Brougham Place

Brougham Place is a street lined with large mansions set in landscaped grounds in the Adelaide suburb of North Adelaide, South Australia. It surrounds Brougham Gardens, (Park 29 of the Adelaide Park Lands), that joins the three grids that comprise North Adelaide. It was named after Henry Brougham, 1st Baron Brougham and Vaux. He was a staunch supporter of the 1832 Reform Act and the passing of this Act led to the third and successful attempt to found a colony in SA in 1834. [1]

Brougham Place starts and finishes at its intersection with LeFevre Terrace and Stanley Street and runs anti-clockwise around Brougham Gardens[2]. Like other streets in the City of Adelaide with properties only along one side, numbering is sequential from 1 to 228. There is also a short stretch of Brougham Place south of Melbourne Street opposite Roberts Gardens.

Institutions and heritage listed buildings along Brougham Place include [3]

Number Name Heritage listing
5-7 Private dwelling State
9 Taylor House (private dwelling) State
24 St. Margarets National
32 Former Baker family dwelling, now East Building of Lincoln College State
35-37 Former dwelling now part of Lincoln College State
39 Former Rymill family dwelling now part of Lincoln College State
45 Former Milne family dwelling now part of Lincoln College State
49 Brougham House (private dwelling) State
King William Road / O'Connell Street
62 Site of the former Hotel Australia
71-74 Belmont, former Masonic Hall National
75-78 Kingsmead House (private dwelling) National
80 South Australian office of the Australian Medical Association
King William Road
137-160 Women's and Children's Hospital
Sir Edwin Smith Avenue / Melbourne Street
187-191 St. Ann's College Local
193 Brougham Place Uniting Church, formerly North Adelaide Congregational Church National
210 Former hall of North Adelaide Congregational Church (private dwelling) State
222 Private dwelling National
225 Private dwelling State

Brougham Court

Brougham Court (formerly Bower Street) is located off Brougham Place between 95 and 96. It contains the national heritage Ebenezer Baptist Chapel, built in 1843 at 21-29, now a private dwelling [4]

References