Geelong Showgrounds

The Geelong Showgrounds in Geelong, Victoria, Australia, are the home of the Royal Geelong Show, an agricultural show held every year since 1855.[1] The current showgrounds are located in the suburb of Breakwater.

A Bills horse trough at the showgrounds

The focus of the Royal Geelong Show is the display of rural industry, including livestock and produce, with associated competitions and awards. The show also features amusement rides, a sideshow alley, and showbags, carry bags full of goodies produced by various commercial enterprises.

History

The Geelong and Western District Agricultural and Horticultural Society was formed in February 1855.[1] The first showgrounds site was in East Geelong, south of Eastern Park, and was bounded by Ryrie, Garden, Myers and Normanby Streets. The second showgrounds opened in October 1891, on a new site that ran south from Ormond Road to St Albans Road.[1] A 40-metre-long wooden grandstand was provided.

In 1907, the showgrounds were again moved, this time to the new Geelong Racecourse. On 14 April 1907, the grandstand was transported from the old site by Messrs McCoy and Son. Weighing 100 tonnes, it was moved across the Queenscliff railway line as a whole by a traction engine, after being placed on 52 large rollers.[2] The stand remained at the current racecourse until at least the early 1990s.

The agricultural society shared the Geelong Racecourse until 1954, when it moved to the current site.[2]

gollark: Oh cool, the 24h eggslot thing only applies to deliberately killed eggs. Now to pick a new one to sacrifice.
gollark: Oh well, hopefully I'll coordinate better next time!
gollark: Aaand gone.
gollark: Well, we have about 15 seconds.
gollark: Yes, it was indeed a bit late.

References

  1. Aitken, Richard (September 1978). "Horses, Shows and Trains". Investigator. 13 (3): 79–93.
  2. Begg, Peter (1990). Geelong - The First 150 Years. Globe Press. ISBN 0-9592863-5-7.

Official website

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.