John Smith's home, Queen St
built late 1840s
Served as Treasury and Gold Office from 1859
John Smith arrived from Sydney in 1840 and began teaching local Indigenous children at a Melbourne government mission. Then Smith opened a grocery and later owned hotels. With this money, he built himself the first really lovely home in Melbourne in 1848, and added a third storey later. Smith was soon elected to the City Council, then elected Lord Mayor, then to the State Legislature for years! The Government used Smith’s renovated premises for different purposes in the C20th eg State Treasury Offices.
Lovell Chen
Meanwhile, a row of shops was built in town. A large shop and a residence above went up in Crossley St in 1848-9 by an English migrant butcher, William Crossley. The premises were historically used as a meat-preserving works, with the land behind used as a slaughter yard. It was here that our story began, with the wide shop and residence in Crossley St.
Suddenly life in Melbourne changed forever in 1851; gold was discovered in rural Clunes, triggering the Gold Rush. As money and people poured in, the city stretched in every direction, requiring rebuilding in a much grander fashion.
The second part of the Crossley Building, the adjoining shop and its residence above, was designed by architect Joseph Burns. The completed building extended from Crossley St (ex-Romeo Lane) and Liverpool St (ex-Juliet Lane). The butchers expanded into the newer shops, over the top of the original cellar. The walls were of bluestone and the ceilings were brick barrel vaults. The interiors showed relics of openings, vents, shelving, enclosures and fixtures. At ground level, an 1847 cast iron column was visible in a later brick wall, separating the two retail sides.
Later shopkeepers included the famous butcher family Sir William Angliss. Since then, shops were used for shoes, drapery, café, grocer, fruiterer, photographic studio, wine merchant, tailor and dry goods. Eugene von Guerard, a wonderful landscape artist in the late colonial era, occupied #56 in 1857-8, just when he was establishing his career. The building had also housed the notorious Bourke St Rats gang.
Job Warehouse, as it was called, was still in a simple Victorian Georgian style. The external render was ruled, there was a simple parapet above, and the corner shop had a splayed corner. Each of the two storey shops had a residence behind and above them. Externally the building kept much of its original form, except for alterations to the shop windows and the parapet. But the interiors retained few original features; even the internal stairs which once led upstairs were all removed and new stairs were added.
The Job Warehouse was of architectural and historical significance to the State of Victoria, satisfying these 3 criteria for inclusion in the Victorian Heritage Register:
The Job Warehouse was of architectural and historical significance to the State of Victoria, satisfying these 3 criteria for inclusion in the Victorian Heritage Register:
A] The building’s cultural history was among the oldest surviving buildings in Melbourne, forming an important link to pre-Gold Rush Melbourne. The various businesses occupying the shops reflected the residential nature of central Melbourne then, and the everyday goods and services local residents needed. It demonstrated the old practice of people living close to their businesses.
B] It has rare historical aspects surviving from a pre-Gold Rush commercial building, and of an early shop-row, once common in the city but now almost completely disappeared.
C] It has the architectural characteristics of the austere Georgian style buildings typical of pre-Gold Rush Melbourne. This style was the basis for most architecture in Australia from the time of European settlement until at least the mid C19th but rarer in Victoria because there was no convict settlement here. In any case, gold wealth in Victoria led to the popularity of more ornate styles.
B] It has rare historical aspects surviving from a pre-Gold Rush commercial building, and of an early shop-row, once common in the city but now almost completely disappeared.
C] It has the architectural characteristics of the austere Georgian style buildings typical of pre-Gold Rush Melbourne. This style was the basis for most architecture in Australia from the time of European settlement until at least the mid C19th but rarer in Victoria because there was no convict settlement here. In any case, gold wealth in Victoria led to the popularity of more ornate styles.
Job Warehouse, Bourke Street
Lovell Chen
These shops were occupied from 1956 by Jacob Zeimer, a post-WW2 European migrant. He later owned the whole building, becoming well-known in Melbourne for fabrics for haberdashers, dressmakers and theatres. Since then the terrace housed many tenants and underwent extensive alterations. For 56 years Jobs Warehouse remained a magnet for dressmakers, its windows showing a lively business crammed to the ceiling with enormous rolls of cloth.
The people who owned and occupied the row told the story of the evolving city. The terrace at the top of Bourke St, on a site flanked by laneways, clearly held special significance for older Melburnians. Own-ed by one family for decades and still the home of the Paperback Bookshop today, the terrace was a rare survivor in the city streetscape. The site’s history and development resembled many early commercial and residential buildings once commonplace in Melbourne’s Central Business District-CBD, but not now.
The restoration of this, one of Melbourne’s CBD’s oldest buildings, is urgently needed. Neglected since the shops closed in 2012, the Heritage Listed property in Bourke St will form part of a new hospitality venture, becoming a 673-patron bar and restaurant Juliet’s Terrace. This will honour the laneway once home to Melbourne’s red-light district 160 years ago. The Lord Mayor said the group’s $50 million project would generate 500 jobs during construction, and 350 hospitality jobs after. But due to the building’s age, the time needed to restore it will be longer than normal.
George's Collins St, c1890
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By way of comparison, compare the Georgian architecture with a building designed by architects John Grainger and Charles D'Ebro some decades later (1880) in the grand classical revival style. Brothers William and Alfred George were retailers in the UK. They emigrated to Melbourne in 1877, and soon found work at Robinson’s drapers in Collins St, in the most fashionable retailing area in the city. In 1880, the opportunity came to take over the business as George's Emporium, perhaps the most beautiful commercial building and business in Australia.





2 comments:
What a vivid journey through Melbourne’s architectural evolution. Thank you for such a detailed history of it
Hello Hels, The John Smith house is another handsome house in Australia that I am willing to move right into. It is good that these early pre-gold-rush buildings are still around and getting the attention and preservation they deserve.
--Jim
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