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in January 1849, an ex-convict called Thomas Chapman found a 38 ounce gold nugget in Daisy Creek (7 km from Talbot) while working as a shepherd, this was to spark a minor Gold Rush which authorities had been trying to keep quiet to avoid lawlessness invading the land. The main gold rush only commenced in 1851 after the law was changed allowing miners to own the gold as long as they paid a miner's licence (formerly, any gold found was deemed property of the Crown).
1850: Lorne (Louttit Bay) in the
Otways is used as a port for timber and its 1st settler developed a cattle run in 1853.
1850: The passing in London of the Australian Colonies Government Act in 1850 led to, ‘the separation of Port Phillip from New South Wales and the extension of representative institutions to Van Diemen’s Land and South Australia’.
1851, colony of Victoria founded, with Charles La Trobe of Latrobe St fame (1801-1875) appointed as 1st governor with Melbourne having a population of 25,000. This coincided with the gold rush which resulted in 313,000 new settlers immigrating to Victoria, rapidly outstripping NSW in population & development. In 1852 alone, 86,000 British migrated seeking their fortune.
A Scottish couple, Archibald and Catherine Menzies, set up the Menzies Family Hotel at this time in La Trobe Street, which lent its name to today's surviving Menzies Alley and Menzies Place. It changed its name to Stutt's around 1872 and then proceeded to feature a lion and other caged animals in its dining room!
1853: In an effort to remove swampy areas in Melbourne, a law was passed in 1853 requiring those in low-lying areas to bury their homes. If a landowner refused or was too slow, the council was empowered to raise the level of the land itself and charge the costs. Hence excavations have discovered this buried fences and houses!
1853, James Blackburn (1803-1854) commences construction of Melbourne's 1st controlled water supply - the Yan Yean Reservoir, but soon after died of typhoid. Fresh tap water became available in 1857.
1853, the Victorian Government offered a concession to the Melbourne, Mount Alexander & Murray River Railway Company to build a railway from Melbourne to Echuca, including land to the east of Batman's Hill for the terminus. In 1856 the company failed, and was taken over by the government who formed the Victorian Railways to complete the works, the railway station being erected at Spencer Street in 1858 and the line finally made it to Echuca by 1864.
1853, govt grants MCC a new site for a cricket ground in the Government Paddock / Yarra Park which was to become the MCG.
1853, Joseph Reed (1828-1890), architect, wins competition to design Melbourne's Public Library and later teams with Frederick Barnes (1824-1884) to create a number of leading buildings in the boom era including Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne Town Hall, Trades Hall, Rippon Lea and St Michael's Church.
1854, the Eureka Stockade in Ballarat; The Age newspaper is founded and was soon taken over by David Syme (1827-1908).
1854, Melbourne's first railway bridge was built for Hobsons Bay Railway - a timber trestle bridge just below Yarra Falls, and soon a government built iron railway bridge with a record clear span of 61m was built across the Maribyrnong River for access to Williamstown.
1855, the gold rush brought a housing supply crisis in Melbourne, and to relieve the situation, prefabricated iron houses were imported from the United Kingdom and erected in some of Melbourne’s inner suburbs. By 1855 there were around 100 of these very modest dwellings in South Melbourne alone, a suburb then known for its many tents and known as canvas town. These were ordered from a catalogue, constructed in UK, dismantled, labelled, crated, shipped to Melbourne. At least 3 of these houses remain today, with one - Patterson House - still on its original site: 399 Coventry Street South Melbourne. Two others, Abercrombie House and Bellhouse were relocated from North Melbourne and Fitzroy.
1855, The British parliament passed the Victorian Constitution Act in October 1855
1855, The Eureka Stockade rebellion led to the election in 1855 of eight Victorian goldfields members, all of whom supported the secret ballot and adult male suffrage.
1856, electoral reform became a reality with the passing into law of universal male suffrage in South Australia and the secret ballot for adult men in Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia.
1856, a wrought iron bridge built at Church St
1856: 136 hotels, inns and taverns crowded into an area one mile long and half a mile broad, bounded by Flinders, Spencer, Latrobe and Spring Streets, The hours were 4 a.m. to 9 p.m. in the warmer months of the year, with special licences available until midnight. Beer for ‘off the premises consumption’ could be bought on Sundays for two hours after 1 p.m.
1857, Ferdinand Von Mueller (1825-1896) becomes Victoria's 1st government botanist and curator for the Royal Botanic Gardens. 16 years later he was replaced by English landscape gardener William Guilfoyle(1840-1912) to changed it from an educational facility to a recreational one much to Von Mueller's displeasure.
1857:
Kyneton was proclaimed a municipality and, thanks to the gold rush and through traffic, Kyneton became the state's major agricultural town and the general prosperity and development resulted in a building boom which saw bluestone quarrying become a substantial industry.
1858: first game of Australian football was played between Melbourne Grammar and Scotch College - a year before the rules of the sport had been codified.
1858: the original Spencer St Station is built
1859: the Bendigo train line construction reaches Sunbury
1861, iron lattice-girder road bridge built across the Yarra at eastern end of Bridge Rd which is Australia's oldest surviving metal truss bridge, although it has been modified twice since.
1861, the Albion & Darlington steam train stations on the Sunbury line which opened in 1860, are closed and demolished, Maidstone is closed in 1865
1862: the Bendigo train line construction reaches Castlemaine then Bendigo. It was extended to Echuca in 1864.
1863: the Great Flood of the Yarra River and inner suburbs in Dec 1863 but the original Princes Bridge survived although initiated plans to replace it and further flood mitigation strategies were later introduced
1866: Batman Hill is removed and flattened to allow for expansion of the rail yards - the Collins Street bridge built in 2002 was designed to replicate the original curve and shape of the hill
1869: the “behind” or “point” was introduced into VFL football to reduce the many lengthy games where teams struggled to win by a goal in often low scoring games
1876: William Wardell (1823-1899) architect, builds St Patrick's Cathedral, one of the biggest Gothic Revival churches in the world, and Government House.
1876: the 8 storey Yorkshire Brewery Tower in Collingwood becomes the tallest building in Melbourne and remains the tallest for the next 12 years.
1878: the private Melbourne and Hobson's Bay United Railway Company which controlled the lines from Flinders Street station to South Yarra was purchased by the State Government enabling the Gippsland line to be brought directly into Melbourne.