving about 50 men to protect the town.
With all roads to Seaham blocked by fire, outside authorities had to rely on telephone to contact inhabitants trapped within the town. The last message received from Seaham Post Office, then located next to the School of Arts hall on Warren Street was “I will have to run now. Fire is all around me”.
The fire had been burning for two days in the heavy timber outside of the township, but residents were caught unawares by the suddenness in which the flames swept down onto the village. One of the first buildings to be engulfed by flames was the historic “Felspar House” on the outskirts of the town. It was within the old stone home that a group of people gathered as the fire advanced on the town, watching it race over the hill and burn viciously towards the house. The Newcastle Morning Herald reported the incident the following Monday, telling how the occupants had remained within the home after it caught alight, and left the back door literally as the kitchen roof caved in.
Those left in Seaham by the time the fire reached the village were left to their own devices. As families fleeted over windswept paddocks, luggage in hand, others submerged themselves in dams, lagoons and even cattle troughs. Some defiant homeowners refused to leave their homes. In one instance it was reported that a man stood with a garden hose on his front steps as the fire burnt in a circle around his feet.
At "Brandon", a two-storey mansion about 2 km (1.2 mi) outside of the village, domestic servants toiled in vain to pump water from the underground well in the garden to save the old house. Luckily, the house itself was saved from the flames, but the gardens and summer houses were reduced to ash. The house still has thick, black tape over its internal windows. The tape was used during the Second World War to prevent the windows shattering in the case of an air raid.
Business, trade and everyday life in the town came to a halt and subsequently the town fell into a downward spiral. Much of the population left during the 1940s and by 1960 the school served less than 10 students.
The town received a second boom during the 1980s with the development of the Brandy Hill residential estate, which injected new life into the area, bringing families from abroad back to the rural village and saving the school from imminent closure.
Seaham Cemetery, which is located on the outskirts of the Seaham township, has a traditional layout with headstones dating back to the 1850s. Contemporary records are incomplete with a number of grave markers lost in the 1939 bush fire. The cemetery is still in use and is maintained by Port Stephens Council.
One of the oldest headstones in the cemetery is that of Scottish educational theorist Henry Carmichael, who died at sea during 1862.
The following is a timeline of significant events in the history of the town:
The Edgeworth David quarry is an historic quarry that was gazetted for preservation for scientific purposes in 1925.9 It is named after the Australian geologist Edgeworth David, who discovered signs of late Palaeozoic glaciation in the Seaham during 1914. The deposits at the quarry, identified as 'varve shale' in 1919, have been considered by geologists as the 'finest [example] in the world'.
The National Parks and Wildlife Service manage the site, which can be visited by everyone interested in geology and geological history of the Seaham area.
as shown on 1:100000 map 9232 NEWCASTLE.
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