All Hotels Listing

All Hotel Listing:

Below is a listing of all the Hotels. Please click a hotel to find out more details.

Hotel:Goldy's Tavern

Hotel ID No47
Hotel Address:

66 Gold Street
Collingwood 3066
Australia
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Suburb:

Collingwood

Most Recent Name:

Goldy's Tavern (c. 2020 to present)

Previous Name(s):

Leinster Arms Hotel (1863/4 to c. 2020)

Hotel Address:

66 Gold Street
Collingwood 3066
Australia
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When Built/Licenced:

1863/64

When Delicensed:

N/A

Status of Building:

Existing hotel

Rebuilt/Altered:

1930

Heritage Victoria Register:

N/A

National Trust Register:

N/A

Collingwood Conservation Study 1989 & 1995:

N/A

City of Yarra Heritage Review 1998:

Volume 3, Appendix B, individually listed under precinct

City of Yarra Review of Heritage Overlay Areas, 2007 & Heritage Database:

Individually significant within HO 321

Maps:

Kearney 1855: N/A ; Hodgkinson 1858: N/A ; MMBW: Detail plan 1235, 1901

History:

This hotel site reflects strong Irish connections in both name and publicans. Leinster is a province of Ireland and a source of a popular name for hotels both in Victoria and Ireland. The original bluestone building was owned and operated by various members of the McDonnell family until the death of John McDonnell in 1870, when another Irishman, Patrick Quinlivan, paid the executors 80 pounds for the goodwill and annual rental of 100 pounds. Quinlivan remained until 1882 and was followed by John Cahill, then Patrick Fitzpatrick and later Mary Cahir, who presided from 1926 until 1940.

The hotel was acquired by the Shamrock Brewing Company which undertook alterations in 1930. The hotel is very distinctive in appearance, with its clinker-brick and render Greek revival style standing in a street of mainly Victorian and Edwardian houses. The use of brick-on-edge detailing is unusual. It is also unusual as a rare surviving single-storey hotel.

The Leinster Arms was a friendly 'home-away-from-home' for locals for many years, under the management of Glen and Wilhelmina McGee. Dining areas provided a more upmarket venue for meals and drinks, but there were still a number of ‘old boys’ propping up the bar who had been frequenting the hotel for many a long year. The retirement of these publicans after 18 years presaged a change. They closed, fittingly, after Grand Final day and put the hotel up for sale, and for a short while there was doubt whether this appealing local hostelry would continue, especially as Covid took its toll. However, it has kept going, but with noticeable changes including a new name, a younger and perhaps more boisterous clientele, a simplified dining menu, and a 'parklet' exterior area very popular in the summer months.

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