Showing 40 items matching "flintoff street greensborough"
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Greensborough Historical Society
Planning Document, Banyule City Council, Site plan of Greensborough 1997, 28/07/1997
Site plans for the area bounded by Flintoff Street; Grimshaw Street; Main Street and Para Road Greensborough. these plans show the area before the development of Watermarc.This plan shows central Greensborough before the Watermarc developmentSet of 8 site plansgreensborough, greensborough swimming pool -
Greensborough Historical Society
Folder, Banyule City Council, Main Street Greensborough, 2007-2011
Folder of coloured photographs of Main Street Greensborough, plus one aerial photograph of the area bounded by Grimshaw, Flintoff, Para and Main Streets and one of Grimshaw Street between Henry and Main Streets. Greensborough Shopping Centre prior to the construction of WatermarcGreen plastic folder of coloured photographic prints of Main Street Greensborough.main street greensborough, banyule city council, watermarc -
Greensborough Historical Society
Photograph - Digital image, Marilyn Smith, Crane at Watermarc, 11/08/2016
Cranes on the skyline at Watermarc development 2016. New Banyule Council offices are being built at 1 Flintoff Street, over the Watermarc building.Digital copy of colour photograph.watermarc, one flintoff, banyule council -
Greensborough Historical Society
Photograph - Digital image, Marilyn Smith, Crane at Watermarc, 19/07/2016
... . watermarc one flintoff banyule council main street greensborough ...Cranes on the skyline at Watermarc development 2016, taken from Main Street. New Banyule Council offices are being built at 1 Flintoff Street, over the Watermarc building.Digital copy of colour photograph.watermarc, one flintoff, banyule council, main street greensborough -
Greensborough Historical Society
Photograph - Digital image, Jan Lewis, View From Flintoff Street Swing Bridge to the Sondemeyer's House in Briar Hill circa 1958, 1958c
From Flintoff Street swing bridge to Sondemeyer's circa 1958 Digital copy of black and white photographflintoff street, sondemeyers hill -
Greensborough Historical Society
Newsletter, Greenhills and North Greensborough Progress Association, Community News: official journal of the Greenhills and Nth. Greensborough Progress Association and the Apollo Parkways Progress Association. 6th October, 1975, 06/10/1975
This edition includes a report on the Progress Association's [September 1975] meeting, Against all competition [Plenty River's footbridge at Flintoff Street], From the Council Chambers, Apollo Uprising! Family Day Care scheme. A digital copy of this Newsletter is available from Greensborough Historical Society.Newsletter, 6 p., illus.greenhills and north greensborough progress association, greenhills, apollo parkways progress association, apollo parkways -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Digital Photograph, Alan King, Heritage apple tree, 24 January 2008
This old apple tree situated beside the Plenty River Trail at Greensborough has been associated with Melbourne Founder John Batman. Known as Batman's Tree, this apple tree is on the bank of the Plenty River near Leischa Court, Greensborough. It is said that Melbourne Founder John Batman may have planted the tree and later signed his treaty here with the Aboriginal people. It still bears fruit and its recorded on the National Trust's Register of Significant Trees, as the oldest apple tree in Victoria. Published: Nillumbik Now and Then / Marguerite Marshall 2008; photographs Alan King with Marguerite Marshall.; p7 Was This John Batman's Tree? An apple tree on the bank of the Plenty River near Leischa Court, Greensborough, is believed to have belonged to Melbourne’s founder, John Batman. It could also stand where John Batman signed his famous treaty with the Aboriginal people.1 Known as Batman’s Tree, it still bears fruit and is recorded on the National Trust’s Register of Significant Trees, as the oldest apple tree in Victoria. It is ‘Believed to have been planted by either John Batman, (c1837) or Martin Batey (1841)’.2 In 1966 a Horticultural Adviser, Mr Rolfe, after extensive questioning of aged Greensborough residents, wrote: ‘it thus seems fairly certain that the old tree on the banks of the Plenty River is an original Batman apple tree’. Mr Rolfe said that the tree stood on a spot formerly called Wattle Bend: ‘one of the sites claimed to be where John Batman signed his famous treaty with the aboriginals. ‘My main source of information has been interviews with people who attended school in the Greensborough area from 70 to 80 years ago. Their parents were close to the days when Melbourne was founded so information passed on by word of mouth.’ Around 1920 the tree was struck by lightning and a concrete block was placed in the split. The concrete is inscribed with the date 1841 when the tree was thought to have been planted. Not everyone agrees with Mr Rolfe however. Former secretary of the Nillumbik Historical Society, Kevin Patterson, said there was no written evidence to support the claim. But he said the tree had been known to locals for decades as Batman’s Tree. In the 1920s a holiday resort in the area advertised: ‘Come to Greensborough and see John Batman’s tree’. Mr Patterson said it was thought that when Batman died in 1839 his land was sold and a Greensborough man Frederick Flintoff bought seedlings from his orchard for £1 each. This was the only one left.3 Mr Rolfe said: ‘If planted in 1837, or even a few years later, it undoubtedly is the oldest living apple tree in Victoria. Title records of the property on which the tree grows show that the land was a crown grant of F D Wickham in 1840. Mr Wickham was reputed to be a friend of John Batman. All the early settlers prior to the crown grants were squatters, by virtue of Batman’s treaty. This treaty was revoked by the then New South Wales Government, so it is likely that Wickham or an agent was in occupation before 1840. ‘According to Mrs Mavis Latham (John Batman – Great Australian Series, Oxford University Press) when Batman came to Port Phillip in 1835 he brought fruit trees with him. He failed to get a crown grant for his selection on Collins Street, which included 20 acres (eight ha) of orchard and cultivation. His residence became the Government Office and Melbourne grew from wild bushland in 1835 to a town of over 20,000 people by 1841. It is possible Batman visited Wickham and presented him with a tree.’ However a Flintoff descendant in 1933 said Frederick Flintoff ordered his bailiff Martin Batey to transplant the Batman Tree from the Spencer Street orchard to its present site as a memorial to his friend Batman.4 Mr Rolfe spoke to many people, including descendants of the Bateys and Flintoffs and pupils at the Greensborough Primary School. Many had gained their information from a ‘very highly respected’ head master Lewis Amiet at the Greensborough School from 1895 to 1917. He must have gained this information from residents in the district and had this information been incorrect, the parents of the children would have promptly corrected him.’ One woman who attended the school before Mr Amiet’s appointment, said the previous teacher also taught that the tree on the Plenty River was a Batman tree, Mr Rolfe said.This collection of almost 130 photos about places and people within the Shire of Nillumbik, an urban and rural municipality in Melbourne's north, contributes to an understanding of the history of the Shire. Published in 2008 immediately prior to the Black Saturday bushfires of February 7, 2009, it documents sites that were impacted, and in some cases destroyed by the fires. It includes photographs taken especially for the publication, creating a unique time capsule representing the Shire in the early 21st century. It remains the most recent comprehenesive publication devoted to the Shire's history connecting local residents to the past. nillumbik now and then (marshall-king) collection, greensborough, john batman tree, plenty river trail -
Greensborough Historical Society
Book, Shire of Diamond Valley, Shire of Diamond Valley Handbook 1980, 1980_
Guide to services provided by Shire of Diamond Valley. The Shire of Diamond Valley was a Local Government Area located about 20 kilometres northeast of Melbourne. The shire covered an area of 74.38 square kilometres and existed from 1964 until 1994. Cover illustration of footbridge over the Plenty River at Flintoff Street. The span is 50 metres and cost $56,100 to build in 1978.Annual guide to services in Shire of Diamond Valley32 pages, col illus., maps. shire of diamond valley, greensborough, handbooks -
Greensborough Historical Society
Document - Oral History Transcript, John Finn, interviewed 1995, 26/09/1995
John Finn 1909-1999. Eliza Jane Finn (Stock) 1889-1980. Thomas William Finn. Marble Hall, Greensborough. Connects the Finn and Stock families and relates their life in Greensborough in the early 20th century.Transcript of oral history, told by John Finn on 26th September 1995. Interviewed by Peter Blackbourn. One A4 page. finn family, stock family, marble hall, flintoff street, para road -
Greensborough Historical Society
Photograph - Digital image, Young woman in Greensborough, 1930s
... in the Greensborough area for eight generations. greensborough flintoff street ...Photograph of Hazel Roy in Greensborough in the 1930's. The background landscape shows properties along Flintoff St and views towards Briar Hill. Part of the Lorraine Coates Collection.Shows a well known local woman whose family has lived in the Greensborough area for eight generations.Digital copy of black and white photograph.greensborough, flintoff street, briar hill