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Emu Hall in Penrith, New South Wales | Landmark



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Emu Hall

Locality: Penrith, New South Wales



Address: 2 Great Western Highway 2750 Penrith, NSW, Australia

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14.01.2022 James Tobias (Toby) Ryan (1818-1899), butcher, pastoralist, politician and sportsman, was born on 4 January 1818 near Penrith, New South Wales, son of John Michael Tobin Ryan, printer, and his wife Mary (1791-1872). His mother was the daughter of Anthony Rope and Elizabeth Pulley (Powley), First Fleet convicts, who in May 1788 were among the first to be married in the colony. John Ryan reached Sydney in 1815 in the Indefatigable with a life sentence and in 1827 took over the ...Continue reading



12.01.2022 Emu Hall is a historic house in the Sydney suburb of Emu Plains in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is 58 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Penrith and is part of the Greater Western Sydney region. The house is on the western side of the Nepean River, located at the foot of the Blue Mountains. Emu Hall was erected for James Tobias Ryan (18181899) between 1851 and 1854. Ryan was a butcher, pastorali...st, politician and sportsman who was born near Penrith, New South Wales. From 1860 until 1872 he was the member for Nepean in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly. He was a jovial and popular parliamentarian but didnt aspire to a ministerial appointment. Ryan was well known as a sportsman and as a good boxer and crack pigeon shooter. He was also a race-horse owner and breeder as well as a gambling man. This led to his decline and on his death he was penniless. The siting of the house in riverside grounds is indicative of a new wealthy class of family in the district during the mid-nineteenth century. As an historic house in a garden setting, it has landmark status on both the highway and river. It has a hipped corrugated steel roof and verandahs to the southern and eastern elevations with cast iron columns, decorative lace friezes and balustrading. Fenestration consists of large sashed windows and french doors. Newer dormer windows have been added to the roof. The house has an enclosed service yard and a free-standing service wing. Within the property there are brick stables and a derelict timber slab barn. In the garden, remnant plantings remain, including clusters of Jacarandas, Camphor Laurels and Bunya Pines.

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