Subject: In 1838 William Bradley and William Shelley became co-partners in a milling and brewing venture. Construction of the mill appears to have started in this year.
Photographer: L Kerr
Copyright owner: Department of Urban Affairs and Planning
Date: 10/06/1982
Subject: The alterations to the brewery provide a vivid record of the ways in which brewing and milling technology changed during a period of 120 years.
Photographer: L Kerr
Copyright owner: Department of Urban Affairs and Planning
Date: 10/06/1982
Subject: View of Brewing machinery.
Photographer: L Kerr
Copyright owner: Department of Urban Affairs and Planning
Date: 10/06/1982
Subject: The susceptability of much of the surrounding land to flooding, and the concentration of Goulburn's growth west of the brewery complex, have resulted in the retention of most of the Brewery's visual curtilage.
Photographer: L Kerr
Copyright owner: Department of Urban Affairs and Planning
Date: 10/06/1982
Subject: The Goulburn Brewery is significant primarily because it is the remaining physical evidence of 120 years of varied industrial activity occupying one group of buildings conceived within the first 50 years of white settlement in NSW.
Photographer: L Kerr
Copyright owner: Department of Urban Affairs and Planning
Date: 10/06/1982
Subject: PCO Plan Number 178
Photographer: Heritage Council of NSW
Copyright owner: Heritage Council of NSW
Date: 05/11/1981