This Trail celebrates the contribution to the City of Port Phillip by immigrants and settlers. For many of these new arrivals, Station Pier was their first landfall in Australia after a long and hazardous journey by sea. This shipping trade has left its historic imprint on Port Melbourne, which retains many public buildings from settler days. Settlers from Tasmania were the first to arrive in 1835, keen to open up the country to expand the wool trade. Other pioneering settlers followed, particularly English, Scottish and Irish, travelling in wind-powered ships on extraordinary journeys round the Cape of Good Hope and through the Rip. The Gold Rush in 1851 brought a huge influx of eager immigrants from all over the world. Post-war migration saw hundreds of thousands of immigrants, many from southern and eastern Europe, first setting foot on Australian shores at Station Pier, seeking refuge from persecution, war and economic hardship. Later arrivals from Asian, African and many other countries have added to the diverse multicultural community that enlivens the City of Port Phillip today.
Estimated Duration: 1 hr.
by cityofportphillipThe pier, originaThe pier, originally built in 1854 as Railway Pier, was the ‘passenger gateway’ to Melbourne and the arrival …
cityofportphillipIt is now a station for the light rail tram route 109 (stop 129 – Beacon Cove). Once the area …
cityofportphillipThe magnificent Victorian Centenary Bridge (designed to overpass the rail line) with its art deco detailing was demolished here in …
cityofportphillipThe Women’s Welcome Home Committee built the picturesque Rotunda in 1918. Large crowds gathered at the Port Melbourne piers to …
cityofportphillipA memorial to Port Melbourne’s first permanent settler Wilbraham Frederick Evelyn Liardet, 1779-1878 is located on the foreshore opposite Nott …
cityofportphillipThe building on the corner of Nott and Beach Streets housed the Seamen’s Institute , once a refuge for the …
cityofportphillipThe building on the corner of Bay and Beach Streets is the Pier Hotel on the site of the timber …
cityofportphillipOpposite on the south side of Bay Street is Morley’s Coal Depot which stored coal for fuelling the ships in …
cityofportphillipHere is the Exchange Hotel. Large numbers of early immigrants were from Ireland, seeking refuge from poverty and conflict. For …
cityofportphillipThe historic law and order complex comprises the police station, currently McCluskys lawyers, with its tiny but grim bluestone lock …
cityofportphillipThe Market Shops comprise 191 to 219 Bay Street, built on the Borough Council’s market reserve in the 1880s. The …
cityofportphillipThe Liardet Community Centre on the corner of Nott Street named after Port Melbourne’s community-minded founder. The building was once …
cityofportphillipNote the Victorian workers’ cottages on the left at Queens Terrace (144-132) and Jubilee Terrace (130-118). The Goldrush caused a …
cityofportphillipOn the corner of 53 Stokes Street is the original building of the Swallow and Ariell Steam Biscuit Manufactory, founded …
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