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Location157-159 Gray St and Eastside of McGuigar Lane HAMILTON, Southern Grampians Shire
File NumberHAMDS041LevelStage 2 study complete |
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SIGNIFICANCE: Early building in Gray Street which was always used for commercial purposes. Owned by EW Stapylton Bree, a leading merchant and public figure. Later shop window by Gill. [i] Hamilton Rate Book 1877, No. 69,; 1887, No. 90 (office, NAV 40 pounds). [ii] Garden, Don, Hamilton, p 72. [iii] HSA DP No. 8, for G Strangio. A verandah, now removed, is shown on the front of the building. [iv] Garden, Don, Hamilton, pp 72-74. [v] Ibid., p 73. [vi] HSA DP No.8, for G Strangio; The builder of the additions may have been Reg Williams. A conversation with Williams' daughter, Mrs Christie, on 16 May 1991, referred to work for Strangio, but alluded to another Hamilton building, Scullions, at 196 Gray Street. [vii] This appears in early photographs but indistinctly. See note 3 above.
STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE
Tops to Tails
157 Gray Street
This building has local significance for its architectural interest as an early Gray Street shop with a 1920s Gill shopfront and for its possible historical associations with the merchants R S Bree and A T Dickens. A rate book search suggests that the shop may date from the late 1870s when Bree & Dickens owned stone stores and an office in Crown Allotments 12 & 13, Section 4, in Gray Street. ([i]) In 1865, Bree (1839-1907) from Cornwall, became the manager of S G Henty's Warrayure property and in 1871 married his daughter, Annie Henty. ([ii]) The site of No. 157 Gray Street was owned by S G Henty in 1852. A 1938 drainage plan confirms that the front portion of No. 157 Gray Street was stone with brick additions at the rear. ([iii]) Bree came to Hamilton in 1872, purchased an auctioneer's business, and became a leading townsman. He was a councillor, Mayor, and he owned the substantial Bewsall property. ([iv]) His partner, Arthur Tennyson Dickens, was the son of the celebrated author, Charles Dickens. ([v]) The owner of the property in the 1930s was G Strangio. ([vi])
The building shows a restrained Classicism in its architecture. It must have had a two storey verandah ([vii]) which has been replaced by the Council's standard 1960s cantilever design. The 1920s shopfront has suffered only superficial changes. The building is in fair condition.
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