St Vincent Place
Encyclopedia
St Vincent Place is a heritage precinct in Albert Park
Albert Park, Victoria
Albert Park is an inner city suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 3 km south from Melbourne's central business district. Its Local Government Area is the City of Port Phillip. At the 2006 Census, Albert Park had a population of 5827....

, Victoria
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria is the second most populous state in Australia. Geographically the smallest mainland state, Victoria is bordered by New South Wales, South Australia, and Tasmania on Boundary Islet to the north, west and south respectively....

, Australia
Australia
Australia , officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the Southern Hemisphere comprising the mainland of the Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous smaller islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans. It is the world's sixth-largest country by total area...

.

St Vincent Place is bounded by Park Street, Cecil Street, Bridport Street, Cardigan Place and Nelson Road. It is bisected by Montague Street, allowing the passage of tram
Tram
A tram is a passenger rail vehicle which runs on tracks along public urban streets and also sometimes on separate rights of way. It may also run between cities and/or towns , and/or partially grade separated even in the cities...

s on route 1
Melbourne tram route 1
Tram route 1 is a public transport service in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It runs from the terminus at Nicholson Street and Bell Street in East Coburg to the corner of Victoria Avenue and Beaconsfield Parade in Albert Park....

. It is an example of nineteenth century residential development around the large landscaped square St Vincent Gardens
St Vincent Gardens, Melbourne
St Vincent Gardens in the Melbourne suburb of Albert Park, is an Australian park of national significance.It is an example of nineteenth century residential development around a large landscaped square. Development occurred as a result of a boom following the Victorian gold rush...

  It is characterised by beautiful original terrace houses of the 1860s and 1870s.http://www.stayz.com.au/information?aid=375

According to the Victorian Heritage Register
Victorian Heritage Register
The Victorian Heritage Register lists places of cultural heritage significance to the State of Victoria, Australia. It has statutory weight under the Heritage Act 1995 which establishes Heritage Victoria as the permit authority...

, "The St Vincent Place precinct was first designed in 1854 or 55, probably by Andrew Clarke, the Surveyor-General of Victoria. The current layout is the work of Clement Hodgkinson, the noted surveyor, engineer and topographer, who adapted the design in 1857 to allow for its intersection by the St Kilda railway. The precinct, which in its original configuration extended from Park Street in the north to Bridport Street in the south, and from Howe Crescent in the east to Nelson Road and Cardigan Street in the west, was designed to emulate similar 'square' developments in London, although on a grander scale. The main streets were named after British naval heroes. The development of the special character of St Vincent Place has been characterised, since the first land sales in the 1860s, by a variety of housing stock which has included quality row and detached houses dominated by Rochester Terrace (Heritage Register Number 813), and by the gardens which, although they have been continuously developed, remain faithful to the initial landscape concept."http://www.heritage.vic.gov.au/page_239.asp?ID=239&submit_action=detailed_result&search_type=DLVHR&query=registerAll/0C8CB1A3944493D9CA2571CD007B743B?OpenDocument

Historical significance

It is registered with the National Trust of Australia
National Trust of Australia
The Australian Council of National Trusts is the peak body for community-based, non-government organisations committed to promoting and conserving Australia's indigenous, natural and historic heritage....

 and on the Victorian Heritage Register
Victorian Heritage Register
The Victorian Heritage Register lists places of cultural heritage significance to the State of Victoria, Australia. It has statutory weight under the Heritage Act 1995 which establishes Heritage Victoria as the permit authority...

 for its aesthetic, historical, architectural and social significance to the State of Victoria.

The Victorian Heritage Register states St Vincent Place is "aesthetically important for the outstanding quality of its urban landscape. The major elements that reflect this importance are the gardens with their gardenesque style layout and fine collections of mature specimen trees, and the harmonious relationship of the gardens with the residential buildings facing them around St Vincent Place. The St Vincent Place Precinct is historically important as the premier 'square' development in Victoria based on similar models in London. It is significant as the largest development of its type in Victoria and for its unusual development as gardens rather than the more usual small park as at, for example Macarthur, Murchison, Lincoln and Argyle Squares in Carlton. The precinct is also historically significant for its associations with Surveyor General Andrew Clarke, and more particularly with Clement Hodgkinson, a prolific and influential surveyor engineer in early Melbourne. The St Vincent Place Precinct is architecturally important for the consistent quality of its built form and its high degree of intactness from its earliest phase of development, characterised by a mixture of one and two storey terraces and detached houses. The St Vincent Place Precinct is socially important as a reflection of the aspirations of middle class residents in South Melbourne. Because of the shared outlook on and use of the gardens, the precinct has developed a sense of community cohesion unusual in the Melbourne context. The gardens are also socially important as a focus of community life for the surrounding district with the maintenance of their amenity a priority of municipal government since their inception. The existence of the tennis and bowls club s in the gardens for over a century is a further manifestation of this social importance."http://www.heritage.vic.gov.au/page_239.asp?ID=239&submit_action=detailed_result&search_type=DLVHR&query=registerAll/0C8CB1A3944493D9CA2571CD007B743B?OpenDocument

The Australian Demographer Bernard Salt included the precinct as first among his "favourite places that have been designed by planners" : "St Vincent Place, Albert Park: Where would such a list start but in my home city of Melbourne? Surely this residential precinct known only to Melburnians must be one of this nation's town planning treasures. Here are two extended but connecting crescents laid out around gardens which are overlooked by double-storey Victorian terrace houses. Designed in the early 1850s, St Vincent Place was virtually a gated community: the well-to-do would promenade around ``their public gardens; smaller wooden houses for servants and the working classes were relegated to the lesser enveloping crescents."

People & Literature

Marshall Browne's book 'The Gilded Cage' covers an eighteen month period in 1888-89 and tells the ill-starred love story of William Boyd and Helen O'Neill, and a happier-ending one between Boyd and Katherine Lindsay with a backdrop of "graceful St Vincent Place".http://www.duffyandsnellgrove.com.au/extracts/marshall_interview.htm

A resident Mary Josephine O'Brien inherited Port Melbourne's Victoria Hotel and O'Brien's Terrace in 1901.http://home.vicnet.net.au/~pmhps/histobrien.html

World War I
World War I
World War I , which was predominantly called the World War or the Great War from its occurrence until 1939, and the First World War or World War I thereafter, was a major war centred in Europe that began on 28 July 1914 and lasted until 11 November 1918...

 brought grief to several households in St Vincent Place.
  • Private Harold Frederick Robinson 2184. 7th Bn. Australian Infantry A.I.F. was killed in action 8–9 August 1915. Aged 25, he was the son of the late Samuel and Mary Robinson; husband of Ada May Robinson of 5 St Vincent Place.http://www.anzacs.net/GRAVES/Cemeteries/MEMLonePine_N_S.htm
  • A resident, Major Frederick Miller Johnson, 6th Fld Ambulance AAMC, AIF, Surgeon, of 32 St. Vincent Place was killed in action at Lone Pine
    Battle of Lone Pine
    The Battle of Lone Pine was a battle between Australian and Turkish forces that took place during the Gallipoli campaign from 6–10 August 1915. It was part of a diversion to draw attention from the main assaults of 6 August against the Sari Bair peaks of Chunuk Bair and Hill 971, which became...

    , central Anzac
    Anzac Cove
    Anzac Cove is a small cove on the Gallipoli peninsula in Turkey. It became famous as the site of World War I landing of the ANZAC on April 25, 1915. The cove is a mere long, bounded by the headlands of Ari Burnu to the north and Little Ari Burnu, known as Hell Spit, to the south...

    , on 29 November 1915, aged 52.http://www.anzacs.org/index_hij.html
  • Another resident, Staff Sergeant, John Alfred Eric Crawford, 15046, Australian Army Medical Corps was killed on 16 September 1916. He was the son of Mrs.S.M.Cowen,of 82 St Vincent Place.http://www.australianwargraves.org/countries/capeverde.php


In 1928 the first Australian Novitiate of the Catholic Carmelite Order was established in St Vincent Place.http://www.carmelites.org.au/chistory.htm

"Albert William Andrews was found in a boarding house in St Vincent's Place, Albert Park in the early 1950’s. The place was sold up or his health was deteriorating and the family was contacted."http://member.melbpc.org.au/~pandrews/andrews.html

A 1969 battle to preserve the area from major road construction is described in an interview with Barbara Niven by the Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific
Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific
The Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific undertakes research into issues of cultural heritage protection in Asia and the Pacific, including Australia...

 http://www.deakin.edu.au/arts/chcap/research_consultancy/interview.php

In 2006, 2 residents received Australian Honours. Ms Imogen Laurie received an honour "For service to people with disabilities as an advocate for improved disability policies and services through community and public sector organisations."http://www.ag.gov.au/portal/govgazonline.nsf/3B37A0A8AA82561DCA25718A007FEC05/$file/S%2075.doc Mr Terrence O'Shannassy received an honour "For service to the community, particularly to youth, and to technical education for people seeking employment opportunities."http://www.itsanhonour.gov.au/docs/Australian_honours_2006.rtf.

Significant Buildings and Facilities


  • 51 St Vincent Place South: St Vincent Place Medical Centre


  • 73 St Vincent Place South: The Loreto
    Loreto
    -Places:*Loreto, Santiago del Estero, Argentina*Loreto , village and municipality in Misiones Province, Argentina*Loreto, Beni, Bolivia*Loreto , Brazil...

     Province Centre http://www.ibvm.org/content/view/34/151/



  • 78 St Vincent Place North: Peter Wille's House
  • 88 St Vincent Place North is part of Australia's Open Garden Scheme
    Australia's Open Garden Scheme
    Australia's Open Garden Scheme is a non-profit organisation that began in Victoria Australia in 1987. Its aim is to promote the knowledge and pleasure of gardens and gardening across Australia. Under the scheme, private gardens are opened for public viewing for one or two weekends a year. About 650...

    . The well-known industrialist John Danks chose the French-Romanesque revival style for this pair of terraces when he built them in 1875, rather than the Italianate style so popular for Melbourne's boom-time mansions. More than a century later, from 1985–1989, both terrace houses were restored following a period as rooming houses. The front gardens, designed as mirror images, are formal in execution, with clipped box hedges, santolina and mounds of Choisya ternata abutting the tiled veranda. Each parterre has as the central feature a massive Haddonstone urn, overflowing with succulents, and in keeping with French style, a fine, pink-beige gravel is used instead of lawn.
  • The Albert Park Bowls Club
  • Charles Moore Boer War Memorial Drinking Fountain (named in memory of Charlie Moore
    Charlie Moore (Australian rules footballer)
    Walter Charles "Charlie" Moore was an Australian rules footballer who played for Essendon Football Club in the Victorian Football League , and who also served as a trooper in the Anglo-Boer War....

    )
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