Grantham Poultry Research Farm

Home Page
Sites Index
Blactown Index
"Melrose". Photograph (c) NSW Heritage Office

A poultry research complex most recently operated by the NSW Department of Agriculture and containing a number of heritage listed buildings, the most notable being Melrose House, built 1897. The complex is located at 71 Seven Hills Road, Seven Hills.

In the 1890's the then 100 acre site was owned by William Chadwick, a city solicitor. In 1897 Chadwick had a country residence built on the site, which he named "Melrose". Chadwick had no interest in farming and in 1906 sold the house and surrounding land to Francis Martin who appointed James Hadlington as a manager and operated the property as the "Grantham Poultry Stud". Hadlington was a leading expert in poultry farming research and the farm was just as much a research farm as a stud farm. In 1917 the property was sold to the state Government who continued to operate it as a poultry research farm and breeding farm, supplying the needs of surrounding poultry farms as part of the "Returned Soldiers Settlement Scheme". The project proved unviable and was wound up in the early 1920's. In 1923 the property, then some 46 acres, was transferred to the Department of Agriculture. The "Government Poultry Farm" continued to operate as a research and breeding farm until 1939. In 1939 the name was changed to "Poultry Experiment Farm" and its use as a breeding farm was phased out, leaving it as a research farm. During the 1940's it established itself as one of the top six poultry research centres in the world. In 1960 the name was again changed, this time to "Poultry Research Station", however in 1959 the surrounding region was rezoned from farming to residential and the increasing urbanisation of the area increasingly hampered the work of the farm and in 1988 the farm was closed. Subsequent to this the site remained untennanted and was, at one stage, threatened with demolishing to make way for the Western Motorway. It was, however, saved from this and the motorway diverted around the core of the site. In 2004 Blacktown City Council aquired the remaining 5 hectares, including the core buildings, for $1 million and plan to operate the site as a heritage park, probably in conjunction with the nearby historic sites also owned by the council (such as St Bartholomew's). The council also hopes to aquire neighbouring crown land, which was once part of the farm.

Throughout it's life from the 1890's to 1988, many buildings have been added to the site, some having since been demolished. A large number of buildings were demolished after 1988, however all but two of those were built after 1930. The two exceptions were the Vehicle Depot and Foreman's Cottage, both built before 1925. Wooden Bachelors Barracks built during the late 1910's were demolished in the mid 1920's. Four heritage buildings remain on the site including the the two farm residences, Melrose House and Drumtochty, the Old Feed Shed and the Workshop (c.1900). The property includes one of the largest remaining tracts of the Cumberland Plain Woodland in Seven Hills and one of few in the eastern part of Western Sydney.

Melrose House is a single storey Federation style brick residence, constructed c.l897. It originally had a slate roof with terracotta ridge capping, and three false gables, one to each side of the verandah. Curved stairs approached the front doors. The false gables and verandah rail have since been removed, and the roof now has corrugated iron cladding. The interior comprises a central hallway, four bedrooms with open fireplaces, lounge room with open fireplace, kitchen and pantry, bathroom and laundry. Some of the rooms have been modernised, others remain much as they originally appeared..

Drumtochty was built sometime between 1890 and 1900. It is a typical Victorian weatherboard cottage with a corrugated iron cladding roof. It was restored in 1984 when it was relocated from elsewhere on the property. Prior to the restoration there was considerable interior water damage. The two bedrooms house also contains a lounge and separate dining room, kitchen and family room. The building retains much of it's original design and material.

The Old Feed Shed is a single storey, open-sided shed built from rough hewn posts with a corrugated iron gable roof and concrete floor.
The timber supports for the roof are exposed within the shed. The hewn posts, post heads and bracketing are typical of rural buildings largely classed as the style known as Rude Timber Buildings.


Sources:
Blacktown Advocate, 4/2/2004
Blacktown City Sun, 3/2/2004
NSW Heritage Office Website, http://www.heritage.nsw.gov.au