DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » Clow a father of the church

Clow a father of the church

What’s In A Name delves into the fascinating stories and personalities behind some of the city’s best-known street names. This week the Journal looks at central Dandenong’s Clow Street, named in honour of Reverend James Clow.

REVEREND James Clow was known as the “father of the Presbyterian church in Victoria” according to his great-great-grandaughter Nola Sharpe.
Nola wrote a history of the Clow family for the Dandenong and District Historical Society’s Gipps-Land Gate magazine.
Born in 1790 near Stirling in Scotland, James’ parents were tenant farmers who ran a flour mill.
Born with only one hand, James was clearly unsuited to take over the family farm. Instead, he enrolled in divinity studies at Edinburgh and St James universities.
At 25 he was appointed the first chaplain of the Church of Scotland in Bombay.
From India James wrote to his Scottish sweetheart Margaret Morison asking her to marry him and join him in India.
Her blunt reply was “If I’m worth having, I’m worth coming for”.
Rev Clow’s ministry in Bombay prospered but the climate played havoc with his health. After 18 years in India he retired to Edinburgh with Margaret and their six children.
The couple had another two children, before deciding to relocate to Australia.
Rev Clow and his family arrived in Melbourne in 1837, two years after the settlement had been established. He conducted the first Presbyterian service in the colony on 31 December 1837.
Despite having a main road named after him, Rev Clow’s connection with Dandenong was tenuous. He pioneered parts of Ferntree Gully and Knox, but at that time according to Nola the whole area between Mt Dandenong and the Dandenong township was loosely known as Dandenong.
In 1938 Rev Clow purchased a cattle run ‘Corhanwarrabul’, which stretched from Dandenong Creek, the present Rowville, to Ferntree Gully and the foot of the Dandenong Ranges.
Clow built a homestead near the junction of the Narrawong and Dandenong creeks at Rowville and named it ‘Tirhatuan’, after the cry of the wild pigeons. It was the first residence in the Knox area.
Son James Maxwell managed the station and the Clows divided their time over the next 12 years between Tirhatuan and their Melbourne home.
In 1987 to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Clows’ arrival in Melbourne, the Knox Historical Society installed a plaque in his honour on Wellington Road.

Want to know the history behind a street name in Greater Dandenong? Let us know and we’ll find out! Email journal@starnewsgroup.com.au

Digital Editions


  • Shot fired in e-scooter dispute

    Shot fired in e-scooter dispute

    A drug-addled man who rammed open a factory gate and fired a gun near a business owner after a dispute over an e-scooter purchase has…

More News

  • Hill responds to TAHA furore

    Hill responds to TAHA furore

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 509107 Bruce MP and Assistant Citizenship, Customs and Multicultural Affairs Minister JULIAN HILL has come under fire for his 2025 election funding pledge to…

  • The Maze continues to confound

    The Maze continues to confound

    An iconic Springvale community-artwork from the 1990s has journeyed from Greater Dandenong’s archives back into the public imagination at Walker Street Gallery and Art Centre. The Maze was a huge…

  • Market future vision unveiled

    Market future vision unveiled

    A new $1 billion, 20-year vision for Dandenong Market and its surrounds has been unveiled, including an urban plaza, apartment towers and better connection with Palm Plaza and Dandenong Square.…

  • Violent home invasion – after 48 cans

    Violent home invasion – after 48 cans

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 481350 An armed, homeless man who stormed into a Dandenong hotel room to bash a stranger after a brief spat is facing automatic deportation.…

  • Mouthwatering match-ups set for first week of DDCA finals

    Mouthwatering match-ups set for first week of DDCA finals

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 537216 There are many small moments within a game of cricket which can completely change the course of the match, and these moments are…

  • Shy stray cat finds forever home in adoption drive

    Shy stray cat finds forever home in adoption drive

    A behaviour cat, Baneberry found his forever home in the ‘Mission Adoptable’ effort to boost adoptions by animal shelters. Baneberry was brought into the Australian Animal Protection Shelter Keysborough as…

  • Cocaine trafficker sprung by hotel cleaner

    Cocaine trafficker sprung by hotel cleaner

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 260279 A 20-year-old Narre Warren man has been jailed for at least two years after a cleaner spotted cash and a large stash of…

  • Footy test for new Metro Tunnel routes

    Footy test for new Metro Tunnel routes

    The Metro Tunnel’s ‘Big Switch’ is set for a test as South East footy fans converge on Marvel Stadium and the MCG for AFL’s opening round. Extra train services are…

  • Breakfast a piece of toast

    Breakfast a piece of toast

    **PAKENHAM’s Les Jones, a great man in every sense, is feeling a little ripped off after a recent breakfast purchase while volunteering in the off-field support team for CCCA Country…

  • Pink, Patel and Pakenham

    Pink, Patel and Pakenham

    BLAIR: Welcome back to another week of Let’s Talk Sport as we look ahead to upcoming cricket finals and footy will also be here before we know it. Best Action…