Skip to main content
  1. The Dictionary of Sydney
  2. Multimedia
  3. Carols by candlelight in Hyde Park, Sydney Dece...

Carols by candlelight in Hyde Park, Sydney December 1970

Contributed By
National Archives of Australia
[A1200, L85587]

Browse

  • Browse
    • Artefacts
    • Buildings
    • Events
    • Natural Features
    • Organisations
    • People
    • Places
    • Structures
    • Entries
    • Multimedia
    • Subjects
    • Roles
    • Contributors
Connections
Appears in
Christmas in Martin Place Religion
Subjects
Celebrations Memorials Music Religions and Beliefs
Events
Carols by Candlelight
Places
Hyde Park
Structures
Anzac War Memorial Hyde Park

Footer

  • Home
  • About
  • Copyright
  • Contact

Footer Secondary

  • Contribute
  • Donate

National Archives of Australia

Religion

Religion has had a profound influence on the geography, culture, politics, and artistic life of Sydney. While religion has mostly been a conservative force, preserving traditions transported from home societies, it has also reflected the setting and people of Sydney, its harbour, bushland and suburbs.

Christmas in Martin Place

The Christmas tree in Martin Place, a fixture of Sydney's festive season, is a relatively recent addition to the landscape of the city, dating from 1971 when Martin Place was first converted into a pedestrian space. It is, however, a continuation of older traditions in the city.

Religions and Beliefs

Music

Memorials

Celebrations

Carols by Candlelight

full record »

Annual community event held in the city at Christmas time. It was first held in Hyde Park near the War Memorial in 1946 (apart from 1947 when it was postponed due to rain and held on Good Friday at the Showground instead. The festival moved to the Domain in 1983.

Hyde Park

full record »

Park providing green space in Sydney's busy centre.

Anzac War Memorial Hyde Park

full record »

The main war memorial in Sydney and one of the city's finest Art Deco buildings. It embodies the collective grief of the people of NSW at the loss of Australian servicemen and women since World War I. It is associated with the landing of Australian troops at Gallipoli on 25 April 1915, since fundraising for the memorial was established on the first anniversary of the landing.