Rosebery Park Racecourse relocated here in 1906 and was well-known for its mid-week pony races. Pony races involved full-sized thoroughbreds and mixed-bred racehorses that were of a slightly smaller breed. The course was just one of several pony tracks in Sydney. Others included Ascot (which was resumed during the expansion of Sydney Airport) and Victoria Park, which is now also home to a number of apartments.
Aerial View of Rosebery Racecourse, c.1945. As you can see from the photographs, the grandstands backed onto Gardeners Road. Courtesy of Adastra/AAM |
Rosebery Park Racecourse as it appeared in the 1934 Gregory's Street Directory and today on Goggle Maps. |
Complimentary Ticket to Rosebery. City of Botany Bay Archives, 1933 |
Look carefully at this photograph and you will see a number of racegoers trying to escape the commotion by climbing down the side of the grandstand. Thomas John Hanrahan, then aged 68, was not as lucky. He was caught up in the centre of the accident and suffered a fractured arm and several other injuries. He was taken to hospital and never left, dying two weeks later.
Sydney Morning Herald, Monday 7th May, 1928 |
After the accident the owners of Rosebery injected some £100,000 back into the course by building a new grandstand and remodelling the track. According to The Referee the new Rosebery was ‘something to be marvelled at’.
War, however, continually impacted the racecourse. Despite its popularity for racing, Rosebery, like many racecourses across Sydney, was used by the military during both world wars. Racecourses were perfect sites for temporary training camps as they provided well-drained open spaces, as well as useful facilities such as electricity and toilets.
1st Light Horse Regiment at Rosebery.Courtesy of the Australian War Memorial (P01208.020) |
After the departure of the1st Light Horse, Rosebery was used by a handful of other Light Horse Regiments, infantry training and by the Citizen Forces.
During World War II Rosebery Racecourse was again used by the military. In October 1939, just a month and a half into the war, a training camp was established here for volunteers who had no previous military training. The first 300 recruits were housed in a grandstand that also doubled as a mess hall.
New recruits, lining up at Rosebery’s totalisator windows, 1939. Courtesy of the State Library of Victoria (H99.201/480) |
After World War II, Rosebery Racecourse was briefly used as a returned stores depot.
Billboard for Eastlakes development, c.1960s City of Botany Bay Library |
In 1961 everything changed when the Sydney Turf Club sold Rosebery Racecourse to property developers, Parkes Developments Pty Ltd. Over the next 10 years the old racecourse was replaced with a shopping centre, over 65 red brick apartments as well as a handful of public housing developments – including a complex designed by Harry Seidler.
In 1968 the cost of new apartments in Eastlakes started at $9000, and could be repaid at just $9.95 a week. Today the suburb reportedly has one of the highest concentration of walk up apartments in Australia and units sell for around $560,000.
The Lakes Shopping Centre during the early 1960s before all of the red brick apartments in Eastlakes were completed. City of Botany Bay Library. |
Samantha Sinnayah, Curator
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