Also advertised in the Sands and Macdougall Directory of
1911 and 1912 as the Junction Steam Brick Co. (J.Hendy) Real High Grade Steam
Bricks. Oakleigh; and 1915 as the Junction Brick Co. Pty Ltd. Dandenong Rd.
Oak. They appear to have had two incarnations, one as a brick works and the second as a roofing tile maker.
Location -37.896937, 145.100598
Ferntree Gully Road to the North, Dandenong Road to the
South and Tanner Street to the East.
This was another
of the small, short-lived companies in Oakleigh. They were located on that small triangle of land now serving as
parkland (Hurst Park) on the corner of Dandenong and Fern Tree Gully
Roads. Even though they called
themselves a company, there is no record of them registering as a company in
Victoria. A sole trader making bricks
is not an easy life and there is no further mention of this brick works.
This triangle of land was part of the original Oakleigh East sub-division. On the 27th of March 1890 the land was purchased by Clara Eliza Collins. This block was inherited by Ida Segemeier when Clara died on the 29th of January 1902. Ida sold it almost immediately to Ellen Matilda Green on the 17th of June 1902. She then sold it to Joseph Murray, 3rd of March 1906.
This triangle of land was part of the original Oakleigh East sub-division. On the 27th of March 1890 the land was purchased by Clara Eliza Collins. This block was inherited by Ida Segemeier when Clara died on the 29th of January 1902. Ida sold it almost immediately to Ellen Matilda Green on the 17th of June 1902. She then sold it to Joseph Murray, 3rd of March 1906.
This is where brick-making enters the picture. The block was sub-divided and sold to Frank Oliver Harford on the 15th of June 1909, and the other block to John Hendy on the 24th of November 1909. Both men were builders. John bought out Frank on the 24th of November 1909 and consolidated the blocks where they then began brick making. This did not last long because the land was again sold, this time to Frederick Oscar Bornum. Peter Finlayson and John Lemmon on the 2nd of June 1910, shortly after Frank and John's partnership dissolved.
They couldn't make a go of it either and sold to Fritz Ernest Frankenberg on the 22nd of March 1912. This is where the business went belly up with the plant and equipment being sold off., ownership was also short-lived and Fritz sold to Richard Arthur Ethell (another of Thomas's sons) the transfer happened on the 29th of October 1914. The company is now listed in Sands and MacDougall under "Tile Makers."
Richard later sold to Harold Frank Hunt on the 23rd of December 1919. (Harold dropped off the perch a couple of years after he sold off the works.)
Richard later sold to Harold Frank Hunt on the 23rd of December 1919. (Harold dropped off the perch a couple of years after he sold off the works.)
This next bit is where it could get confusing because Harold Hunt sold to the Terracotta Roofing Tile Company on the 24th of March 1921. I suspect he saw a chance to offload what these days would be seen as an under performing asset but Harold was also a shareholder in the Terracotta Roofing Tile Company. I thing Harold probably did better out of the deal.
For some time after the Junction Brickworks closed, their boiler was kept lit in the hope that the business would resume. It was not still going in 1921. This resumption of works did not happen and even when the Terracotta company took over, sales never matched production and the site eventually lay idle, becoming a dangerous eyesore and health hazard. They owned the land until the 18th of August 1939 when it was acquired by Ernest Henry Montague Ratcliff (1863-1938). Ernest was also a Director of the nearby Glen Iris Brick Company.
For some time after the Junction Brickworks closed, their boiler was kept lit in the hope that the business would resume. It was not still going in 1921. This resumption of works did not happen and even when the Terracotta company took over, sales never matched production and the site eventually lay idle, becoming a dangerous eyesore and health hazard. They owned the land until the 18th of August 1939 when it was acquired by Ernest Henry Montague Ratcliff (1863-1938). Ernest was also a Director of the nearby Glen Iris Brick Company.
The property had lain idle since the closure of the Terra Cotta Roofing Tile Company (see separate post) The vacant site became a dumping ground and quickly became a health hazard. Whatever plans Ernest may have had for the site, they never came to fruition and the Council took legal action against Ernest to clean up the site.
According to the
Oakleigh Council records, in July 1927, Council decided they needed a new site
for a tip. Cr Andrews moved that a hole
on Dandenong Road be used, but Councillors threatened to resign if this was
done. In 1928 The East Oakleigh League
wrote to the Council drawing attention to the unsightly condition of the
defunct tile works on the corner of Dandenong and Fern Tree Gully Roads. They suggested that Council purchase the
property and make it into gardens. The
owners wanted £5,000.
Council said that they would pay only £2,500 for it – but no
money was available.
Junction Brick
Works Site 1931
On the 17th of April
1929 the owners of the disused tile works at the corner of Dandenong and Fern
Tree Gully Roads were given 14 days to erect a substantial fence around the
clay hole. There is a reference to this
company being started by the Moroney Brothers but there appears to be no
evidence of this. The carefully
manicured parkland there now shows no sign of its former life.
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