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・ Malvern Hills Act 1995
・ Malvern Hills Conservators
・ Malvern Hills District
・ Malvern Hills District Council election, 2015
・ Malvern Hills District Council elections
・ Malvern Hills Protection Society
・ Malvern Hills Science Park
・ Malvern House College
・ Malvern House Preparatory School
・ Malvern Instruments
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・ Malvern Link railway station
・ Malvern Museum
・ Malvern Preparatory School
Malvern Presbyterian Church
・ Malvern pudding
・ Malvern railway station
・ Malvern RFC
・ Malvern Road School
・ Malvern Roller Mill
・ Malvern Rosenwald School
・ Malvern School District
・ Malvern St James
・ Malvern Star
・ Malvern Town F.C.
・ Malvern tram depot, Melbourne
・ Malvern water
・ Malvern Water (bottled water)
・ Malvern Wells


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Malvern Presbyterian Church : ウィキペディア英語版
Malvern Presbyterian Church

Malvern Presbyterian Church is located in Victoria, Australia. Opened in 1886, it was the first Presbyterian Church to be founded in the City of Malvern and is now within Stonnington, a metropolitan area of Melbourne.
The church is a congregation of the Presbyterian Church of Australia. A good example of Post-Federation, Australian Arts & Crafts architecture, it is in stylistic sympathy with the many Federation style houses in the area. The church became a hub of the district and the place of worship for many leading citizens of the area and reflected the self-confidence of Edwardian Melbourne. The Congregation produced three Moderators of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Victoria and continues to thrive as a diverse congregation in a busy inner-east suburb.
== Background ==

Malvern is one of several daughter churches formed by families from the Toorak congregation. Originally, the area was called the Gardiner Road district and developed from the 1860s as a place for wealthy Melburnians to establish large houses in a semi-rural environment. Commenting on this in 1925, the Rev Graham Balfour – who grew up in Toorak in the 1870s – described it as the "vice-regal" district, adding: ''"grouped around....beautiful undulating land, studded with magnificent redgum trees, were the homes, generally in wide domain, of the men who by industry, foresight and character, had attained wealth and honour in this young country. A large proportion of these were Scotch Presbyterians."'' The Scottish and Ulster Presbyterian influence was significant.
The closest Presbyterian congregation was a long journey to South Yarra and had been formed in 1854. A meeting was organised by two Members of Parliament who lived locally, Sir James MacBain MLA and The Hon. William Bayles MLA. This took place on 29 December 1873, with the aim to petition for the establishment of a nearby congregation, and comprised: ''"about 30 persons, Toorak and Malvern being about equally represented"''.〔 This became the Toorak Presbyterian Church (now Toorak Uniting).
For the next decade, Malvern and Toorak were one parish, but when the South Gippsland Railway was extended from South Yarra in 1879, the opening of a station at Malvern in May of that year started to transform the southern end of Glenferrie Road. A range of commercial premises and housing developed as the population rapidly increased. Large estates were subdivided to make way for suburban plots, and orchards and horse paddocks were developed into what was becoming a fashionable locale of spacious villas. From the early 1880s, the locality's Presbyterians started to meet in homes or outdoors rather than travel through to Toorak.

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