William Murray Ross

Australian businessman
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAustralian businessman
PlacesAustralia
wasBusinessperson
Work fieldBusiness
Gender
Male
Birth1825
Death1904 (aged 79 years)
The details

Biography

William Murray Ross (1825–1904) was an entrepreneur best remembered for his failed "Rosstown Railway" in the south-eastern suburbs of Melbourne. The railway was part of a larger "Rosstown Project" which also included a sugar beet processing mill and residential estate. Parts of the rail line easement have been preserved as the Rosstown Railway Heritage Trail.

Ross was born in Liverpool, England, arriving in Melbourne in 1852.

In 1875, he launched his new suburb of Rosstown, running this advertisement in the Argus:

THE NEW SUBURB of ROSSTOWN SHIRE of CAULFIELD.

MURRAY ROSS Has CONVERTED his ESTATE into a TOWNSHIP.

High land, with beautiful sea views for dwellings. Excellent metalled roads. Distance from Elsternwick Railway Station, commencing at 1½ miles. Threepenny omnibus fares from Elsternwick Station.

Free passes by the Melbourne and Hobson's Bay Railway for 10 years for houses costing £1000, and for shorter periods for smaller houses. Two express trains in the morning and two in the evening, only 12 minutes from town. A new line of railway—the Rosstown Junction— to be made from Elsternwick to the sugar-works, to have three stations in this suburb.

Price of land one-half to one-fourth the price in other suburbs, viz. from £50 to £100 per acre Purchasing the land without capital on long timo payments, repayable over 6, 8, 10 or 12 years, in fortnightly, quarterly, &c. payments. Three-fourths advanced of the cost of building large houses, and about one-half for cottages, repayable as in the case of the land. Sums advanced up to £2000, or more, for a gentleman's residence, £200, or more, for a workman's or gardener's cottage. Three-acre blocks for gentlemen's houses. One-acre blocks for worbmen's cottages.

Six to nine acre blocks for market-gardens The best soil for market-gardens round Melbourne. A sugar-works in their very midst, to buy the beet grown by the gardeners. Omnibuses from tho Elsternwick Railway Station arrive at 9 and 11.15 a.m., and 4.15 and 5.21 p.m.; leave at 9.6 and 11.34 a.m., and 4.36 and 5.22 p.m.

For full particulars see plans and prospectuses, to be obtained from the principal auctioneers and estate agents, or at the offices of the Victorian Permanent Property Investment and Building Society, Collins- street east.

Ross died in 1904. His failed sugar beet mill, which had been known for many years as "Ross' Folly", was demolished in 1908.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 14 Jun 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.