The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
New content in the Dictionary
Our usual September regeneration of the site has added another 22,000 words of text, and hundreds of new images, links, entities and more. This rebuild takes the total number of words in Dictionary entries over the magic million mark, (although if you count captions, descriptions and other paratext, we’ve been over a million for quite some time).
The entries are, as usual, a mixed bag.
We have a major long essay on the Archaeological evidence of Aboriginal life in Sydney, by Val Attenbrow of the Australian Museum, lavishly illustrated. It’s a fascinating account of what is known of the lives of people in the Sydney region before Europeans arrived.
New people in the Dictionary range from the eminent to the forgotten: three of them are part of our joint project with the Sydney Mechanics’ School of Arts.
- William Charles Windeyer – lawyer and public man, a stalwart of the Sydney Mechanics.
- Peter Nicol Russell – pioneering engineer and manufacturer who endowed the School of Engineering at the University of Sydney.
- George Kenyon Holden – lawyer and parliamentarian who reformed land title in NSW.
- Walter Renny – oil and colour man, who was mayor of Sydney in 1869-70
- Elizabeth Kata – the writer of the book upon which the film 'A Patch of Blue' was based, whose family was divided by World War II and its aftermath
- John Lucas – son of convicts who became a parliamentarian and the protector of Jenolan Caves
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