Timeline of Melbourne history

The Melbourne, also known as the settlement skyline, and Yarra River

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

Pre-European settlement

  • Aboriginal Australians settled the area for at least 30,000 years.

19th century’s timeline

A map dating to the 1880s shows the well-established suburbs of Melbourne.
  • 1800 – James Grant explores the south-east of Australia
  • 1801 – John Murray sails into Port Phillip in the Lady Nelson
  • 1803 – Charles Robbins and Charles Grimes explore the entirety of Port Phillip and discover the Yarra River in the Cumberland
  • 1803 – David Collins sent from Sydney to establish a settlement for the British Government. Unaware of previous discoveries, Collins settles near present-day Sullivan Bay on the Mornington Peninsula. This settlement is abandoned five months later.
  • 1834 – Henty family establish first long-term European settlement in Victoria at Portland
  • 1835 – John Batman 'buys' the 2,430 km2 that Melbourne would be founded on from the local Aboriginal nation, the Wurundjeri. The Batman Deed is now widely recognised to be more of a treaty than a sale.
  • 1835 – Melbourne is founded by John Batman and John Pascoe Fawkner
  • 1836 – William Lonsdale built the first government block, declaring Melbourne the capital of the Port Phillip district[1]
  • 1837 – 28 March – Hoddle Grid of streets for the central business district is surveyed by Robert Hoddle
  • 1837 – 10 April - Melbourne named by Governor General Richard Bourke[2]
  • 1837 – 1 June – First inner-city land sale
  • 1838 – Melbourne is declared a legal port and administrative centre, opening the way for vastly increased immigration
  • 1838 – Melbourne Cricket Club is founded
  • 1838 – Second inner-city land sale
  • 1839 – Third inner-city land sale. Quarrying of bluestone began out of the Melbourne Corporation Quarry at Clifton Hill.
  • 1840 – First petition for the separation of Port Phillip District from New South Wales drafted by Henry Fyshe Gisborne and presented to Governor George Gipps.
  • 1841 – First seaport and market are opened
  • 1842 – Melbourne Municipal Corporation Act was passed in Sydney. Melbourne City Council is formed.
  • 1842 – Birth of Saint Mary MacKillop
  • 1845 – First Princes Bridge constructed connecting both sides of the Yarra
  • 1846 – The Melbourne Botanic Gardens is founded
  • 1847 – Melbourne declared a city by Queen Victoria on 25 June.[3]
  • 1847 – Melbourne Building Act was proposed in 1847 based on Sydney act of 1833.
  • 1848 – Melbourne Hospital founded (from 1935 the hospital is called The Royal Melbourne Hospital)
  • 1848 – First Catholic bishop appointed
  • 1849 – "Melbourne Building Act" was passed.[4]
  • 1851 – Beginning of the Victorian gold rush with discovery of gold at Buninyong
  • 1851 – Victoria becomes a colony, separate from New South Wales
  • 1851 – First state Lieutenant-Governor Charles La Trobe inaugurated
  • 1852 – City's first gas works is opened
  • 1853 – The University of Melbourne is founded
  • 1854 – The Melbourne Terminus (first Flinders Street station building) is completed
  • 1854 – First steam railway journey in Australia from Melbourne Terminus (on the current site of Flinders Street station) to Sandridge (later Port Melbourne)
  • 1854 – Melbourne Exhibition held in conjunction with Exposition Universelle (1855)
  • 1854 – The State Library of Victoria is founded
  • 1854 – First telegraph service, to Williamstown
  • 1854 – The first Town Hall is completed
  • 1855 – First state Governor Sir Charles Hotham inaugurated
  • 1855 – The Melbourne Museum is founded
  • 1856 – Stonemasons win the eight-hour day
  • 1857 – First reservoir water supply (at Yan Yean Reservoir) tapped outside city limits
  • 1857 – Queen Victoria Market is founded
  • 1857 – Victoria's first country railway from Geelong to Melbourne is built
  • 1857 – City streets first lit by gas lighting
  • 1858 – 7 August – a game of football played between Melbourne Grammar School and Scotch College
  • 1858 – First inter-city telegraph services, to Adelaide and Sydney
  • 1859 – 14 May – Melbourne Football Club, Australia's oldest football club, is founded
  • 1859 – Spencer Street station (then Batman's Hill Station) and Princes Bridge railway station completed
  • 1859 – Construction of the General Post Office begins
  • 1859 – First Melbourne Trades Hall building opened.
  • 1860 – Burke & Wills expedition departed from Royal Park.
  • 1861 – National Gallery of Victoria is founded
  • 1861 – First Melbourne Cup
  • 1861 – Victorian Exhibition held
  • 1861 – Melbourne's population reaches 125,000
  • 1862 – Melbourne Zoo founded
  • 1863 – Batman's Hill levelled
  • 1865 – Melbourne overtakes Sydney to become Australia's most populous city
  • 1866 – Intercolonial Exhibition of Australasia held
  • 1867 – Melbourne Town Hall begins construction
  • 1869 – Royal Mint is completed
  • 1874 – Supreme Court building is completed
  • 1875 – Victorian Intercolonial Exhibition held
  • 1877 – First Test cricket match, between Australia and England, at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. First season of the Victorian Football Association.
  • 1878 – Xavier College, in Kew, is founded after the increased need of boarding space for the oldest Jesuit School in Melbourne, St Pat's.
  • 1878 – Ruyton Girls' School, also in Kew is founded by Charlotte Anderson. Its land includes the heritage listed Henty House, built by the seminal Hentys of Sussex.
  • 1880 – Ned Kelly hanged in Melbourne Gaol
  • 1880 – Royal Exhibition Building opened
  • 1880 – Melbourne International Exhibition held
  • 1883 – Historic Yarra-Yarra Falls (near Queens Bridge) removed using explosives
  • 1884 – Victorian International Exhibition held
  • 1885 – First cable tram line opens in the Melbourne cable tramway system
  • 1885 – Victorians' Jubilee Exhibition
  • 1887 – Melbourne Town Hall is completed
  • 1888 – Victorian Juvenile Industrial Exhibition and Centennial International Exhibition held
  • 1890 – Melbourne and Metropolitan Board of Works is formed
  • 1894 – City streets first lit by electric lighting
  • 1897 – First season of the Victorian Football League
  • 1897 – First part of the mains sewage system becomes operational

20th century

Chart of Melbourne's population growth since first settlement in 1851

21st century

  • 2000 – New Melbourne Museum opened
  • 2000 – CityLink freeways open, including two new tunnels, a new cross-harbour bridge, and electronic tolling
  • 2000 – Docklands Stadium completed
  • 2002 – Federation Square opens
  • 2002 – Controversial Melbourne 2030 planning policy introduced, aimed to increase population in designated 'activity centres' and curb urban sprawl, promises to increase public transport usage to 20% of motorised trips by 2020
  • 2003 – 2003 Melbourne Thunderstorm
  • 2004 – Melbourne Victory FC is formed
  • 2005 – 2005 Melbourne Thunderstorm
  • 2006 – Southern Cross railway station redevelopment opens to passengers, renamed from Spencer Street station
  • 2006 – Commonwealth Games held in Melbourne
  • 2006 – Construction on Eureka Tower is completed, making it the tallest building in Melbourne and tallest observation deck in the Southern Hemisphere.
  • 2007 – 2007 FINA Swimming World Championships are held
  • 2008 – New Eastlink freeway completed
  • 2008 – M1 upgrade begins
  • 2009 – Black Saturday bushfires around Melbourne, the worst fires in the history of the city leave 180 people dead
  • 2009 – Melbourne Heart FC is formed
  • 2009 – Melbourne's population reaches 4 million people, expanding by an unprecedented 90,000 people a year[8]
  • 2010 – Severe Thunderstorm 6 March, once in a century storm with 10 cm hail stones
  • 2010 – Melbourne celebrates 175th birthday
  • 2011 – Say Yes demonstrations draw 10,000 people who support increased investment in renewable energy
  • 2015 – Construction commences on Australia 108 which, once complete, will be the tallest building in Melbourne
  • 2017 – Six people were killed and thirty wounded in the January 2017 Bourke St car attack, followed by the death of one person and the injury of seventeen in the December 2017 Flinders St car attack
  • 2018 – Major construction begins on the Metro Tunnel, a 9-km underground rail tunnel through the CBD and the biggest public transport project since the City Loop
  • 2018 – 170,000 people march through the city in response to unfair working conditions and low wages[9]
  • 2019 – 300 Anti-Fascists and 150 Neo-Nazis clash at St Kilda beach[10]
  • 2020 – Melbourne is hit the hardest by the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia and as a result Melbourne becomes one of the most locked-down cities in the world
  • 2021 - Local newspapers try to claim Melbourne becomes the most locked-down city in the world.[11] There is no evidence for this, and cities such as Leicester in England suffered much worse lockdowns of over a year,[12] while Peru maintained strict controls for far longer. Deaths from COVID19 in Melbourne were very low compared to Europe and the Americas in 2020-21. Minor far right 'cooker' protests against strict lockdowns and mandatory vaccinations in the construction industry broke out throughout the city during the second half of the year. See COVID-19 protests in Australia

See also

References

  1. ^ Lewis, Miles (1995). Melbourne the city's history and development, 2nd ed. City of Melbourne.
  2. ^ New South Wales Government Gazette, 12 April 1837 (No.271), p. 303.
  3. ^ Melbourne the city's history and development, 2nd ed pg 5, Miles Lewis, 1995
  4. ^ Charles Augustus FitzRoy. An Act for Regulating Buildings and Party Walls and for Preventing Mischiefs by Fire in the City of Melbourne. Melbourne: (Government of New South Wales, 1849).
  5. ^ Burgmann, Verity and Meredith (1998). Green Bans, Red Union: Environmental Activism and the New South Wales Builders Labourers' Federation. pp. 50–51.
  6. ^ Ness, Immanuel (2014). New Forms of Worker Organisation: The Syndicalist and Autonomist Restoration of Class Struggle Unionism.
  7. ^ "Melbourne tram dispute and lockout 1990 - anarcho-syndicalism in practice". libcom.org. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  8. ^ Lahey, Tim Colebatch and Kate (22 September 2009). "Melbourne's population hits 4 million". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  9. ^ "170,000 Shut Down Melbourne's CBD To Demand Better Pay & Work Conditions". Pedestrian TV. 23 October 2018. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  10. ^ "St Kilda beach racist protests: Far right clashes with anti-fascists". www.news.com.au. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  11. ^ https://ncreview.com.au/2021/09/28/how-do-melbournes-lockdown-and-covid-19-deaths-compare-to-other-locked-down-cities/
  12. ^ https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/leicester-lockdown-coronavirus-restrictions-b1825544.html

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to History of Melbourne.
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Years in Australia (1788–present)
18th century
19th century
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21st century

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