Series[UMA-SR-000001984] Photographic prints taken by Jack Lockyer O'BrienAccession[1965.0004] Papers of Jack Lockyer O'BrienIdentifierUMA-ITE-1965000400312Extentnot specifiedScope and ContentFront view of the former Aberdeen Street Baptist Church, Geelong, Victoria. Erected in 1853, it is the oldest surviving Baptist Church building in Victoria outside the Melbourne metropolitan area. John Lockyer O’Brien (1905-1965) was an historian at the University. His collection of about 4,000 photographs was taken in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Many of them capture the architecture and streetscapes of inner-city Melbourne when the area was in transition between its then 19th century topography and working-class status prior to large-scale demolitions to made way for the construction of the Housing Commission high-rise blocks, and middle-class migration back to the inner-city and subsequent renovation and gentrification of its housing. He was also interested in the early architecture of country Victoria and photographed 19th century homesteads, hotels, churches, banks, railway stations, as well as humbler buildings. He and his wife Laurie owned and resided in a double-storey Georgian-style bluestone house in Hanover Street, Fitzroy.
Inscription: "Aberdeen St Baptist Church, Geelong", is written in ink on the back of the photograph.Access StatusOpen for public accessRequest TypeRequest itemUnitBWP Album 0166Conditions of Use and ReproductionThis image is provided for research purposes and must not be reproduced without prior permission of University of Melbourne Archives. For information about ordering a copy of this image contact the University of Melbourne Archives: archives@archives.unimelb.edu.auMenuBrowse digitised items | Available online