With the ebb and flow of time, a little of Victoria's jettisoned past has washed up upon my desk: a discarded photo, a worn postcard, or a fading newspaper. Their long forgotten characters now retell their stories in a digital sampling, post by post. Their voices are my blog's vignettes. Researched and written by Heather Arnold.
Thursday, December 29, 2022
Victorian Railways and Marion Steam Shovels
Thursday, December 1, 2022
The property known as Mayune, then Mayfield, Cranbourne and the Ruffy Brothers
This post is the history of the squatting run, Mayune, at Cranbourne starting with the arrival of the Ruffy Brothers in the 1830s. This is a companion piece to a post on another Cranbourne property, Ravenhurst, part of the Garem Gam run, which you can read here.
The Ruffy Brothers were some of the earliest European settlers in the Cranbourne area. They squatted on the Tomaque run, raising sheep, after having arrived from Tasmania in 1836 (1). Tomaque was situated between Dandenong and Cranbourne. The brothers held Tomaque until 1850. In 1840 they also took up the Mayune Run of 32,000 acres. Mayune was situated around what is now the town of Cranbourne. The Brothers held Mayune collectively, until Frederick took over the lease from 1845 to 1850; it was then taken over by John Crewe, more of whom later (2). The Ruffy brothers also owned the Cranbourne Inn, which some suggest was the original source of the name of the town of Cranbourne (3). Cranbourne is a town in Berkshire, England.
William Joseph Ruffy, who died on the 27th ult. in his 61st year, at his son's farm on the Tamar, shall not descend into the grave, without something beyond a naked record of that event. Many of us remember his extensive and eminent press, in Budge row, London, whence issued standard and periodical works of chaste execution and proverbial correctness. In the beginning of the present century, he originated the well known Farmer's Journal; and which, often alone and unsupported, he continued to edit and manage, for nearly 30 years, with a devoted and successful ambition of extending the science of agriculture, with due advocacy of the claims and interests of British farmers, and with a degree of general ability, never distracted from his singleness of purpose by party, that gained to him their universal esteem, and to his journal great circulation. Having disposed of the copyright of it, and of his press; and preceded a few months by the greater part of his family, he bade adieu forever to Britain, to spend here with them, the remainder of a life always dedicated to the strictest performance of every social, moral and religious duty. And, as he was well read - had mixed much with good society - had an ample fund of anecdote and observation, it need scarcely be added that, with a flow of language, at once copious and polished, he was a delightful companion; while his friendship was endeared to those who enjoyed the happiness of it, by his great and modest worth. He has left a widow with nine sons
Eliza Crewe died in 1868 at the age of 44. She was the daughter of Thomas Baynton and Eliza Arabella Smith. Thomas Baynton was the brother of Zillah Baynton who was married to Benjamin Rossiter, who took over the Ravenhurst property from Crewe after his death. You can read more about the Baynton family in my post on the Rossiters, here.
Alexander Cameron (1814 - 1881) took over the Mayune lease from Eliza Crewe in 1851 as we said. At later land sales he purchased 592 acres, the Pre-emptive Right, on the corner of what is now Cameron Street and the South Gippsland Highway and renamed renamed the property Mayfield. Dr Gunson considers that Alexander Cameron was in many ways, the 'father' of modern Cranbourne. Like most Scots settlers he valued the services of an industrious tenantry and gathered a community about him which formed the nucleus of the future town (15). One of his ‘industrious tenants’ a shepherd named James Mackay is said to be responsible for the name of Clyde. Dr Gunson says that the watercourse that was the boundary between the Mayune run and the Garem Gam run was named Clyde creek as MacKay had ‘cut the name on a tree whilst watering sheep’ and the name was used for the creek and then the town (16).
Alexander Cameron was a trustee of the Presbyterian Church in Cranbourne which opened in May 1860, he was Cranbourne Cemetery Trustee, a member of the Cranbourne Road Board from 1863 to 1867. Alexander had been one of the original petitioners to have the Road Board established which happened on June 19, 1860. He married Margaret Donaldson (1822-1895), in 1848 and they had seven children (17).
Cameron was also one of the first people to bring to a wider public the discovery of the Cranbourne meteorites. The first meteorite was discovered by William MacKay, who assumed that it was part of an iron deposit. He had made it into a horse shoe and it was displayed at the Melbourne Exhibition of 1854. In 1860 Cameron took the horse shoe to Melbourne to a conference to convince the powers that be that Cranbourne should have a railway line due to the commercial possibilities of this iron deposit. At the conference the Town Clerk of Melbourne, E.G Fitzgibbon, thought that this was not iron but a meteorite and he then presented his findings to the Royal Society and this put the Cranbourne Meteorites on the world stage with interest from the British Museum and the Emperor of Austria! As a matter of interest, Cranbourne would have to wait until 1888 - another 28 years for a railway (18).
After Alexander Cameron (who incidentally gave his name to Cameron Street) the land went to his son Alexander junior (c.1850 - 1920). Alexander was also a Councillor of the Cranbourne Shire from 1881 to 1898 and Shire President 1883-84, 1891, 1892 and 1893. Dr Gunson says that Cameron along with George Poole and Christopher Moody were strong personalities who dominated the Council. In 1884, it was reported that six out the eight Councillors refused to sit under the Presidence of the present Chairman due to his obstructiveness and prevention of business (19).
Alexander Cameron, junior, moved to Mayfield in 1883 - he was described as an ‘extraordinary speculator’ and he rented at one time nearly every rentable property in the Cranbourne, Tooradin and Koo Wee Rup area, all up he had 5,000 acres in 1896 plus land belonging to his brother. On the Mayfield property he had nine studs of horses, cattle and sheep and also grew barley, oats and flax. Not surprisingly Cameron was also instrumental in establishing the Cranbourne Sale Yards – although arguments went on from 1883 to 1889 as to where they should be located - the rear of the Shire Offices was the eventual location and they held their first sale January 1890. In spite of what seem liked a profitable business, in 1889 Cameron was forced to mortgage the estate and went to the Collie district in WA, where he died in 1920. (20).
After Cameron left, the property was leased to various people - Charles Cochrane, James Downey, Edward Henty, John Monohan to name a few until around 1932 when the estate was sold to a Henry Creswick, who I believe was responsible for sub-dividing the land into smaller parcels as by this time it was getting hard to trace the land owners in the Cranbourne Shire Rate Books. There is some connection between the name Creswick and the Melbourne Hunt Club, which was just to the north of the Cranbourne Library site - haven't quite worked this connection out yet - but the Hunt Club moved to Cranbourne in 1929. Some of the Mayfield property (the Pre-emptive Right section) had already been sold to George Hope, in 1912, who established his model dairy having moved from Kooyong Road in Caulfield. You can read about this here.
We now have a bit of a gap in ownership of the land, so lets fast forward to 1980 when the Sperry New Holland era started. New Holland had commenced operations in Victoria at Dandenong in 1955. They manufactured agricultural equipment including hay balers and hay bale elevators. In 1980, they purchased a 114 acre (46 hectare) site - around ten times the size of their Dandenong operations - in Cranbourne-Berwick Road, Cranbourne. The building of 269,000 sq ft facility with rail loading dock, fully computerised systems (including manufacturing) entirely electronic office using the very latest equipment was opened in 1982 (21). Initially there were over 400 people employed but a recession hit within 18 months and there were redundancies and layoffs. In 1985, Sperry New Holland was taken over by the Ford Motor Company, but continued producing machinery and also made parts for car manufacturers. The information in this paragraph comes from New Holland in Australia 1945 - 1987 written by Ray Smith, who held various roles in the New Holland Company from 1955 until he retired as the Marketing Director in 1991. You can read it here.
The factory had its own spur line from the main South Gippsland Railway line. The spur line went into what is now the The Shed, a skate board facility, so I presume it was used a for despatch. If you are interested in railway infrastructure then there are some photographs of the old line on the Vicsig.net website, here.
The Ford New Holland factory closed down around 1992 as operations were shifted to New South Wales and sadly, workers were made redundant. The entire site was sold to the Cranbourne Shire for five million dollars. The Casey Cardinia Library Corporation moved into the Administration building in 1996 and the Cranbourne Library (where I used to work) also opened there in 1996. The main factory building is now the Terry Vickerman Indoor Sports Centre.
Terry Vickerman was the Cranbourne Shire Chief Executive for 22 years until he retired in December 1994, after the Council amalgamations. He was responsible for the purchase of the building, which was not without its critics. There was a report in the Cranbourne Sun of March 16, 1992 about the acquisition (see below). The Shire of Cranbourne Ratepayers and Residents Association threatened to stand candidates against the sitting councillors who had voted for the purchase - the gist of the complaints against the purchase were that the Council had not provided enough information on the transaction and that residents outside of the Cranbourne township would have to pay for the site but would obtain no benefit from it.
It depended on who you asked if the cost of the site at five million dollars was reasonable or not. It does appear that many ratepayers were unhappy with not only the initial purchase price but with the money required to convert it to its new purpose - an estimated ten million dollars. However, according to a report in Hansard on May 3, 1994, the local member Gary Rowe (Liberal member for the Legislative Assembly seat of Cranbourne from 1992 to 2002) considered that the five million dollars was a 'bargain basement ' price.
Over all - whether the artist's impression did or did not eventuate or whether the five million dollars purchase price was a waste of tax payers money or a bargain - nearly 30 years on the site and its associated buildings are now a real asset to not only the Cranbourne community but further afield - there is the Cranbourne Library, the incredibly busy Casey Indoor Leisure Complex (Terry Vickerman Centre), The Shed Skatepark, The Factory Rehearsal Centre for the Arts, the Casey RACE (Casey Recreation and Aquatic Centre) and the Balla Balla Centre. The Ruffy Brothers and Alexander Cameron would be shaking their heads in amazement if they could come back to today and see how their Mayune and Mayfield properties had changed.
Friday, November 18, 2022
The property known as Ravenhurst, then Gladys Park and then Tulliallan, Cranbourne
The property was in Cranbourne, in fact Grices Road was the border of the Shire of Cranbourne and Shire of Berwick, although most of the newspaper articles I have found on the property say it is located in Berwick or near Berwick. The area is now called Cranbourne North. The property consisted of Lots 28 and 45 (and later also Lot 29) in the Parish of Cranbourne - south of Pound Road / Grices Road with a portion either side of Berwick-Clyde Road. The section of Pound Road which runs west from Berwick-Clyde Road has now been renamed Glasscocks Road.
The realignments of Mayune and Garem Gam were also complicated. Dr Bathe's Garem Gam appears to have been subdivided in 1845 and the eastern station was known as Ravenhurst. In the same year, the lease for the reduced Mayune was transferred to Fred Ruffy. Ravenhurst was held by John Crewe until his death in 1850 shortly after acquiring the Ruffy station. From 1849, Crewe had also leased the original Garem Gam run, in conjunction with Sarah O'Shea and a non-resident partner named Brown. In October 1850, Ravenhurst was transferred to Benjamin Rossiter and Maurice Feehan who leased the whole of Garem Gam with Mrs O'Shea from 1851, thus restoring the original pattern. The lease for Mayune was transferred to Alexander Cameron in March 1851 by John Crewe's widow, Eliza (3). I have written about Mayune, here.
In January 1892 The Australasian published an article by their writer, who used the pen-name Bruni, about a visit to the Strettle properties – Gladys Park and his orchard at Sweet Hills, his Lysterfield property -
Leaving the Gippsland train at Berwick, one of the prettiest villages in all Australia, a drive of about three miles brought me to Gladys-park, the property of Mr. S. Strettle. The site of this house is a most delightful one, the aspect being towards the east. Close by are the gently-swelling hills around Berwick, dotted with numerous steadings, the monotony of the native forest being relieved with many plantations of foreign trees. Beyond these are the darkly wooded ranges, whose rugged outlines contrasted strongly with the park-like appearance of the fertile hills around Berwick. Gladys-park was very much out of order, so I merely took a run through the paddocks before starting for Mr. Strettle's newly planted and extensive orchard further in among the hills. Some years ago Mr. Strettle, finding from analysis of the soil of Gladys-park that there was a deficiency of lime, gave the whole property, consisting of about 1,200 acres, a good top-dressing with lime. The result was a considerable improvement in the pastures, which fatten both sheep and cattle well in summer. A marked peculiarity in this property is the large supply of water that is easily obtained at a short distance from the surface. Close to the house, which is situated on the top of a fair rise, a well has been sunk, from which an inexhaustible supply of water is obtained at about 18ft. from the surface. Water is raised from this well by a windmill pump, and distributed over the steading, the garden, and the adjoining paddocks. (9).
In February 1898, Gladys Park was impacted by the extensive fires in the Cranbourne area and The Argus reported - both from the direction of Narre Warren and Berwick, Cranbourne is threatened with fires, and Mr Beaver [sic] Hall, of Glady's-park, has already lost a valuable extent of glass and fencing. (10). An interesting fact about Percy Carr, who was at Gladys Park after Beevor Hall, was that his father Charles Warburton Carr, was the source of the name of the town of Warburton. Mr Carr was a Police Magistrate and a Warden of the Gold Fields; gold had been found in the Upper Yarra area in February 1860 at Yankee Jim's Creek and in 1863, after a major lead had been discovered it was named Warburton. (11) Whilst living at Gladys Park, Percy's sister Cecil Garnett Carr was married on January 18, 1899 to John Mickle Lyall at St Paul's Church in Clyde. John Mickle (1869-1925) was the youngest child of William and Annabella Lyall, of Harewood at Tooradin. On a sadder note, Geraldine, Percy and Cecil's mother Geraldine, died at Gladys Park in June 1899. (12)
When Stratford Strettle died in December 1919, at the age of 74, The Herald described him as the oldest stock and station agent in the Commonwealth (13).
In 1904,as we mentioned before, Mrs James Gibb purchased Gladys Park from Stratford Strettle and at the time the property was reported to be of 860 acres. Mrs Gibb was born Mary Jane Paterson, who firstly married Thomas Esson in Scotland, and they had one son, the poet and playwright, Thomas Louis Buvelot Esson. When she was widowed she moved to Melbourne and married George Brown of Inveresk, Berwick. George Brown died in 1896 and Mary then married James Gibb in 1898. I have written about Mary and her family here.
Lieutenant Mitchell sold his most charming country home together with 743 acres of land to Frederick Charles Curtis in 1919. The house was described as a very nice homestead, in splendid order, of 12 rooms with large billiard room, large dining room, large reception room and four large bedrooms. Hot and cold water laid on with a splendid service and the homestead is sewered. The outbuildings consist of detached kitchen, 2 pantries, 2 maids rooms, servants quarters, mens rooms......there is a nice drive of English trees from the main road to the homestead and it is laid out with a very nice lawn and summer house and has one of the best gardens to be found in any country home of its size near Melbourne (19).
In 1946, James McKenzie Elder purchased Tulliallan. He had married Nancy Russell Barrett in 1929 and was the son of prominent business man, Sir James Alexander Elder and his wife Margaret Blyth Nicoll - you can read about Sir James in the Australian Dictionary of Biography, here. The family also had their social activities reported in the social columns of the Melbourne papers - in March 1953 there was a report of a dance at Tulliallan where guests sat on hay bales at open fires and danced in the sylvan setting at an outdoor party. Susan Elder, James’ daughter, hosted the party. Amongst the guests were some visitors from the Western District and some members of the socially prominent Chirnside family. Susan’s marriage at the Berwick Presbyterian Church, to Geoffrey Haggard, son of the late Commander Geoffrey Haggard, R.N was the subject of a report and photograph in both The Age and The Argus in November 1953. The wedding reception was held at Tulliallan. In December 1954 a dinner dance was held at Tulliallan for 150 guests in honour of Ian Elder, Susan’s brother (24).
In 1960, the Elders put the property up for sale - 600 acres in 4 lots including the homestead block of 190 acres. The homestead was described as a spacious weatherboard homestead, set in delightful surroundings, with all modern conveniences. (25) This original house was later demolished, it was still there in the early 1990s, but that's all I can say (26). As James and Nancy Elder were still at Tulliallan in 1972, according to the Electoral rolls, the property either did not sell or they changed their mind. Their daughter Susan operated a Cheviot sheep stud on the property. The Age reported in March 1972 that she had founded her stud flock in 1955 on Cheviots from Tasmania and New Zealand (27). James died in 1978 aged 76 and Nancy in 1974, aged 70.
We will leave this history of the Ravenhurst / Gladys Park /Tulliallan property with the Elders, but as you can see it has had many interesting and at times socially prominent and well connected owners. The property is now under a sea of houses. A 1860s shearer's cottage still remains as well as the avenue of elm trees or the nice drive of English trees from the main road to the homestead. (28) It would appear that the shearer's cottage was built during the occupancy of the Rossiter family. The City of Casey heritage citation notes this about the elms - A key landscape element is the driveway, which is lined with an avenue of 51 elms down each side; these are mature from the gates through to the 28th tree, and semi-mature after that indicating two stages of planting. The size of the more mature specimens suggests an original planting date of around 1900. About 10 of the trees are recent in-fill sapling plantings. (29) I believe that as James Gibb is credited with the tree planting in Berwick, that he actually planted the elms after he took over the property in 1904.
Footnotes
(1) Billis, R.V & Kenyon, A.S. Pastoral Pioneers of Port Philip (Stockland Press, 1974)(2) The sons of William Joseph Ruffy and Louisa Ann Kingham were married at St Martin in the Fields in Westminster in London on May 15 1799. Ruffy was a joint editor of the Farmers Journal and Agricultural Advertizer, an English publication, from 1808-1832. The Farmers Journal was one of the first Agricultural journals in England. They family migrated to Tasmania in the 1820s. They had nine children of which five sons lived at Western Port - Thomas (1800 - 1882) William James (1802 - 1884) Frederick (1804 - 1872) Henry (1808 - 1847) and Arthur Wiggett (1817 - 1893). William Joseph Ruffy died in Launceston in 1836 aged 61 and Louisa Ruffy died in Campbell Town in 1859 aged 79.
(3) Gunson, Niel The Good Country: Cranbourne Shire (F. W. Cheshire, 1968), p. 36.
(4) The Australasian, November 22, 1873, see here.
(5) Sale advertisement for William Palmer in The Australasian, November 12, 1881, see here.
(6) The Age, December 4, 1886, see here.
(7) The Argus, July 18, 1885, see here.
(8) The Weekly Times, July 25, 1885, see here.
(13) The Herald, December 22, 1919, see here; another obituary South Bourke & Mornington Journal, December 25, 1919, see here.
(14) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, March 6, 1919, see here; Weekly Times, March 8, 1919, see here; Robert Gibb - Electoral Rolls; his death notice The Argus, September 28, 1923, see here.
(19) The Age, February 15, 1919, see here.
(20) Shire Councillor information from The Good Country, see citation footnote 3; Table Talk March 31 1927, see here; Dandenong Journal, August 4, 1932, see here;