Sunday, April 09, 2006
Banyule historic house in Heidelberg
Here are some photos of one of the first houses in Victoria which still survives. It was part of the Banyule Estate - now only 1 hectare - in Buckingham Drive, in the Melbourne suburb of Heidelburg. It is built in the Gothic Revival style made from stuccoed locally sourced hand-made bricks and sandstone foundations with walls 75 cm thick. This historic house on a very steep hill or bluff overlooks parklands that were once part of the original huge farm on the rich river floodplains. Now the view across the river is mostly houses...
This "Banyule" house was built by Sydney explorer Joseph Hawdon on a 266-hectare estate. Hawdon transported livestock from Jugiong on the Murrumbidgee to Melbourne in 1836 blazing a trail for others. In 1838 he contracted the first mail run from Melbourne to Yass. Also that year he became the first to overland cattle from Howlong [NSW]to Adelaide. The next year he settled at Heidelberg and built the 'Banyule' homestead which was completed in 1846. The Hawdon family owned it until 1863.
Banyule Homestead was on an estate of a huge area until the 1890s when it was only 750 acres. The original house was extended in 1907.
In 1958 most of the 240 acres of the original estate land was sold and controversially developed into a housing estate.
In 1974 it was bought and restored by the State Government and it became an affiliate art gallery of the National Gallery of Victoria between 1977 and 1985.
In 1996 extensive alterations and additions were made.
Currently 2006, this historically significant house is in private ownership and appears to be in rather an unkempt state:it is partly painted in different shades of yellow/white, with overgrown lawns and very few trees or shrubs, and an ugly high wire fence across a smaller gate and around the permimeter bordering on the Main Yarra Trail, public parklands. [Photos through wire]
Saturday, April 08, 2006
Achievable Gardens Melbourne Flower Show DIY
Thursday, April 06, 2006
A weird garden at the Melbourne Garden Show
Telephone marketing pests cold calling phone calls - can be stopped!
I thought you might be interested to know that I have found a way that has worked to stop all those very annoying, harrasing telephone calls that are not from friends around dinner time @#$%$%%%. When the phone rings and I say hello and there is either dead silence or someone asks who it is speaking I know it is not a friend - so I just say "wait a minute" and put the phone on a table nearby without ending the call... This wastes their time and now I get NO COLD CALLS! from about 3 an evening every day of the week and at weekends!! Of course after about 5 minutes it is a good idea to remember to press the button to end the call. If I want to change an account, buy something or make a donation etc., I will initiate the call . I sure will not act on any cold calls.
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