Main North Road 40-42 Willaston

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Fast Facts
Place type: Building
Address: 40-42 Main North Road
Town or Locality: Willaston


DESCRIPTION:

This pair of late-Victorian, transverse-gabled attached dwellings are constructed of overpainted stone rubble with overpainted brick quoins and dressings and capping to the parapet walls. The roof is clad with corrugated metal and features overpainted brick chimneys with corbelled caps. The top of the parapet wall to number 42 has been concealed with metal flashing. Each dwelling has a central timber-framed panelled door with fanlight (leadlight glazing to 42), flanked on either side by timber-framed, double-hung sash windows. The verandahs are non-original, clad with corrugated metal, and supported on metal trellis posts. The frontage is defined by non-original timber-look aluminium fence to number 40 and timber picket to number 42. Additions include lean-to to the rear of number 40 and gable structure to the rear of number 42.

STATEMENT OF HERITAGE VALUE:

Likely constructed in the late 1890s for local labourer and farmer, Michael Lally, the attached pair of dwellings demonstrate the type of residential development that occurred in Willaston during a time of growth in agricultural activity in surrounding areas and the development of the Willaston township. It is significant as portion of the early 1858 subdivision of Willaston. The attached Worker’s cottages are an intact, early example of their typology, typical to both Gawler and Willaston.

BRIEF HISTORICAL BACKGROUND:

John Reid, one of the original purchases of the Special Survey, took up several of the larger allotments on both sides of the river. Reid arrived at Gawler with his family in South Australia in early 1839, and soon established his home station ‘Clonlea’ on the banks of the North Para River. Reid suffered a series of unfortunate losses and had mortgaged his property to William Paxton, a Hindley Street chemist who had made a fortune from the Burra copper mines. Paxton eventually foreclosed on the debt leaving Reid with the homestead and 40 acres of his original 630 acre landholding. In 1848 Paxton laid out a new township on Section 1 of Reid’s former sheep run on the northern side of the North Para River, naming it Willaston after a place where he had lived in England. Thomas Greaves built the first Willaston Hotel near the bridge over the North Para River in 1849 and also established a camping ground for mule teams from the Burra Mines, alongside. Willaston retained its own separate character and developed its own shops and industries, and within a few years had grown to be the largest village after Gawler itself.

The population of the northern township of Willaston grew considerably (from 381 to 555) and the number of dwellings increased from 84 to 121 in the period between the 1901 and 1911 censuses and to 151 by 1928. The disposition of the population in and around Willaston was by 1928 more scattered, but within Willaston was also more concentrated as a number of allotments were furthersubdivided. Industry in Willaston remained centred around the brick yards of William Weaver (later William Gouger) and the nearby lime kilns operated by George Eyers (later Luxon and Dracker), William Rendell, A.C. Edson and Ayling and Dwyer and there was little new commercial activity; Coombe's general store continued to predominate and only two new shops and a blacksmiths shops were established between 1900 and 1928, all along Main Street.

The earliest Certificate of title indicates ownership of the property by Michael Lally, a local Willaston labourer in 1892, as a much larger land holding which included portions of allotments 47, 46, 45 and 44. Michael Lally was also described as a farmer in an article printed in the ‘Bunyip’ in 1888. The attached pair of Worker’s cottages were likely constructed sometime in the 1890s during the time of growth in local agricultural industry. The allotment was subdivided in 1922 and again in 1925. The dwellings remained in the Lally family, a line of farmers, until at least 1953.

Please <click here> to view photos of 40-42 Main North Road Willaston.

Acknowledgments

This report has been prepared by the following people:

• Nancy Cromar (Flightpath Architects)

• Deborah Morgan (Flightpath Architects)

• Kate Paterson (Flightpath Architects)

• Douglas Alexander (Flightpath Architects)


The study team would like to acknowledge the assistance of the following people:

• David Petruzzella (Strategic Planner; Town of Gawler)

• Jacinta Weiss (Cultural Heritage Centre Coordinator; Town of Gawler)

• Jane Strange (Senior Development and Strategic Policy Officer; Town of Gawler)


Gawler History Team Inc. thanks: Flightpath Architects, Ryan Viney and the Town of Gawler for allowing us access to this important document of Gawler History.

www.flightpatharchitects.com.au

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References

main north 42 road willaston
main north 42 road willaston


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