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Between 1854 and 1874, governors lived at Toorak House, in the suburb named after it, then briefly at Bishopscourt in East Melbourne until the present Government House was occupied in 1876. Between the formation of the Commonwealth of Australia in 1901 and 1927, Government House was the official residence of the governor-general of Australia.
Built c. 1798 in Georgian style; purchased by state for use as governor's residence in 1965. NRHP-listed in 1972 [5] Florida: Governor's Mansion * (The People's House of Florida) 700 North Adams Street, Tallahassee: 1907–1955
Government House, Melbourne. New South Wales: Government House [6] ... Old Government House (Governor's residence (1807–1857, demolished 1858) [11] Austria
Admiralty House, Kirribilli is the Governor General's official residence in Sydney. Government Houses for the state Governors exist also in each state and the Northern Territory: Government House, Sydney in New South Wales; Government House, Melbourne in Victoria; between 1901 and 1930 used by the Governor-General; Government House, Brisbane in ...
At the Federation of Australia in 1901 Melbourne became the location of government, and Government House, Melbourne became the home of the Governor-General [5] [6] [7] and Stonnington Mansion was leased by the Victorian Government as a home for the Governor of Victoria in 1901, before eventually being purchased by the state, along with all its contents, in 1928. [2]
After being elected governor in 2006, Clement Leroy "Butch" Otter politely declined to occupy the State of Idaho's Executive Residence. Instead, Otter chose to live on a much humbler riverside ...
Government House, Melbourne; Government House, Sydney; P. Portuguese Governor's Mansion This page was last edited on 10 November 2024, at 10:29 (UTC). ...
Old Government House, South Australia, former residence of the Governor of South Australia, 1860–1880; Old Government House, Hobart, former residence of the Governor of Tasmania; Toorak House, former residence of the Governor of Victoria, 1854–1876; Stonington mansion, former residence of the Governor of Victoria, 1901–1931