(Redirected from Llandilo)
'Llandilo' is a
suburb of
Sydney, in the state of
New South Wales,
Australia.
It is a small semi-rural outcrop between two creeks. The local Catholic High School in Llandilo is Xavier College, which was received with controversy due to the fact that it was the first incursion on native habitat reserved in the ADI Site.
History
Prior to European settlement, what is now Llandilo was home to the Mulgoa people who spoke the
Darug language. They lived a
hunter-gatherer lifestyle governed by traditional laws, which had their origins in the
Dreamtime. Their homes were bark huts called 'gunyahs'. They hunted
kangaroos and
emus for meat, and gathered
yams, berries and other native plants. Shortly after the arrival of the
First Fleet in Australia in 1788, an outbreak of
smallpox decimated the local indigenous communities and made it easier for settlers to disposses them of their land.
[1]
The first land grant in the area was made to Samuel Terry in 1818. He named the area Terry Brook. By the 1860s it was known as Llandilo after a
Welsh town. While the landholdings have reduced in size down to around one or two acres, the area is still primarily rural as it has been for the past 200 years or so.
[2]
References
1. Dharug Aboriginal History
2. Penrith Local Suburb profiles - Llandilo
External links
★
Penrith Local Suburb Profiles