Context

Historic context

Victoria has developed exponentially since European settlement. Originally timber huts housed a small but growing population. A legacy of the gold rush of the 1850s was an oversupply of underemployed miners. The extensive basalt plains of Victoria were a fertile ground for stonemasons who built the magnificent cities we see in Victoria today. These masons could not keep up with the demand as working basalt is a slow process. Brick makers then filled this gap and brick works popped up all over the colony as the population grew more affluent and wanted a better standard of housing.

This cultural and industrial heritage has largely been lost. The brick kilns are now gone. But the bricks remain. They are everywhere. Australia is now, as has been for a long time, the world’s largest per capita consumer of bricks. Nobody gives them a second thought. Many new arrivals in post-war Australia worked making bricks. Maybe one of your relatives was such a person. Almost nothing has been done in Victoria by the State Government to record this history, except a half-hearted attempt in the early 1980s by the Victoria State Archaeological Survey to record a few brick that came their way at a few sites. What ever became of them? Although some good came of it because a paper on “The Analysis of Bricks from Archaeological Sites in Australia; IAIN STUART” was produced. See it at http://www.jcis.net.au/data/23-04-Stuart.pdf


Even half the bricks we use today smash like China tea-pots if you drop them from any sort of height. Not like the old Victorian bricks. Oh no, they knew how to build houses in those days.

“Blue Collar”, P16, Danny King



What I want to do here is to show pictures of some of the bricks I have come across in my travels and give a short story about their maker. If you have anything to add, please let me know. PS: I do not collect bricks, only photographs of bricks. If you have some old bricks, let me know and I may come and photograph them and maybe find a story about them.

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Corinella


Trading Name
Not known
Years of Operation
1827 1828
Company Number
No number
Address
Brick Kiln Road Corinella
Council Lot No.
11a
Coordinates
-38.411480 145.446552
Current Use
Primary production

What better way to start this blog than with the first brick makers in Victoria.  In December 1826, a party of settlers from Sydney arrived at Corinella in Westernport Bay.  They bought with them, around 10,000 bricks used as ballast in the ships.  As the settlement grew, in early 1827, they set up a clamp to make more bricks.  It is believed that around 30,000 more were made at the site.  These were reported as being better made than the Sydney bricks.  The Governor required each settlement to set up their own brick works.

Given that each cubic yard of clay makes about 200 to 250 bricks, then the brick pit would not be large.  The settlement was located at the end of Jamieson Street Corinella and a small pit is still visible in the paddock further east at the end of Brick Kiln Road.  I suspect that name may be a clue.  A large percentage of the bricks were “recycled”shortly afterwards by the Anderson brothers who built their home on the Bass River from these bricks, as well as a salt works and a flour-mill.


One of the convicts was Charles Rote, a Brick Maker.  Some of the  other convicts in the original settlement were Charles Baker, a mason and bricklayer from Bristol;  John Clark, another convict was a Bricklayers Boy; James Boland, Stonecutter;  Thomas Softly, Bricklayer and Benjamin Pearce, Bricklayer and Plasterer.

In late November 1834 Captain John Hart, Master of the whaling ship “Elizabeth” with a party of whalers from Portland to Western Port to gather wattle bark used in Tanneries during a lull in whaling. Captain Hart had traveled the coast previously in 1831.  Hart had been singing the praises of the area.  This led to John Batman settling Melbourne in 1835.  (Batman had earlier tried to obtain land at Westernport without success.)  In early December Hart landed at Red Point near the 1826 settlement with 20 Bark Strippers, a team of bullocks and a dray.  He later settled on French Island.



A "Hart" Brick Mounted in a Monument at Corinella

A John Hart later tried to establish a salt works there and as part of this process, he made bricks.  They were hand made and were impressed with a single heart motif.  People often mistake these “Hart” bricks for the original convict bricks produced in 1827.  This is not the case.  Most convict bricks were scavenged and pilfered years ago but many “Hart” bricks are in Corinella.  A house, (the Palmer Homestead) made from them burned down as late as 1999.  It was probably John Junior as the bricks were first made in 1872.  John moved to Melbourne and went into partnership with George Preston, then out on his own for a couple of years in the mid 1870s.


A single heart has been used by a number of brick makers in early settlements, usually by convict makers.  Soon after the settlement was abandoned, later arrivals pillaged the site and little now remains.  Anything around these days is likely to be one of the "Hart" bricks.


Brick Kiln Road at Corinella with the remains of the clay pit at the top of the picture.



1 comment:

  1. Hi Rameking, I really liked this blog from a while ago. Do you have any advice as to how to protect the site from development
    which is proposed to occur right beside the original dam?

    ReplyDelete