Osborne House (Geelong)
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Osborne House is a historic building built in 1858, located in North Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
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[edit] History
Osborne House was built in 1858 for local squatter, Robert Muirhead, who named the mansion after Osborne House in the Isle of Wight, England. Muirhead lived at the house until his death in 1862, with the house being sold the following year after the death of his wife.
The house was leased for a number of years, finally sold sold by Muirhead's executors in 1878 to James Francis Maguire. Located on Swinburne Street, the original 1888 subdivision plan of St Helens estate had it named Maguire Street.
In 1900 the State Government of Victoria purchased the house as a country residence for the Governor of Victoria, although it was never used as such.
The Geelong Harbour Trust purchased the house in 1905 for 6000 pounds (AUD$12,000). A dining room and seven bedrooms were added in 1910, the Trust using Osborne House as a guest house for a number of years. The Trust offered the house to the Royal Australian Navy in 1911, with nothing coming from it.
In 1913 the Navy took up offer to use the house as a naval college. Improvements to the buildings were carried out, including the erection of block of buildings as quarters for unmarried seamen, two new classrooms, and alterations to the main room to provided a large barrack for 28 cadets. The college was opened by the Governor General, Lord Thomas Denman on March 1 1013, with Prime Minister Andrew Fisher also present. Lord Denman arrived by torpedo boat, with 200 invited guests arriving by by train from Melbourne. The college housed 28 cadets, 4 petty officers, and 10 seamen, together with the professors instructors and domestics. The initial class of 28 cadets was chosen from 137 candidates. The naval college was relocated to HMAS Creswell at Jervis Bay in 1915.
During World War I Osborne House was used as a military hospital, and during between 1919 and 1924 was used as a base by the Royal Australian Navy Submarine Service for the J-class submarine.
The Geelong Harbour Trust regaining control in 1929, with a caretaker being the only resident. In 1937 the Shire of Corio council purchased the house for use as shire offices.
Between 1939 and 1945 the Department of Defence took over the site as an army training centre.
In 1945 the Shire of Corio regained control of Osborne House, with the shire purchasing adjoining land in 1947, and remodelling the offices in 1966. The amalgamation of the shire into the City of Greater Geelong in 1995 saw the house lay empty.
[edit] Today
Today the stables house the Geelong Maritime Museum, the house itself housing various community groups.
[edit] References
- Begg, Peter (1990). Geelong - The First 150 Years. Globe Press. ISBN 0-9592863-5-7.
[edit] External links
- Geelong Maritime Museum (official site)