Where is newington armoury




















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Go back. Five reasons to visit Newington Armory A heritage site and home to a sprawling naval storage depot, discover all there is to do at Newington Armory. By this time, the greater part of the Newington Estate was owned by John Wetherill and the Benevolent Asylum for Women under Crown operation was operating where Silverwater Correctional Centre now exists.

There was further delay, and construction of the magazine did not eventuate until In the intervening years, Spectacle Island had been handed over to the Royal Navy in to serve as the ordnance depot for its Australia Squadron. The colonial government in acquired two powder hulks also known as floating magazines to replace the lost storage; these were to survive in Middle Harbour until well into the 20th century.

Although originally envisaged as being for merchant's explosives, by the time construction commenced at Newington, the magazine was purely for military purposes.

Following completion, it was manned by a small complement of uniformed gunners, under the charge of a Sergeant. The establishment of the magazine required major modifications to the natural environment, including the reclamation of mudflats and wetlands and the small island just off the shoreline.

Stone sea walls were constructed along almost the entire foreshore of the Parramatta River fronting the site and the mudflats were filled in to gain more land for farms, docks and a wharf.

The magazine was then expanded eastwards into grazing land and wetlands previously part of the adjacent State Abattoir precinct in the vicinity of the current Narawang Wetlands almost doubling its area. Further wartime expansion of the depot occurred between and when the site expanded south of Holker Street to approximately the line of the present F4 Motorway. This southward expansion provided space for the construction of a US Navy magazine operated independently by US Navy servicemen and storehouses and laboratories to support both the RAN's increased activity, and ammunition reserves for the Royal Navy.

Between and , buildings at the State Brickworks were used for ammunition storage. The Burma Road which still exists in the Newington Armory provided access between the depot and brickworks facilities, crossing Haslams Creek to the east of the Haslams Creek Bridge that exists today. By the brickworks had been vacated, and disposal of excess wartime stocks of ammunition was in progress, mainly by sea dumping.

By some buildings were removed as the depot reverted to a size appropriate to an expected period of peace. In , the Prime Minister, Robert Menzies, instructed that all high explosives were to be removed from Newington and relocated to the Kingswood depot.

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