Rouse Hill

The uprising was crushed by the military authorities at Rouse Hill the following day with at least fifteen rebels killed during the battle.

The exact site of the Battle is uncertain but a monument with a plaque commemorating the event can be seen within Castlebrook Lawn Cemetery on Windsor Road in Kellyville Ridge.

There were ongoing official efforts to dispense with the name Vinegar Hill, due to the association with the 1804 uprising.

A change of horses was made at the Rouse Hill Hotel, at that time kept by the publican John Booth (known as 'Crockery Bill').

The house, its immediate surviving estate and outbuildings including stables designed by John Horbury Hunt, is now a house museum cared for by Sydney Living Museums,[16] and is listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register,[17] and the former Register of the National Estate.

[18] Much of the family memorabilia has been preserved, including dolls, clothes and writings of the two girls, Nina (1875-1968) and Kathleen Rouse (1878-1932).

These form a unique and fascinating record of late-Victorian Australian childhood,[19] and inspired Ursula Dubosarsky's prize-winning novel "Abyssinia".

This complex features a major discount supermarket chain selling packaged groceries and perishables, as well as specialty shops and restaurants.

In September 2007, the North-West T-way opened, providing a bus rapid transit service to Parramatta railway station.

A 1804 watercolour depicting the 'Second Battle of Vinegar Hill'.
Mungerie House, Rouse Hill, a heritage-listed farmstead dating back to 1890
Rouse family in front of Rouse Hill House , in 1859.
Rouse Hill Anglican Church