The first colonial travellers to inland Australia took the western road through the plains round Sydney. At the foot of the towering Blue Mountains, where they crossed the Nepean River, simple buildings of the convict era formed the tiny township of Penrith.
On that splendid natural stage the story told in this book unfolds. Lorraine Stacker traces events and developments that have made Penrith the mature city it is today.
In chronological order, with a wealth of detail, her book studies land use and settlement, civic amenities, local government and changing patterns of urban growth. It looks beyond Penrith, to all areas now within the City’s municipal boundaries—reviewing the local histories of places such as St. Marys and Emu Plains, that once progressed independently.
Since 1988—when the history of Penrith’s formative epoch was published in Darug and Dungaree—readers have longed for a book that would carry the story forward. This new book takes it into the 21st century, and includes an index to both volumes.