Cremorne Pleasure Gardens in Melbourne, Australia
- James Lesh
- Feb 11, 2019
- 1 min read
Updated: Mar 17
Cremorne Gardens, gold-rush Melbourne, and the Victorian-era pleasure Garden, 1853-63
For ten summer seasons, from 1853 to 1863, Cremorne Gardens - gold-rush Melbourne's premier leisure attraction - welcomed thousands of visitors. A desirable modern pleasure garden, Cremorne, this article argues, was at once a space of modernity for its host colonial city, and a remarkable node in a global network of mid-nineteenth-century pleasure gardens. Cremorne's three proprietors, including the prominent businessman and politician George Coppin, carefully arranged this commercial venture. Cremorne became an alluring urban space that engendered new social experiences and provoked contested responses, inflected by contemporary standards of social etiquette and public morality. Cremorne thus reflected broader urban, social and cultural patterns of the era.
Commendations and Awards:
A.G.L. Shaw Summer Research Fellowship, State Library of Victoria.
Shortlist, Victorian Community History Awards.
Shortlist, John Adams Prize, Royal Historical Society of Victoria.
James Lesh, “Melbourne’s Cremorne Gardens and the global Victorian-era pleasure garden, 1853–63”, Victorian Historical Journal 90, no 2 (2019): 219–252.


