Mrs Macquarie's Chair (Mrs Macquarie ' s Fair) is located at the northeast end of Sydney Royal Botanical Garden (Royal Botanic Gardens) in downtown New South Wales.
Mrs Macquarie's Chair is famous for its excellent location and good vision, which is only a narrow bay separated from the Sydney Opera House (Sydney Opera House) and is the best place to enjoy the Sydney Opera House and the Harbour Bridge (Sydney Harbour Bridge).
Mrs Macquarie's Chair itself is a huge stone seat, the chair is large, sitting down a row of people are no problem, is a good place to take a group photo, here green grass, the grass towering tall and stout, under the shade neatly arranged for the rest of the dark red wooden bench.
Mrs Macquarie's Chair was originally a large bare sandstone on a peninsula in Port Sydney, and the peninsula itself was named Lady Macaulay Headland (Mrs Macquarie's Point). During 1810, the prisoner carved the sandstone into the shape of a chair by hand to Elizabeth, the wife of then Governor-General of New South Wales, Lacron McCauley (Lachlan Macquarie). Governor Macaulay has done a great job and achieved great success. Under his leadership, Australia has developed well, and Sydney has made great progress. Since Governor Macaulay had to return to England every five years for a debriefing, the journey was quite long, and there was no modern means of transport, such as a plane, which would take more than two years to make a round trip, leaving Mrs. Macaulay alone in Australia, who was said to have been sitting on the beach while her husband was away, drawing, reading and looking forward to Mr. Mccauley's early return.