Brighton 3186 |
Brighton is a residential bayside suburb 11 km. south-east of Melbourne.
In 1840 the British Government's Land and Emigration Commission approved procedures for the sale of "Special Survey"land allotments of eight square miles (5,120 acres at one pound each - 2,072 ha.), chiefly as a revenue-raising arrangement. There were three such sales in the area of future metropolitan Melbourne before special surveys were stopped, they being Dendy's at Brighton (March, 1841), Unwin's at Bulleen and Templestowe and Elgar's at Box Hill. All were five miles from the centre of Melbourne, as required by regulations made by the New South Wales Executive Council.
Henry Dendy (1809-81) employed Jonathan Binns Were (1809-85), later a prominent stockbroker, as his agent. His special-survey land was bounded by the coastline, North Road, East Boundary Road and South Road. A town was surveyed in the Spring of 1841, defined by the crescent-shaped street layout which remains today, and subdivided allotments offered for sale. Purchasers were few, a financial depression came and Dendy's scheme for emigration and land sales failed. He died a pauper and the Were family acquired the land for highly profitable resale after the depression.
Dendy's town site was initially marketed as Waterville, perhaps because an early settler at Port Melbourne called his area Brighton, probably after the coastal watering place in Sussex, England. However, Dendy soon renamed his land the Brighton Estate, and Dendy's site for his own home was named "Brighton park". Dendy's choice of land was done carefully, avoiding the swamp at Elsternwick and consisting mainly of good undulating land. After the depression sales of land resulted in Brighton becoming the third most populated town in Port Phillip (after Melbourne and Portland), by 1846. The farming land was sought to supply agricultural produce for Melbourne, so as to lessen imports from Tasmania. Brighton attracted wealthy residents who wanted generous building sites and the prospect of sea bathing.
By 1850 there were an Anglican church (1843), Wesleyan and Catholic churches (1848) and a Methodist church (1851). Schools were opened in the Anglican church (1849) and by the Catholic church in Centre Road (1850). Another was opened in the Wesleyan church in 1855. In 1854 Brighton had a census population of 2,731 persons. Brighton had three localities - Big Brighton on the Dendy township, Little Brighton (today's East Brighton around the intersection of Union Street and Hawthorn Road) and Brighton East in the direction of Moorabbin. During the mid 1850s there were rumours of a railway connection to Melbourne. It came in stages: Windsor to North Brighton (1859), the connection to Melbourne in 1860 and North Brighton to Brighton Beach (1861). On 18 January, 1859, the Brighton municipality was proclaimed extending eastwards between Dendy's survey boundaries to Thomas Street and Nepean Highway.
Brighton had been made a borough in October, 1863, and in 1870 parts of Elwood and Elsternwick were added. The creation of the Brighton municipality brought Thomas Bent into Brighton's orbit as its rate collector in 1861. He subsequently was elected to the Moorabbin Roads Board (1863), became the Parliamentary member for Brighton (1871) member of Brighton Council (1874), mayor on several occasions and a tireless developer for Brighton. He was the Treasurer and Premier of Victoria, 1904-9.
Brighton developed three shopping centre - Bay Street, with 65 shops by 1887, Church Street with 17 and Nepean Highway with 16. Away from the town or village Brighton was market gardens, famed for cabbages.
A volunteer corps was formed in 1860, and the Boer War and the Mafeking relief evoked keen interest. Patriotism was prominent during the first world war, and the erection of a war memorial at Green Point, Brighton Beach, in 1927 marked the last land which soldiers saw as the ships took them down the bay to distant fields.
Between 1872 and 1893 most churches built of replaced their buildings - Anglican (2), Presbyterian (2), Methodist (2), and Catholic and Congregational. The Anglican St. Andrews church is on the register of the National Estate and the Congregational church is on the Victorian Heritage Register. In the same period there were numerous private schools, of which Brighton Grammar (1882), survives. Firbank Anglican girls' school was opened in 1909, and St. Leonards (Uniting Church) in 1914. A primary school at Brighton Beach was opened for an orphanage in 1878 and was changed to an ordinary school in 1915.
The Brighton Yacht Club was begun in 1875 and gained the Royal prefix in 1927.
In addition to the train to Brighton Beach there was a tram from St. Kilda to Brighton (1906), closer to the coast than the train. In 1919 the railway was electrified. These events stimulated house-building as people realised that Brighton was more accessible than had been thought. The subdivisional pace quickened as Toorak and South Yarra filled up, spacious family properties were broken up and motor cars improved accessibility. East of the railway line the tramline down Hawthorn Road, from Glenhuntly to North Road (1925) and onto the Nepean Highway (1937), stimulated house building in Brighton East.
Brighton has been noted for patriotism. Apart from the Green Point war memorial there have been the Anzac Hostel convalescent hospital, the Brighton Patriotic Society in aid of the Red Cross and the Comforts Fund and the Air Raid Precautions Association.
Brighton has primary schools at Middle Brighton (1874) and at Brighton Beach (dating from an orphanage school, 1878). A technical school was opened in 1920, later becoming a secondary college. Xavier College also has a prepatory school at Brighton Beach (1937). In 1990 Brighton municipality had slightly more than one child at a private primary school for every child at a State primary school. The metropolitan ratio was one at a private school for two at a State primary school. Private secondary schools in Brighton had nearly three pupils for every one in a State secondary school. The metropolitan ratio was two pupils in a private secondary school for every three in a State secondary school.
Brighton's shopping centres are in Bay Street at the North Brighton railway station and at Church Street, Middle Brighton. Church Street has been likened to Toorak Village by the sea. There are five neighbourhood reserves and more extensive recreational space along he foreshore. The municipal baths are near the pier and the Yacht Club and Port Phillip's last private bathing boxes remain on the Dendy Street beach.
Brighton's municipality's median house price was about twice the figure for metropolitan Melbourne. House block sizes are large, and flats fewer then other municipalities. Of its male work force, the proportion engaged in finance, property and business services was more than twice the figure for metropolitan Melbourne. The municipality has had twice the metropolitan proportion of persons over 65 years for several decades.
The census populations of the Brighton municipality were 2,051 (1861), 10,047 (1901), 21,235 (1921), 39,769 (1947) and 32,230 (1991).
On 15 December, 1994, Brighton City was united with Sandringham city and parts of Mordialloc and Moorabbin cities to form Bayside city.
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