| Bay Street |
This name is self explanatory and shows lack of imagination.
Surely there are one or two Queenscliff pioneers who still deserve recognition! |
| Beach Street |
Same comment as for Bay Street! |
| Bethune Street |
This street probably commemorates the name of Walter Angus
Bethune (1794-1885), a merchant and settler in Van Diemen's Land from 1821. He was also a
breeder of high class merino sheep at the time Port Phillip was settled and they were in
great demand among the new settlers on the mainland. |
| Bridge Street |
Originally Fish Street, where the Government is said to have
provided land to accredited fishermen at £1 per year (probably when the railway
interfered with the original sites). No doubt pressure from the residents caused a change
in name. |
| Dod Street |
This street carries the name of Charles Dod snr., first
postmaster of Queenscliff, who arrived in Geelong in 1851 on the Statesman. He took over
the Crown lease of J. W. Stevens and lived in the latter's house near St. George's Church.
His son, Charles jnr., wrote a series of historical articles for the Geelong Advertiser,
on the Queenscliff district, and these were later committed to book form entitled 'Early
Memories of Queenscliff'. |
| Esplanade |
This aptly named road runs along the cliff-top between
Stevens and Swanston Streets near the Cottage by the Sea and overlooks the Rip. The name
has no particular significance, but should not be confused with Gellibrand Street, which
is often, but wrongly, called the Esplanade. |
| Fellow Road |
Judge Thomas Howard Fellows, one of Queenscliff's greatest
admirers, was admitted to the Victorian Bar in 1853 and subsequently elected to the
Parliament where he was appointed to several important posts including Solicitor-General
and Post Master General. He became a judge in 1872. He was active in the creation of the
Borough of Queenscliffe in 1863 and in the erection of St. George's Anglican Church,
Queenscliff, in which a plaque to his memory was erected following his death on April 8,
1878. His brother, Rev. Walter Fellows, also had a deep affection for Queenscliff. It is
fitting that a street in the Queenscliff-Point Lonsdale area should bear Judge Fellows'
name. |
| Flinders Street |
Named after Capt. Matthew Flinders, R.N., the celebrated
navigator who named Bass Strait and was one of the first white men to enter Port Phillip
Bay. |
| Fraser Street |
Runs to the west off Smith Street and was named after Robert
Fraser, six times mayor of the Borough of Queenscliff, also session-clerk of St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church. Possessed of a strong Scottish brogue, he arrived in Queenscliff
early this century and ran a grocery store at the corner of Hobson and Hesse Streets,
opposite the Post Office. Later he ran the well-known guest house "Glenalvie" at
the corner of Gellibrand and Hobson Streets, where he died about 1930, his wife having
pre-deceased him. |
| Gellibrand Street |
Joseph Tice Gellibrand, a lawyer, was a member of the Port
Phillip Association which crossed from Tasmania to Victoria and took possession of the
land around Melbourne and Geelong under an illegal treaty with the native chiefs.
Gellibrand is said to have prepared the treaty documents. With G. B. L. Hesse, a fellow
solicitor, he disappeared in 1837 around the Colac area on a journey from Geelong to
Melbourne via the Barwon River!
Major General Sir John Gellibrand, a First World War figure and a founder of Legacy, was a
grandson. Gellibrand Light in Port Phillip Bay also carries his name.
This street is often erroneously referred to as the Esplanade, perhaps because it leads to
the hotel of that name. |
| Henry Street |
This street commemorates Hastings R. Henry, 2nd Lieutenant of
the survey vessel. Although it has been stated that Pt. Henry carries his name, close
scrutiny of records shows that the brig "Henry" is honoured at the point. My
theory is that the "Rattlesnake" used charts prepared by Capt. J.P. Tregurtha of
the "Henry", and the presence of the name Henry at the Point inspired the
dedication of other crew members' names to geographical features around Port Phillip Bay.
In 1855 H.R. Henry had risen to command the H.M.S. "Arrogant". |
| Hesse Street |
The ill-fated partner of J. T. Gellibrand, George Brook
Legrew Hesse had been a barrister of the Inner Temple, London, before his departure for
Van Diemen's Land aboard the Gulmare which arrived at that Colony on February 12, 1833.
Although not a member of the Port Phillip Association, he was an early arrival in the Port
Phillip District and his disappearance with J. T. Gellibrand (as yet unsatisfactorily
explained) was the greatest mystery of the day. It is fitting that his name is
commemorated in this district and the Colac area. |
| Hobson Street |
Named after Captain Hobson, master of the Rattlesnake -
Hobson's Bay also carried his name. In July 1839 he was appointed Lieutenant-Governor of
New Zealand where he died on September 10, 1842, aged 49 years. He left a widow, a
daughter and a son who became a captain in the Navy. |
| Hygeia Drive |
Named after P.S. "Hygeia" which saw service in Port
Phillip Bay from 1890-1931. Owned by Huddart Parker Ltd., it was towed from Queenscliff
and scuttled outside the Heads on 10.6.1932. |
| King Street |
Although it could be suggested that Governor King or even a
royal title is commemorated here, this street carries the surname of Daniel King, M.D.,
surgeon of the "Rattlesnake". He died in Halifax in 1847. |
| Larkin Parade |
This newly named street carries the name of John Patrick
Larkin, A.M.I.C.E.L.S., C.E., a former marine surveyor of the Victorian Ports and Harbours
Dept. Born and educated in New Zealand, he came to Victoria in 1915 and after service in
the A.I.F., he came to Queenscliff in 1920, where he remained until 1953. He lived at the
corner of Gellibrand and King Streets. |
| Learmonth Street |
Thomas and Somerville Learmonth crossed from Van Diemen's
Land to Port Phillip in 1837 and made an outstanding contribution to the development of
the Australian merino, winning many prizes for their superfine fleeces. They built
Ercildoun, a mansion still standing at Learmonth outside Ballarat, which they sold to
Samuel Wilson on their return to Scotland in 1873. It is fitting that their name is
perpetuated in this street. |
| Little Hesse Street |
This small street, running south off Symonds Street, between
Hesse and Gellibrand Streets, contains several small houses originally occupied by
fishermen. See Hesse Street. |
| Mercer Street |
As this name appears in the early subdivisions of Geelong,
Portarlington and Queenscliff, it would appear that the honour belongs to George Mercer,
of Edinburgh, who was one of the original members of the Port Phillip Association and its
representative in London, but who did not come to Australia. His interests in Victoria
were supervised by his sons, George D. and John Henry Mercer, and nephew, Major William
Drummond Mercer, who, otherwise, may be honoured in the naming of these streets,
particularly George D. and William Drummond Mercer who spent time in the Bellarine
Peninsula with David Fisher. |
| Nankervis Parade |
James Nankervis, born Ballarat in 1889 and a builder by
trade, came to Queenscliff in 1939, where he built numerous houses. To enable the
Queenscliff Borough Council to continue a road from King Street to the north, thus
completing a bayside drive, Mr. Nankervis donated the land comprising the road reserve and
the Council named the road in his honour. The donor died at Queenscliff in 1979, aged 90
years. |
| Queen Street |
No doubt this street is named in honour of Queen Victoria and
perhaps matches King Street into which it almost merges. It once was a much longer street,
but suffered a reduction in size when the section, now in the Queenscliff High School
area, was removed from its length. |
| Raglan Street |
Raglan was one of the most used place names in the gold rush
period of the 1850s - districts, streets, goldmines, etc., carried with obvious pride the
name of one of the British Field Marshals of the Crimea Campaign - Lord Raglan 1788-1855.
Even an overcoat with its raglan sleeves took his name. |
| Richards Street |
Charles Richards was 1st Lieutenant of the
"Rattlesnake"; as well as this street Pt. Richards near Portarlington bears his
name. He died in England in 1844 by which time he had reached the rank of Captain. |
| Shortlands Bluff |
Peter Frederick Shortland was mate of H.M.S. Rattlesnake
which carried out the survey of Port Phillip in 1836-37. Born 1815, he was the son of
Thomas George Shortland, also an officer of the Royal Navy. In 1838 he obtained leave to
study at Cambridge University, graduating with honours in 1842. He rejoined the Navy and
wrote books on naval surveying etc., and had risen to the rank of Commander before his
death in 1888. |
| Smith Street |
J. E. Smith, born in Van Diemen's Land, arrived in 1847 and
commenced a butchery business in Geelong. He came to Queenscliff in 1856 and retired to
Healesville in 1906. The local Queenscliff newspaper Sentinel spoke in eulogistic terms of
his residence in that area on the eve of his departure for Healesville. The street carries
his family name. |
| (The) Springs Area |
This area around the entrance of Lonsdale Road to Point
Lonsdale and west of the "narrows" was so named because of the presence of
several fresh water springs which perpetually bubbled to the surface until about 1939 when
adjacent roads were surfaced. Market gardens sprang up early and many Chinese lived in the
vicinity. Many early citizens of Queenscliff lived there and have left their names in
streets such as Werry, Ward and Lawrence. The Springs area is not a postal district, being
regarded as part of Point Lonsdale - Queenscliff, according to which side of the
Geelong-Queenscliff road it is situated. |
| St. Andrew's Street |
This small street led to the rear of St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church and ultimately took its name. |
| St. Leonards |
In 1853 the Queenscliff area was officially surveyed by
Government Surveyor, Alexander John Skene (1820-1894) who took charge of the Geelong
district survey office in 1853, having arrived in Melbourne in 1843. He later became
Surveyor-General of Victoria. A notice dated June 20, 1853, officially named the township
St. Leonards, much to the ire of the local inhabitants who, on June 23, 1853, through the
intervention of Judge T. H. Fellows, had the township renamed Queenscliff (no final
"e"). |
| Stevens Street |
John Whitehall Stevens had the pastoral licence for
Shortlands Bluff from 1850 onwards and is fittingly remembered in this street. He built
first house worthy of the name in the Queenscliff area. |
| Stokes Street |
H.M.S. "Beagle" surveyed Port Phillip and Tasmanian
waters on several occasions between 1838 and 1843 - Capt. Lort John Stokes was in command
of the vessel. |
| Swanston Street |
No doubt this street commemorates Charles Swanston, a Hobart
banker, who was an original member of the Port Phillip Association and whose son, Charles
L. Swanston, was actively associated in Geelong with the firm of merchants, Swanston,
Willis & Co. (later Swanston, Willis & Stephen), Moorabool Street, near the Barwon
Bridge. Swanston Jnr. at one time lived at Clonard, Herne Hill. The name is also
remembered in streets in Melbourne and Geelong. |
| Symonds Street |
This street commemorates Lieutenant Symonds of H.M.S.
Rattlesnake. Thomas M. C. Symonds was 3rd Lieutenant of the "Rattlesnake" when
it surveyed Port Phillip in 1836/7. By 1855 he had risen to the command of H.M.S.
"Arethusa" in the Black Sea area. |
| Thwaites Walk |
Named after a pioneer family of fishermen, boatmen, seamen
and building contractors, this walk runs along the edge of the cliffs through the
Citizens' Park opposite the Ozone Hotel. the Thwaites men were all members of the
volunteer lifeboat crews of the past and Cr. W. J. Thwaites was five times mayor of the
Borough of Queenscliff. |
| Tobin Drive |
An extension of Hobson Street, this road leads fittingly
enough to the Pilots' Jetty. It was named in honour of Geo. Tobin, first pilot to operate
in Port Phillip Bay. He served from 1839-1853. |
| Weeroona Parade |
Carries the name of P.S. "Weeroona" which operated
in Port Phillip Bay from 1910-1942. Owned originally by Huddart Parker Ltd., it served as
a hospital ship in World War II and was dismantled at Berry's Bay, N.S.W. in 1951. |
| Whale Head |
So named in 1802 by Lieutenant Tuckey of the Calcutta -
probably the first white man officially to set foot in the area. |
| Wharf Road |
This road runs east from Hesse Street to the original wharf
used by the fishermen and early shipping. The fishermen's co-operative society's shop is
at the beach end of the original street. |