opens in new tab or window
Skip to main content
Quick Links
City of Darebin
Darebin Arts
Darebin Libraries
Contact Us
My Account
Join
English (Australia)
Select this as your preferred language
Select a language to translate to
English (Australia)
Select this as your preferred language
Darebin City Council - Home - Logo
Open
Search
Menu
Your library
Sub-menu
Visit
Sub-menu
Locations and hours
Visiting the Library
Our environmental commitment
Conditions of entry
Your free membership
Sub-menu
How to become a member
Benefits of joining
Borrowing, renewing and returning
Overdue, lost and damaged items
Reservations and requests
Darebin Libraries app
Membership Frequently Asked Questions
Strategy and guidelines
Sub-menu
Darebin Libraries and learning strategy
Collection development guidelines
Donations
Computer guidelines
Library membership guidelines
Fees and charges
Contact us
Multilingual support
Employment opportunities
Services
Sub-menu
Library services
Sub-menu
Home library service
Researching local and family history
Book clubs
Libraries After Dark
English language support
Digital support
Justice of the Peace
Ask a librarian
Library tours
Seed library
Energy efficiency tool kits
Portable induction cooktops
Computers
Sub-menu
Computers and laptops
Library wifi
Print, copy and scan
Gaming and PlayStations
Book a space
Sub-menu
Meeting rooms
Community art spaces
Accessibility
Sub-menu
Accessibility tools and items for loan
Accessible facilities
Accessible computers
Neurodiverse visitors
Accessibility services
Recommendations
Sub-menu
Kids resources
Youth resources
Darebin Deadly Reads
Climate change and action
Resources in community languages
Lifelong learning
Reading ideas
Darebin Heritage
Northcote Leader archive
Digital library
Sub-menu
eBooks, eAudiobooks and eComics
Encyclopedias and reference
Health
Kids digital resources
Learn English and other languages
Local and family history
Magazines, newspapers and journals
Online learning
Video streaming
News and events
Sub-menu
News
Sub-menu
enewsletter subscription
Events
Sub-menu
Events calendar
Wurundjeri Storytime
Bilingual Storytimes
Book Nook
Conversation Café
Rhyme time
Storytime
In the Loop
Device Advice
Chess Club
Dungeons and Dragons at the Library!
DIVRS community support sessions
Search
You Are Here :
Home
/
Biographies
/
Early Settlers
/
Tambo Park Estate
In This Section
Northcote Leader archive
Biographies
Art & Entertainers
Business People
Clubs and Societies
Council Workers
Criminals
Early Settlers
Abigail Foulkes
Agnes Glew - Bootmaker and early settler (1819-1911)
A. H. and W. Richardson
Amelia Kate Allchin
Bendall Family of Northcote
Benjamin Easter Johnson
Captain Frederick Charles Standish
Carl Augustus Adolph Schwaebsch
Catherine Oliver - Butcher
Edmund Matthew Bond
Francis Edis Beaver
Frederick Pike
George Robert Bowen Steane
Grindrod family
Henry Lane
Horace Bastings
Isaac Barrow
Jacob Brache
James Lambert
J.C. Clinch
Job Smith's Thornbury House
Johann Christian Kupsch
Johan Gottleib Arndt
John Hawthorne Thomson
John McNamara - Baker
Major St Lawrence Webb
Marshall Brothers Co.
Moritz Heiner
Nehemiah Wimble
Philip Gough
Reverend Caleb and Elanor Booth
Reverend Duncan Fraser
Reverend Samuel Hector Ferguson
Richard Howitt
Richard Schlesinger
Robert Duff
Samuel Brownlow
Samuel Jeffrey
Samuel Leakey Bartlett
Sarah Susanna Bunbury
Schwaebsch Family of Northcote
Sir Andrew Clarke
Tambo Park Estate
Thomas A'Beckett
Thomas Butler
Thomas George Beckett
Thomas Percival Laidler
Thomas Smith
Thomas William Bransgrove
Thomas William Mason
Timothy Shepherd
Walter Shade
Whalley Brothers
William Loveday
William Paterson
William Shade - Ironmonger
Families
Mayors & Councillors
Military
Miscellaneous
Publicans
Religious leaders
Scientists
Sports People
Teachers
Buildings
Crimes and Criminals
Darebin at War
Events
Industry & Business
Oral Histories
Places
Publications
Sport & Leisure
Transport
Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung
Tambo Park Estate
Tambo Park and Alexander Short
The Tambo Park Estate near Summerhill Road in East Preston was one of the early homesteads in Preston. Set on 105 acres it was a blue stone building with slate roof with eleven rooms, kitchen scullery, dairy, coach house and stabling. The boundaries of the property stretched from Summerhill Road to Plenty Road and to the Darebin Creek. The location of the homestead can be clearly seen by searching on an aerial map of 1945 showing the buildings directly south and towards the eastern end of the quarry and sandpits.
https://1945.melbourne
The property was originally part of the 885 acres that Thomas Alexander purchased in the 1838/39 land sales. Alexander’s property stretched from High Street to Darebin Creek and from Summerhill road northwards towards Bundoora. Alexander also purchased the adjoining block to give him a total of 1875 acres stretching from the Merri Creek to Darebin Creek and encompassing most of what would become Reservoir. Alexander paid a £1,147 for his land and quickly sold it on to Captain Sylvester Brown who then promptly sold it to Thomas Edwardes. Like most of Preston’s early landowners Alexander had no intention of living in Preston but was keen to make a profit from early land sales around Melbourne. We cannot be sure who built Tambo Park or when it was built but it appears that Alexander Short was there by about 1877. By that stage the Rose Shamrock and Thistle Hotel and Doolan’s forge were well established just a short distance down Plenty Road and a daily coach from Melbourne stopped at the hotel. As a ‘gentleman farmer’ Short naturally progressed into local government and was the Jika Jika Shire President in 1884/85 and Preston Shire President 1888/89. His first foray into local politics started in August 1879 when he put himself up for election for the vacancy of the Gowerville Riding. In 1882 the estate was put up for sale, with the suggestion that the property would be “eminently suitable for subdivision.” In November 1891 Alexander Short died at Tambo Park. Short was 60 years old and had suffered from diabetes for several years before hand. As well as serving as Shire President, Short had represented Preston Council for seventeen years, and was the Chairman of the Preston Magistrates and Returning Officer for the Bourke East. Short was survived by his wife Jane and eleven children. In his will, dated 14th September 1887, Short left his household goods and possessions to his wife but instructed that Tambo Park be sold and the money used to purchase a home closer to the city for his wife. Any surplus money was to be invested in property and the income passed onto his wife. On the death of his wife three of his children were to receive £850 (Charlotte, Alexander and Ernest) with the other eight children dividing the remaining monies between themselves. In a further amendment to the will, three of the children (Clara, Elizabeth and Eva) were cut out of the will. The total value of the will was the then considerable sum of £12,316. Despite the instructions of the will, the property was not offered for sale until 1901, being described as “that well known property at Preston” and being “without doubt about the best that has been placed on the market for many years.” Tambo Park was described as a substantial house with flower gardens, orchards, horse and cattle yards and six paddocks. Yet year after year Jane Short continued to be listed in the directories as living at Tambo Park in Preston. In 1924 the property passed onto Ernest Short, and the by the 1940s it was the home of A. Short. If the property was sold then clearly the Short family stayed on as tenants. However the most likely scenario is that the property was not sold. The exact location of Tambo Park remains a bit of a mystery. Early directories listed it as Plenty Road and was not until 1942 that it was listed as Summerhill Road. At that stage the estate had not been subdivided and the property was probably close to Plenty Road in the vicinity of the Summerhill shopping centre. We do not know as yet exactly when the Tambo Estate was finally broke up and sold for subdivision but the house probably vanished shortly after. The Tambo Estate was one the grand houses of early Preston and was one of the last links to the early days of Preston settlement.
Back to top