Geelong Advertiser

Snapshot of bygone days

- NOEL MURPHY

BIT of a mystery down Lorne way just at the moment. Good kind of mystery, courtesy the town’s born-and-bred Jeff Gaylard clearing out his factory in Melbourne.

What he’s unearthed is a motherlode of black and white photos of the old Louttit Bay and surrounds, a freshly minted Great Ocean (dirt) Road, rugged hills, beachside bathers, jalopies and roadsters, and official functions.

The mystery is figuring just what dates can be ascribed to the images. One clutch of the shots was labelled 1943, the rest are up for grabs. It’s fair to put them in the 1920s and 1930s but specifics require better provenance skills that than this scribbler can throw at the job.

One dateable pic, however, is the official opening of the Great Ocean Road to Apollo Bay in 1932 after its 13-year constructi­on by 3000 returned World War I servicemen. Another, of Cape Patton along the road, I tracked to circa 1940.

Beachfront bathing boxes, scattered weatherboa­rd structures and paddocks on Mountjoy together with besuited gents on the sand would speak to the 1890s if not for the 1920s cars behind them.

The road into town from the northeast is something of a goat-track, its lack of cliff side barriers enough to raise the alarm among members of Facebook’s One and Only Lorne Community Notice Board where he’s posted the pics.

Others show the ocean road in vastly less-treed fashion, the track surface carved into a rugged rocky hillside, along with arresting views of sections into and out of Lorne; Cinema Point, Teddy’s Lookout, Big Hill …

“My dad, Bruce Gaylard, was a mad photograph­er,” says Jeff.

“He took loads of photos and family slides, and lots of photos of other photos.

“He passed away eight years back and my mum, Marjorie, five years ago. Mum had been ‘Throw it all out’ but I took them to my factory in Box Hill and I’ve only just got around to going through them.”

Bruce Gaylard worked with the PMG and Jeff says he also etched himself into the history books when he snagged the town’s largest-ever mulloway, at 61 pounds and four foot six, on June 4, 1971, 500 yards off Point Grey. A day for Lorne fishermen to remember forever. And, yep, he has the photo – plus a cork with the hook and 35-pound line attached.

“It was so big, he couldn’t take it home,’’ Jeff recalls. “So the locals chopped it up and helped themselves.”

While Jeff says the 1943 pics were his dad’s, the earlier shots were his grandfathe­r’s. These include Lord Stradbroke opening the Great Ocean Road’s completion as far as Lorne, in 1922, but he’s especially taken by an aerial shot of the Point Grey pier from the era.

The pier stands stark and alone bar a small wooden structure at its base. No restaurant, no co-op, no aquatic club. Look hard, though, and you might spy the old slaughterh­ouse in the distance.

The Grand Pacific Hotel across the road stands stark as well, surrounded by paddocks and hillside bush, bar some adjoining sheds and buildings and a Victorian house a couple of hundred metres away.

The photo appears to have been taken from a biplane, with an out-of-focus wire stay cutting across the edge of the shot. No drone shots back then, says Jeff.

It’s all different now, of course. But as Jeff says, the response he’s received to his photos demonstrat­e the liking for Lorne’s history and culture’s as strong as ever.

If you can date any of these photos, drop us an email to journo@geelongadv­ertiser.com.au with Lorne Picture the Past in the subject line.

 ?? ?? Among Jeff Gaylard’s photograph­s are images of a freshly minted Great Ocean Road (above left, below right), the opening of the road to Apollo Bay (above right) and Teddy’s Lookout (below left).
Among Jeff Gaylard’s photograph­s are images of a freshly minted Great Ocean Road (above left, below right), the opening of the road to Apollo Bay (above right) and Teddy’s Lookout (below left).
 ?? ?? Bathers and bathing boxes at Lorne Beach, the Great Ocean Road winds into town (right) and Cinema Point (below right).
Bathers and bathing boxes at Lorne Beach, the Great Ocean Road winds into town (right) and Cinema Point (below right).

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