The railway station at Linden was built in 1874 and was named after Linden Lodge, the home built in 1865 by local businessman William Jolley Henderson.[3] Linden was originally known as Seventeen Mile Hollow because of its location 17 miles (27.35 km) from the Nepean River. It was originally the location of a tollhouse erected in 1849 and demolished in the 1860s during the construction of the railway.
The village is near the grave of John Donohoe, a road-gang convict who died on 25 June 1837.[4] It is also near Caley's Repulse, a mound of rocks in the shape of a pyramid that was believed to have been constructed by Aborigines. However, some sources maintain that this is a fallacy and that the pile of rocks actually date back to 1912, when a group from the Royal Australian Historical Society made a pile of rocks in the wrong place.[5] Other nearby attractions include King's Cave and Linden Observatory.
Linden Creek, which carves a deep valley on the north side of Linden, is a major tributary of the Grose River.
Heritage listings
Linden has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:
^John Low (September 2012). "The Mystery of Linden's Lonely Gravestone: who was John Donohoe?". Blue Mountains History Journal(PDF). pp. 26–33. Archived from the original(PDF) on 4 March 2016.
^How to See the Blue Mountains, Jim Smith (Second Back Row Press) 1986, p.70