Saturday, February 12, 2022

Dr John James Helsham of Cranbourne

In 1866, James H. Watson, who later became the President of the Royal Australian Historical Society, spent some time on Quail Island, at the northern end of Western Port. You can read his account of his time, here. Of interest was that he described Cranbourne at the time - Two or three small cottages, and the ruins of another with a big stone bush chimney still standing, completed the town of Cranbourne. The ruined cottage is mentioned because in it lived, or rather existed, the local doctor - a clever man, but one who had the habit that many an otherwise good man has fallen a victim to. The minister kept his books and instruments, and, for special cases, he was sobered up for a couple of days, the hotel being tabooed to him till he had completed the case in hand (1).

I have done some research and discovered that the local Doctor, who was sadly addicted to drink was John James Helsham.

Dr Helsham was born c. 1833 in Dublin in Ireland (2).  He was a Licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, 1857 (3). Family trees on Ancestry list his parents as Captain George Paul Helsham and Elizabeth Anne Conway, even though they do not list any sources. The trees list five or six other siblings including George Macklin Helsham (4). We know that George Macklin Helsham had a brother called John James Helsham. They both joined the Freemasons Lodge, No. 37 Kilkenny; George on January 4, 1853 and John on December 13, 1853 (5). Also, in 1875, John and George were listed in the Encumbered Estate (6) register as the sons of Captain George Paul Helsham. 


Encumbered Estates Registry, 1875 showing that there was a John James Helsham who was the son of Captain George Paul Helsham and the brother of George Macklin Helsham.
Ancestry.com Ireland, Encumbered Estates, 1850-1885

George Macklin Helsham had also come to Australia and his 1870 Queensland Death Certificate lists his parents as George Paul and Elizabeth Ann Helsham (7).  The question is this - is Dr John James Helsham the same John James Helsham who was the son of Captain George Paul Helsham? There is every possibility that there were two men of that name born around the same time in the same location; anyone who has done a lot of genealogical research would know that this occurs. However, I am leaning towards our Dr Helsham being the son of Captain Helsham and his wife Elizabeth Conway.

After our Doctor graduated he left Ireland for Victoria and the first account I can find of his life in Victoria was in November 1859 when Dr Helsham had a letter published in the Ovens and Murray Advertiser claiming that he had been libelled in another newspaper report concerning his treatment of a patient, John Bragg. In the letter he writes that  I took him from the wagon with the assistance of some friends, and carried him in, but medical assistance was of no avail. He never spoke one word, and was utterly unconscious until the time of his death, which occurred in less than half an hour, after reaching Longwood (8).  I don't have the full story, however it does place Dr Helsham in the Longwood area in 1859.


The Barkly Navarre Goldfield, c. 1861. This is a landscape that Dr Helsham would become familiar with after his appointment to the area in 1860.
The Barkly Navarre Goldfield. Photographer: Richard Daintree.
State Library of Victoria Image H9324

In 1860, he was appointed as the Public Vaccinator  for the district of Crowlands and Navarre (9).  The towns are both on the Ararat-St Arnaud Road. In August 1861, he performed a small operation on William Broadfoot who was suffering from varicose veins; he lanced an abscess on the man's leg  and apparently cut into a vein and Mr Broadfoot started bleeding. Helsham was called again and was satisfied with the patient's condition, however Mr Broadfoot later bled to death. An inquest was held into his death and in Mrs Broadfoot's evidence she said this about the doctor at the time I do not think Dr Helsham was sober. Another witness, William Smith, said on the second visit Dr. Helsham was tipsy (10).  The Ballarat Star in their report of the incident was quite scathing about Dr Helsham - this is how they reported the case - Unfortunately for him, some of his friends introduced, on Sunday last, a medical gentleman, from old Navarre, styling himself Dr Helsham. After manipulating the ailing limb of Mr Broadfoot, he expressed a most extraordinary surprise that another medical gentleman who had seen the swelling in the leg did not lance it at once. The bouncing charlatan tucked up the sleeves of his coat and commenced lancing what he deemed an abscess (11).

The Coroner ruled that the deceased, William Broadfoot, came to his death having cut varicose veins and not taking proper precautions to stop the bleeding and he committed Dr Helsham for trial for manslaughter (12). The manslaughter trial was held at Ararat in October and the Doctor was acquitted (13).

The next two references I can find to Dr Helsham were both appointments as the Public Vaccinator in February 1862 to the district of Barkly (14) and then in May 1864 to the district of Dimboola (15). Two years later, according to James Watson's report of his trip to Quail Island, the Doctor had moved to Cranbourne. In March 1867, he held an inquest into the death of  a man found dead at Bass, a normal duty for  a country doctor to perform (16).  He was also the secretary of the local Court of Foresters Lodge (17) and in December 1867 was appointed the Public Vaccinator for the district of Berwick (18).

In July 1868 an inquest was held into the death of four year old Mary Mead, of Cranbourne, who was badly scalded when she accidently tipped a billy of hot water over herself. The Age reported that no doctor attended the child on the day of the occurrence, because the only practitioner in the neighborhood, Dr. Helsham, refused to come to see her. He, however, gave some dressing for her; and the resident surgeon at the hospital, where the child was removed the next day, deposed that medical aid would have been of no avail. A verdict of 'accidental death'  was recorded (19)

The Weekly Times reported on October 30, 1869 (20) that Dr Helsham had died of snake bite - this turned out to be untrue - he was bitten by a snake, but he did survive. The Herald of November 4, 1869 gave a report of the true version of events and it is worth repeating in full as an example of the medical treatments available at the time -
As a garbled account of this accident has found its way into print, a correspondent furnishes the following narrative: A very severe and almost fatal case of snake bite occurred at Tooradin, in Cranbourne district, on Wednesday, 27th October. The following are the facts as related by a young man who attended on the sufferer. As Dr. Helsham was out snipe shooting on the morning of the above day, his dog pointed to what he took to be a snipe, but on nearer approach found to be a black suake, about three feet long; he directly fired at the reptile, standing about a yard distance from it. The dog immediately rushed forward to seize the snake, which the doctor prevented, when the snake sprang up and bit him very severely on the second finger of the right hand. He then killed the snake, bound a ligature tightly round the finger, and walked to the homestead a distance of a mile, carrying the snake in his hand all the way.

When he reached home, a young man on a visit to the place took him in hand, and first cut the piece out with a razor, and scored the finger to the bone from the root of the nail up to the second joint, and rubbed in some gunpowder. By this time, some brandy and ammonia, which had been sent for, had arrived. This was administered: half a tumbler full of brandy and ten drops of ammonia every half-hour. Within one hour of being bitten he became drowsy and insensible, and it took the united efforts of two men, slipping, pricking, pinching, and dragging him about to keep him awake. After a time, even these failed. After about two hours he became convulsed, frothing at the mouth very much; pulse became weak, almost ceased to beat; hands, face and lips turned black, extremities cold, and life almost despaired of. Ammonia was then applied to the wound, to his nostrils, and sprinkled over his face. This lasted for about half an hour, when he seemed to rally a little and breathe easier, and was allowed to sleep twenty minutes, and was afterwards only kept awake by the most severe treatment, being quite unable to walk and altogether paralysed

Towards four o'clock p.m., seeming a little better, he was taken to an hotel two miles distant. A medical man by this time having arrived, he continued the same treatment which had already been used. Between his removal to the hotel and two o'clock next morning he relapsed twice, both times his life being almost despaired of; but large doses of brandy and ammonia being given and vigorous efforts being used to keep him awake, he again rallied, and by four o'clock a.m., or eighteen hours after the accident, he had recovered sufficiently to walk about a mile to a friend's house, and was considered to be out of danger, although very weak and sick from the effects of the bite and the treatment (21)


Ammonia was a common cure for snake bite at the time and you could purchase special syringes to inject the liquid. Warning: Do not try this at home!

There are a few references in the newspapers to Dr Helsham after his recovery from snake bite - he conducted an inquest in 1874 (22) and was appointed Health Officer for the Shire of Cranbourne in 1876 (23).  He died suddenly at the age of 45 (24), on August 11, 1878 whilst at the Grantville Hotel, which was owned by John Payne.  This was a Sunday and evidence from the witness statements tell us what happened.  Dr Helsham had come to Grantville to examine James McMahon in the billiard room of the hotel. Afterwards, at around  6.00 p.m., he was having a meal with some others. Witnesses described him as his normal self, cheerful, pleasant and that he appeared sober. He was eating beef steak when he suddenly threw his head back made a choking sound and then he was dead. The Constable, George Ardill,  from Griffiths Point (San Remo) was called, and he took witness statements from Michael Richardson, James McMahon, Catherine Conner, Abram Field and John Payne. The information was passed onto the Coroner who decided than an Inquest was not necessary as there were no suspicious circumstances (25).  His death certificate says that Dr Helsham was buried on August 16, 1878 at the Grantville Cemetery; the undertaker was John Payne and that there was no minister of religion present but three witnesses - John Monk, James Cain and William Matthews.

Dr Helsham is in an unmarked grave at Grantville - the little marker on the right is his grave - it is row 31, plot 6. The Grantville Cemetery has a website, www.grantvillecemetery.org.au which has a list of those buried there. The grave in the photo belongs to the Sloss family, Margaret was buried there in 1891. The grave to the right with the wrought iron fencing, belongs to Isabella Jane Curr or Carr, who was buried in 1878. The next grave is George Casey, buried in 1880 and then Dr Helsham.

What was the reaction in Cranbourne to the death of their Doctor? The South Bourke & Mornington Journal reported that the sudden death of of Dr. Helsham at Grantville seems to have caused general regret in the Cranbourne district where he had so long resided, and dissatisfaction is expressed that a proper enquiry as to the cause of death was not instituted, it being believed by some that it may be possible he died from choking whilst eating. The supposition is that apoplexy was the cause (26). However for some there was no regret. At a Cranbourne Shire Council meeting discussing Helsham's replacement as the Shire Health officer,  Dr Phillips, who was addressing the meeting said that the late doctor was never fit for his duties (27). In response, Councillors Patterson and Poole spoke in favor of the late Dr Helsham, passed high eulogiums on the manner in which he had carried out his duties, and both very much regretted Dr Phillips remarks about him (28)

It does appear that Dr Helsham had a drinking problem, he may even had been sent out to the Colonies  by his family for this reason either to make a fresh start or to rid them of an embarrassing problem. By 1861, when he was charged with manslaughter and he was only 28 he already had a reputation as a drunkard and a bouncing charlatan.  But in Cranbourne he still had friends, including the local Presbyterian Minister, the Reverend Alexander Duff (29), who looked after his books and instruments. I understand that Cranbourne and other communities deserved a  better Doctor than Dr Helsham, but I can't condemn him completely and agree with James Watson's description of him as a clever man, but one who had the habit that many an otherwise good man has fallen a victim to.


Trove list
I have created a list of articles on Dr Helsham on Trove, access it here.

Footnotes
(1) On June 20, 1927, James H. Watson, the President of the Royal Australian Historical Society, Sydney presented a paper to the Historical Society of Victoria - Personal Recollections of Melbourne in the 'Sixties. It was a look at various events and activities of the 1860s including this story - Dipping Sheep on Quail Island. The story was published in the Victorian Historical Magazine, v. 12, June 1928 available on-line at the State Library of Victoria https://www.slv.vic.gov.au/search-discover/popular-digitised-collections I have transcribed it here. Niel Gunson also quotes this account on page 68 of his book, The Good Country: Cranbourne Shire (Cheshire, 1968) which is where I first saw it. The Minister was the Reverend Alexander Duff - see footnote 29.
(2) His death certificate said he was born in Dublin and and he was 45 years old when he died in 1878, which makes his birth date c. 1833, although a family tree on Ancestry lists the birth date was 1831, see footnote 4.
(3) Licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, 1857 - that is how Dr Helsham is listed in the 1875 UK & Ireland, Medical Directory, which are available on Ancestry.com

Ancestry.com - 1875 UK & Ireland, Medical Directory: Practitioners resident abroad. 

(4) From information on Ancestry - Captain George Paul Helsham (1802-1861) married Elizabeth Ann Conway (1809 - 1841) in 1830 in Paris. He is listed in various sources as belonging to the Irish Militia, Kilkenny Fusiliers or the Royal Irish Fusiliers. In 1829, whilst in France, he shot a man dead in a duel. It was reported in the Australian papers The Colonial Times of Hobart, January 29, 1830, see here and then there was a subsequent murder trail reported in the same paper on February 18, 1831, see here. His great, grandson John George Douglas Helsham was killed at Gallipoli and his obituary in the Bendigo Independent said that Captain George Helsham was the recipient of an inscribed dagger from the hands of H.R.H. Prince Albert. Private Helsham, therefore, is of a fighting family, and it was his lot to inherit a gold repeating watch and a gold seal which had been handed down from generation to generation for many years (Bendigo Independent June 12, 1915, see here) George and Elizabeth had six children - the birth dates are approximate - George Macklin (1830-1870), John James (1831 or 33 - 1878), Elizabeth Ann (1833 - 1872), Rebecca Blount (1834- 1900), Amelia (1835 - 1835) Paul (1836-1836).
(5) Ireland, Grand Lodge of Freemasons of Ireland Membership Registers, 1733-1923, available on Ancestry.com. Technically, the fact that they both joined the same Lodge does not prove they are brothers.
(6) Encumbered Estate - This definition is from Ancestry.com -  The Encumbered Estates' Court was established to facilitate the sale of Irish estates whose owners were unable to meet their obligations because of the Great Famine, regardless of whether the land was entailed. The need for the Court was caused by the impoverishment of many Irish tenant farmers during the 1840s famine, rendering it impossible for them to pay their rents to the landlord who in turn could not make his mortgage payments. Until this Court was established, the lending bank could not get a court order to sell the mortgaged land because of the entail.
(7) George was the Town Clerk of Dalby in Queensland. He died in tragic circumstances at the age of 39. He was rushing to help out at a fire and run into a tree stump and sustained internal injuries and not recover. He left a wife and four children. You can read accounts of the accident in the Darling Downs Gazette February 12, 1870, see here, and the Queensland Times of February 19, 1870, see here. It was George's grandson who was killed at Gallipoli, see footnote 4.
(8) Ovens and Murray Advertiser, November 5, 1859, see here.
(9) The Age, August 4, 1860, see here.
(10) An account of the incident can be read in the Ballarat Star of August 22, 1861, see here. The two quotes about his sobriety are from the Maryborough and Dunolly Advertiser of August 28, 1861, see here.
(11) Ballarat Star August 22, 1861, see here.
(12) Maryborough and Dunolly Advertiser, August 28, 1861, see here.
(13) Ballarat Star, October 19, 1861, see here.
(14) The Herald, February 19, 1862, see here.
(15) The Argus, May 27, 1864, see here.
(16) The Age, March 26, 1867, see here.
(17) The Leader, September 21, 1867, see here. The Court of Foresters was a Friendly Society, which were formed to help members pay for medical care. Read about Friendly Societies here https://www.emelbourne.net.au/biogs/EM00614b.htm
(18) The Age, December 7, 1867, see here.
(19) The Age, July 29, 1868, see here.
(20) The Weekly Times, October 30, 1869, see here.
(21) The Herald, November 4, 1869, see here.
(22) The Argus, May 7, 1874, see here.
(23) The Argus, September 30, 1876, see here.
(24) He was listed as 45 years old on his death certificate.
(25) The information about his death comes from his Inquest record held at the Public Records Office of Victoria and which is also digitised on Ancestry.com
(26) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, August 21, 1878, see here.
(27) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, October 2, 1878, see here.
(28) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, October 2, 1878, see here.
(29) Reverend Alexander Duff (1824 - 1890), read more here (scroll to bottom of post)

A version of this post, which I wrote and researched, appears on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past

Monday, February 7, 2022

The Dunkinson family of Narre Warren

This postcard of the Dandenong Post Office was sent from that building on December 14, 1910 to Miss Dunkinson of Narre Warren.

The letter reads - I am sending your basket up by train this afternoon, I took it up to Mrs W but I see it has not gone yet. I am very sorry for keeping it so long, G.N.  It is not  a very interesting message, even though I do wonder why G. N., had Miss Dunkinson's basket in the first place. I can't tell you who G.N is or who Mrs W. is but I can tell you who Miss Dunkinson is and the amazing connection her father has to the start of Australian Rules Football in Victoria. The family is also the source of the name Dunkinson Street in Narre Warren.

We will start with Mr Dunkinson - John Valentine Dunkinson. His first connection to Narre Warren is in 1890 when he is listed in the Shire of Berwick Rate books, renting one acre with a house, part Crown Allotment 12, Parish of Berwick, from Sydney Webb. CA 12 is on the north side of the Princes Highway, and the west side of Narre Warren North Road (1). His occupation was listed as a labourer and he remained at this property until his death in 1930, having purchased it around 1914. John and his family had been living at Gisborne before the move to Narre Warren.

John was born on February 14, 1836 in Yass, in New South Wales, to William and Georgina (nee McGregor) Dunkinson.  When he was two, his family came by boat to Melbourne, a journey which took six weeks (2). On April 23, 1856 John married Mary Ann Butler, the daughter of Alexander Bishop Butler and his wife Charlotte Selina Mortimer, of Cheltenham (3). The had five children (4) all born in Melbourne -
Charlotte Selina - born 1857 and died in Dandenong 1933, aged 76.
Alexander William (Alec) - born 1859, married Vida Amelia Grenfell in 1895 and died in Kalgoorlie in Western Australia in 1913.
Arthur Herbert - born 1861, married Ellen Eliza Vibert in 1884, death date unknown.
Georgina Emily - born 1863, died in Narre Warren in 1950, aged 87.
Florence Adelaide - born 1866, died 1867, aged 1.


John Valentine Dunkinson, aged 92

It appears that John Valentine Dunkinson had a number of interesting accomplishments. A letter to editor of The Argus in December 1907 said  Mr. W. Dunkinson, of Narre Warren, Gippsland, [is]  if not the oldest colonist, must be very near it, as he was brought to Victoria in 1838 from Sydney by his parents (5). An article reporting on his 91st birthday said he was an authority on the Australian aborigines and their curious customs (6). It was an interview with Mr Dunkinson in the Sporting Globe in 1928 (7) which talked about his many significant sporting achievements - he was a founder of Australian Rules Football, helped peg out the Melbourne Cricket Ground, was the first ever central umpire for a football match and an inaugural and life member of the Richmond Cricket Club. It is a fascinating interview covering not only the history of sport in Melbourne, but also some of Melbourne's history, read it here. I will quote some of the Sporting Globe article -
Only two of the founders of the Australian game of football - H. C. A. Harrison and John Valentine Dunkinson aged 92 - are still alive. Mr Dunkinson is a remarkable old gentleman. Still clear of vision and alert, this grand old Australian delights in visits from present or past athletes. He prizes photographs of players, which were presented to him by Syd. Sherrin.

Mr Dunkinson recalls the match played between the Police and the Fourteenth Regiment. So strenuous was the play that most of the players were in the hospital for several days afterwards. It was a fight to the finish in those days. If no decision were reached in one day, the match would be continued at a later date.

At first the umpire controlled the play from the goals, but the futility of this was soon seen, and Dunkinson was the first man to act as central umpire. In addition to umpiring a great deal, Mr Dunkinson was one of the original Melbourne players.

The original Melbourne ground was near Spencer street, but this was not connected with the M.C.C. The old ground, to his knowledge, was located there in 1856. The next ground was just below Prince's bridge. There was a little pavilion and a picket fence. Floods however, brought down silt, which was deposited in the locality. He took a prominent part in the construction of the present M.C.C. ground, and helped to peg off the area chosen. A man named Gass was the contractor. Many old gum trees, "crusty old devils," according to Mr Dunkinson, had to be shifted by blowing up the trunks.

In addition to taking an active part in football, Mr Dunkinson was associated with cricket. He played with Richmond and was the first member of the Punt road club. He recalls such players as Ted Mortimer, Jack Huddlestone, and Sam Costick. At his home at Narre Warren he has a photograph of the Australian Aborigines' team, which went to England in 1869 "I remember them as a great bunch of fellows—a gentlemanly lot."

So that's Mr Dunkinson, the extraordinary sportsman and to be honest I am not actually sure if all of this is totally true, but it is a good story.  

Who was Miss Dunkinson - the recipient of the postcard? It can only have been Charlotte or Georgina, and it was Charlotte. Charlotte is listed in the Electoral Rolls, living with her parents at Narre Warren from 1903 right through to 1928. Her occupation was always 'home duties'. Georgina moved around - in 1906 she was in Brunswick, in 1913 she was in New South Wales near Moree, then from 1913 until 1926 she was listed in the Electoral Rolls at Mornington Junction, the old name for Baxter. Her occupation was also 'home duties' (8).

John Valentine Dunkinson died on May 14, 1930, aged 94. His wife, Mary Ann, died October 20, 1917, aged 84. Charlotte died on October 16, 1933 aged 76 and her sister Georgina, who was also unmarried, died June 7, 1950 aged 87. They are all buried at the Berwick Cemetery (9). I don't have any information on how Charlotte and Georgina lived their lives. I presume Charlotte remained at home helping out with the household and taking care of her parents as they got older. Georgina, who lived way from the family home, and still had her occupation listed as 'home duties' in the Electoral Rolls may have been a live-in companion or  a housekeeper.

Did John and Mary Ann have any grandchildren? Alec, who died in Kalgoorlie, and his wife Vida had one daughter, Hazel Dorothy, who was born in Melbourne in 1896. Albert and his wife Nellie (who died in 1905, aged 42) had two daughters - Alice Esther May, born 1886 and Alexandra Beatrice, born 1889 and one son Richmond Valentine Dunkinson, born in 1887. Richmond was Killed in Action at Gallipoli on May 4, 1915 (10).

I can only hope that when Miss Charlotte Dunkinson walked down to the Narre Warren Railway Station in December 1910, after receiving her postcard, that her basket was waiting for her.

Trove List - I have created a list of articles connected to the Dunkinson family of Narre Warren on Trove, you can access it here.

Footnotes
(1) Around 1920, Georgina, John's daughter, purchased the house but John continued to be listed in the Rate Books. An entry for Georgina in an Electoral Roll has her address as Narre Warren North Road, so I presume the house backed onto the northern section of Webb Street.
(2) Interview with the Sporting Globe of May 26, 1928, see here.
(3) Marriage information from a Marriage notice in The Argus of April 24, 1856, see here and the Index to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages, see here.
(4) Information on the children comes from the Index to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages, see here and various family announcements in the newspapers on Trove.
(5) The Argus, December 20, 1907, see here.
(6) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, February 17, 1927, see here.
(7) Sporting Globe, May 26, 1928, see here.
(8) Electoral Rolls are available on Ancestry database.
(9) Information on the death dates comes from the Index to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages, see here and various family announcements in the newspapers on Trove.
(10) Information on the grandchildren comes from the Index to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages, see here and Richmond's entry the AIF Project, see here.

A version of this post, which I wrote and researched, appears on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past

Thompson's Road, Shire of Cranbourne, and Patrick Thompson of 'Oaklands' Lyndhurst

Thompson's Road (1) runs from Patterson Lakes, through Carrum Downs, Cranbourne and Clyde nearly to the Cardinia Creek, so essentially all the way west to east across the old Shire of Cranbourne. It was, I believe, named for Patrick Thompson, early land owner and member of the Cranbourne Road Board.  

According to the Cranbourne Shire Rate Books, Patrick Thompson owned 308 acres, lots 19 and 22 in the Parish of Lyndhurst – the land was on either side of what is now Thompson's Road. The land was originally owned by C. & R. Wedge - Charles and Richard Wedge, who along with their other brothers, John and Henry had extensive land holdings. They were the nephews of the surveyor, John Helder Wedge. They had arrived from  Tasmania in 1836 and took up land at Werribee. They later acquired the Bangam  and Ballamarang runs, 42 square miles which ran from essentially modern day Hampton Park to Frankston and covered the Carrum Swamp (see map, below).They held this property collectively, which they called Banyan Waterholes, until 1852 when it was divided between them (2).


Banyan Waterholes, fronts Port Phillip Bay. 
Squatting Runs, Western Port
Image: The Good Country: Cranbourne Shire by Niel Gunson (Cheshire, 1968), p.50.

You can see Patrick Thompson's land on the map below, it is outlined in red.

Part of the Parish Plan of Lyndhurst. 
The Thompson Property, Lots 19 & 22, is outlined in red. 
On the map it was still owned by C. & R. Wedge. 

I don't know when Patrick purchased this land from the Wedge Brothers, the Cranbourne Shire Rate books start at 1863, the earlier ones are missing, but in October 1856, Thompson was listed in the State Government  Gazette as being appointed a Trustee of  the land set aside for the Presbyterian Church, so we could presume that he owned the land then. 


Patrick Thompson appointed as a Trustee for Cranbourne Presbyterian Church.
Victoria Government Gazette, No. 137 1856 http://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1856/V/general/137.pdf


Thompson was also appointed as a Trustee of the Cranbourne Cemetery on December 11, 1857. This was also listed in the State Government Gazette.

Patrick Thompson appointed as a Trustee for Cranbourne Cemetery.
Victoria Government Gazette, No. 146 1857 http://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1857/V/general/146.pdf

Patrick Thompson was elected to the newly created Cranbourne Road Board on July 8, 1860 and held the position until 1863. Other members of this first Road Board included Alexander Cameron, James Smith Adams and Edward Malloy, who were also fellow Trustees of the Cranbourne Cemetery (3). Dr Gunson in his book,  The Good Country: Cranbourne Shire book says that his property was called Oaklands (4). In April 1863, Patrick Thomson held a clearing sale of stock, crop, implements and household  furniture and the farm was advertised for lease, in consequence of his leaving the district, but I have no information as to where he went to.


Sale at Patrick Thompson's stock, crop, implements and household furniture.
The Argus April 8, 1863   http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article6484785


Another advertisement appeared in The Argus of May 22, 1863, leasing Oaklands for three years. There was a good description of the farm -
The farm contains 308 acres, 200 of which are black soil, of the richest description. It is divided by a Government road in two equal parts, and subdivided into nine paddocks, nearly all of which are fenced and drained; 130 acres of the land have been under cultivation, 20 acres thereof under English grass and clover. There is a good house, dairy, three-stall stable, and farm offices, spring-wells, and water-holes, with other conveniences, all in complete repair; likewise a close-fenced garden, planted with choice fruit-trees, and vines in full bearing. It would be interesting to know where his house was - his block bordered Evans Road as well as being either side of Thompson Road (called a Government road in the advertisement), so he had a good choice of road frontage.


Oaklands available for a three year term.

1863 is, as I said before, the first  year that the Cranbourne Shire Rate Books are available and James Sloan is listed as leasing lots 19 and 22 from Patrick Thompson. This is the only mention of Thompson in the Rate Books, though James Sloan is listed until 1867. From 1864 to 1866 there is no owner listed – so we can’t tell if Patrick Thompson still owns the land. In 1867, Sloan is still listed as the rate-payer, however the owner is listed as Atkinson. There are advertisements in The Argus in 1868 advising that Sloan is selling all his dairy stock and farm produce.  


Mr Sloane of Oaklands selling his dairy stock and farm produce.

From 1868 until 1874, William Cameron is listed as the rate-payer of lots 19 and 22 and the owner is still listed as Atkinson. William Cameron held an immense clearing sale at Oaklands on March 2, 1874 selling the whole of his dairy stock, dairy plant, farm implements etc.


William Cameron's immense clearing sale.

After William Cameron leaves the Oaklands property and the Rate book show that Arthur Facey takes over the lease. It is still owned by Atkinson, the Rate books do not list even an initial, so I have no idea who this Atkinson person is. In 1878 ownership of the property is listed as W. Norquay, and that's as far as we will go.

The earliest reference I can find to Thompson's Road is in 1872 in a report on a Cranbourne Shire meeting in The Argus in the May.


This is the earliest reference I can find to Thompson's Road.

I know nothing about Patrick Thompson's personal life, and I don't know for sure if Thompson's Road was named for him, but the fact that he had land on either side of the road and was a member of the original Cranbourne Road Board makes it highly likely that it was.

Footnotes
(1) It is officially Thompsons Road but it should be either Thompson's Road or Thompson Road, but it's too late to be telling that to VicRoads.
(2) The information on the Wedge Brothers comes from The Good Country: Cranbourne Shire by Niel Gunson (Cheshire, 1968), p.34, 52-53.  Their holdings are also listed in Pastoral Pioneers of Port Phillip by R.V. Billis & A.S. Kenyon (Stockland press, 1974) You can read  about their uncle, John Helder Wedge, in the Australian Dictionary of Biography, here.
(3) Cranbourne Road Board members are from page 259 of Neil Gunson's book (see details footnote 2). The original members of the Road Board were - Dr James Smith Adams of Balla Balla; James Bruce of Sherwood Park; Richard Burgh Chomley of Tongala, Lyndhurst; James Lecky snr of Cranbourne; Edward Malloy of Mayune; Alexander Patterson of St Germains; Christopher John Peed of Springmount; Patrick Thompson of Oaklands and John Wedge of Johnswood, Lyndhurst.
(4) Niel Gunson's book (see details footnote 2), p. 259.


A version of this post, which I wrote and researched, appears on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past. This is an updated and improved version.

Friday, February 4, 2022

John and Margaret Doveton - the namesakes of the suburb of Doveton

The suburb of Doveton was established in the mid 1950s by the Housing Commission to provide housing for the employees of the 'Big Three' Industrial companies, International Harvester Company, H.J Heinz and General Motors Holden. The area was originally known as Grassmere or Eumemmerring, which I have written about here.  However in September 1954 the new suburb was named Doveton after Captain John Doveton. This is an interesting choice given that Captain and Mrs Doveton were only in the area for ten years and there are other families with a much longer or much earlier connection to the area. They had already been remembered in the area by the naming of Doveton Avenue, which dates from the mid-1920s (1). Doveton is variation of the name Dufton which means dove farm or farm where doves are kept (2).

This post looks at the life of John and Margaret Elizabeth Doveton.  They were actually first cousins, he was the son of John Bazett Doveton and Margaret was the daughter of Francis Crossman Doveton. They married on October 8, 1873 at All Saints Church in St Kilda. Their marriage certificate tells us that he was a Master Mariner, born in Saltford, Somerset and she was a Spinster, born in Tasmania. Usually marriage certificates state the age of the couple, but theirs just said they were of 'full age', however he was 30 and she was 29.


The marriage notice of John and Margaret Doveton.


These are the signatures of John Doveton and Margaret Doveton from their Marriage Certificate. We don't have any photographs of them, so it is the only physical connection we have to them.

After they married they lived for a  time in Barkly Street, St Kilda and then Murray Street, Prahran and during this time, John continued his career as a master mariner. There was a report in The Age of September 21, 1874 about the new steamship Durham which had just arrived from London after 47 days of sailing. Mr John Doveton is listed as the Second Officer (3)The Argus has various reports, in the Shipping Intelligence column, of Captain Doveton arriving and departing Melbourne as the Captain of the Julia Percy, then the Tamar and then the Southern Cross. 

A report in the Hobart Mercury of May 8, 1882  (see below) said Southern Cross, under Doveton, run ashore on the Vansittart Shoals between Babel Island and Cape Barren in Bass Strait. Captain Doveton was suspended from the Command, pending an enquiry. Another report in the same paper of  May 23, 1882 said that Captain Doveton had resigned. After this, the only reports I could find about Captain Doveton involved him supervising work at the Wright, Orr & Co. floating Dry Dock and later at the Alfrred Graving Dock, so it appears he was still involved in the maritime industry, but no longer went to sea (4).


The Southern Cross runs aground
Hobart Mercury, Monday, 8 May 1882.  http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9009163

In 1893, the couple moved to Grassmere, just east of Dandneong, which at the time was still very much a country town.  The first listing for Captain Doveton in the Shire of Berwick Rate books was in 1893/94. He owned a house and 2½ acres at Lot 53, Parish of Eumemmerring, in Grassmere. The following year he is listed as having another 2½ acres, Lot 56, so five acres in all.  Even though Captain Doveton was listed as the ratepayer, according to the Title, the property was actually purchased in Margaret's name. From 1900 it was leased out and was sold on August 21 1903 to Robert Skinner. The house, which is now demolished was located around Gumbuya Close, off Doveton Avenue (5).

The thirteen voters on the Supplementary Electoral Roll at Oakleigh in the Kooyong Electorate in 1913, including John and Margaret Doveton.
Ancestry.com Australia, Electoral Rolls, 1903-1980 

When the property was leased they moved to Oakleigh and in the 1903 Electoral Rolls they were at Ferntree Gully Road, in Oakleigh and his occupation was a Poultry Farmer. They then moved to  Burnett, Atherton Road, Oakleigh, where John Doveton died at the age of 61, on April 7, 1904. He is buried at Oakleigh Cemetery. Margaret was still listed at Atherton Road in the 1909 Electoral Rolls, but by 1912 had moved to Williams Road, Prahran, then various addresses in Malvern until 1924 when she is listed at Everdon, Rose Street, Surrey Hills. She was still there in the 1937 Electoral Rolls, however her address when she died on December 13, 1941 was 13 Randell Street, Mordialloc. She was 97 years old and was buried at St Kilda Cemetery, where her father was buried, and not for some reason at Oakleigh with her husband. The couple did not have children (6).


Life of Margaret Doveton

We have looked at John and Margaret's life together, now we will have  a look at their lives before they married.

John Doveton was the son of  John Bazette Doveton and Mary Harriett  Fenton, they had married in October 1838 in Saltford, Somerset. The Minister who performed the ceremony was the Reverend John Frederick Doveton, the father of the groom.  John was baptised on February 21, 1843 in Saltford,  I don't have  his date of birth, but based on the date of his baptism its is likely to be the end of 1842 or beginning of 1843. His father, who was also a Church of England Minister, actually performed the baptism ceremony on his son.  John's father and grandfather had both studied at Oxford University and they both held the position of Rector of the parish of Burnett, Somerset (7). As  a reminder of his childhood, John and Margaret had named their house in Atherton Road, Oakleigh Burnett.


John Doveton's father, John Bazett Doveton went to Oxford University. John Frederick Doveton is the grandfather of both John and Margaret. 
Ancestry.com. Oxford University Alumni, 1500-1886 

The family were quite well off. In the 1851 Census the family is listed at Burnett - John Bazett (aged 44, occupation Rector of Burnett), Harriet (aged 32) and their children, Catherine (aged 9), our John (aged 8), Bazett (aged 6), Caroline (aged 3) and Ella (aged 1). They also had a Governess and four female servants living in the house. In the 1861 Census, John Bazette Doveton was still the Rector of Burnett, and there are two more children in the family, Mary Harriet aged 9 and Henry aged only 10 months (8).


John Doveton's Second Mate Certificate
National Maritime Museum. Ancestry.com. UK and Ireland, Masters and Mates Certificates, 1850-1927

John went away to sea and in May 1862 gained the qualification of Second mate (9). He obviously sailed his way to Victoria as he married Margaret in 1873, but I don't have any details of this part of his career. Margaret Elizabeth Doveton was born in Hobart on November 17, 1844 to Francis Crossman Doveton and Margaret Bostock. Francis and Margaret had married in Launceston in September 1842. They had another daughter Rachel Emily in Tasmania in 1846 and then moved to Victoria where they had three more children, Annie (1848), Francis (1850) and John (1852). Margaret died in 1853 and in 1855 Francis married Mary Ann Snell and they had eight children together (10).

Francis Crossman Doveton, was another son of the Reverend John Frederick Doveton and his wife Elizabeth Crossman and thus the brother of the Reverend John Bazett Doveton (11).  Francis joined the British Army, when he was married his occupation was listed as a Lieutenant in the 51st Regiment. The 51st  Regiment (2nd Yorkshire West Riding), or The King's Own Light Infantry Regiment escorted convict ships to Australia in 1837 when they left Tasmania for Bengal in 1846, Francis remained behind (12). Francis and Margaret moved to Victoria around this time. From 1851 Francis had a number of Government appointments the first being the Commissioner of Crown lands in the Buninyong and Lodden Districts (13).  This covered Ballarat and he was stationed at Ballarat during the Eureka uprising where he had the unpopular responsibility of leading the troopers against the gold diggers  (14).


Francis Crossmam Doveton's first Victorian Government appointment.

In 1852 he was appointed a Magistrate of the Colony of Victoria, in 1855 Chairman of the Local Court of the District of Hepburn and a Police Magistrate; and in 1858 he was appointed a Warden of the Gold Fields, then a Chinese Protector and in 1860 he was appointed as a Coroner, acting at Daylesford. Francis Doveton died on July 10, 1905 and is buried at the St Kilda Cemetery (15). As you can see in the article below, Doveton Street in Ballarat is named for him.


Obituary of Francis Crossman Doveton

As we saw before Margaret named her house in Surrey Hills, Everdon, and there is an Everdon Hall, a Grade II listed building, in Everdon, Northamptonshire, which was built around 1820 for General Doveton, so Margaret and John are almost certainly connected to him. The article, above, mentions a Sir William Doveton (1753-1843), he apparently spent all his life on St Helena in the service of the East India Company, so possibly General Doveton was his brother (16)

Everdon Hall. Grade II listed building. Photographer: Michale Trolove. 
Creative Commons Licence [Some Rights Reserved] © Copyright Michael Trolove and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence. This image has been cropped - the original is here https://www.geograph.org.uk/more.php?id=3321126

John and Margaret came from  a very well connected solid middle (upper?) class family. It is ironic, then, that the suburb of Doveton was from the start a working class suburb. It did, however, have  a strong sense of community. Dennis Glover grew up in Doveton in the 1960s and 1970s and has written about the suburb in his book An economy is not a society: winners and losers in the new Australia (Redback, 2015). Well worth tracking down to look back at time before economic growth was considered more important than community. There is a great interview with Dennis Glover here, in the Sydney Morning Herald  of February 18, 2014.

In conclusion, the fact that Captain John Doveton and Margaret Elizabeth Doveton were first cousins, means that Margaret should have as much status as the namesake of the suburb of Doveton as her husband has traditionally had.

Footnotes
(1) I have written about Grassmere, Eumemmerring and Doveton Avenue, here.
(2) Mills, A.D A dictionary of British Place names (Oxford University Press, 2003)
(3) The addresses come from the Rate book on Ancestry.com; The Age September 21, 1874, read here.
(4) Hobart Mercury May 8, 1882, see here; Hobart Mercury, May 23 1882, see here; The Argus, February 6 1885, see here;  The Herald, April 5, 1888, see here.
(5) Rate Books are at Casey Cardinia Libraries. The Title was in the Archive there. 
(6) Death certificates of John Doveton and Margaret Doveton. Electoral Rolls are on Ancestry.com.
(7) Marriage and Baptism certificates on Ancestry.com as is the list of Oxford University Alumni.
(8) U.K Census available on Ancestry.com
(9) Ancestry.com. UK and Ireland, Masters and Mates Certificates, 1850-1927
(10) Tasmanian Archives and the Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages.
(11) Parents listed on Death Certificate.
(12) https://www.nam.ac.uk/explore/51st-2nd-yorkshire-west-riding-or-kings-own-light-infantry-regiment
(13) Victoria Government Gazette http://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/
(14) The Argus, November 17, 1941, see here.  
(15) Victoria Government Gazette http://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/ ; Death Certificate.
(16) Everdon Hall - https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/photos/item/IOE01/06653/23             St Helena -  http://sainthelenaisland.info/importantpeople.htm


A version of this post, which I wrote and researched, appears on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past. I wrote the original in 2010, this is an updated and improved version.

Grassmere becomes Doveton

The suburb of Doveton, just east of Dandenong, was established in the mid 1950s by the Housing Commission to provide housing for the employees of the 'Big Three' Industrial companies, International Harvester Company (established 1952), H.J Heinz (1955) and General Motors Holden (1956) (1). 

The area was originally known as Dandenong or Eumemmerring or Grassmere and it was once part of the Eumemmerring Run. This run was 10, 560 acres (2)  and was taken up by Dr Farquhar McCrae (1807-1850) in 1839.  It was described as 'good sheep country'. Dr McCrae was the brother-in-law of Georgiana McCrae (1804-1890) who was married to his brother Andrew. Georgiana kept a journal, later published as Georgiana's Journal (3).   Later the same year it was taken over by Leslie Foster (1818-1900) or to give him his full name -  John Vesey Fitzgerald Leslie Foster, apparently known as 'alphabetical Foster’ due to his abundance of names (4).  Foster was, amongst other things, a cousin of Sir William Foster Stawell (1815-1889) who was appointed Victorian Attorney General in 1851 and became Chief Justice of Victoria in 1857. Stawell Street in Cranbourne was named after him, as well as the town of Stawell (5).  Foster also, in 1843, challenged Dr McCrae to a pistol duel over a land sale, when McCrae refused Foster whipped him and his horse with a horse whip. He was later fined £10 and had to pay £250 in damages (6).  Foster was a member of the Victorian Parliament, firstly in the Legislative Council, then the Assembly went on to help draft Victoria’s constitution, and acted as the administrator of the Colony between the departure of Governor La Trobe and the arrival of Governor Hotham (7). 

The Eumemmerring run is at the top of the map.
Squatting Runs, Western Port
Image: The Good Country: Cranbourne Shire by Niel Gunson (Cheshire, 1968), p.50.

Foster held the run until 1842 (8) when it was taken up by Edward Wilson (9) and James Stewart Johnson (10). Edward Wilson (1813-1878) was the owner of  The Argus newspaper. James Stewart Johnson (1811-1896), was amongst other things, a member of the Legislative Council. In 1846 when Thomas Herbert Power (1801-1873)  took over the property, which Power called Grassmere,  it went from around the Dandenong Creek all the way to Berwick (11).  Power was a business man and a member of the Legislative Council from 1856 until 1864 and had land in other areas including Hawthorn, where he lived.  He is  is the source of the name Power Road in Doveton. When he died in 1873 the value of his Estate was over £40,000. He still owned, according to his Probate papers 1,848 acres (747 hectares) in the Parish of Eumemmerring  when he died (12).


Probate papers of Thomas Power
Public Records Office of Victoria VPRS 28/P0002, 11/519

On October 30, 1888 Munro & Baillieu Estate Agents offered for sale  the Grassmere property of 3,000 acres (1214 hectares) subdivided into lots of between 1 acre and 20 acres (up to 8 hectares) (13). I realise that Power's Grassmere property was only 1848 acres when he died in 1873 and in 1880 when it was sub-divided it was described as 3,000 acres, I can only assume his family had purchased other adjacent land at some time.   It was described in the newspaper advertisements as being on the crest of  a delightful slope and only a few minutes walk from this happily situated and pretty township, so fast becoming a favourite residential estate. The pretty township was Dandenong (14).


Grassemere sale advertisement designed by the firm Batten & Percy, October 1888.
Dandenong Creek is the boundary on the west (left) side, the northern boundary is Heatherton Road, the southern boundary is the Princes Highway. The road running north to south is Power Road; the road running west to east is Kidds Road 

The area was called Grassmere well into the 1950s, when it was  renamed Doveton after John and Margaret Doveton in as we shall see, either 1953 or 1954. I have written about John and Margaret Doveton, here. There was already a reminder of the couple in the area - Doveton Avenue, which predates the name of the suburb by decades. John and Margaret Doveton's house was located in the vicinity of Doveton Avenue and they are, of course the source of the name of the road.  The earliest reference to Doveton Avenue, Grassmere that I can find is in 1927 in a death notice of Mr Siggins.

Death notice of John Siggins, who passed away at Doveton Avenue.
The Argus April 20, 1927   http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article3849944

This is another reference to Doveton Avenue, Grassmere, below, the wedding report of Miss Ethel Hilyear of Doveton Avenue, Grassmere to David Newport. They were married August 4, 1951.


The wedding of  Ethel Hilyear of Doveton Avenue.
Dandenong Journal April 22, 1951  http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article222354279

From around 1951 the farms at Grassmere were purchased by International Harvester, H.J. Heinz and General Motors Holden to construct their manufacturing plants (15). From the start there was some discussion as to what the area should be called. An article in the Dandenong Journal of October 24, 1951 (see below) talks about General Motors Holden feeling that Eumemmerring as an address is 'unwieldly', although apparently International Harvester thought it was a 'thundering nice name'. The Journal asked if anyone knew the origin of the name and a further article (also below) in the Journal said the name was Irish, which is unlikely. Jean Uhl, in her book Call back yesterday: Eumemmerring Parish writes that Ummemmering, later spelt Eumemmerring, was the native name to that part of the district over the Dandenong Creek, outside the township of Dandenong.....and in means 'we are pleased to agree with you' (16). 


Opinions on the Eumemmerring name
Dandenong Journal, October 24, 1951. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article222355372

There was a suggestion that Eumemmerring was an Irish name.
Dandenong Journal November 21, 1951 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article222355877

According to an article in paper, below, the name of Doveton was agreed to by the Shire of Berwick in April 1953 after  a request from the Hallam Progress Association (17).  This decision preceded the establishment of the Housing Commission project east of Dandenong, between the Dandenong and Eumemmerring Creeks.


The approval to change the name of Grassmere to Doveton
Dandenong Journal April 29, 1953 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article215818852

The Dandenong Housing Commission Estate was announced in September 1954. Two thousand homes were to be built, with preference for the housing given to employees of International Harvester, H.J. Heinz and General Motors (18). It is interesting that the area is still called Dandenong, in the article, below, even though the Shire of Berwick had approved the use of the name Doveton for the area over a year before. 


Establishment of the Housing Commission Estate at what will become Doveton.

Although the Berwick Shire had agreed to adopting the name of Doveton over Grassmere in April 1953, the formal adoption of the name Doveton for the area and the Housing Commission Estate was in October 1954, according to the report in the Dandenong Journal
New Housing Commission Estate now Doveton - Following the decision of Berwick Shire Council at their last meeting to name the area between Kay’s Av. and the western boundary of the Shire  “Doveton,” advice has been received from the Housing Commission that it has decided to adopt this name for its estate, formerly known as the East Dandenong Estate...The Department of Crown 
Lands and Survey has also advised Berwick Shire Council that it has no objection to the area referred to being named “Doveton."
(19)


The name of Doveton is formally adopted.
Dandenong Journal October 13, 1954 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article218513061

It does appear that the year 1954 was the year the name Grassmere was finally abandoned for the area east of Dandenong.  It is hard to know if it was still used informally by any old-timers who remained in the area. The Dandenong Journal on Trove only goes to 1954 and as there is also a town called Grassmere near Warnambool, later mentions could refer to that town. As a matter of interest, the modern day suburb of Eumemmering was gazetted on May 20, 1981 (20).  

Footnotes
(1) Harding, Maria  Doveton: a brief history (Friends of Doveton Library, 1993)
(2) Uhl, Jean Call back yesterday: Eumemmering Parish (Lowden Publishing, 1972), p. 8.
(3) Uhl., op.cit., p. 6.
(4) Leslie Foster, read his Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here.
(5) William Stawell, read his Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here
(6) Uhl., op.cit., p. 7.
(7) Leslie Foster, read his Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here.
(8) Dates of ownership from Billis, R.V & Kenyon, A.S.  Pastoral Pioneers of Port Phillip (Stockland Press, 1974).
(9) Edward Wilson,  read his Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here.                               
(10) James Stewart Johnson,  read his Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here.
(11) Uhl., op.cit., p. 10.
(12) Uhl, op. cit., passim; https://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/about/people-in-parliament/re-member/details/24/782  His will is at the Public Records Office of Victoria.
(13) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, October 24, 1888, see here.
(14) Ibid.
(15) Dandenong Journal, August 29, 1951, see here.
(16) Uhl, op. cit., p. 6-7.
(17) Dandenong Journal April 29, 1953, see here.  
(18) The Age September 27, 1954, see here
(19) Dandenong Journal October 13, 1954, see here
(20) Harding, op. cit., p. 26.


A version of this post, which I wrote and researched, appears on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past. This is an updated and revised version.

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Moola - a town on the Puffing Billy line

The township of Moola, on the Fern Tree Gully to Gembrook Railway line (as the Puffing Billy line was officially called) was proclaimed on December 16, 1913 (1).

The township of Moola is proclaimed.
State Government Gazette No. 195, December 24 1913, p. 5534.

The town of Moola is marked on this 1926 map - as you can see it is located between Wright's Station and Cockatoo.
Tourist map of Dandenong Ranges, Fern Tree Gully and Gembrook district, created by the
Victoria. Department of Crown Lands and Survey, 1926.
State Library of Victoria - click on this link to download the full map and a higher-res version http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/170469

Just over  a week after the town was proclaimed the land, which was Crown land, was advertised by Baillieu, Patterson and Allard. I believe this was the company of William Baillieu (1859-1936) who was also a member of the Legislative Council from 1901 until 1922 (2).  Some might consider that a member of the Government being the agent to sell Government land would be a conflict of interest.

The auction was to take place January 14, 1914 (3). The land was advertised as magnificent week end sites, near the Cockatoo railway station -
Allotments 1, 2, 3, 4, area about 2½ acres each. Upset, £6 per acre.
Allotments 5, 6, 25, 26, 27, 28, 20, 30, 31, area from 3 to 5 acres each. Upset, £5 acre.
Allotments 7, 8, 24, area from 2¾ acres to 4¾ acres each. Upset, £4 acre.


Advertisement for land sales at Moola - auction to be held January 14, 1914.

Eleven of the sixteen allotments were sold - there were four block with a reserve of £6 per acre and they sold for between £8 and just over £9 per acre. Of the blocks with the reserve of £5 - four were passed in and five sold - only one made more than the reserve and it went for £6/10 an acre. There were three blocks for sale with a reserve of £4, two sold - one for £4/10/ per acre and the other £5/7/6 per acre and there was no report on the other (4). That makes a clearance rate of 68 per cent. 

It does not appear that the rest of the blocks sold very quickly,  perhaps due to the uncertainty of the First World War. Parts of Moola were in the Shire of Fern Tree Gully and in 1920, the Council received correspondence from Department of Lands and Survey notifying that request that the unsold land at Moola, between Wright and Cockatoo, be offered for sale, has been noted (5).

Letter to the Fern Tree Gully Shire Council

The next report I could find about Moola was in 1941 when there was a report of a Berwick Shire Council meeting about a letter from the Lands Department came confirmation of the reservation of 13 acres for a swimming pool and plantation at Moola (Cockatoo). The land is to be used for public purposes, and the council is the committee of management (6). It seems an odd place for a swimming pool in what was a non-existent town.

Proposal for a swimming pool and plantation at Moola

In 1950, the Ferntree Gully Shire sold off some allotments because the owners had failed to pay their rates. Even allowing that in the end all the sixteen blocks were sold,  it is interesting that by 1950 six of the owners had lost interest in the blocks or perhaps more likely they were purchased as a speculative venture, had not increased in value and were not worth bothering about (7)

Shire of Ferntree Gully - sale of lands for rates - allotments at Moola.
Mountain District Free Press March 16, 1950 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/254781655

Moola was a short lived locality on the Puffing Billy line and according to Mark Fiddian in his book on the Puffing Billy line (8), the proclamation of the town was rescinded in 1952. Moola Road is all that remains of the town of so-called magnificent week end sites.


Trove list
I have created a list of articles on Trove on Moola, access it here.

Footnotes
(1) State Government Gazette No. 195, December 24 1913, p. 5534.
http://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1913/V/general/195.pdf
(2) William Baillieu - read his Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here.
(3) The Age, December 27 1913, see here. The same advertisement was in The Herald and The Argus.
(4) The Argus, January 15, 1914, see here. The results are below and also give the size of the allotments in acres, rods and perches.

The Argus, January 15, 1914 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/7245919

(5) Box Hill Reporter, May 7 1920, see here.
(6) Dandenong Journal, April 23, 1941, see here.
(7) Mountain District Free Press, March 16, 1950, see here.
(8) Fiddian, Mark Potatoes, Passengers and Posterity: a history of Puffing Billy's Railway (The Author, 1978), p. 63.

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