A statue of Peter Lalor was erected at Sturt Street in Ballarat in 1893. It was presented to the municipality by a friend of Lalor's, James Oddie, who was also first chairman of the city, and was unveiled by another friend, the Premier, the Hon
Duncan Gillies. The Melbourne suburb of
Lalor, Victoria, was named after him in 1945. The suburb was originally pronounced "LAW-luh", after Peter Lalor, and although many people still pronounce it as such, in recent times the pronunciation "LAY-lor" has become predominant.
Peter Lalor Vocational College (formerly Peter Lalor Secondary College), in the Lalor area, is named in his honour. A federal electorate in the south-western suburbs of Melbourne, the
Division of Lalor, was named after him in 1948. It has been held successively by senior Labor figures
Reg Pollard,
Jim Cairns,
Barry Jones and
Julia Gillard. The suburb of Lalor is not in the electorate, which is pronounced "LAW-luh". Lalor Street in
Ballarat East was also named in his honour. The
University of Ballarat (now known as
Federation University Australia) honoured Lalor by naming one of the two
Halls of Residence at the Mt Helen campus after him (the other being named after
Bella Guerin, the first woman to graduate from an Australian university). Portrayals of Lalor's role in the Eureka Rebellion appear in film. The first film to have Lalor appear in is supposed to be
Eureka Stockade, but only a seven-minute fragment of it has survived. In 1915, Lalor was portrayed by Leslie Victor in the silent film
The Loyal Rebel, which is also considered
lost. Next, he was played by
Chips Rafferty in the 1949 British film
Eureka Stockade (released in United States of America under the title,
Massacre Hill). He was played by Australian actor
Bryan Brown in
Eureka Stockade, a two-part television mini-series which aired on the
Seven Network in 1984. The most recent film in which Lalor is portrayed was the Australian documentary
Riot or Revolution: Eureka Stockade 1854 (2006), with Lalor played by Andrew Larkins. For further information about the various films depicting Peter Lalor, see:
Eureka Rebellion in popular culture. Since 1992, Lalor has been depicted in the commemorative
Son et lumière "Blood Under the Southern Cross" at
Sovereign Hill. A caricature bollard by artist
Jan Mitchell, depicting Peter Lalor holding the Eureka flag, was erected on the Geelong foreshore in 1999 as part of the
Waterfront Geelong bollard walk. His portrait is featured on two commemorative postage stamps, a 38c Irish stamp released on 3 May 2001 in the "Rebel Spirit, Irish Heritage of Australia" series, and a 2004
AUD2.45 Australian stamp commemorating the Eureka Stockade. ==References==