Thursday, 28 November 2019

Venetians blinds were all the go in 1953

(Ruskin's 1953 All About Coburg)

I rather liked the old wooden Venetian blinds in the parsonage at Coburg when we arrived in January 1962. My mother didn't - dust traps and oh so difficult to keep clean. The same could be said of the new 'modern' blinds in a range of pastel colours to suit any decor that are advertised here.

My across the road neighbours in Bendigo liked their venetians, though. They were forever pulling them slightly apart to see what was happening in the street!




Monday, 25 November 2019

Charles Marshall's house, 80 Bell Street, Coburg


Charles G. Marshall's home, 80 Bell Street, Coburg, pre1915. Next to the Town Hall. Photograph by Dr Thomas Beckett. Image courtesy Melbourne Museum, Image MM 1730.


This house, called 'Montrose' by the Marshall family, has gone now. Next door, though, is the only house left in this strip of Bell Street - 82 Bell Street, known as The Bluestone Cottage Museum and home of Coburg Historical Society. It's well worth a visit, and open Fridays from 12 til 2pm and the first Sunday of the Month. It closes over the summer (December and January), so you've still got a few weeks of 2019 to visit.

Several years ago I researched (with the help of many others) and wrote a World War One history of Coburg entitled The Old Boys of Coburg State School Go to War.




One of the old boys featured was Charles Marshall's son 39670 Gunner David Ronald Marshall, 2nd Field Artillery Brigade.  

Charles Marshall, like his son, attended Coburg State School. He was a Trustee of Coburg Cemetery and of the Coburg Presbyterian Church. He worked for 50 years as an accountant and was a notable local athlete and sportsman in his younger days. 

If you'd like to find out more about any aspect of Coburg's history, why not contact the local historical society. You can check out the contact details here

If you'd like your own copy of The Old Boys of Coburg State School go to War, they are still available at the bargain price of $20. Details of how to purchase a copy can be found here.

And the Society's Facebook page is always worth a look. You can see that here





Sunday, 17 November 2019

Sam Gandolfo's service station


At the moment everyone's very interested in the Gandolfo Gardens situation now that the Upfield Line's upgrade is getting closer to reality. You can read about that here

And I've already written about the Gandolfo Gardens and Sam Gandolfo in a previous post, which you can read here


From the Ruskin's 1953 All About Coburg

Today, though, I thought I'd feature Gandolfo's Service Station, corner Sussex and Gaffney Streets, Pascoe Vale. I'll bet there wasn't a roundabout there in those days. And I'll bet it wasn't the tricky intersection it is today.

Those of you who live in the area know that Shedden Street runs parallel to Gaffney Street, off Sussex Street. Street Names of Coburg states that it was named after A.P. Shedden, a Brunswick real estate agent who sold much of the land in Pascoe Vale.

This is quite a 'new' area of Moreland, with most building occurring after the end of World War Two. There's a terrific photograph of an unmade Shedden Street in 1948 in the Moreland Leader, 28 October 2019 issue, page 8. It's of a very wet and muddy street. Construction had started but had definitely not finished. I wouldn't want to try and drive my car down the street in that state!



Friday, 15 November 2019

Prowse Street, Brunswick, 1940s


Weatherboard cottages and factory, c1940-60. Photographer Lyle Fowler. Part of the Harold Paynting Collection, State Library of Victoria. Image H94.150/123.


Today, Prowse Street is a long street running parallel to Sydney Road (it's to the west of Sydney Road). It starts at Albion Street and after a few dog legs ends up in Cameron Street which runs parallel to the Upfield Bike Path and ends up at Woolacott Street in Coburg.

The street is named after William Prowse who lived in Sydney Road, Brunswick as early as 1863. He is listed as a slaughterman working from his Albion Street abattoirs by 1865. Prowse Street first appeared in the Sands and MacDougall Street Directories in 1890. 

When William Prowse died in March 1911 aged 86, he was living at 60 Cassells Road, Brunswick. It was said that he had lived in Brunswick for 60 years and been in Albion Street West for nearly 50 years. (Coburg Leader, 24 March 1911)

Originally from Newton Abbot in Devonshire, William Prowse was one of nine children, eight of whom came to Australia to live. 

Prowse and his wife had only one son - Thomas William - who reading between the lines of his will was unable to live independently. (He left £2,000 to be invested and the income was to go to the maintenance of his son Thomas William Prowse who was to live with Thomas Edward Cowell (a plumber) and Louisa Ellen Cowell of Cassells Rd., Brunswick. If they died the money was to go to a trustee who would decide where son would live. Prowse hoped he’d go to a respectable person in the country (preferably a farmer)’.)
 

So when he died, Prowse left most of his considerable estate (worth £15,000) to his nieces and nephews (23 of them, 17 of whom staked a claim to his estate.) They were only eligible, he said, if they lived in Victoria and were not involved in the Roman Catholic Church. This ruled out his brother Charles's nine children. He had married an Irish Catholic and three of children were in religious orders. These provisions were contested and a judge ruled that the claimants did not need to live in Victoria, but he upheld the Catholic clause.

Probate papers include a description of Prowse Street in 1911: 


Public Record Office of Victoria, VPRS 28/P3 Unit 216, item 120/511. 


It tells us that ‘Prowse Street ... is little more than a right of way being only about twenty feet in width.’ And this is a pretty good description of the street as shown in Lyle Fowler's photograph, taken some time between 1940 and 1960.


Friday, 8 November 2019

Ferguson's Cake Shop, Coburg

From the Ruskin's All About Coburg, 1953.


Ferguson's Cake Shop was a go-to destination for my family in the 1960s. We didn't have far to go - we lived diagonally opposite. Regular buys were vanilla slices, apple slices, Boston buns and chocolate eclairs. Yummo. And all because my mother went to work at Myer in the city and no longer had time to bake. Oh yes, and my father had a very sweet tooth!

There was also a fish and chip shop just down Bell Street (same side of the road) somewhere near the railway line. Lots of kids from Coburg State School went there on Fridays to buy potato cakes and chips. This must have been in pre-decimal currency days because I'm pretty sure I was given sixpence to spend on lunch on those rare occasions when I didn't go home for lunch. (Lived right next to the school, so no excuse, really.)

Does anyone else have their own favourite memories of Fergusons? 






Monday, 4 November 2019

Corner of Blyth and Nicholson Streets, Brunswick East, 1949


Intersection at corner of Blyth Street and Nicholson Street, Brunswick, c1949. Photographer Lyle Fowler. Part of Harold Paynting Collection, State Library of Victoria. Image H92.20/3329.


What a wonderful photograph! So many things to grab the 21st century viewer's attention. The photographer, Lyle Fowler, was facing north-east in Blyth Street. To the left is the Lomond Hotel. There's a vacant block on the right foreground. Today this is the home of radio station 3RRR. 




On the right hand side of the intersection you'll see a 'clock' style traffic control signal. I don't think I've ever seen one before. The vehicle you see moving along Blyth Street is travelling west towards Lygon Street. Just behind the telephone box (red, of course) you can see the MUFSD (Melbourne United Friendly Societies Dispensary) building. It was built in 1935, so had been there over a decade by then. It's now a multi-storey building.


You can just see a bus travelling south along Nicholson Street in this close up. Today it's the 96 tram terminus.




The shop on the corner of Nicholson and Blyth Streets. It's McAlpin's Grocers shop. And if you look at the advertising you can see they sell Lipton's Tea, Peter's Icecream, Irish Moss, daily newspapers such as the Argus, the Sun and the Herald. This is the closest you'll get to the modern-day supermarket in 1949.



Next door to McAlpin's is Alf Roberts business. Unfortunately I can't make out the details of his business. Written across the window is 'Streb...' but there's a truck in front of the building, obscuring the rest of the word. 



The school children walking south down Nicholson Street have come from Brunswick East Primary School, just a little further down the road in Stewart Street. It's summer, but whether it's the start of the school year or the end is impossible to tell. If you look closely, you can see children on each corner of the intersection, reminding us that these were the days when kids walked to and from school without adult supervision. 

And if you'd like to see some great photos of Brunswick East Primary School taken a few years later, a selection from the Public Record Office of Victoria can be seen here

Finally, just so you can do a bit of now and then comparison, here's the original 1949 photo again followed by a photo taken in November 2017 (from Google). I couldn't quite get the angle right, but it's close.



1949

2017




Friday, 1 November 2019

Providing water, Fawkner, 1955






Hard to believe now, but in the middle 1950s, Fawkner residents were collecting water from a central point by bucket. Walking half a mile (0.8 kilometres) to get water to drink, to wash yourself or wash your clothes was quite a commitment. I like the ingenuity of the methods of getting buckets home - I can see a wheelbarrow, a billy cart (?) and a baby's pram here. 

Someone commented to me once that there's so little written on the history of Fawkner, so I've been trying extra hard to find material. It's not that easy, and I've relied mostly on newspaper reports, but of course the TROVE newspaper collection only goes to the middle 1950s, so after that it's a bit more difficult. 

So, if you've got any Fawkner-related material or memories of your own that you'd like to share, please let me know. (gcheryl52@gmail.com)