Monday, 12 September 2016

Melbourne Hunt Club at Cranbourne by Claire Turner Sandall

This account of the history of the Melbourne Hunt Club was written and researched by the Local History Officer, Claire Sandall (nee Turner) for the Cranbourne Hands on History project, Cranbourne: a town with a history published in 2001. You can access the entire history on-line on the City of Casey website, here.

In 1996, the headquarters of the long established Melbourne Hunt Club along Cameron Street [Narre Warren-Cranbourne Road] were demolished*. The end of these charismatic buildings was the end of an era when Cranbourne and its surrounding districts were at the centre of this traditional sport. Today when you travel along Cameron Street, you will see the construction of a new housing estate called The Hunt Club Estate. This is yet another symbol of the passing of time and the rapidly changing land around Cranbourne. Its rural foundations are gradually disappearing and are being replaced by the trademarks of progress. The Hunt Club name survives and with it a fascinating history that saw the intermingling of ‘elite’ Melbourne society with a farming community.

A long-time member who had enjoyed close associations with the Hunt Club since being a teenager in the 1940s, Mr. Derry Francis remarked that: ‘to see the club house, stables and houses removed recently was a very sad loss of a great lot of memories!’

The English tradition of fox hunting on horseback was established in Australia during the 1830s and the Melbourne Hunt Club dates back to the 1840s. By the 1870s, Melbourne’s wealthy families like the Chirnsides and the Clarkes, indulged in the hunt as a prestigious leisure activity for special occasions. Kangaroo hunts, as well as traditional foxhunts, were also popular. The club needed headquarters to stable members’ horses and to breed the hounds. The hounds were pivotal to the club. A club would become well known for the pedigree of its hounds and for how well the chief huntsmen could train them. Well-trained hounds would ensure a good chase of the fox for the hunters on horseback.

Cranbourne was selected as a new site for the Hunt Club when urban development was squeezing them out of their existing site in Oakleigh during the 1920s**   Fox hunting relies on the availability of space and cooperation with neighbouring farms: land was the key to the survival of the club. Oakleigh’s farms were beginning to disappear, signalling a problem for the club. The Cranbourne site, on the corner of Thompsons and Narre Warren Cranbourne Roads was chosen by a special ‘Country Committee’ of the Melbourne Hunt Club in the late 1920s. The committee included Pakenham identity J.J. Ahern, S.A. Greaves and the owner of the ‘Mayfield’ property in Cranbourne, R.G.Hope. These men provided an important link between the Melbourne gentry society and the Cranbourne and Berwick Shire areas. As influential landowners, they could persuade the Club that Cranbourne would sustain the Club’s endeavours, providing them with plenty of space for their activities and township support.



Alec Creswick, George Missen and Rupert Richardson outside the Berwick Inn. The Melbourne Hunt Club used to gather at the Berwick Inn before setting off for the days hunting.


When the club moved to Cranbourne, there had already been a long association with the Casey-Cardinia region. The first Master of the hounds was George Watson, from the I.Y.U property in Pakenham. Permission was required from landowners to hunt across their property and the committee had to work very hard to achieve and maintain this. There was eventually a network of properties that would participate in the hunt, making their land available and allowing the club to install special points in their fences where horses could safely jump. Watson became a stoic figure in the club over the years and enjoyed the benefits of his sons owning land in Narre Warren and Hallam during the 1890s. His son Godfrey Watson owned ‘The Pines’ and kennelled the hounds there during the 1897 season. The Greaves family in the Berwick and Cranbourne district also featured in the history of the Hunt Club. Again they were a useful connection because they owned large properties and allowed the hunts to operate there. Greaves family properties included ‘Fernside’ at Cranbourne and ‘Strathard’ at Narre Warren.

The Hunt Club adopted parts of Cranbourne culture as its own. The sustaining industry during the 1920s and 30s in Cranbourne was dairying and the town was an industry leader in providing the first bottled milk. The Hunt Club picked up on the local culture and the following club poem describing local sites highlights this:
The Lyndhurst, Clyde and Cranbourne chaps
There must be easy seven
And other men from Nar Nar Goon, 
We’d make up to eleven, 
The Huntsmen coves, the General said,
 Put sugar in their tea, 
And Cranbourne milk is pretty strong
 You take the tip from me…. 

The 1920s clubhouse at Cranbourne was the scene of many social engagements, especially refreshments after a hunt, and was a notoriously beautiful building. It was located near the railway line on Narre Warren Cranbourne Road, where the Hunt Club housing estate is now being developed. The buildings could not be seen from the road. They were at the end of a long and winding driveway. The clubhouse was on the left, followed by the Bregazzi house. There was an orchard, dog kennels, exercise yards and a room where all the meat was boiled up for dog food. At the end on the right hand side were the enormous stables. A car could be driven through the centre and there was a chute along which the chaff was shovelled.

A curious and compatible relationship developed between the local Cranbourne community and the patrons of hunting who travelled up from Melbourne. They shared a love of the country and of sport. Horse people and other locals from surrounding properties joined in the club activities, rubbing shoulders with prominent politicians, visiting dignitaries and wealthy business people from the city.

One of Cranbourne’s pioneering families, the Bregazzies, had a special association with the Hunt Club. Keith Bregazzi worked for the club between the early 1930s and 1975 when he retired. Keith was highly respected as ‘the backbone of the Melbourne Hunt Club’. He and his wife Phyllis lived in a cottage on the Hunt Club grounds and were well-known personalities, both locally and among the many and varied club members that came to Cranbourne to enjoy the high-quality organization that Keith quietly and efficiently maintained. He was in charge of the training and breeding of the hounds, the welfare of the horses and the overall property. Club member Derry Francis remembers: We became very friendly with Keith and I often went up to help him with the hounds and horses. On my 15th birthday, I was given a pony ‘Bidgee’ then I could go and help work the hounds pre-season, with Keith and Ted McCoy. Late teens I got a hunter and hunted with the hounds for years. In that period there were 4 different Masters – Sir Alex Creswick, Peter Ronald, Owen Moore and Jeff Spencer – great years!!



This is the Hunt Club at Cranbourne - it's part of the Casey Cardinia Library Corporation Archive collection, but I don't know the date or the source of the photo.


The Club was a very established part of Cranbourne’s identity. There are many memories held by locals who had various involvements with the club, either as members of the Hunt, workers at the hunt complex or as children. Children from nearby properties loved to play at the grounds. Pam Ridgway recalls: We spent a lot of time at the Hunt Club visiting the Bregazzi family. We used to play in the stables and around the kennels. During the hunting season the hunting party looked magnificent in their red coats and black hats. There were hurdles along farmers paddock fences so that there were safe places to jump. 

Locals would follow the hunt by road in cars, on horseback and in jinkers, making a real occasion. The Hunt Club was a prestigious part of Cranbourne for many decades. Its headquarters are now located at Pakenham.



A 1980 aerial photograph of the Melbourne Hunt Club at Cranbourne. It was located on the east side of  Narre Warren-Cranbourne Road and the north side Berwick -Cranbourne Road (Sladen Street extension). The railway line bi-sects the photo.


*I  believe that some of the buildings were removed and that two buildings are now in Modella and being used as a private house [Heather Arnold]


** They actually moved from Oakleigh to Cranbourne in 1929 (source: Hounds are Running: a history of the Melbourne Hunt by Heather Ronald (Lowden Publishing, 1970).

6 comments:

Unknown said...

I was born in 1936 and spent the first 18 months of my life at the Melbourne Hunt Club in Cranbourne. My father Joe Thompson was the Kennel Master. We lived in the house on the property. I have some photos of that time if you are interested. My dad had a tin with negatives of our early life. My husband was a photographer and he was able to print them.
If you are interested I would love to have a conversation with you. My husband and I visited the club in the late 80s and was given a tour of the place which was so interesting. You can contact me on the email below

Casey Cardinia Libraries said...

Hi and thank you for your comment. Unfortunately, your contact details did not come through. Please email to information@cclc.vic.gov.au - we would love to discuss this further.

Unknown said...

As a boy, I rode once with Melbourne Hunt - Lilydale & Yarra Glen being my regular playground. The photo including Rupe Richardson gave me a warm feeling; I had great respect for his showjump riding and beautifully-trained mounts. Didn't he once compete at Royal Melbourne with broken ribs strapped up after a stirrup-dragging incident? Cranbourne Point-to-Point was a highlight of my adolescence

Barbara Evans said...

Thank you for publishing this article, & especially the comments by Derry Francis & the photos showing he& Rupert Richardson.
As a child of 9,I lived at Cranbourne, my father BERNARD MEAD's home town, and was given my 1st ponie 'Trixie' in approx 1957,

Dad knew both Derry Francis & Keith Bregazzie, & because of that, a young friend & I were given special permission to ride our ponies in the front paddocks of The Hunt Club.
On 2x occasions my parents allowed me to join a Children's meet provided I stayed close to local farmer and long term family friends, John &Julie MARRIOT, &
their father,& what a thrilling & exciting adventure that was!
But approximately 8-10 years later, I bought my 2nd horse from RUPERT RICHARDSON at Berwick, and she was buried many years later as a still beautiful & much loved 32yo.
She had been Mrs Richardsons own mount I was told at the time.
This stunning Mahogany-brown P/A .are who I named Lori,also became the dam of my well performed
'Lorisglen Lodge'line of show Galloways, and the well known Reg Pinto pony,
Lorisglen Vicount, later owned by CYNTHIA & Arthur Martin of Dixons Creek, Vic.
He was by Vic Chandlers reg ASPB &Pinto stallion
ALLAMBIE PHANTOM.
Vicount was trained to Carriage Driving, & was possibly best known for a demonstration drive in Tandem with his Sire at Melbourne show, possibly in the early 80s.
ARTHUR MARTIN also used 'COUNT' as his regular
Mount when officiating as CLERK OF the COURSE mount on Yarra Junction
Race days, & this showy little 13.2hh PINTO PONY became a great favourite with race-day crowds.
His dam, LORI, was registered as an Astralian Stock Horse at the age of 21,& only 4 days after I'd weaned 2x foals from her.
She carried the well reputed WINE GLASS brand on her ns, and this was later traced down to 'Gunnee' Station, DELUNGRA, butI was unable to lean any more of her breeding or bloodlines.



However, it is to the 3x men named in the lublished history that I owe a tremendous debt of over 50x years time frame:

Derry (& JUDY) FRANCIS;
KEITH BRAGAZZI
& RUPERT RICHARDSON
DERRY FRANCIS.
My Grandfather,
ERNEST GEORGE MEAD owned a 30 acre farm down near Thompsons Rd, Cranbourne.
Previously an orchardist, he returned from WW1 as a complete invalid due to'being gassed in the trenches' & may have served as a farrier to the Light Horse. His war history hasn't yet been researched.
His only Son, my father BERNARD G MEAD served in WW2 s a Tradesman Class 1, and was deployed I believe Mum said, in Katherine, Pine Gap &Alice Springs

And through his friendship connection with the 3 Hunt Club members named above, was fostered my own long appreciated connection with not omly the Cranbourne Hunt Club, put perhaps as a minor contributor to this important heritage document.

Barbara
Evans,
nee
Barbara Mead of Cranborne, 1957-1963

Heather said...

Thank you Barbara, for your interesting story about your life in Cranbourne and your horses. It's lovely that many people have such fond memories of the Hunt Club at Cranbourne and thank you for taking the time to share your own memories. Best wishes, Heather.

Anonymous said...

What an incredible thing this was for me to read. As a child in about 1980 I kept my ponies at Mr. Mc’s property on Thomspons Rd in Cranbourne.
I was friendly with their daughter at the time and she had her little old shetland pony Minnie at the time, who lived till she was 30 yrs old and buried under the big old tree up near the barn.
What beautiful memories i have of the years there. I also rode his bay gelding Regal i think his name was, but he was a big strong horse. I remember the stunning Clydesdale mare they also owned back then.
This is how i started going to the junior hunts held at the Melbourne hunt Club along the railway tracks there.
This was a very long time ago now, as i am now 50 myself. The names are hard to remember but i will never forget the wonderful years i spent there, and the kindness this wonderful family showed me at all times.