I wrote this for the 35th birthday of the Bunyip & District Community News, and it was published in the October 2017 edition.
The first European
settlers in the Bunyip region were squatters who leased the two Connabul Creek
runs, which were located between the Ararat Creek and the Bunyip River. In
1845, Connabul Creek 1 run of 8,960 acres was
leased by Michael Ready (or Reedy) and James Hook and Connabul Creek 2 run was
leased by Terence O’Connor and a Mr Hayes. The other squatting run in the area
was the 30,000 acre Bunyeep Bunyeep Run, which was located between the Bunyip
River and the Tarago River and taken up in 1849 by Henry Jennings. Around the
same time as these squatting runs were taken up (1847) a road was surveyed from
Dandenong to the Bunyip River (in the vicinity of were Ellis Road meets the river)
and the township of Bunyeep developed there.
This town was surveyed
in the 1850s - it had a High Street and a Barkly Street and eleven blocks - two
owned by A. McKinnon, two by W.M.K Vale and the rest by David Connor, who built
the Bunyeep Inn around 1854. In 1867, Connor built a new hotel called the New
Bunyip Inn. This was built on the Bunyip
River on the Gippsland Road, as the Princes Highway was then called. It was on
the south side of the Highway, just east of A'Beckett Road and the west side of
the Bunyip River. A small settlement
developed around the Inn, William Snell built a bakery in 1878 and a dance hall
was erected by Mr Hyne, opposite the Inn. The New Bunyip Inn was closed by the
Licensing Reduction Board in 1917. It is
possible that this small township on the Bunyip River would have developed into
a sizable town however the arrival of the railways in 1877 moved the settlement
further south and the modern town of Bunyip developed around the railway
station.
Bunnyip Hotel, North Gippsland. [David Connor's New Bunyip Inn] Photographer: Fred Kruger
State Library of Victoria Image H41138/11
Another report that
contains a description of Bunyip was in the South Bourke & Mornington
Journal on August 3, 1887 - it has two hotels, well conducted by Messrs.
Hanson and Finch. These two hostelries, with Mr. Barrow's general store,
amicably uniting themselves pretty well form the township. There are also one
or two unpretentious dwelling houses about, and a State School.
As is usual in many
country towns some of the first establishments were hotels and, according to
Denise Nest’s book The Call of the Bunyip, two Hotels opened in 1876 -
the Butcher's Arms and the Bunyip Hotel. John O'Brien had the licence for the Bunyip
Hotel and in January 1877 he took up the licence for the Railway Family
Hotel. I don’t know if these hotels were
the ‘red wood cottages set up for the purpose of trade’ as described by the
journalist above.
John O'Brien's tenure at
the Family Hotel didn't last very long as it was sold up by the Sherrifs Office
in May 1881, according to an advertisement in The Argus. I am a bit hazy on the early details of these hotels -
by 1884 there are various advertisements for Lawrence Finch's Gippsland Hotel
at Bunyip - this Hotel is still in existence (it's known as the Top Pub); in
1897 Sarah Alice Finch was listed as the licensee and William Kraft took over,
sometime between October 1898 and September 1899, according to the Shire of
Berwick Rate Books. I don't know when
the original building was replaced by the existing two storey brick building.
The other hotel in Bunyip today is the Railway Hotel - Thomas Stacey is listed
as a publican in the Shire of Berwick Rate books in 1890 and he had it for many
years, but I am unsure of the connection, if any, between the Railway Hotel and
early hotels - was John O'Brien's Railway Family Hotel the same hotel as the
Railway Hotel or was it the Butcher's Arms? The Railway Hotel was destroyed by
fire in 1924 and the new building, which is the existing building, opened in
October of the same year.
The settlement on the
Koo Wee Rup Swamp from around 1893 helped the development of Bunyip and Garfield
as they were service centres for the surrounding farm lands. The 1903 Electoral
Roll shows that Bunyip had 355 adults enrolled of which just under half were
female. The occupations listed in the Roll give us idea of the sort of services
were available in the town. As you might expect, most of the men were farmers
or labourers but there were also railway employees, a carpenter, draper, coach
builder, store keepers, baker, gardener, butcher, Hotel keeper and even one
sailor. The women overwhelmingly had their occupation listed as ‘home duties’
but there was a dressmaker, a music teacher, a teacher and a saleswoman.
The population of Bunyip
increased at a steady rate - in 1921 it was 694; 1933 - 744 and 1961 - 959. It
then remained almost static for 25 years as in 1986 it was still only 986. The
largest increase has come in the last 20 years when from 1996 to the 2016
Census the population doubled from 1,011 to 2,468.
As the population grew
all the necessary trappings of a 'civilised' life developed - the State School
opened at the start of 1880; the hotel keeper William Kraft built a hall, which
was replaced by the original Mechanics' Institute Hall in 1906 (this hall burnt
down in 1940 and the existing hall was opened in1942). Church services had
taken place in the hall and private homes until the Methodist Church was opened
in 1899 and the Anglican Church in 1902. The Presbyterian Church (now Uniting)
was not opened until 1954.
Community groups such as
the Agricultural, Pastoral and Horticultural Society was established in 1899; a
football club and a cricket club sometime in the 1890s and Bunyip even had
‘young ladies’ cricket team which started in 1909. The ‘ladies basketball’ club (netball) began
in the 1930s. The Fire Brigade started in October 1942. The First Bunyip Scout Troop commenced in 1910 and the Girl
Guides in 1959. On the welfare front - the Country Women’s Association started in
1936 and the Baby Health Centre the same decade. A private Hospital was built in 1912 and
another in the 1930s. The Shelley Memorial
Hospital at Bunyip was officially opened on March 19, 1966 and closed on May 1,
1991. The building is now part of Hillview Hostel.
There
are, of course, many other Community groups or institutions which have played a
role in the life of Bunyip residents but we don’t have the space to go into it
here. The Call of the Bunyip by Denise Nest, which I mentioned before,
has information on some of these groups. You can buy this book from the Bunyip
Historical Society. However, we can’t finish this short history of Bunyip
without mentioning this publication, the volunteer run Bunyip & District
Community News, which has been recording the activities of the area for 35
years. Congratulations to the News team and we look forward to the next 35 years!
Hi Heather,
ReplyDeleteI came across your blog while researching my family history, and I wondered if you'd mind me asking you a question please.
My Great Grandparents Francis & Mary Hargrave, and my Grandfather Edward lived in the Bunyip area around 1897-1909, owning a property at Tonimbuk. They apparently found it hard work to clear, and the children left it after Francis and Mary died. Edward appears twice in the book "Call of the Bunyip".
I'm wondering if you have come across any records of this family please, or if you could suggest anywhere I might find a land ownership map dating to around 1900.
Thanks, Eric Hatfield