Thursday, March 2, 2023

The Inebriates Asylum at Beaconsfield

Between 1889 and 1892 there was an Asylum for Inebriates operating at Beaconsfield, and even though the Asylum was short lived, it gave its name to the surrounding area and even as late as 1925 a report in The Argus called the area Inebriates Hill (1).  The area is now known as Guys Hill.

The Inebriates Act of 1890, defined Inebriates as persons who habitually used alcoholic liquors and they could be committed to an Inebriate Asylum for detention and curative treatment for up to three months (2).  Around 1881, Dr Charles McCarthy had opened the first Melbourne Inebriate Retreat at Northcote and this was compulsorily taken over by the Government in 1890, though he was appointed the Medical Superintendent of the establishment (3). More of Charles McCarthy later. Previously inebriates were committed to the Lunatic Asylum. 

We can trace the early history of the Asylum through the Victoria Government Gazettes (4). On September 30, 1889 the Governor in Council ordered that the buildings and premises situate at Beaconsfield and hitherto known as Craik’s Boarding House shall be an Asylum for Inebriates.

The start of the Inebriates Asylum
Victoria Government Gazette, October 4 1889, p. 3320.  https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1889/V/general/103.pdf


A week later, the  Government Gazette noted the appointment of the Superintendent of the  Asylum, Thomas Elmes and the Secretary, Charles Williams. Thomas Elmes was a Doctor with a practice at Berwick (5). Charles William was the Superintendent of the Belair Inebriates Retreat in Adelaide, upon which the Beaconsfield facility was modelled. Belair had opened in June 1877 (6). 

Appointment of the Superintendent and Secretary of the Beaconsfield Asylum.
Victoria Government Gazette, October 11 1889, p. 3377  https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1889/V/general/107.pdf

On November 4, 1889 the Governor in Council ordered that The buildings and premises belonging to Mrs M.H.Blair, situate at Beaconsfield, and known as Walnut Grove, shall be an Asylum for Inebriates, to be used for the care and treatment of female patients only.


Facilities for female at Beaconsfield
Victoria Government Gazette, November 8, 1889, p.3834. https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1889/V/general/118.pdf

The Victoria Government Gazette of December 20, 1899 (7) published the Regulations relating to the discipline and conduct to be observed by patients in asylums for inebriates. This covered such things as meal times - Breakfast at 8.00am, Dinner at 1.00pm and Tea sat 6.00pm; Bed-times - 10.00pm and to rise at 6.00am in the summer and 7.00am in the winter; there was to be no gambling and patients were not to receive any articles from visitors without permission of the superintendent. 

The same issue also published the Regulations for the Management, Supervision, Inspection , and Regulation of Asylums for Inebriates. The Regulations covered the amount of food allowed to each inmate; intoxicating liquor was banned; inmates were banned from having money or stamps and all letters were opened before being handed to inmates. Regulations also covered what to do if an inmate became insane (they were sent to a Lunatic Asylum) or died (a letter was sent to the local Coroner and to the ‘person who shall have made the last payment on account of such patient'). The Fees were also set out - £2 per week for patients on the ‘lower scale’ and £5 per week for those on the ‘higher scale.'


The daily rations for each inmate.
Victoria Government Gazette, December 20, 1899, p 4450-4451 https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1889/V/general/135.pdf 


I found the following descriptions in the newspapers of the Asylum at Beaconsfield -
A report from July 1891 noted - There was only accommodation for 10 male and seven female inmates, and these were kept in buildings two miles apart from each other (8). From January 1892 - The [male] asylum consists of two blocks of wooden buildings a slight distance apart, one of which was on the land when it was leased by the Government; the other has been since erected (9).  A later report from July 1892, described the male complex - Government had purchased a large area of property and built a number of houses, as well as a caretaker's private residence of considerable dimensions (10).

There were two tragic stories connected to the Asylum. The first concerns Thomas Bissell, of South Melbourne,  who on Tuesday April 28, 1891 escaped through a window, wearing only a nightshirt, drawers and socks. The grounds and surrounding area were searched and there was a reported sighting on the Thursday morning. The Aboriginal trackers were called in and started work on Friday morning but could not pick up the trail (11). On the Saturday morning - 
about 60 horsemen and 30 or 40 people on foot assembled at the retreat. The horsemen were divided into parties under Constables Roberts and Falkiner, and Messrs. Fuller and Williams, who scoured the bush right through to Gembrook. The footmen, under Messrs. W. Paternoster and Gardiner, searched the Cardinia Creek for about four miles, dragging all the water holes, but when the daylight drew in the party had to give up without finding any trace (12).


Thomas Bissell missing
Victoria Government Gazette, May 15 1891, p.2021. https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1891/V/general/65.pdf

On July 17 two young men were out shooting in the Gembrook Ranges, about 12 miles from the Asylum, and discovered a human skeleton at the bottom of a gully. The news was sent to Berwick, and Constable Roberts proceeded to the place indicated, where the remains were identified, by means of the little clothing on them, as those of Thomas Bissell, the escaped inebriate. They were conveyed to Berwick, and the usual course in such matters taken. It is satisfactory to know that the mystery surrounding the sad affair will be cleared up (13).

The second sad story concerns Francis Key, a cordial manufacturer of Seymour (14).  He was found in his room on January 3, 1892 having shot himself, the bullet having  entered the head at the chin, and blew the face and fore part of his head to atoms (15) as the local paper graphically reported. He had been living separately from his wife  and at the time of his admission he was suffering from alcoholism and was in a weak state. Under medical treatment, however, he rapidly improved, and appeared cheerful and contented until a few days before his death, when he expressed a wish to obtain his release (16).

Another report notes that -
On the 30th ult. his wife visited him at the asylum, when she noticed that he had a gun in his bedroom, and on her return home the following day she wrote to Mr. Williams, the secretary of the Asylum, cautioning him, "On no consideration to allow her husband to have firearms in his possession, as he was very cunning and had suicidal tendency." The letter was received by the secretary on the 2nd inst., but beyond submitting it to the visiting medical superintendent, no action was taken with regard to it, and on the following morning the deceased shot himself. Two letters the deceased had written to his wife, but had not posted, showed that the act was premeditated. (17).

It may seem extraordinary that inmates at an Inebriates Asylum should have access to guns but as The Age reported, Mr Key had obtained the gun -
from Seymour about a fortnight previously for the purpose of joining the other patients in shooting parties, which occasionally take place under the charge of the secretary, Mr. C. Williams, who resides on the premises. Although patients on their entry into the asylum are deprived for a time of any instrument with which they could injure themselves as soon as they have quite recovered from the effects of alcohol they are treated like residents of an ordinary country boarding house, the only difference being that they are not allowed to leave the asylum grounds except in charge of an attendant. To relieve the monotony of detention, shooting, fishing, &c., are occasionally indulged in, and this accounts for the presence of a gun in the room of the deceased. (18).

The Jury at the Inquest found  -
"That the deceased, Francis Key, came to his death through a gunshot wound, inflicted by himself, during a fit of alcoholic mania," and added a rider, " That we also think sufficient precaution was not exercised by the officials, after the letter of warning from deceased's wife, received on the day before his death, intimating his tendency to commit suicide." (19)

Both Beaconsfield and Northcote were closed in 1892. Dr Charles McCarthy, who established the Northcote Facility as a private concern in 1881, wrote to The Age in July 1892 on this subject, accusing the Government of having ulterior motives and being financially extravagant -
Sir, — I saw from The Age that the Government intends to shut up the Northcote Inebriates Retreat, as well as that at Beaconsfield, on the 30th September, for three reasons, viz. : — 1st. that there is no demand, on account of the smallness of the number of patients ; 2nd, the expensiveness of the staffs ; 3rd, that the matter had better be left to private establishments. Sir, I have supplied every member of Parliament with printed matter, proving that there is not the slightest foundation for the above three pleas being the cause of this determination. First, in May, 1890, when I had male and female patients, I got the option from the Government either to be removed from the Retreat or to accept office under the Government for one year, and with the condition that I should discharge all my patients and admit none but " female paupers." For 18 years not three female paupers applied in any one year. This showed me at once that it was intended to shut up the Retreat. As such, therefore, I had only from one to four patients, with 16 bedrooms empty. During that year a very large number of pay patients, male and female, applied for admission, begging and urging me to receive them up to the day that I was leaving, and on that day also, but I was not permitted to do so. Yea, and up to last week here in Hawthorn. Second plea, of expense : For the previous 14 years the Retreat did not cost the Government 1s. When I saw that for one patient I had four servants, and when I complained to the head of my department that these servants were allowed by him to be out at night, his remedy for that was to promise to appoint two additional female servants, a clerk at £3 per week, who had nothing to do, with 18 books from Kew Asylum, some of them immense ledgers for lunatics. I protested against this extravagance in vain, I saw the object of it, namely, an excuse to shut it up. I begged to be allowed to receive the females from Beaconsfleld This would not be allowed till after my removal. 3rd. That the cure of inebriates had better be left to private institutions. The Lunacy Commission got the Parliament to pass an act forbidding private retreats, and making Northcote retreat a Government institution, and now, when the property has been secured to the Government, it is only private retreats that must be depended on! Very much was said about the poor by the commission. Though I offered the Government to admit the poor, but not as "paupers," this was repeatedly refused, hence it was never intended to have a permanent inebriate retreat, as the above proves. It was only intended to get my property, to prevent patients entering, and to make the expenditure appear disproportionate to the number of patients. Of this there is not a shadow of doubt. Under these circumstances I am entitled to compensation for my compulsory removal.
— Yours, &c., CHARLES M'CARTHY, M.D. 16th July. (20)

The closure of the Asylum at Beaconsfield was of concern to the local community. The Argus reported in July 1892 
- that during the past day or two residents of this locality have been much concerned as to the notion taken by the Government in closing the local inebriate asylum....[The Government] have decided to dispense with the services of the men numbering about twenty and abandon the place which has cost a great deal of money. It is the intention of the residents to send a deputation to the Government on the matter. Notices have been issued to the men that their services will not be required after the 30th September next and the residents are anxious that some definite settlement should be arrived at before that time (21).

However, they concerns of the Beaconsfield community fell on deaf ears and the Asylum was closed. On August 31, 1894, the empty building  caught fire as reported in South Bourke and Mornington Journal by the journalist using the pen name Todea Africana (22)
On Friday last an old land mark of Beaconsfield disappeared. I don't know how long Mrs Craik's old boarding house has been in existence. It was certainly flourishing when I first became acquainted with this famous health resort. Situate on the foothills, as it were, of these ranges and looking across the valley, the position was a very, pleasant and healthful one if not so picturesque nor commanding such a grand view as its successor on the Hills, Kincraik. 

As Upper Beaconsfield was growing more and more in favor, it was decided by the proprietor to build a more extensive establishment, and a site was chosen which is certainly second to none on the hills, near the post office. After remaining unoccupied for a period the old premises were let to the Government as an inebriate retreat, and under the efficient management of Mr Charles Williams, formerly of Adelaide. 

The report continues that after the Asylum was closed down  It was next occupied as a dairy farm, but in this character had a short lived existence, and latterly has been let to a lady who was sent to Beaconsfield for her health, as so many are, but alas, at too late a stage of her disease. Her death occurred but recently, and it was whilst the house was being cleaned out that the fire occurred. As in the case of all wooden buildings in the country, once the fire fiend had got a grip, he did not let go until the tenement was purified out of existence, and nothing but a heap of ashes and charcoal with a few dozen tortured and twisted shoots of iron corrugated with agony, remained to tell the tale. It was insured for £700 (23).

As I mentioned at the start of this post the last reference I can find to Inebriates Hill is this sad account of the death of Mr Jack McNaughton of Beaconsfield who was killed instantly in an accident on December 21,  1925 -
As a bullock team driven by Mr. Jack McNaughton, of Beaconsfield, was being driven down Inebriates'Hill, two miles from Beaconsfield, on the Upper Beaconsfield road, the team became out of control and bolted. McNaughton attempted for a time to regain control of the bullocks, which were harnessed to a heavy jinker. He was unsuccessful, and when the jinker passed over a rut he was thrown to the roadway.  One wheel of the jinker passed over his body, killing him instantly (24). 
Jack was 44 years old, the son of Archibald and Mary (nee McDonald) McNaughton, of Beaconsfield.

Trove list - I have created a list of articles connected to the Beaconsfield Inebriates Asylum on Trove, access it here.


Footnotes
(1) The Argus, December 22, 1925, see here
(2) Inebriates Act of 1890 https://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/vic/hist_act/ia1890113.pdf
(3) The Argus, February 10, 1881, see here; The Age, November 29, 1890, see here. Also Public Records Office of Victoria  https://prov.vic.gov.au/about-us/our-blog/inebriate-retreats
(4) https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/
(5) Thomas Elmes entry in Residents of Upper Beaconsfield by Marianne Rocke   https://www.upperbeaconsfieldhistory.org.au/g0/p163.htm#i4874 
(6) Charles William and Belair Inebriates  Asylum -  South Australian Register, June 8, 1877, see here; South Australian Advertiser, June 21, 1877, see hereThe Argus, September 2, 1889, see here. Also see an account of the Belair Asylum https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~dicummings/genealogy/SA-InebriatesRetreat.htm
(7) Victoria Government Gazette, December 20, 1899, p 4450-4451, see here.  
(8) The Argus, July 1, 1891, see here.
(9) The Age, January 5, 1892, see here
(10) The Argus, July 6, 1892, see here
(11) Reports of Thomas Bissell - The Argus, May 4, 1891, see hereThe Leader, May 9, 1891, see here; South Bourke and Mornington Journal, July 22, 1891, see here
(12) The Leader, May 9, 1891, see here
(13) South Bourke and Mornington Journal, July 22, 1891, see here
(14) Reports of Francis Key - The Age, January 5, 1892, see here; The Argus, January 6, 1892, see here; South Bourke and Mornington Journal, January 6, 1892, see here; Weekly Times, May 28, 1892, see here.
(15) South Bourke and Mornington Journal, January 6, 1892, see here
(16) Ibid
(17) Ibid
(18) The Age, January 5, 1892, see here
(19) South Bourke and Mornington Journal, January 6, 1892, see here
(20) The Age, July 26, 1892, see here
(21) South Bourke and Mornington Journal, September 5, 1894, see here
(22) Todea Africana / Thomas Cole Mackley  see  Residents of Upper Beaconsfield by Marianne Rocke https://www.upperbeaconsfieldhistory.org.au/g0/p234.htm#i7000 and https://www.upperbeaconsfieldhistory.org.au/g0/p46.htm#i1360
(23) South Bourke and Mornington Journal, September 5 1894, see here
(24) The Argus, December 22, 1925, see here.


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

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

Victoria Hall, Yarra Glen

I came across this photograph, below, of Yarra Glen and wondered what the building on the right was and discovered that it was the Victoria Hall. This post looks at the history of the Victoria Hall (later referred to as the Mechanics' Hall)  and the two other Yarra Glen Halls - the Recreation Hall and the Memorial Hall. 


Yarra Glen, c. 1911, showing Victoria Hall
State Library of Victoria Image H96.200/740


The Hall has an interesting history as related by the journalist, The Vagabond. John Stanley James (1843-1896) arrived in Melbourne in 1876 after a mixed career in England and America and he started writing for The Argus, under the name of The Vagabond. (1). He visited Lilydale and Yarra Glen towards the end of 1893 and his observations were published in The Leader in December 1893 and January 1894. This is what The Vagabond wrote about Victoria Hall -
Opposite the railway station is the most prominent public building in Yarra Glen. The Victoria Hall is architecturally a feature of the place. Built on a point of land at a junction of four roads, it could not be on a better site. It is as good a building of its kind as there is outside of Melbourne, containing stage, scenery and sitting accommodation for 400 persons. Balls and "socials " at the Victoria Hall are always crowded........This Victoria Hall, it may be mentioned, has a history. Ten years ago a cheese factory was erected near the banks of the river, and an American manager was imported to make cheese and dividends for the shareholders. He failed to do the latter. The benefits to be derived from creameries were not understood by farmers in those days. In these times a butter and cheese factory at Yarra Glen would perhaps pay. This American was one of the most obnoxious Yankees I ever met. Outside dairy management he was very ignorant. To this day they tell with glee of his nailing wire netting on all the windows of the two-story factory to keep out the snakes which he believed crawled up the sides of houses. This would do good, however, in keeping out the flies. Like all ignorant Americans, this Yankee was perpetually blowing about the country of his birth. Once only did he say a good word for Australia. A snow storm came down from the hills on to Yarra Glen. The Yank took off his hat and stood in the centre of the road. " Great Scott !" he shouted, " this is the only thing I've met in this allfired desolate land which reminds me of God's own country, America! " He was not regretted when he left the district. The factory stood empty for years, till someone persuaded Mr. Robert Kilpatrick to buy it and remove it to a central site for a public hall. It cost him an additional £500 to build the Victoria Hall as it is, and there is no chance for years of obtaining a return for the outlay. But Mr. Robert Kilpatrick is a local patriot. "If it doesn't benefit me it will benefit the district," says he. The chairman of the New Mariner can afford this. (2). 

Robert Kilpatrick (1839-1903), of Lilydale, was involved with both the New Mariner Gold Mining Company Steiglitz, which was registered in February 1891;  and the New Mariner No. 1 Quartz Mining Company, which was registered in July 1893 (3). 



Victoria Hall, Yarra Glen. 
This photo and others were published in The Leader of January 6, 1894, in conjunction with The Vagabond's article (see here
It is also at the State Library of Victoria, from the Illustrated Australian News of February 1, 1894  http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/437092


The Vagabond's report of January 1894 is the first reference I can find to it being called the Victoria Hall. When it was opened on June 30, 1893 it was referred to as the New Hall. The Evelyn Observer, of July 7, had this report of the opening -
The new hall built by Dr. Wm. Kilpatrick at Yarra Glen was opened last Friday evening, when the Yarra Glen Amateur Dramatic Club staged the play. "Our Days" and the comedietta " Hook and Eye." There was a large audience present, and the amateur theatricals acquitted themselves creditably and were warmly applauded (4). 

It is interesting that they credit Dr William Kilpatrick with the building of the hall. The Vagabond had referred to the musical skills and dedication of Doctor Kilpatrick in his report -
Yarra Glen rivals Lilyday [sic] in musical and histrionic talent. The "leading lady" of the district is Miss Murphy, who is the school mistress at Dixon's Creek. I have been often fairly startled at Miss Murphy's powers. As an amateur she is in the front rank, and delights the audiences to whom she plays throughout the year on behalf of local charities. In comedy and tableaux Dr. Kilpatrick is Miss Murphy's great support. It is nothing for the doctor to spend a day in the saddle around the district, play at Yarra Glen for some "benefit," visit a few more patients, and then drive back to Lilydale, arriving there in the middle of the night, to be up fresh as paint in the morning (5). 
Doctor Kilpatrick was the only child  of Robert Kilpatrick, so whether it was Robert or William who donated the Hall to the community,  they were the same family (6). 

An early function held at this new hall was reported in Lilydale Express in September 1893 -
The debate, "Woman's Position," by Mrs Andrade, in spite of most unfavorable weather, drew a good audience to the new hall, Yarra Glen, on the evening of the 8th September. The bill of fare presented, although it offered nothing new in the way of grievances or remedies was well thought out and delivered. American statistics were brought forward to show the number of positions and the variety of duties fulfilled by women in the United States making them as useful and self-supporting as men. After Mrs Andrade's presentation the debate was taken up by four men - the Reverend Darroch who considered that in women, sense is second to sentiment; Mr Fleming who would give women the vote but did not want to see them in Parliament; Mr Maxwell who thought women should chose her own sphere and not be tied down by any male restriction and the last speaker Dr Kilpatrick who  had been at school and college with girls, and found them equal, if not superior, to the male scholars. Why should not all careers be opened to them? (7). 

The Victoria Hall was used for the usual functions in a small town - meetings, performances, balls and fundraisers for community efforts such as repairs to the Anglican Church building. During the First World War the Hall hosted Red Cross meetings,  farewells to local soldiers and the 'welcome home' to the returned soldiers. 

In September 1898, a Library was opened at the Hall. The Evelyn Observer noted - 
The Yarra Glen Public Library is now open, and considerable interest is being taken in it. On Friday evening last, in the Victoria Hall, Mr. Paul, barrister, of Melbourne, gave a lecture in aid of the funds. The subject of the address was "Ourselves as others see us." (8). The Library was still in operation in December 1905, but it closed at some unknown time and when, in 1929, there was agitation in the town for a new public library it was reported that there is a Probability of a public library being established in the town. Years ago there was one in existence, but it became a thing of the past (9). 

On October 8, 1921, the Soldiers Memorial was unveiled in front of the Victoria Hall, on the corner formed by the Lilydale Road and the Railway (10). The Eltham and Whittlesea Shires Advertiser reported - 
The monument consists of a granite column, with abroad pedestal on a foundation of concrete, the
whole surrounded and protected  by a chain set in granite posts. On one face of the monument is the inscription: "This monument is erected by the citizens of Yarra Glen and District,  under the auspices of the Welcome Home League, to perpetuate the memory of the men who gave their lives in the Great War, 1914-1919." And below on the pedestal, "This Monument was unveiled 8th October, 1921."
The following names were listed on two sides of the memorial -  J. Armstrong,  J. Bell, H. Conway, 
C. Dinsdale, E. Farnsworth, C. Gedye, W. Holding,  E. Hubbard, G. Hubbard, A. Hunt, J. Irvine,  
S. Jell, A. M'Leod, L. M'Leod,  H. Marshall, S. Mills, J. Pickering, D. Shillito, S. Smedley, R. Waigh and J. Wilson (11). 

What happened to the Victoria Hall? The last reference in the newspapers which I can find to Victoria Hall is in November 1924. However, from 1919 until 1929 there are references to the Mechanics' Hall at Yarra Glen and I believe they are the same building. This is confirmed by the fact that the building is also listed as a Mechanics' Institute in the comprehensive survey of Mechanics' Institutes in Victoria, These Walls Speak Volumes (12) The building was still there in December 1934, as it is photographed in the flood photograph, below. These Walls Speak Volumes notes  It is thought locally that Victoria Hall  was demolished some time before the end of World War Two (13). 


Yarra Glen, December 1934 flood. 
State Rivers and Water Supply Commission photographer. 
State Library of Victoria Image RWP/32883


The Victoria Hall was not the first Hall in Yarra Glen; as mentioned previously when it was opened in June 1893, it was referred to as the New Hall. The original Hall was also donated by local business men, as the Evelyn Observer notes in the report from July 1886 -
We hear on good authority that Messrs. Munday and Warren, auctioneers, are making arrangements for building a spacious hall on their land at Yarra Flats, to enable the residents of that district to have some commodious building to hold their public meetings, and allow the young to enjoy " the light fantastic" ; also, in case of wet weather Messrs M. and W. will use the hall for their land or property sales. We believe a stage is included in the specification, so we may expect to see some "stars" on the boards during the oncoming busy times promised for the Yarra Flats and its neighborhood. We wish them success (14). 

Tenders for the building were called in the August and the building was opened by  December 1886 (15). 

Tenders invited for the erection of the Yarra Flats Recreation Hall


I can find references to this Hall, known as the Recreation Hall, until 1911, but I have no information as to its fate. As you can see from the report above, Yarra Glen was originally known as Yarra Flats, however when the railway line reached the town in May 1888, the local station was called Yarra Glen and the School and the Post Office adopted the new name in 1889 (16). 

There was also another Hall in Yarra Glen - the Memorial Hall.  It was opened in December 1920 and the Eltham and Whittlesea Shires Advertiser reported on the event - 
Last Saturday, the 11th inst., the Soldiers' Club rooms at Yarra Glen were formally opened by Mr W. H. Everard, M.L.A. There was a fine gathering of district residents, together with many friends from a distance. Mr P. F. Downer presided and introduced the member of the district, who, in a happy speech, declared the building formally opened, and referred eloquently to the generosity which had built and equipped the rooms. The ground, a well-placed corner block, was given by the Herbert family, the money for the building being raised by donations and numerous efforts from the folk of the township and district, and the furniture, which includes a fine billiard table, was a gift from Mrs Woolcott and members of her family.

Speeches were also given by Cr Bath, Chairman of the Welcome Home League, the other two councillors of the Riding, Crs Smedley and Hubbard, and by Mr Maroney as representative of the R.S.S.I.L. During the afternoon a medal from the Welcome Home League was given to Private G. Muir, of Christmas Hills. Tea and cakes, provided by the ladies, were handed round, and then the assembled company inspected the rooms and watched the "Diggers" trying the billiard table. In the evening the Victoria Hall was packed to listen to a fine concert programme provided by the Ringwood Diggers (17). 

Six years later in December 1925 a dance hall was added to the Memorial Hall (18). In the January 1939 Black Friday bush fires the Hall was nearly destroyed - 
...word came from Yarra Glen that the town was in danger, and most of the fighters from the road
area went on, to discover that the Memorial Hall was in imminent peril of being demolished. Outbuildings were alight then, and it appeared to be just a matter of time before the hall itself would catch. Their commendable activity was responsible for a splendid save, as they prevented the flames reaching the main building (19).  

However, sadly, on February 16, 1952 the Hall did not escape destruction by fire. The Lilydale Express reported on the tragedy - 
Destruction of Yarra Glen's Memorial Hall by fire early last Saturday morning is one of the most tragic incidents in the district's history. The Hall, an invaluable asset and of one of most modern in Eltham and neighbouring Shires, was razed to the ground by fire, which began mysteriously. The fire was first noticed at at 5 a.m. by neighboring residents, who quickly raised the alarm.....by 6.20 the hall had been reduced to smouldering ashes (20). 

A new Memorial building was opened on May 27, 1955, by Mr Colin Badger, Director of Adult Education in Victoria (21). The War Memorial was relocated to the front of this Hall in 1998 (22).


Trove List  - I have created a list of newspapers articles on the Halls at Yarra Glen, access it here.

Footnotes
(1) John Stanley James - read his Australian Dictionary of Biography entry here   https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/james-john-stanley-3848
(2) The Leader, January 6 1894, see here.
(3) Obituary in the Healesville and Yarra Glen Guardian, August 22, 1903 see here; See my Trove list, here, for connections to the New Mariner Companies. Dates of registration from the Victoria Government Gazette of February 13, 1891, page 898 see here; and Victoria Government Gazette of July 14, 1893, page 3212, see here.
(4) Evelyn Observer, July 7, 1893, see here.
(5) The Leader, January 6 1894, see here.
(6) Healesville and Yarra Glen Guardian, August 22, 1903 see here
(7) Lilydale Express, September 15, 1893, see here
(8) Evelyn Observer, September 30, 1898, see here.
(9) Hurstbridge Advertiser, May 17, 1929, see here.
(10) Eltham and Whittlesea Shires Advertiser, October 14, 1921, see here.
(11) Ibid
(12) Baragwanath, Pam and James, Ken These Walls Speak Volumes: a history of Mechanics' Institutes in Victoria (published by the authors in 2015)
(13) Ibid, p. 646.
(14) Evelyn Observer, July 9, 1886, see here.
(15) Evelyn Observer, December 17, 1886, see here.
(16) Evelyn Observer, May 18, 1888, see here; Blake, Les Place names of Victoria (Rigby, 1977)
(17) Eltham and Whittlesea Shires Advertiser, December 17, 1920 see here.
(18) The Argus, January 1, 1926, see here
(19) Healesville and Yarra Glen Guardian, January 21, 1939, see here
(20) Lilydale Express, February 22, 1952, see here
(21) Lilydale Express, June 3, 1955, see here.

Sunday, February 5, 2023

Trophies from the Crimean War

In January 1858, The Age reported that a communication was received from Lord Panmure, by the Right Worshipful the Mayor of the City of Melbourne, in which that nobleman, as Commander-in-Chief of Her Majesty's Forces, offered to the City of Melbourne two Russian Guns, to be preserved in the City as Russian War Trophies. The offer was made in consequence of the manner the citizens of Melbourne displayed their loyalty to the Sovereign, and the handsome way in which they came forward with their subscriptions for the relief of the sufferers by the late Russian War (1). 


Russian Trophies, Botanical Gardens, 1862. 
Artist: George Stafford; Engraver: Samuel Calvert. 
State Library of Victoria Image H4205


The Russian War, also known as the Crimean War, was fought on the Crimean Peninsula between Russia and an alliance consisting of Britain, France, the Ottoman Empire and Sardinia. It began in October 1853 and ended on March 30, 1856.  For people like me, who are not military historians,  the Crimean War is remembered due to its connection to Florence Nightingale who was in charge of nursing the British and Allied soldiers and improved the standard of care, cleanliness and food provided to the wounded. On her return to England she established a school of Nursing to improve the training of nurses.  

The other interesting thing about the Crimean War is that many Victorian place and street names are connected to the battles and personalities of the War. A prime example can be seen in the suburb of St Kilda which has a Crimea, Odessa, Sebastapol, Raglan, Alma, Inkerman (2), Malakoff and Redan Street and is next to the suburb of Balaclava; the last five are named after battles; Odessa is a port on the Black Sea. Sebastapol is named for a city on the Crimean Peninsula, which was besieged for eleven months from October 1854. It is also the source of the name of the town of Sebastapol, near Ballarat. Raglan is named for Baron Raglan (1788-1855) a commander of the British troops during the War and  there is also a town called Raglan, near Beaufort.  

The town of St Arnaud, was named for Armand-Jacques Leroy de Saint-Arnaud (1798-1854), the Commander of the French forces.  Napier Street in St Arnaud is named for Sir Charles Napier (1786-1860), commander of the British Baltic fleet in the War.  

In Cranbourne there are three streets with a Crimean War connection -
Codrington - Sir William John Codrington (1804 - 1884) was Commander in Chief of the British Forces in the War; Clarendon - George William Frederick Villiers, 4th Earl of Clarendon (1800 - 1870) was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland from 1847 to 1852 and the British Foreign Secretary on three occasions from 1853 to 1870. He negotiated a favourable outcome for Britain at the end of the Crimean War in 1856 at the Congress of Paris Peace talks. The third Cranbourne street is Lyons Street - named for Admiral Sir Edmund Lyons (1790-1858), 1st Baronet Lyons, who commanded the Black Sea fleet during the War. 

I also believe that Pakenham was named after Lieutenant-Colonel Edward William Pakenham (1819 -1854) who was killed at Inkerman during the Crimean War. This has been disputed, but I stand by my research. You can read more about the naming of Pakenham, here.


The Russian cannons and the rotunda, Botanical Gardens, Melbourne, c. 1870.
State Library of Victoria Image H10788


Back to the cannons - the loyal citizens of Melbourne were indeed happy to accept the war trophies and a year later, they had arrived and The Age reported in January 5, 1859 -
A platform of stone work is now being erected in the Botanic Gardens, for the accommodation of the Russian guns presented to the colony, trophies of the late war, by the Home Government. The platform is in the immediate vicinity of the music pavilion (3). 

Two days later, The Argus had this detailed report - 
Trophies from the Crimea - Two of the Russian guns taken at the Redan fortification in the Crimea, and forwarded by the Imperial to the Victorian Government, have recently been placed in the Botanical Gardens, on an  elevated spot overlooking the southern and eastern portions of the city. The peculiar construction and formidable powers of these enormous engines of warfare render them well worthy of Inspection, not to take into consideration the ideas which they must naturally suggest of the sufferings and triumphs of the allied armies in the late war. 

The cannon weigh each three tons, and their comparatively light-looking carriages weigh a ton-and-a-half each. The carriages are of very peculiar form, being entirely of iron, and in some degree resembling that of the English field-gun, with the exception that the wheels are not more than 2½ feet in diameter, and are fitted with double-spokes of crossed iron bars. The sockets into which the elevating screws are turned project from the back part of the carriages, and when the screws are entirely removed form a rest for the breach, keeping the guns at point-blank range, beyond which range the muzzles cannot be elevated. The muzzles may, however, be so far depressed as to bear upon a force within a very short distance of an embrasure, in which they were no doubt placed. Each gun is 9 feet 4 inches in length, and about 2 feet in diameter at the breech. The calibres are 7¾ inches, and will receive balls weighing about 40 lb. When loaded with the full or distance charge (12¾ lb.) of powder, these imposing-looking iron magnates would propel their iron globes with much greater velocity than lighter guns of the same calibre to a distance of nearly 4,000 yards. 

One of the guns is "spiked"-that is, a brittle steel rod has been driven into the vent, and then broken off, of course rendering the gun useless until the steel is drilled out again. This must have taken place at the storming of the Redan. The other gun has the vent so enlarged from constant firing, that the finger may be readily introduced. Besides these evidences of use, one of the cannon bears a singular mark, caused by the bursting of a shell upon it breach. The projectile must have been thrown from a howitzer from the English trenches, as it has evidently entered the narrow embrasure in which the gun was placed in a horizontal direction, and has scored a horizontal trace along one side of the metal, and finally burst at the breech. The mark made on the metal where the shell burst is a deep circular dent, from which radiate pretty equally and pretty thickly, in every direction, grooves cut into the solid iron, some of them an inch wide and a third of an inch deep. Of course, the Russian artillerymen on that side of the gun must have been killed, and the man stationed at the breech, who would occupy a position similar to that occupied by an artilleryman No. 4 in working an English gun, must have been blown to pieces. The guns are of excellent workmanship, and bear the date 1836 on the trunnions. The sight of them will well repay a visit to the spot where they are placed (4)There is more on the date of manufacture, below.

At this time, just after the end of the Crimean War, Victorians were happy to display these trophies and  on occasions the cannons were fired. The Geelong Advertiser reported in March 1859 that a Military Band performed at the Botanical Gardens, the highlight of which was -
a performance of a Battle Sinfonie, descriptive of British troops leaving their native shores for the seat of war, the composition of the band-master, Mr Johnston. During the performance, one of the Russian war trophies placed in the gardens, was called into requisition and fired, to represent the daybreak morning gun. Owing to some negligence in not warning the spectators, a man who was crossing within range of the gun, was struck to the ground with a piece of wadding, which caught him in the face, and carried away a portion of his nasal organ. When removed from the ground, he was bleeding most profusely, and it will be fortunate if he has not received any severer injury (5). 

However, the relationship between England and Russia thawed as the years went on. They thawed to such an extent that on January 23, 1874 Queen Victoria's second eldest son, Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh (6) married  the Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna, the daughter of the Russian Emperor, Alexander II, at the Winter Palace at St Petersburg (7). After this it was thought inappropriate to have such war trophies on display in such a prominent location so they were, as the Herald reported in February 1882, bundled into the barrack yard where they now lie (8).  By 1889, they were located either side of the central door at Victoria Barracks, St. Kilda road (9)where they are today.


The wedding of Prince Alfred to the the Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna, January 1874.


I don't have a specific date as to when they were moved from the Gardens to the Barracks, even though I do like to know these things - the best I can do is between 1874, when the Royal wedding took place and 1882. 

The Age report from 1859 said the guns bear the date 1836 on the trunnions. Major Bill Billett, in his book Victoria's Guns: a field guide (10) notes that the guns were restored  at the Ordnance Factory in Bendigo in 1989 and an attempt was made at translating the marks of  their origins. Major Billett, who was the curator of Arms and Armour at the Melbourne Museum, also says the guns were made in 1838, possibly at the Alexander Arsenal in Russia to a design  by Armstrong, or supervised by him,  for the Tsar of Russia.  He lists the guns as a Type 36-Pr SB with the numbers 26028 and 26046 (11).


The cannons at the Victoria Barracks, St Kilda Road, 1975.
Photographer: John T. Collins.
State Library of Victoria Image H98.251/183


Finally, even before the 1874 Royal Wedding, some Victorians were tiring of the glorification of the Allied victory over the Russians on the Crimea Peninsula - this is from the St Kilda Telegraph of August 1869, written by the journalist 'Figaro' - 
Why Redan and the Crimea? I ask the question in connexion with the naming of two new streets about to be formed in St. Kilda. I am sorry to see the council have sanctioned this ill-advised nomenclature. I do not approve of thus to perpetuating names that were brought into prominence by events which, if they cannot be forgotten, need not at least be thus ever-lastingly obtrusively forced on our notice. Have we not already Inkermann-street and Balaclava-road to keep the Russian campaign green in our memories, to say nothing of the trophy-guns in the Botanical gardens? Where, then, is the good of adding to these souvenirs of a miserable epoch in the national history? Why should we Australians in particular - who had nothing to do with the war, excepting as a matter of sympathy - thus perpetuate its sad memories? Besides, what might be justifiable when the Russians were at war with the mother-country, is, now they are at peace with her, very like an insult (12). 

I understand what 'Figaro' is saying, but I have a real interest in the origin of place and street names and find this pocket of Crimean War names in St Kilda an interesting part of our Colonial history.  There were , of course, Crimean War veterans who migrated to Australia and I have written about some of them, here

Footnotes
(1) The Age, January 12, 1858, see here.
(2) Inkerman Street was originally spelt as Inkermann, which was how the town on the Crimean Peninsula was actually spelt. I don't know when the last n was dropped. (Cooper, John Butler The History of St Kilda from its first settlement to a City and after, 1840 - 1930, v. 1 (City of St Kilda, 1931), p. 93)
(3) The Age, January 5, 1859, see here
(4) The Argus, January 7, 1859, see here.
(5) Geelong Advertiser, March 15, 1859, see here
(6) I have written about Prince Alfred in this blog before, read it here
(8) The Herald, February 3, 1882, see here.
(9) The Herald, March 18, 1889, see here
(10) Billett, Bill Victoria's Guns: a field guide (Scienceworks, Museum of Victoria, 1994)
(11) Billett, op.cit, p. 39.
(12) St Kilda Telegraph, August 7, 1869, see here

Saturday, January 28, 2023

Leech Aquarium of Felton, Grimwade & Co., and the Leech Trade

Felton, Grimwade & Co., was founded in 1867, when A. Felton and F. S. Grimwade took over the wholesale drug business of Youngman & Co. (1). Felton, Grimwade & Co., soon expanded into other areas including the manufacture of drugs and perfumes as well as establishing a Chemical Company and the Melbourne Glass Bottle Works. Given that liquids, powders and potions were all packaged in glass bottles and jars at the time, this was logical move. 

The Felton of Felton Grimwade was Alfred Felton (1831-1904), who, before the partnership, had his own wholesale drug business. After his death his estate provided the funds for the Felton Bequest which purchased works of art for the National Gallery in Melbourne and supported charities. His partner was  Frederick Sheppard Grimwade (1840-1910). Grimwade also had a background in the drug business as his father owned a wholesale drug company in England (2). 

Felton never married, but in 1865, Grimwade married Jessie Sprunt (1842-1916) and they had nine children. Apparently, Felton and Grimwade, were not only business partners but were also to spend their afterlife together at the St Kilda Cemetery. A report notes that Alfred Felton's  body was interred in the family vault belonging to the deceased and Mr. Grimwade (3) and after Mr Grimwade's death it was reported the remains will be interred in the grave of the late Mr. Felton (4). 

This story exists because I come across this 1884 image of their factories.


Image: State Library of Victoria http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/257357 
Image originally published in the Australasian Sketcher of March 12, 1884, 

The top images are the Chemical Works and Bi-Sulphide of Carbon works at Sandridge (Port Melbourne); the middle image are the Glass Works in Graham Street, South Melbourne. At the bottom are the Laboratory & Drug Mills, Jeffcott Street, West Melbourne and the Leech Aquarium, part of Drug works.

It was the Leech Aquarium that caught my eye, because that seemed a bit unusual. 


The Leech Aquarium of Felton, Grimwade & Co. 
Detail of image, above. 

Leeches have been used in medicine for centuries to remove blood from the body, thought necessary for a variety of conditionsLeech saliva has a substance which acts as an anti-coagulant on the blood and therefore increases blood flow which the leeches absorb (5)  In fact, so common was it that one report in 1893 noted  the palmy days of leeching, when "blood him" was the advice of every physician upon the slightest provocation (6).  

The Argus reported in April 1870 - 
Few persons have any conception of the magnitude of the leech trade. France is said to consume yearly 100,000,000 of leeches, England and Germany the same, and other countries in proportion. From official statistics of France, Germany, Russia, Italy, and Turkey, it has been gathered that the prime cost of leeches sold in Europe exceeds £2,000,000 per annum (7). 

This same report continues -
Some parts of Australia abound with leeches, those which frequent the Murray river being preferred
by the medical faculty to any other known specimen. They bite freely, and leave no inflammatory wound or mark behind. They thus equal, if they do not surpass, the famed speckled leech of Northern Europe. Messrs. Felton, Grimwade, and Co., of Melbourne, took measures some time ago for the conservation of the Murray leeches, and their contracts with the fishermen in the Murray district for the past season exceeded half a million. We are informed that the intercolonial demand is almost equal to the supply (8). 

Some of these leeches were imported and this is the method used to keep them alive on their journey overseas - 
The leeches have been packed in boxes of soft clay made to resemble as much as possible the muddy bottom of the river, which is their ordinary resort (9). 

Ten years later, in March 1880, The Age reported on Felton and Grimwade's leech business -
A contract has been taken by a resident of Echuca to supply to Messrs. Felton, Grimwade and Co., of Melbourne, 250,000 leeches. The Riverina Herald says the contract has been nearly completed, and on Thursday afternoon 50 lb. weight of leeches were sent down. The leeches are caught in the Moira Lakes, and are tied up in bags about the size of shot bags. Six of these bags are slung across a stick and are enclosed in a fruit case (10). 

I don't know when the Leech Aquarium was erected but it was located at their Drug Mill and Laboratory, which was in Jeffcott Street. This was one of several buildings on land between Spencer and Adderley Streets, built around 1878.  In 1906, a three-story office building facing Spencer Street was added (11).   
The Australasian Sketcher of 1884 has this description of the complex - 
The Drug Mills and Laboratory are in Jeffcott-street, West Melbourne, and consist of a handsome range of buildings, in red and white brick. Over these we are shown by the manager, Mr. Jackson, who referred with justifiable pride to the announcement telegraphed from Calcutta of the award to Felton, Grimwade, and Co. of a diploma of honour and no less than three gold medals for their various products. Some of these products we see in process of manufacture. In the mill-room linseed meal is being ground, in one room fluid magnesia is being made and bottled, another is devoted to yeast powder, another to Kruse's insecticide. We are shown through drying-rooms, packing-rooms, engine-room, and a large and busy laboratory, savouring strongly of medicinal tinctures and extracts. Beyond this are stills for the manufacture of nitrous ether, &c., and an elaborate and costly-looking apparatus for the manufacture of liquid ammonia. In the yard are sheds filled with the raw materials and packages required for the various manufactures, and at the end of the garden attached to the manager's residence a detached wooden building filled with leech tanks, in which large supplies of leeches are kept constantly stored. The aspect of the place is altogether one of busy and thriving industry (12).

Frederick Grimwade's 1910 obituary has this interesting but I believe not necessarily accurate, take on their leech business -
In 1870 he visited Echuca, and contracted for the delivery of 1,000,000 leeches at 10/ a thousand. They were caught by aborigines, who waded into swamps and allowed the leeches to fasten to their bodies. The leeches were sent packed in cases to a leech aquarium at South Melbourne, and-shipped to Europe, where they brought 30/ a hundred (13).

Firstly, the aquarium was in West Melbourne, as the 1884 contemporary report (above) confirms. The West Melbourne location is also confirmed by the 1937 reminiscences of former employee -
In their chemical laboratory in West Melbourne men and women were kept working. I was one of sixty there. Leeches were required by the medical profession more then than they are now. So Felton and Grimwade must have a leech house built there (14). 

Regarding this sentence from Frederick Grimwade's obituary - [the leeches] were caught by aborigines, who waded into swamps and allowed the leeches to fasten to their bodies. Fascinating, if true, but I would like to see other evidence to support this, as I haven't seen this anywhere else, and certainly the 1870 report (above) states that the firm was supplied by fishermen in the Murray District (15). 

From the few reports I have seen it did not seem to be necessary catch a leech by having them latch on to your body. Here are some methods of catching leeches. This is from 1870 -
Joseph Hendricks, of fruit and fish-selling note at Pleasant Creek, proposes to devote himself in future to leech-finding in the lakes. He reckons to catch 3000 per day if the weather be warm, and to sell them for 30s per 1000. He does not divest himself of his clothing, but after perturbing the waters, skims the surface with a small net and thus secures his prey (16). 

A 1893 article noted the following way that leeches were collected - 
The method of catching them was, and is, to throw a freshly removed sheepskin into the water where they live. When the skin is taken out the leeches are found clinging to it by hundreds (17).

This was the method described in 1915, under the heading - Boys and Leeches.
Dr. J. Leach, of the Education Department, has initiated a scheme to help the Melbourne Public Hospital, in addition to assist the Children's War Fund, and finally to send food to heroic Belgians. 
8,000 leeches are needed by the hospital and each school is invited to send as many as possible in small tins containing damp grass, and posted to Dr. Leach. Teachers' College, Carlton. He will deliver to the hospital authorities, and forward the cash to the schools for the Belgian Fund. He warns children not to go near deep water, nor to run any risk. Dr. Leach adopts the following plan for catching leeches :- Sink a loose meshed sack, such as a potato bag, bated with a scrap or two of raw meat, in a shallow water hole where leeches abound. After some hours the harvest may be gathered in safety. Price paid 10s per 100. The black leech is not used. It is the five striped leech which is needed at once, before the first frost causes them to hibernate. The postal address of each school sending must be plainly stated (18). 

In spite of the fact that the aptly named Dr Leach seemed to think only boys collected leeches, it was a past-time for girls as well. Ada Crossley (1871-1929) was born in Tarraville in South Gippsland and became an internationally renowned singer. She was interviewed in 1903 and said -
I am still as fond of fun as in the old Gippsland days when as a youngster I caught leeches and sold them to a local chemist in order to buy a ticket for a travelling circus (19). 

Before we leave the topic of leech catching, in 1917 Labor Call, the newspaper of the Political Labour Council of Victoria, suggests that Frederick Grimwade's own son was sent out to catch leeches -
Norton Grimwade [is] an upstart pill and poison seller of Melbourne.... His father was one of the
firm of Felton and Grimwade, and he started in life by a successful use of his legs for leech-catching in ponds. The article continues with a scathing account of Norton and his father, one of the harshest oppressors of the workers (20).  It is possibly true that Norton caught leeches for the family business, however as he was the oldest child and was only four in 1870 when the Company commenced their large leech operation it seems unlikely (21). 

Felton, Grimwade & Co,  may have been the largest leech merchant but they were not the only ones. They did, however, cover all aspects of the leech market as Chemists and households would keep their leeches in a leech jar or 'aquarium' which was conveniently available for purchase from Felton, Grimwade & Co.


Products sold by Felton, Grimwade & Co., in 1872
The Argus, September 24, 1872   https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/5839344

Here are some advertisements from other leech merchants who operated in Victoria over the past 180 years.


1841 - The finest leeches seen in Port Phillip.
Port Phillip Patriot, February 11, 1841 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/226511316


1848 - Leeches in Geelong.
Geelong Advertiser, May 6, 1848  https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/91458473


1853 - Leeches from Upper Plenty


1859 - Charles Armstrong, sole agent for Lake Moira leeches
Bendigo Advertiser, October 12, 1859 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article87992785


From 1862, Alfred Felton began advertising leeches for sale. 
This was before his partnership with Frederick Grimwade.


1866 - Negus & Co., Leech Merchants
Bell's Life in Victoria November 24, 1866 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/199056923


1870 - Felton, Grimwade & Co., advertisement.


1870 - The Melbourne Hospital invites a tender for the supply of leeches


1874 - Leeches from the Murray, apply to Hirundo. 
Hirudinea is the scientific name for leeches.


1882 - Leeches for sale form Rocke, Tompsitt & Co. 


1885 - Attention - Leech catchers in Echuca
Riverine Herald, December 4, 1885 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/114638122

1889 - H. Francis & Co. will purchase leeches


By the 1890s, the demand for leeches had declined, as confirmed by this 1895 report, which also noted the leeches success in predicting changes in the weather - 
When leeches were kept in every chemist's shop, and often in private houses, their behavior was subject of constant observation; and it was generally noticed that in still weather, dry or wet, they remained at the bottom, but rose often as much as 24 hours in advance, before a change, and in case of a thunderstorm rose very quickly to the surface, descending when it was past (22). 

However, Felton, Grimwade & Co.,were still in the leech business in 1916, as confirmed by this answer to a correspondent in the Bendigo Advertiser in 1916 -
We are informed that there is no market in Bendigo for leeches, the chemists obtaining requirements from Melbourne. Messrs. Felton, Grimwade and Co., of Melbourne, who have special means of keeping leeches alive, buy from recognised suppliers in large quantities during certain seasons. The prices given, we believe, range from 17/6 to 25/ per thousand (23). 

This 1916 article is the last I can find which has a connection between Grimwade, Felton & Co. and the leech trade.  However, as we saw before, leeches were still being used in hospitals at this time, as Dr Leach of the Education Department, was urging boys to collect leeches for the Hospital. 

In the end, Dr Leach's campaign was successful as The Argus reported in April 1916. The article has many engaging leech facts, so it is reproduced in full -
It may not be generally known that the leech is still largely used in medical practice. Each year about 8,000 are used in the Melbourne Hospital, mainly in cases of pneumonia, in which they have a beneficial effect in easing the characteristic pain in the back. They are used, too, in cases of bruising. The leeches are collected mainly by the school children of the State, in swamps and ponds. Some months ago it was feared that the supply for this winter would fall short, as it did last, and an appeal was made to the children, who are paid 5/ a hundred for the leeches. One small boy reassured the Hospital by writing:-"I will send as many leeches as possible as soon as possible,''

Soon the leeches began to arrive. Now there are about 8,000 of them-a year's supply-stored in stone filter-cases, with six inches of pebbles at the bottom of the water. Against these pebbles they scrape off the slime, which would otherwise kill them. Most of them come from the Murray and Goulburn districts. The children fish for them with baits of meat; some daring youngsters wade in the swamps, and the leeches fasten on their bare legs.

Some years ago, in the old dispensary of the Melbourne Hospital, the gauze was found to have been removed from the top of the vessels in which the leeches were kept, and the leeches vanished, not one being found in a search of the dispensary. It was finally found that the rats were the culprits, it being surmised that they put their tails into the water, and that the leeches, fastening upon these baits gratefully, were drawn up and eaten. The leeches are not fed. They are thus more ready to do their work of blood-sucking when the time comes. When once they have gorged themselves they are discarded. The reason for discarding them is obvious-one cannot sterilise a leech. If, however, one wishes to keep them as pets afterwards, it is interesting to know that about four months' rest is necessary before the leech is ready for business again
(24). 

On September 26, 1917, a factory in the West Melbourne site, was wracked by a explosion, which fortunately caused no loss of life. The reports tell us that - 
Since the war began, the manufacture of carbolic acid has been carried on by Messrs Felton, Grimwade and Company at their works in Jeffcott street, West Melbourne. Today the works were destroyed by fire, the result of an explosion in a naphthalene retort. The extent of the damage, which was great, has not yet been estimated. Thick black clouds of smoke hung over the western end of the city, and caused thousands of people to run to see the fire. The factory was of iron, and four men were at work when the retort exploded. Nobody was injured. In an instant there was a huge flame which shot right through the factory, where carbolic acid, lysol substitutes, cresol, and naphthaline wore in process of manufacture. The plant was quickly gutted. Hundreds of gallons of carbolic acid, cresol, and caustic, and many barrels of raw naphthalene were destroyed (25).


The Laboratory and Drug Mills, Jeffcott Street, West Melbourne.
Detail of image at the top of the post.

As you can see from the image above, the West Melbourne Complex was a large one, with many different buildings and I have no information as to which building was destroyed.  However, they were still producing drugs, or pharmaceuticals, on the West Melbourne site into the 1950s at least (26). What of the Leech Aquarium? I have no information as to when it closed. 

Trove - I have created a list of articles on the Leech Trade and the Leech Aquarium of Felton, Grimwade and their role in the Leech Trade, access it here

Footnotes
(1) The Argus, July 1 1867, see here.
(2) Alfred Felton (1831-1904), Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here; Frederick Sheppard Grimwade, Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here
(3) The Leader, January 16, 1904, see here.
(4) The Age, August 5, 1901, see here
(6) The Age, June 24, 1893, see here.
(7) The Argus, April 26, 1870, see here.
(8) Ibid
(9) Ibid
(10) The Age, March 20, 1880, see here.
(11) Punch, August 27, 1907, see here.
(12) Australasian Sketcher, March 12, 1884, see here.
(13) The Age, August 5, 1910, see here.
(14) The Age, March 27, 1937, see here.
(15) The Argus, April 26, 1870, see here.
(16) Mount Alexander Mail, November 14, 1870, see here.
(17) The Age, June 24, 1893, see here.
(18) West Gippsland Gazette, April 27, 1915, see here.
(19) The Argus, October 3, 1903, see here. Ada Crossley - Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here.
(20) Labor Call, March 29, 1917, see here
(21) Read the Australian Dictionary of Biography entry for Norton, Harold and Russell Grimwade, here. Russell Grimwade owned a property in Baxter, where he grew geraniums for the perfume industry and during World War Two, herbs for use in the drug trade. I have written about this here,   https://victoriaspast.blogspot.com/2023/01/geranium-harvesting-and-ten-acres-of.html
(22) The Herald, October 21, 1895, see here.
(23) Bendigo Advertiser, November 10, 1916, see here.
(24) The Argus, April 27, 1916, see here.
(25) The Herald, September 26, 1917, see here.
(26) Report and photos of the pharmaceutical laboratory Labor Call, October 19, 1950, see here;  Job advertisement The Argus, September 8, 1954, see here.