THEN
Built in 1815, the Macquarie Arms Hotel, in Windsor, New South Wales, owes its existence to Governor Lachlan Macquarie. In 1811, he gave Richard Fitzgerald, an exconvict, a large allotment in Thompson Square on the condition that Fitzgerald would build an inn that was at least two storeys high. This was to save the government the cost of building such a large structure.
On 15 July 1815, the Sydney Gazette announced the erection of the inn, which was opened two weeks later by Governor Macquarie. In the late 1830s, the hotel was occupied by the 73rd Regiment redcoat soldiers who were stationed at Windsor, and it became known as the ‘Mess Hotel’. While the soldiers occupied the upper floor, there were convicts chained up in the cellar below, despite…