12 BROAD GULLY ROAD DIAMOND CREEK, NILLUMBIK SHIRE
Level
Included in Heritage Overlay
[1/1]
Image21
Statement of Significance
What is significant?
The property located at 12 Broad Gully Road, Diamond Creek. The original form, materials and features of the
Victorian residence and the connected former outbuilding contributes to the significance of the place.
How is it significant?
12 Broad Gully Road, Diamond Creek is of local historic and aesthetic significance to the Shire of Nillumbik.
Why is it significant?
The property at 12 Broad Gully Road, Diamond Creek is of local historical significance as it contains one of a small
number of surviving examples of Victorian residences and outbuildings demonstrating the establishment of Diamond
Creek as a result of the gold rush in the area. Thomas Huntly junior was an active gold miner in the area from the
1890s. This site is a good example of the wider phenomenon in the Nillumbik area of how gold miners and those of
low income more generally made use of the provisions in the Mines and Land Acts for cheap rent of small-holdings on
Crown Land and gradually improved their properties over years and through generations. (Criterion A)
The property is also of historical significance for its use as the Felton House Private Nursing Home during 1914 and
1915 by the Huntly sisters Isabella and Elizabeth, and by its use by Dr Ted Cordner as Diamond Creeks second
hospital around 1920 and possibly up to the end of the 1920s when Dr Cordner built a new home and surgery in the
town. (Criterion A)
The property at 12 Broad Gully Road, Diamond Creek is aesthetically significant for the residence and former
outbuilding dating from c. 1870s. Although altered, the buildings retain important original features demonstrating the
Victorian period of residential architecture. Features of note on the residence include the front door with sidelights and
highlight windows, the tall brick chimneys with corbelling, the hipped roof form with timber corbelling under the eaves
and the scalloped weatherboards and timber finial on the west gable end of the former outbuilding. (Criterion E)