Trading Name
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Not known
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Years of Operation
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1827 1828
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Company Number
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No number
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Address
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Brick Kiln Road Corinella
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Council Lot No.
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11a
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Coordinates
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-38.411480 145.446552
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Current Use
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Primary production
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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.
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.
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
ReplyDeletewhich is proposed to occur right beside the original dam?