Showing posts with label Dandenong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dandenong. Show all posts

Friday, January 2, 2026

Dandenong Market - a very short history

The Dandenong Market was originally located on the corner of Lonsdale and McCrae Streets, and its first trading day was likely to have been October 10, 1866. This site eventually proved to be too small and it was sold in June 1924 and a new location was selected in Clow Street, where it still operates. The first livestock sales at Clow Street took place in June 1926 and the produce market moved there by October 1927. In 1958 the Stockyards moved to Cheltenham Road. (1)  The Dandenong Stock Market was the last municipal owned and operated facility in Victoria, and closed on December 22, 1998. (2). The stock market site is now Metro Village 3175, a housing estate.


Market Day, Dandenong August 26, 1913.
Township of Dandenong - market day - Princes Highway East, 1913.
Photographer: Country Roads Board VPRS 17684 Image 13_00158


Dandenong in 1973. The Produce Market is on the corner of Clow and Cleeland Streets, next to the Sports Ground; the Stock Market is on the left on Cheltenham Road. 
Image:  Melway Street  Directory of Greater Melbourne, edition 6, 1973 (Melway Publishing Co)

Farmers from the surrounding area  took their produce to the Dandenong market. Elizabeth Andrews (1849-1934) had a farm at Hallam, originally owned by her parents John and Bridget Andrews, on the Princes Highway, opposite what is today the Spring Square Shopping Centre.  Her niece Marie Carson remembers that the butter was made into round half pound pats with Aunt Lizzie's scallop shell brand embossed on them. There they'd be like little golden suns waiting to be wrapped in muslin and taken along with the brown eggs and white, to Dandenong market on Tuesdays. She drove into Dandenong on her spring cart, pulled by old Tim, her pony. (3)


The Dandenong Market, next to the sports ground. 
Market Day, Dandenong, c. 1930s. Photographer: Charles Daniel Pratt - Airspy P/L

My grandparents, Joe and Eva Rouse, had a dairy farm on Murray Road at Cora Lynn. The family milked cows and separated the cream which they sold to the Drouin factory to make butter; the rest was fed to the pigs, which when they were fat enough were sold at the Dandenong Market. When my father, Frank Rouse, was fifteen, in 1948, his family purchased a Austin A40 ute from Brenchley's Garage at Garfield. Dad taught himself to drive and although he was underage, he used to drive his parents from Cora Lynn to the Dandenong Market where they sold their eggs, chickens and calves (all carried on the back of the ute). Apparently not having a license was no obstacle to driving in those days.


Aerial view of Dandenong Stock Market, 1959
Aerial view of the stock yards at Dandneong, December 8, 1959. Photographer: Airspy P/L

The Dandenong Market was traditionally (and still is) a major shopping destination for people from the surrounding area for clothing, footwear, general goods and fruit and vegetables. My father's cousin, Betty, came in from Cora Lynn once a week to do all her shopping at the Market and visit her parents who had retired from the farm and moved  into Dandenong. Buses were put in to service on a Tuesday, which was Market Day, just for the Market, as these two articles below attest. [Market Bus for Narre Warren -Dandenong Journal, August 11,1944  from Newspapers.com; U.S. Motors Dandenong Market Bus Mountain Free Press, October 11, 1951 from Newspapers.com.]





In 1970s, when I was at Koo Wee Rup High School, a trip to the Dandenong Market to buy clothes and other goods was a ritual for many. We never shopped there, but we did shop in Dandenong.  Dandenong also had a Lindsay's store (which became Target) near Vanity Court Arcade. I remember both my sisters had a skirt from Lindsays - one had a bias cut, checked 'maxi' skirt and the other a short, checked, almost sun-ray pleated skirt. We were a family of home dress makers so it was quite unusual to buy clothes. Also, in the 1970s, at the back of Vanity Court, my uncle Ian Stagg had a pharmacy and my aunty Marion had a gift shop, so we would call in there. 


This postcard, from the 1970s, shows the Sale Yards top left and Dandenong Market in Clow Street, bottom left. The other photographs are Lonsdale Street and the Dandenong Town Hall.
Photographer: L. Hort. Publisher: Biscay Greetings


This postcard is from the 1980s. Images 1 and 3 are Lonsdale Street; image 2 is Langhorne Street and image 4 is the Rotary Fountain in Dandenong Park. Vanity Court, which I mentioned, above, is in the top left photo;  it is to the left of Coles with the red awning on the first storey.
 Publisher: Biscay Greetings


There are photographs of the Dandenong Stock Market and surrounds from 1992, here

Footnotes
(1) Ferguson, Jenny A Concise History of the Dandenong Markets (Dandenong & District Historical Society, 1998)
(2) Flanagan, Martin An urban stockyard passes into memory (The Age, December 23, 1998, p. 4)
(3) Stephan, Deborah A small farm at Hallam: The Andrews 1854-1934 (City of Casey Historical pamphlet 1, August 1992). Based on information provided by Mrs Marie Carson. 


Flanagan, Martin An urban stockyard passes into memory (The Age, December 23, 1998, p. 4) from Newspapers.com


This is an expanded version of a post, which I wrote and researched, which appears on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past. It was also published in the Dandenong Star Journal on August 4, 2020, page 13. https://issuu.com/starnewsgroup/docs/2020-08-04_djs_657 I was very excited to have my own by-line!


You can see the images in the article, here

Dandenong Stock Market - photographs from 1992

These photographs are of the Dandenong Stock Market and surrounding streets, at its Cheltenham Road location, and were taken by the City of Berwick on October 27, 1992. They are labelled as 'University site suggested by Dandenong', so I assume it was once considered a possible site for the Monash University campus that was built in Berwick. They were part of the Casey Cardinia Libraries collection.


The Stock Market was in Charman Road.
Image:  Melway Street  Directory of Greater Melbourne, edition 6, 1973 (Melway Publishing Co)

The Dandenong Market was originally located on the corner of Lonsdale and McCrae Streets, and its first trading day was likely to have been October 10, 1866. This site eventually proved to be too small and it was sold in June 1924 and a new location was selected in Clow Street, where it still operates. The first livestock sales at Clow Street took place in June 1926 and the produce market moved there by October 1927. In 1958 the Stockyards moved to Cheltenham Road.  The Dandenong Stock Market was the last municipal owned and operated facility in Victoria, and closed on December 22, 1998. I have written more about the market, here.


Stock Pens at the Market






Blue Circle Cement works is in the background.





 With stock markets, come stock crates.


Victorian Producers Co-Op and Stevens, Egan & Johnston & Co. Offices

          

Wash down bay for trucks.



Poultry Sheds





City of Dandenong Depot, which adjoined the Market


I presume this is Greaves Street (above and below)



Cheltenham Road. 

For more information on the Market and other photographs, click here

Some of these photograph were posted on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past. They were part of the Casey Cardinia Libraries collection.

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

The Corner House Drapery and the Ordish Timber Yard, Dandenong East

This postcard of Dandenong 'East' shows The Corner House, on the corner of Walker and Langhorne Streets in Dandenong and the premises of E. Ordish, Timber Merchant, in Langhorne Street.  The photograph was taken around 1909. I am not sure of the boundaries of Dandenong East however State School No. 1403 Dandenong was known as Dandenong East from around the 1930s to the 1950s. The school is located on the corner of Foster and New Street. (1)


Postcard of Dandenong 'East' corner of Walker and Langhorne Streets.

The Corner House was a drapery, previously known as The Red House. The Red House, owned by George Dobson, was sold around March 1905 to Joseph Watts, who then held a Startling Clearing Sale. (2)


Startling Clearing Sale at The Red House.
South Bourke & Mornington Journal, March 29, 1905 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article66142986

The following advertisements tell the story of  The Corner House. In May 1905, The Red House was renamed The Corner House and it advertised on a regular basis in the South Bourke & Mornington Journal.  Around March 1910, Joseph Watts sold his stock to Wilson brothers, the Big Cash Drapers, of Lonsdale Street, Dandenong. 



The Red House becomes The Corner House.
South Bourke & Mornington Journal May 17, 1905 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/66143213 


Advertisement for The Corner House
South Bourke & Mornington Journal, October 7, 1908 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article66148406 


Wilson Brothers acquire the stock of The Corner House.
South Bourke & Mornington Journal,  March 2, 1910 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/66201406 



Wilson Brothers advertisement
South Bourke & Mornington Journal, March 24 1909  http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article66199784 


Who was Joseph Watts?  Joseph Eacott Watts was born in Bristol in England to Joseph and Martha (nee Eacott) Watts.  On July 30, 1873 he married Elizabeth Gittus and they had three children - Elizabeth (1874, died aged 1 month), William Henry (1875, died in Perth in 1937) and Frank Cecil (1877, served in World War One, returned to Australia in 1919 and I have no further information.) Elizabeth's father, Thomas Gittus, was a Councillor at the City of South Melbourne and Mayor in 1893/94. Sadly Elizabeth died, aged only 28, on June 7, 1882 at their home, Clifton Villa, Palmerston Crescent, Albert Park. She was buried in the St Kilda Cemetery, and her parents, Susan and Thomas, were later buried with her. (3).

Less than six months later, the 32 year old James married 22 year old  Elizabeth Charlotte Richardson on November 6, 1882 at the Presbyterian manse in East Melbourne.  She was born in Birmingham, in England, the daughter of William and Mary Anne (nee Newport) Richardson. James and his new wife, Elizabeth had six children - Ida Beatrice (1883, known as Queenie, married Robert Ernest Crooke in 1909 and died 1949), Netta May (1885-1974), Rupert Carlisle (1889-1967), Eric Clarence (1892-1966), Vera Eacott (1896-1989) and Jean Elizabeth (1902, married Frederick Middleton in 1926, died in Adelaide in 1983). (4)

Joseph and Elizabeth were listed in the Electoral Rolls from 1905 until 1934 at 20 Elphin Grove, Hawthorn, except for the 1909 roll where their address was Dandenong, which fits in with the time frame of Watts owning The Corner House drapery. Joseph died January 30, 1937 aged 86 and Elizabeth on November 10, 1952 aged 92 years old. Joseph and Elizabeth are buried at the Booroondara Cemetery, with their daughters Netta and Vera. (5)

 The other business in the photograph was the timber yard of E. Ordish. The first reference I can find of Ordish being in Langhorne Street was from the start of October 1908 when Joseph Watts began advertising The Corner House as being next to Ordish's Timber Yard 
 

The Corner House - next to Ordish's Timber Yard.
South Bourke & Mornington Journal, November 11, 1908 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article66148572 

The first advertisement for the timber yard in the South Bourke and Mornington Journal was October 21, 1908, where Mr Ordish wishes to notify the public of Dandenong and district that he has opened large and commodious yards. A year later the firm became known as E.& J. Ordish. The brothers, Edgar and John, continued at the yard until at least 1912, but in 1913 J.W. Ordish was advertising as the oldest established Builder and Timber Merchant in and Dandenong. Plans arranged for Schools, Halls, Shops, Villas and all styles Farm Buildings. (6).


The opening of the large and commodious yards
South Bourke & Mornington Journal, October 21 1908 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/66148472



J. Ordish joins the business.
South Bourke & Mornington Journal, October 6, 1909 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article66200820


By 1915 A.C. W. Bailey had taken over the yard.
South Bourke & Mornington Journal, October 21, 1915 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article66188662


Edgar and John Ordish were brothers, the sons of Thomas and Mary Jane (nee Ward) Ordish. They were both born Dandenong - John Whiting Ordish in 1866 and Edgar in 1870. Edgar was a builder/contractor and John's occupation in the Electoral roll was listed as a labourer and later a timber merchant. (7).

John married Easter Louisa Blackmore in 1889. They had three children - Hazel (1890, married Albert Crump in 1913, and died 1973), Myrtle (1892, married Geoffrey Collins in 1940 and died 1949 ) and Frank (1895-1897). On January 15, 1915 John enlisted in the A.I.F. He said he was 44 years old, in reality he was nearly 50. John served in the Middle East but was sent home after a time in hospital due to an internal derangement of knee and discharged in July 1916. John died on August 26, 1922 at his home in Beena Avenue, Murrumbeena, aged 55. Easter died On June 12, 1946, aged 87. (8)



Easter Ordish's obituary.
Dandenong Journal, June 12, 1946 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article214794040

Edgar married Jemima Lillian Anderson in 1901. They had the one son, John 'Jack' in 1904. Edgar died on May 10, 1936 at his home 42 Scott Street, Dandenong. Jemima died on July 2,  1942, aged 71. Jack married Myra Vizard in the Dandenong Methodist Church on November 23, 1935. (9)


Edgar Ordish's obituary
Dandenong Journal, May 14, 1936 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article214739599 


Given the opening of Edgar Ordish's timber yard in Langhorne Street was in October 1908  and the sale of Joseph Watt's The Corner House business was  in March 1910, I believe we can safely date the photograph on this postcard to 1909 or a few months either side. 

There is one more element of the postcard - the sender and the addressee. The sender was possibly a Jane, I can't really decipher it. It was sent to Miss Lizzie Hawking, Kogan, Queensland. Kogan is a town west of Dalby and south of Chinchilla. I currently have no other information about Lizzie. 


The back of the postcard


Footnotes
(1) References to Dandenong East School - Dandenong Journal, December 25, 1930, see here; Dandenong Journal, May 21 1941, see here; Dandenong Journal, January 9, 1952, see here.
(2) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, September 14, 1904, see here.
(3) Watts/Richardson wedding certificate; Watts/Gittus marriage The Argus, August 12, 1873, see here; Indexes to Victorian and West Australian Births, Deaths and Marriages; First Australian Imperial Force Personnel Dossiers, 1914-1920 -  National Archives of Australia; Daley, Charles The History of South Melbourne (Robertson & Mullens, 1940); Elizabeth's death notice The Age June 8, 1882, see here and funeral notice The Argus, June 8, 1882, see here; St Kilda Cemetery records on Ancestry.com.
(4) Watts/Richardson wedding certificate; Indexes to Victorian and South Australian Births, Deaths and Marriages.
(5) Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com; Joseph death notice The Argus, February 1, 1937, see here; Elizabth death notice The Argus, November 11, 1952, see here; Booroondara Cemetery   https://boroondaracemetery.com.au/
(6) Advertisements in South Bourke & Mornington Journal on Trove; J.W. Ordish advertisement South Bourke & Mornington Journal, April 3 1913, see here.
(7) Indexes to Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages; Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com.
(8)  Indexes to Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages; First Australian Imperial Force Personnel Dossiers, 1914-1920 -  National Archives of Australia; John death notice The Argus, August 29, 1922,  see here ; Easter's obituary Dandenong Journal, June 12, 1946, see here
(9) Indexes to Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages; Edgar death notice  The Argus, May 11 1936, see here; Jemima obituary Dandenong Journal, July 8 1942, see here. Ordish/Vizard wedding Dandenong Journal, December 5, 1935, see here.

Saturday, February 24, 2024

Dandenong High School

When Dandenong High School opened in 1919, it was the only secondary school between that town and Warragul, where the High School had opened in 1912. Because of this the early students at Dandenong came from a wide geographical area including Berwick, Pakenham, Garfield, Bunyip, Hallam, Lyndhurst, Cranbourne, Koo Wee Rup, Carnegie and Murrumbeena.

A clutch of new High Schools were opened from the 1950s to the 1970s - Springvale High in 1954, which by 1962 had over 1,000 students;  Dandenong Girls High School in 1957; Doveton High in 1960, where over half of the students came from the surrounding area of Hallam, Narre Warren, Berwick, Beaconsfield, Clyde and Cranbourne; Pakenham High in 1967, Hallam High opened in 1971, Cranbourne High in 1976 and Berwick High on February 1 1977, with 110 students.  Koo Wee Rup High had started in 1957, even though it was Higher Elementary School from 1953.

The Dandenong High School (DHS) was opened on March 10th, 1919. This was later than the usual School opening date due to the outbreak of pneumonic influenza that was prevalent at the end of the First World War. DHS is one of the earliest High Schools in the State. In 1919 the other State High Schools were Melbourne, University, Geelong, Castlemaine, Colac, Mansfield, Warragul, Leongatha, Kyneton, Maryborough, Stawell, Horsham, Bairnsdale, Echuca, Mildura, Ararat, St Arnaud, Essendon, Williamstown, Coburg, Benalla, Hamilton and Kerang.


Dandenong High School, maybe 1940s
Public Records Office of Victoria VPRS 10516/P0001, Dandenong High School

When the School opened it was in temporary premises with the junior students housed at the Old Fire Station and the senior students at the Temperance Hall and Church of Christ. There were 104 students. The foundation stone of the permanent building was laid on November 21st, 1919 and the School was officially opened in late 1920. In 1920 the DHS enrolment was 150.  

The First Head Master of DHS was Mr Percival C W Langford. Mr Langford served in the 4th Light Horse Regiment and saw action in France and the Sinai-Palestine campaign. He was invalided out of the Army in September 1916 suffering from Enteric fever (typhoid).He then undertook recruitment work for the Army. Mr Langford served at the School until 1934 when he transferred to Mildura, then to Frankston in 1937 where he worked until his retirement in 1948.


The colours of the school are those of Mr Langford’s Regiment, the 4th Light Horse, and are red and two shades of blue. The School Crest (shown above) was designed by the Art Mistress, Miss D.McKinnon. The motto of the School is Faber, Quisque, Fortunae “Every man is the architect of his own destiny”. In 1920 there were six Houses – Bluegum, Clematis, Orchid, Wattle, Boronia and Waratah though this was soon reduced to four with the loss of Boronia and Waratah. The names and colours of the houses were chosen by Miss Dora Taylor, the senior Mistress.


Dandenong High School, maybe 1940s
Public Records Office of Victoria VPRS 10516/P0001, Dandenong High School

According to existing school Records the following students are the original 104 students of Dandenong High School. The 55 boys are listed first, followed by the 49 girls.

George ALEXANDER, John ARNOLD, Leopold BAILEY, Charles BLAIN, Theodor BOWMAN, John BRAKEWELL, Colin BREWIS, Charles BUCKLEY, Hugh BUNTINE, Wilfred CARLISLE, Norman CASBOLT, Henry COOPER, Clive FIGGINS, Roy FINK, James GARDNER, Claude GILCHRIST, Leonard GODFREY, John GROGAN, Darrell HARVEY, Robert HAYES, Robert JONES, Arnold KEYS, Charles MCCORD, David MCCORD, Alexander MCINNES, William MCKINNON, Charles MCPHERSON, Austin MEHRENS, Eric MEEKING, Terres MIDDLETON, John ORDISH, Arthur RALSTON, Fred RANDALL, Hector RANDALL, Donald ROBERSON, John ROBERTSON, William ROWLANDS, William RYAN, Norman SCOTT, Frederick SEARLE, Allan SHANNON, John SHARKIE, Arthur SPETTS, John STAUGHTON, Edward STRACHAN, Edward STUTTERD, Marcus SWANN, Earl TATHAM, John TAYLOR, Frank THARLE, Harvey THARLE, Percy THRELFALL, Norman TRASK, Edgar VIAL, Edward WALKER, George WEETMAN, Mervyn WILLIAMS.

Jean ABBOTT, Gertrude ALLCHIN, Isobel ALLEN, Jessie BOWMAN, Eva BUCKLEY, Evelyn BULLIVANT, Jean BUNTINE, Gladys BURNS, Margaret CAMPBELL, Maude CARLISLE, Ellen CORRIGAN, Maura CROWE, Mernda CURRIE, Lorraine DAY, Marie FACEY, Gladys GILBERTSON, Helene GILL, Nellie GORMAN, Elsie GRANT, Ruby HARRIS, Norah HILL, Jane MCCORD, Jean MCNABB, Jessie MITCHELL, Kath MORPHEY, Elsie MURRAY, Ellwyn NIELSEN, Mabel ORGILL, Lola PEARSON, Sadie PEARSON, Mary QUIGLEY, Chrissie RAVEN, Ethel RAYNER, Maud REEVE, Mabel RICHARDS, Doreen SHARKIE, Olive SHARP, Lillian SIMS, Madge SLATER, Edith SNELL, Norah STRANGE, Tasma STATTERD, Ena THARLE, Louisa THARLE, Mary THOMAS, Dorothy TRASK, Marion WALKER, Dorothy WANGMAN, Gladys WANGMAN, Eva WINN, Frances WOOLARD.


Dandenong High School students, 1930
Weekly Times July 12, 1930  http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article223324051

In 2007 Dandenong High School merged with  Doveton Secondary College and Cleeland Secondary College. 


I have written about other local High Schools here - 
Local High Schools on or connected to the Koo Wee Rup Swamp  https://kooweerupswamphistory.blogspot.com/2019/04/local-high-schools.html 
and local Technical Schools here - Technical Schools in the Shires of Berwick and Cranbourne  https://victoriaspast.blogspot.com/2024/02/technical-schools-in-shires-of-berwick.html

Sources
  • Mitchell, K. B A history of the Dandenong High School, 1919-1968.  Published by the School in 1968.
  • Blake, L. J (editor) Vision and Realisation: a centenary history of State Education in Victoria,  (Education Department of Victoria, 1973), vol. 3.

A version of this post, which I wrote and researched has appeared on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to or Past.