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Arcadia
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SuburbArcadiaTypeSuburbDetailsArcadia, situated at the head of Calabash Creek.
The area was originally known as Galston Heights, but was renamed Arcadia after the public school was opened in 1894. The name was suggested by a local resident, a retired Royal Navy officer, G Shearston, who had visited Arcadia in Greece and felt that the two regions were similar. The word comes from a Greek legend of a rural utopia.
The first land grant in the district was 600 acres (243 hectares), given to George Hall by Governor Lachlan Macquarie in 1819. Including grants to Hall's children, the family's holding amounted to 900 acres (364 hectares). This land was released for sale during the land boom of the 1880s, when large tracts of government land were made available for subdivision.
Timber-getting was the first industry in the area, and many settlers supplemented their income by selling locally grown timber, which was in demand for houses, fences and fruit boxes, and later for railway sleepers and telegraph poles.
Many of the early immigrants were Irish, arriving in the 1840s. Most were farmers who planted citrus orchids. This included William and Ann Fagan, who settled in Arcadia in 1854 with the purchase of 70 acres (28.3 hectares), paying £1 an acre. The land was fertile and the climate ideal for growing citrus fruit. By the mid-1890s, Arcadia, Galston and Dural produced more oranges than any other area in the state. At this time the Fagans were producing 3000 cases of fruit in a season.
The Trethowans were another prominent family in the district. Alfred and Anna Trethowan bought land in Smalls Road. Alfred was involved in building the Union Church Hall in 1893, lobbying for the Arcadia Post Office (opened in 1894) and the design and building of St Columb's Anglican church.
Telephone service arrived in the district in 1919 via an exchange housed in the Arcadia Post Office, which also served Galston and Berrilee.
CreatorJoan Rowland
The area was originally known as Galston Heights, but was renamed Arcadia after the public school was opened in 1894. The name was suggested by a local resident, a retired Royal Navy officer, G Shearston, who had visited Arcadia in Greece and felt that the two regions were similar. The word comes from a Greek legend of a rural utopia.
The first land grant in the district was 600 acres (243 hectares), given to George Hall by Governor Lachlan Macquarie in 1819. Including grants to Hall's children, the family's holding amounted to 900 acres (364 hectares). This land was released for sale during the land boom of the 1880s, when large tracts of government land were made available for subdivision.
Timber-getting was the first industry in the area, and many settlers supplemented their income by selling locally grown timber, which was in demand for houses, fences and fruit boxes, and later for railway sleepers and telegraph poles.
Many of the early immigrants were Irish, arriving in the 1840s. Most were farmers who planted citrus orchids. This included William and Ann Fagan, who settled in Arcadia in 1854 with the purchase of 70 acres (28.3 hectares), paying £1 an acre. The land was fertile and the climate ideal for growing citrus fruit. By the mid-1890s, Arcadia, Galston and Dural produced more oranges than any other area in the state. At this time the Fagans were producing 3000 cases of fruit in a season.
The Trethowans were another prominent family in the district. Alfred and Anna Trethowan bought land in Smalls Road. Alfred was involved in building the Union Church Hall in 1893, lobbying for the Arcadia Post Office (opened in 1894) and the design and building of St Columb's Anglican church.
Telephone service arrived in the district in 1919 via an exchange housed in the Arcadia Post Office, which also served Galston and Berrilee.
CreatorJoan Rowland
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LocationArcadiaGeotag[1] KeywordsTrethowanArcadiaGeorge HallMaps and PlansOrchard Lands - Galston & Arcadia
Joan Rowland, Arcadia. Hornsby Shire, accessed 05/04/2026, https://hornsbyshire.recollect.net.au/nodes/view/3937






