Totness House Mt Pleasant . Home of Henry Giles who subdivided his land to make the town of Totness in 1858. Later it became Mount Pleasant. : 無料・フリー素材/写真
Totness House Mt Pleasant . Home of Henry Giles who subdivided his land to make the town of Totness in 1858. Later it became Mount Pleasant. / denisbin
ライセンス | クリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示-改変禁止 2.1 |
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説明 | Mt Pleasant –last town on the Torrens. This sprawling hills town near the source of the trickling Torrens has an interesting history. The area was part of one of the SA Company Special Surveys of 1839. The government consequently had surveyed land to sell off which it did in 1842 to three men, Henry Giles Senior, Henry Bushell and James Phillis. They cleared a few trees, built their houses and attracted their relatives, brothers etc to come and take up land in the district. Landowner Henry Glover subdivided some of his land to create the town of Mt Pleasant in 1856 near the pre-existing Mt Pleasant Inn established in 1853. (When this Inn burnt down in 1860 a new hotel was erected called the Mt Pleasant Hotel). Meantime, Henry Giles also decided to subdivide some of his land in 1858 and create a township which he called Totness, immediately adjacent to Glover’s Mt Pleasant township. Giles was already operating a general store here. The two townships competed and then finally amalgamated. In Totness the hotel there opened in 1860 (it began as a single storey hotel with the second floor added in 1918 to provide accommodation for an influx of holiday makers expected with the arrival of the railway in that year). After 1860 Henry Giles developed most of the town himself with a flourmill (1863), blacksmiths, cottages for his workers and his own residence Totness House (1840s) behind the Mt Pleasant Soldiers Memorial Hall. Giles’ town progressed more quickly and it soon had a Bible Christian Chapel (1858) now part of the School, an Anglican Church (1860), a Presbyterian Church (1866) and a Wesley Methodist Church (1867). The Town Pound for straying animals had also pre-dated Giles town of Totness as it was erected in 1855, only closing in 1944. When the former Bible Christian Chapel closed in 1861 it became the town schoolroom until finally being incorporated into a state school in 1876. Glover’s town however got the police station (1867). From its earliest days Mt Pleasant was the service centre for some large estates in the district. By the mid 1850s when the town was established the Melroses had Rosebank estate and the McBeans had Glen Devon estate. Further away Alexander Borthwick Murray had Borthwick Brae and Mt Beevor. These landed gentry had an impact on the town and by 1904 when George Melrose died the Rosebank estate had increased to around 60,000 acres. It was left to the four Melrose children, one who was married to a Murray. This set the stage for ongoing conflict between two rival families of the McBeans and the Melroses over the location of the proposed Institute building. Lachlan McBean wanted it on the triangle on the main street which is now an antique shop on land he would donate but it was a very small parcel of land. Robert Melrose wanted it on its present site or similar on a spacious block of land that he would donate. There was no agreement on this issue amongst the local committee. The impasse was broken after Henry Giles Junior died in 1921. Robert Melrose bought up most Giles’ lands. Robert Melrose then donated the land for the hall in its present spacious site with parking and a small public reserve. Work began in 1926 and the Institute opened in 1927 but by then it was a late Memorial Hall for World War One which had hardly started when this saga began! In recent years Rosebank estate has been owned by the McLaughlin family. |
撮影日 | 2011-05-05 12:40:57 |
撮影者 | denisbin |
タグ | |
撮影地 | |
カメラ | DSC-S950 , SONY |
露出 | 0.004 sec (1/250) |
開放F値 | f/5.6 |