By MICK ROBERTS.

Henry Cotterell: The man who sold Sandon Point.

JUST what Bulli pioneer real estate agent Henry Cotterell would think of today’s property prices in the controversial Sandon Point residential estate is hard to imagine.

Cotterell, known as “Cottie” to friends, was one time editor of the Bulli Times newspaper, but more interestingly he was the agent who sold the original Sandon Point Estate on Boxing Day 1913.

A model farm, owned by George Adams, proprietor of the Bulli Colliery and later of Tattersall’s Lottery fame, was subdivided and auctioned by Cotterell on behalf of the trustees of the deceased estate.

In extreme contrast to the remaining former Bulli Colliery land to the selling almost a century later for around a million dollars, 60ft (18m) beach frontages were sold by Cotterell for around 60 pounds ($120) in 1913. Also in disparity, not an eyebrow was raised when 102 blocks east of Southview Street at Sandon Point were subdivided in 1913.

Born in Bath, England in 1861 Henry Fowler Cotterell was apprenticed to his father as a midshipman before embarking on a new life as a journalist in Sydney. He worked on the Macleay Argus at Kempsey on the NSW north coast in the 1880s before writing for a Campbelltown newspaper in the early 1890s. It was at Campbelltown he married Elizabeth Thompson in 1892 later taking the role as editor of the Singleton Argus.

Cottie arrived at Bulli in 1895 after purchasing the Bulli Times from founding publisher FW Wilson.

Read the full story at the Looking Back website.

One response to “Looking Back: The man who sold Sandon Point”

  1. Even before Tattersall and Westmacott, the original 300 acres was given as a crown grant to Cornelius O’Brien, who dispossessed the Aboriginal owners – and that ripoff continues today. Now its Wollongong Council who steals public land and gives it to Stockland at Sandon Point and Thomas Gibson Park, and there have been a litany of other names involved: BHP, David Campbell, Rod Oxley, NPWS and Planning ministers, Gabrielle Kibble as Chair of Sydney Water who sold the Sydney Water land to Stockland in 1999 etc. Everybody wanted a piece of Sandon Point, but it is still Aboriginal land.

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