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Taman Rakyat Mystery Cache

This cache has been archived.

Riblit: As Joni Mitchell once wrote "They paved paradise and put up a parking lot"

Well history repeats itself and this little paradise of walking tracks and native bushland has fallen victim to the need of a bigger parking lot and is in the process of being transformed into concrete and bitumen.

The cache and surrounding structure have been unceremoniously ripped out.

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Hidden : 12/13/2009
Difficulty:
3.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

Recycled ground

This area was once part of the Rooty Hill Government farm.  The Government farm was an initiative of Governor King and was one of 4 government depots and stock farms, used to control livestock prices and prevent graziers from exploiting the market. It was closed in 1828.   By the time Governor Macquarie arrived in 1810 private landowners and settlers were demanding more land and Macquarie began subdividing the government farms. He granted 2000 acres to John Campbell in 1822. Campbell, a retired military officer from Scotland, named the 2000 acre grant “Bungarribee Estate”. An article in the Sydney Gazette in 1828 reads:

“The Valuable Estate of Bungarribee, the Property of the late John Campbell, Esq., situated on the Great Western Road, about 10 miles beyond Parramatta; it contains 2,000 acres of very excellent land, fenced all round, has 250 acres cleared, four large enclosed paddocks, various stockyards and piggery, a garden consisting of 8 acres, with a great number and variety of young fruit trees well watered, and two creeks always supplied with water running through the farm. The house, built of the very best materials, and scarcely completed at Mr Campbell's death, consists of a dining room, drawing room and five bedrooms on the ground floor, and four small rooms in the upper storey. Attached, is a most excellent kitchen or Servants' Room (the residence of the Family for some years before the building of the new house), with store, ham house, stable, barn, carpenter and blacksmiths' shops, superior barracks for the men, &c. The Dairy is considered to be, in design, the most complete in the Colony. It is not quite finished but a trifle will complete it.”

 

This photo is of a painting of Bungarribee House in the 1850’s

Bungarribee House

In 1941 the Commonwealth resumed the property, excepting the house, for military use.  The military built an airfield consisting of a compressed gravel runway of 1800 metres along with taxi ways and aircraft hides.  I read somewhere that the Americans laid bitumen on the airstrip. The fabric shows evidence of this in some places.

After the war ended the property remained in government hands and was acquired by OTC in October 1949 for development as an International transmitting station. OTC built staff houses and buildings to house the transmitters and erected antenna. During their stewardship Bungarribee house fell into such disrepair it was demolished in 1957.

OTC transmitters were active until the 1990’s, when the HF station closed, although OTC remained on the estate until 2001, by which time the station buildings and antenna masts had been removed.

 

This 1956 air photo shows the OTC installation and the runway.

Air Photo

Some of the land has been returned to the public as part of Western Sydney Parklands.
There is an enclosed off lease area for exercising dogs and some nature walks.
The rest will be subdivided and sold off as house lots.

The car park gates are open between 8am and 7pm, vehicles there after 7pm will be locked in for the night.

What has all this to do with the cache? I hear you mumble.  Well, apart from giving you enough information to find the cache, although how you use that information depends on your interpretation, it’s always good to know a bit about the local area

Please be careful to replace the cache in the same orientation as it was when you found it

Additional Hints (No hints available.)