Showing posts with label ross. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ross. Show all posts

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Ross, sheep paddock

Here we have a sheep paddock

Paddock, with sheep

with an empty house in it.

Cottages


This is a short timeline of the site taken from Parks & Wildlife's web page

  • c. 1831 brick and thatch huts built for convict gang employed in public works
  • 1833-5 permanent stone buildings constructed to house chain-gang employed on the Ross bridge
  • 1841 site commenced use as male probation station and also housing chain-gangs working on the Hobart-Launceston road
  • 1847 expansion of buildings for female convicts
  • 1853 end of convict transportation
  • 1854 closure of female factory
  • 1855 factory handed over to Police Department

    It's the period from 1847-1854 that is the main focus of the displays and most material written about the sight.

    There is only one building still standing. Originally, it was two conjoined cottage, each of which consisted of two main rooms with a small room on the back. This is the rear cottage, with a room on either side of the door

    Back cottage

    and the little room at the back.

    Back, second cottage

    The front cottage has been enlarged.

    Front

    The rooms on the right are the original two roomed cottage (same as the one shown earlier). Two rooms have been added on the left, with a central hallway joining them to the original part, making a four roomed house.

    Back, first cottage

    This is the side of the house, originally the back of the cottage. I hadn’t noticed until I was editing this photo, but you can see the doorway that must have led to the little back room (there's a sandstone doorsill at the bottom, and the a vertical line above it shows where the doorway was filled in with stone).

    Inside the house is a small museum, but I'll leave that for Mr Squirrel. Anything I write about the site that will be duplicating what has been done better elsewhere on the web, in particular the Parks & Wildlife site and the Female Factory website

    Model

    Inside, there is a model of the site, the two cottages are at the bottom (the addition is shown with clear walls).


    On the Parks site, there's a map that shows the present day remains related to the demolished buildings.

    Stones in paddock


    From back

  • Thursday, March 20, 2008

    Ross, more stones

    A side trip, to the hill behind the older part of town.

    Through a gate

    Penalty For Not Closing Gates 10

    Penalty For Not Closing Gates ?10

    across the railway

    Railway

    and through another two gates

    Gate


    Cemetery behind wall

    is the Anglican cemetery, with the smaller Catholic cemetery to one side (not visible).

    Headstones


    Headstone

    It's an interesting cemetery in its own right, but today's destination is further up the hill.

    Sign

    Also known as the soldier's or military burial ground,

    Headstone, Maher

    because there are a number of redcoats buried here.

    Philip Maher
    who departed this life
    on the 31st March AD 1817
    and served as Quarter Master Seegeant
    in the 51st K.O.L.I
    during a long campaign on the
    Peninsula and? Waterloo
    and later Barrack Sergeant
    at Ross
    aged 56 years



    Old Cemetery

    There are not a lot of headstones up here though.

    Broken Headstone

    (This is a guess)
    Isabella Ann
    the beloved wife of
    Mr Henry Valentine


    Many of the surviving stones are also too worn to read.

    Headstone, Herbert

    Herbert is responsible for carving many of the headstones here, including his own (this one). Presumably Colbeck did some too but he rarely gets mentioned.

    Headstone, Ellis

    Sarah Ann Ellis
    October 13th 1836 aged 1 month


    In the background there is the next, and final, destination

    Path to cemetery

    at the bottom of the long path that runs alongside the newer cemetery (looking back up here).

    Ross, the bridge

    So I lied :)

    The Ross Bridge is on the southern access road, although once part of the highway. It was built in 1836, at the request of Lt Gov Arthur, and is another design by architect by John Lee Archer (maybe I should add a tag for his creations?). The two men responsible for building it, as both stonemasons and overseers, were highwayman Daniel Herbert and burglarJames Colbeck. Herbert's name is still well known Colbeck though has faded into relative obscurity, and when he does get a mention, he's often called John. Both did get a pardon a few years latter though.

    Bridge from south

    Bridge, steps


    Bridge detail


    Bridge, north side


    Bridge, arches



    The stone isn't standing up to elements very well and many of the 186 carvings that decorate the bridge are badly worn. (The also don't photograph very well from the riverbank.) There is, or was, a project under way to create replacements from moulds, and put the originals somewhere safe.

    In the photo below, look for the face in the bottom left corner.

    Bridge, detail


    Bridge detail


    Bridge, south side

    Tuesday, March 11, 2008

    Ross, some more of the town

    Some photos of buildings today, and then I'll get onto the interesting stuff. :)

    Street from bridge

    Along Bridge St, being the street leading from the Bridge. Military Barracks.

    War Memorial

    War Memorial at the intersection of Bridge & Church St (from previous post). I started adding a few notes about this, but it got long. Next post :)

    Looking south up the hill. The Uniting Church is up there on the right.

    Uniting church

    The Uniting Church (formerly Methodist) was built in 1885 to an older 1838 Chapel. On the site of the chapel, there is an early Sunday School buildings and apparently some old headstones. One of the things I didn't get to look at.

    House

    The Council Clerk's House, from the back.

    General store

    South along Church St are the shops and many of the old buildings.

    Shop


    Man O`Ross

    The pub again.

    Bakery


    Inn

    The Scotch Thistle was a coaching inn, built about 1830, licensed about 1840.

    WB Cottage

    Not all stone :)

    White cottage


    Post Office

    Post Office

    House

    Wednesday, March 05, 2008

    Ross, an introduction

    Ross sits beside the Midlands Hwy, not quite halfway between Launceston and Hobart, and just south of the Line. At the time of the second settlement in the north, the island was divided into two: Cornwall in the north, Buckingham in the south. Folk history puts the line along the 42nd latitude, and Ross is at 42°01' S. Nowadays, the (unofficial) dividing line between north & south is at Oatlands, the next town down the road.

    With a settlement at each end of the island, there was soon travel between north and south. From Highway in Van Diemen's Land, by Hawley Stancombe, "Wentworth wrote in 1819 of the track between Hobart and Launceston worn by carts and stock regularly passing between the two towns, but winding about so much that it was probably a hundred and sixty miles long. [Today it's closer to 124 miles] Major Thomas Bell of the 48th Regiment was therefore commissioned in 1821 to construct portions of the road from the capital to Port Dalrymple."

    1821 is the same year, according to Parks & Wildlife, that Ross was a declared a town, although there'd been a garrison there from a few years earlier.

    Also from Highway: "Travellers between the north and the south, particularly those with carts, were subject to careful scrutiny by the military at various posts. Only free settlers were permitted to proceed to Port Dalrymple from the south with a load of goods, because of the robbers and trafficking in stolen goods between the two settlements."

    Other than waylaying travellers, I'm not actually sure what the purpose of the garrison was. (I am writing this based on two brochures (one of which has only the barest of details) the book above, the Parks & Wildlife website, and whatever is stored away in my brain; none of them have anything else to say about garrisons in the midlands.) I assume there was some chasing of aborigines and absconders going on though.

    The 1820s is rather early for a town to be appearing, but obviously things were happening in the area, possibly farming. A timber bridge was built over the river in 1821, to be replaced by the current stone bridge 15 years later. Then, again from Highway, a stock market was built at Ross in 1826 "to rival Cross Marsh and to serve as an outlet for the stock produced by northern breeders" and in 1829, "Sergeant Dan O'Connor was sent to supervise the erection of buildings at Ross, some of which are still standing between the bridge and the hotel."

    Ross was also the site of a probation station and a women's prison, and once the road was put through, a coaching stop.

    The road building that started in 1821 is, of course, still going on. Late in the 20th century, a number of the towns along the central section of the Midlands Highway were bypassed, including Ross. I think Ross's only reason for existence these days is tourism, because most of the services in the area are provided at Oatlands, a bigger town about 20 minutes drive to the south. Ross is a good place to stop for a drink or a meal, and for the size of the town, there is a lot of look at. I've only included some of these because I haven't had the opportunity to photograph everything.

    One interesting feature of Tasmanian architecture is the use (or absence) of sandstone. It's almost non-existent in the north, mostly appearing in modern buildings. Whereas down south, it is everywhere. IIRC all the older public buildings in Hobart are sandstone, and most of the grander private houses, but also many small cottages and warehouses. The same occurs in many of the older southern towns. Oatlands claims to be the town with the most sandstone buildings, but for sheer concentration, I think Ross wins.

    There are a lot of photos, so I'm going to do this over a few days (hey, come back). After my longer-than-I intended introduction, I'll just include a few today, and then next time a selection of buildings along Church St, before looking at three particular sites of interest.

    The heart of the town is the intersection of Church St and Bridge St.

    Road into town

    Shown here as you come in from the south, along the bridge. It's a busy little place.

    Crossroads

    A little more town-like if viewed from the opposite direction. :)

    The four corners of the intersection were said to represent Temptation, Salvation, Recreation and Damnation and so we have:

    Man O'Ross

    Man O'Ross Hotel, built in the early 1830s -- a Georgian-style building, which Victorian alterations.

    Corners, church

    Catholic Church, converted from a store about 1920.

    Town Hall

    Town Hall, built 1881. The Council Chambers, the shorter bit on the left, is a stone facade to a timber building. The brochure says the facade had once been part of the "Governor of the Prison" House. The sign out the front says it's now the Midlands Community Church.


    Site of the town gaol, then Council Clerk's house. There's a western wing that incorporates part of the old police building. I think that's the bit out the back (on the right of the photo).

    I'll leave working out which corner is which as an exercise for the reader.