The Alexandra Hotel – Corner Grant and Downey Streets, Alexandra
The Alexandra Hotel was the first local buildings to offer a reading room as an early library before the Alexandra Library was opened as part of the Mechanic’s Institute in 1883. The Alexandra Hotel was also the meeting place for the early Roads Board.
The current 1903 Alexandra structure, which enveloped the older brick structure, is built on the corner of the busy thoroughfares of Grant and Downey Streets on a rather awkwardly shaped block. Yet it is part of the historical heart of the north eastern Victorian country town. Built of locally made bricks, the Alexandra Hotel is designed in the typical style of public bars and hotels popular in Australia at that time. It features a double storey L-shaped pillared verandah with ornate cast iron fretwork on the upper balcony. The older part of the building still features glass panes that have been hand painted with geometric patterns to imitate stained glass with leadlight panels. Around the front door to the lounge, real Art Nouveau stained glass featuring stylised tulips may be found, along with an impressive lunette above the door. The whole Grant and Downey Street facades are painted white with brickwork picked out in black.
This fine old Hotel underwent refurbishment during 2007 and 2008 and features a public bar, function room, dining room, and accommodation for up to fifteen guests.
Alexandra is a town in Victoria, Australia. It is located at the junction of the Goulburn Valley Highway (B340) and Maroondah Highway (B360), 26 kilometres west of Eildon. The town was settled in the late 1860s, with a Post Office opening on 15 March 1867 (known until 24 April 1867) as Redgate. The town was originally known as Redgate, or Red Gate Diggings. The current name either derives from Alexandra of Denmark (Queen’s Consort to King Edward VII of England) when given a stature of her to the shire; or from three men named Alexander (Alesander, McGregor, Alexander Don, and Alexander Luckie) who discovered gold in the area in 1866. Charles Jones born Herefordshire also discovered Gold on the Luckie Mine in 1866. He bought a Hotel with John Henry Osborne and was the proprietor of the New York and London Hotel Grant Street Alexandra. The railway to Alexandra arrived in the town via Yea from Tallarook in 1909, and closed on November 18, 1978. The Rubicon Tramway connected Alexandra with the village of Rubicon, at the junction of the Rubicon and Royston Rivers. Today many tourists pass through Alexandra on their way to the Mount Buller ski resort from Melbourne. The town contains the Timber Tramway and Museum (located at the Alexandra Railway Station), and the National Trust classified post office and law courts. There is a local market on the second Saturday of each month from September to May, an annual art show at Easter, an agricultural show and rose festival in November, and the annual Truck, Rod and Ute Show in June.
The Alexandra Hotel – Corner Grant and Downey Streets, Alexandra
The Alexandra Hotel was the first local buildings to offer a reading room as an early library before the Alexandra Library was opened as part of the Mechanic’s Institute in 1883. The Alexandra Hotel was also the meeting place for the early Roads Board.
The current 1903 Alexandra structure, which enveloped the older brick structure, is built on the corner of the busy thoroughfares of Grant and Downey Streets on a rather awkwardly shaped block. Yet it is part of the historical heart of the north eastern Victorian country town. Built of locally made bricks, the Alexandra Hotel is designed in the typical style of public bars and hotels popular in Australia at that time. It features a double storey L-shaped pillared verandah with ornate cast iron fretwork on the upper balcony. The older part of the building still features glass panes that have been hand painted with geometric patterns to imitate stained glass with leadlight panels. Around the front door to the lounge, real Art Nouveau stained glass featuring stylised tulips may be found, along with an impressive lunette above the door. The whole Grant and Downey Street facades are painted white with brickwork picked out in black.
This fine old Hotel underwent refurbishment during 2007 and 2008 and features a public bar, function room, dining room, and accommodation for up to fifteen guests.
Alexandra is a town in Victoria, Australia. It is located at the junction of the Goulburn Valley Highway (B340) and Maroondah Highway (B360), 26 kilometres west of Eildon. The town was settled in the late 1860s, with a Post Office opening on 15 March 1867 (known until 24 April 1867) as Redgate. The town was originally known as Redgate, or Red Gate Diggings. The current name either derives from Alexandra of Denmark (Queen’s Consort to King Edward VII of England) when given a stature of her to the shire; or from three men named Alexander (Alesander, McGregor, Alexander Don, and Alexander Luckie) who discovered gold in the area in 1866. Charles Jones born Herefordshire also discovered Gold on the Luckie Mine in 1866. He bought a Hotel with John Henry Osborne and was the proprietor of the New York and London Hotel Grant Street Alexandra. The railway to Alexandra arrived in the town via Yea from Tallarook in 1909, and closed on November 18, 1978. The Rubicon Tramway connected Alexandra with the village of Rubicon, at the junction of the Rubicon and Royston Rivers. Today many tourists pass through Alexandra on their way to the Mount Buller ski resort from Melbourne. The town contains the Timber Tramway and Museum (located at the Alexandra Railway Station), and the National Trust classified post office and law courts. There is a local market on the second Saturday of each month from September to May, an annual art show at Easter, an agricultural show and rose festival in November, and the annual Truck, Rod and Ute Show in June.