FORMER LIMERICK HOTEL AND COMMERICAL/ RESIDENTIAL SITE

Location

27-31 PEEL STREET SOUTH BALLARAT CENTRAL, BALLARAT CITY

Level

Heritage Inventory Site

Statement of Significance

What is significant?
The site is first mapped on the 1861 Gold Fields Plan of Ballarat No 1. The plan, shows two structuring the south east corner of the site. In 1865 the site was formally sold to assist in the remediation of Lake Como, a local nuisance. Lake Como likely formed as a result of the alluvial mining and later quarts mining of the area. The 1870s Panorama from Ballarat Town Hall shows the ‘City of Limerick Hotel’ which occupied the site until c.1890 a number of timber residences were also sold alongside the site in the 1880s.  There are multiple descriptions of the filling of Lake Como with mining waste and rubbish, in addition to Hil’s DEM showing 1m-3m of fill across the site demonstrating that archaeology is likely to survive under the current structures 
How is it significant?
The site is of local historical and archaeological significance. 
Why is it significant?
The site is of historical significance as the location of an early residence and commercial precinct during the years of the Victorian gold rush – one of the most significant rushes in world history. The site is of archaeological significance due to its potential to contain artefacts, deposits and features that relate to the establishment of commercial operations in the gold rush, and other later 19th-century commercial activities.  

Group

Commercial

Category

Hotel