
Housing a permanent collection, Reflecting Canberra, and a variety of local, national and international exhibitions, CMAG provides a refreshing insight to the integration of social history and the visual arts.

Clogs
c.1925-50
wood, leather, metal
12 x 30 x 14 cm
Unknown maker
Gift of Property ACT,
Department of
Urban Services 2005
The Canberra Brickworks, established in 1913, was the first industrial manufacturing facility in the ACT. It’s an example of a type of early 20th-century large urban brickworks that is increasingly rare in the world. The Staffordshire kiln is the last of its kind in Australia.
In 1912 Frederick Campbell allowed 38 acres of his property Yarralumla to be used as the site of a quarry and kilns for the
production of bricks for the new national capital. Temporary
kilns were built to make the bricks for the Staffordshire kiln,
constructed on site from plans sent from England and adapted
by Walter Burley Griffin. The kiln produced bricks, roof tiles and
terracotta pipes. It began production in 1916, closed almost
immediately due to labour shortages brought about by the First
World War, and reopened in 1921. Some of the bricks went to
building houses for the workers but most of the output was for
public buildings; four million ‘Canberra red’ bricks went into the
construction of Parliament House. Between 1923 and 1929 a
tramway linked the brickworks to major Canberra construction
sites. The brickworks finally closed in 1976.
The Canberra Brickworks is of major historical interest because
of its integral role in providing the base material used in the
construction of the city’s early buildings, and is significant as
one of a remnant group of industrial and engineering sites built
to facilitate the initial development of Canberra. Others are the
Cotter Dam and pump station, the Kingston Powerhouse and
sewerage and drainage works.
The wheelbarrow and clogs provide material evidence of brickmaking
activities. The wheelbarrow was used to cart bricks
from the kilns, and the clogs are overshoes worn by workers to
insulate their feet and protect their boots from the heat of the
kiln floors.
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