
Drovers Inn Moora
Circa 1909
1 Dandaragan Street Moora W.Australia 6510
PH 9651 1108
Circa 1909
1 Dandaragan Street Moora W.Australia 6510
PH 9651 1108
A substantial double storey brick construction with a corrugated iron roof. the building has top floor verandahs and ground floor colonnades along two street frontages and is truncated across the corner. A gable features on each street frontage. The Padbury Street gable has a dormer window. The Dandaragan Street feature is a brick and render parapet of considerable proportion in relation to the hotel. The verandah balustrade is a delicate diagonal lattice detail.
The hotel is located on the corner opposite the Post Office and the site of the Railway Station. Meetings of the Progress Association took place in the Commercial Hotel, later named to Drovers Inn, from when it opened. Lamzed held the license from 1908 to 1912 when he moved to the Queens Hotel in Beaufort Street. The Commercial Hotel was the center for trade and commerce in Moora, with many sales and representatives using the hotel as a base. The builder; Liebe has the distinction of being the world's largest individual wheat grower at the time. He also constructed His Majesties Theater in Perth, the original Moora railway Station and other stations along the line.
The hotel is located on the corner opposite the Post Office and the site of the Railway Station. Meetings of the Progress Association took place in the Commercial Hotel, later named to Drovers Inn, from when it opened. Lamzed held the license from 1908 to 1912 when he moved to the Queens Hotel in Beaufort Street. The Commercial Hotel was the center for trade and commerce in Moora, with many sales and representatives using the hotel as a base. The builder; Liebe has the distinction of being the world's largest individual wheat grower at the time. He also constructed His Majesties Theater in Perth, the original Moora railway Station and other stations along the line.
Under the Liquor Control Reform Act 1998 it is an offense To supply alcohol to a person under the age of 18 years (Penalty exceeds $6,000)For a person under the age of 18 years to purchase or receive liquor (Penalty exceeds $500)