RAHS/NAW Lecture – Irrawang: The History and the Archaeology
Event Date & Time: Wednesday, 21 May 2025 @ 6.00 pm – 7.00 pm
Event Location: History House, 133 Macquarie St, Sydney NSW 2000 AND Online via Zoom
In-Person Cost: RAHS Members $20 | Non-Members $25
Online Cost: RAHS Members $10 | Non-Members $15
Event Description:
Just north of Raymond Terrace near the Williams River lies Irrawang, a site important for its early colonial industry and for being one of the earliest historical archaeological projects in Australia. James King was a colonial entrepreneur with a number of interests. King experimented with glass manufacture before he took a grant in the Hunter Valley to develop a winery. He then set up a pottery on his land to manufacture utilitarian wares. The pottery was moderately successful until the gold rush resulted in his labour decamping and the enterprise closed down.
In the 1970s, Judy Brimingham and the students from the Archaeological Society at the University of Sydney began to excavate the Irrawang site. The work at Irrawang also provided a key stimulus to the development of historical archaeology in Australia. Recently, members from the Industrial Heritage Committee of the National Trust have revived interest in Irrawang, largely because it has not been listed on the State Heritage Register. Although many know of the site, little is known about what happened there.
This session hosted by Dr Iain Stuart and with contributions from Felicity Barry, Stephanie Moore, Isabella Trope and James Cole, aims to present what is known about the site’s history and archaeology. Being a hybrid presentation, we hope to also have contributions from key individuals who worked on the site.
$10.00 – $25.00