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Timeline
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The History of Marcus Hill

Early photo of Marcus Hill State School (date unknown) - demolished in
1967.
[Photograph #885 : The Bellarine Historical Society photograph collection]
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The following is extracted from Balla-wein : A history of the Shire of Bellarine
by Ian Wynd.
The name Marcus Hill appears as early as 1863 when the inhabitants there asked the
Indented Head Road Board for a road to be cleared (possibly Banks Road). The ordnance map
shows Marcus Hill (209 feet) about two miles slightly north of east from the locality. Bailliere's
Gazetteer of 1865 describes it as a small hamlet about four miles west-south-west
of Queenscliff, at the head of a salt swamp draining into Swan Bay and on a freshwater
lake or swamp, suggesting that the settlement was originally further south than it is
today. The fact that there was no regular communication with Queenscliff or Geelong also
indicates that it was not on the main line of road. The scattered population consisted of
small agriculturalists and a few brickmakers. Church services began about 1863 in a
thatched hut, then in a brick building that also served as a Sunday School. It was later
enlarged and in 1882 was moved to a position on the Queenscliff Road near the State
School. .....
In 1882 J. F. Levien was successful in getting a railway station built for Marcus Hill.
This appears to have been on the Swan Bay Road about two miles from the hamlet. Then the
Ocean Grove Station was built about one mile closer along Banks Road to serve the new
township. In 1890, as the result of a petition from the locals, the name of the Marcus
Hill station was changed to Mannerim, as was the post office which had been established
there in 1883. A further change occurred on December 1, 1896, the Ocean Grove station was
renamed Marcus Hill. Later the word Hill was dropped from the name.
In June 1870 Anne Higgison opened a school at Marcus Hill which seems to have become
State School No. 1370 in 1874, when it had an average attendance of 16. A new site was
chosen in 1875 but it was not until February 1878 that the new school, No. 2029, with its
three room residence (cost £400) opened with Mary O'Connell as head teacher. Until 1905
it was known as Queenscliff Road School. (pp. 109-110)
(See p. 180 of Balla-wein for source references.)
[Reproduced with the kind permission of Ian Wynd, Geelong]
Wynd, Ian. Balla-wein : A history of the Shire of Bellarine,
Shire of Bellarine, Drysdale, 1988 - available from the Bellarine
Historical Society and the Geelong Historical Records Centre.


Members of the Bellarine Historical Society and residents of the towns of the Bellarine
Peninsula have commenced a major project to document the history of their local areas on
the Internet. These histories will includes towns, buildings, families, schools,
environment - in fact any subject which adds to the history of the Bellarine Peninsula.
These are not all encompassing histories and certainly will not replace the need for
researchers to visit or contact the Bellarine Historical Society and other local
repositories for more detailed information. The purpose of these histories is to increase
the awareness of the depth of history on the Peninsula and to encourage further research
into local archives.


We'd love your input to the history of Marcus Hill. This is how you can help :
 | If you've already researched or would like to research a part of Marcus Hill's history -
people, buildings, etc. - and would like it added to the Marcus Hill web page(s), contact
our Publicity Officer. |
Please don't be bashful - your contribution can be anonymous or we'll happily put your
name to it.
If you don't have email access, please mail information or questions to :
Publicity Officer, Bellarine Historical Society, PO Box 53, Drysdale, Vic 3222


 | Photographs : Bellarine Historical Society;
Geelong Historical Records Centre; various private collections. |
 | Maps & Plans : Bellarine Historical Society;
Geelong Historical Records Centre. |
 | Newspapers : Geelong Advertiser Indexes
- Bellarine Historical Society & Geelong Historical Records Centre; Geelong
Advertiser on microfilm - Geelong Historical Records Centre; various local newspapers
- Bellarine Historical Society. |
 | Miscellaneous Documents & Advertisements :
Bellarine
Historical Society; Geelong Historical Records Centre; various private collections. |
 | Bellarine Shire Council Records : Geelong Historical Records Centre. |
 | More recent Council Records : City of Greater Geelong. |
 | Cemetery Records : Bellarine Historical Society; Geelong Historical
Records Centre. |
 | Land Records : Registrar of Titles, Melbourne; Bellarine Historical
Society; Geelong Historical Records Centre. |


Brownhill, Geo. H. Illustrated Guide to Geelong And District,
Facsimile edn., Deakin University Press, Geelong, 1990.
Campbell, A. J. Tourist Guide to Geelong and Southern Watering Places,
Henry Thacker, Geelong, 1893.
Edwards, Ronald G. The History of Ocean Grove, Limited
edition., The Edina Press, Lower Ferntree Gully Victoria, 1952.
McKeown, Gil. The Grove That Grew : The History of Ocean Grove,
Gil McKeown, Ocean Grove, 1983.
Townsend, Alix. These Friendly Shores : A Personal History of Ocean Grove,
A. Townsend, Ocean Grove, 1988.
Wynd, Ian. Balla-wein : A history of the Shire of Bellarine,
Shire of Bellarine, Drysdale, 1988.
Wynd, Ian. Geelong The Pivot : A Short History of Geelong and District,
Cypress Books, Mont Albert North, 1971.


Created by : Susie Zada
© 1996 Susie Zada, Ocean Grove, Victoria, Australia
Last revised : July 17, 2004.
Email : szada@zades.com.au
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