Archdeacon R. B. S. HammondPrint Page
The R. B. S. Hammond Memorial commemorates Archdeacon R. B. S. Hammond (1870 - 1946) and the sixtieth anniversary of the pioneer homes at Hammondville.
Hammond's most imaginative and remarkable response to the Depression was the Pioneer Home Scheme At a time when the vast majority of workers lived in rented accommodation, widespread unemployment quickly snowballed into a crisis in housing. The government's limited support for the workless did not extend to rent assistance and, in 1932 alone, New South Wales courts issued more than 5,800 Orders of Ejectment against people chronically behind on rent. By mid-1933, 33,000 homeless Australians lived in makeshift camps across the country.
Hammond did not wait for government to act: with money raised by cashing his own life insurance policy, he purchased a tract of uncleared land five kilometres past Liverpool (know known as Hammondville) and established his own settlement for unemployed workers and their evicted families. He arranged for the construction of several basic wooden cottages, each with an acre of land, and offered them to unemployed couples with three or more children. He expected the scheme's participants to cultivate their gardens and to make modest but regular payments towards the purchase of their land and cottage.
Location
Address: | Stewart Avenue & Walder Road, Hammondville Anglican Church , Hammondville, 2170 |
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State: | NSW |
Area: | AUS |
GPS Coordinates: | Lat: -33.948461 Long: 150.955522 Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate. |
Details
Monument Type: | Monument |
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Monument Theme: | People |
Sub-Theme: | Religion |
Link: | http://adb.anu.edu.au/ |
Dedication
Actual Monument Dedication Date: | Friday 20th November, 1992 |
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The R. B. S. Hammond Memorial
This memorial was unveiled by His Excellency Rear Admiral Peter Sinclair, A.C. Governor of New South Wales, on Friday, 20th November, 1992 to commemorate the Sixtieth Anniversary of the opening of the first nine "pioneer cottages" at Hammondville.
R. B. S. Hammond
1870 - 1946
Archdeacon R. B. S. HAMMOND, O.B.E., and the non-profit company he founded, Hammond`s Pioneer Homes, built 110 timber houses for homeless families in the period from 1932 to 1939, during the Great Economic Depression, thus forming the suburb of Hammondville.
Later, Hammond`s Pioneer Homes built the Hammondville Homes for senior citizens.