Showing posts with label St Kilda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St Kilda. Show all posts

Friday, April 3, 2026

The history of Sebastian / Dynevor at 325 Beaconsfield Parade, St Kilda

My aunty had her wedding reception at Dynevor, 325 Beaconsfield Parade, St Kilda in January 1963. This is the story of the building and its two significant owners, Thomas Paul Anthony (1863-1929) who built the house, and Solomon Green (1868-1948). 


Dynevor, January 1963
Photographer: Frank Rouse (my Dad). This was originally a slide, which I scanned. 

Thomas Paul Anthony (1863-1929)
Dynevor was built, I believe, around 1910-1912 for Thomas Paul Anthony, a manager of the Australian Mutual Provident Society, who named the property Sebastian, after the birthplace of his wife, Mary Robina 'Polly' Charlton. (1) At the time, the street address was 45-46 Beaconsfield Parade. 

This date of construction is based on a number of factors - firstly the 1910 Sands McDougall Directory list properties at 44 and 48 Beaconsfield Parade, with nothing in between. Secondly, Thomas and Polly Anthony were living at 15 Canterbury Road, St Kilda in February 1910, when their third child, Tom, was born but they are listed in the 1912 Electoral Roll at Sebastian, Beaconsfield Parade. Thirdly, in September 1909 the Bendigo Advertiser published the following -Messrs. Cordner, Reynell and Co announce that they have received instructions from Mr. T. P. Anthony to sell privately his mansion at the corner of View street and Barkly Place, known as "Sebastian." In the October the very superior modern art furniture, appointments, vehicles, harness, ponies, etc. to be sold on the premises, "Sebastian."  (2)  This would seem to confirm that the Anthony's were leaving Bendigo, and as we know they ended up in St Kilda. 

Thomas Anthony, born on May 20, 1863 was the fifth of six children  of Thomas William Anthony and Mary Ann Kemball (also sometimes called Campbell) who had married in 1857; he had four older sisters and a younger brother. At the time of Thomas' birth his father was 44 and his mother was 27.  Thomas, like his sisters, was born in Creswick. (3)  Thomas senior, born in Pennsylvania,  operated the American Hotel in Creswick. In 1875 he moved to Melbourne and opened Anthony's Farmers' Club Hotel, Bourke Street West and at the time of his death he was at the Victoria Hotel in Hotham (North Melbourne).  (4)

The Ballarat Courier had this touching obituary of Thomas senior after his death on January 31, 1880 -
We regret to record the death of Mr T. W. Anthony, for many years host of the American hotel, Creswick, but latterly of the Victoria hotel, Hotham. We suppose there is no name more intimately connected with the district of Creswick than the genial and liberal Tom Anthony. While landlord of the American hotel he made heaps of money, in old coaching days, and was never backward in spending it again in developing the resources of the district, and there are many now resident in the district who owe to him their success through his open-hearted assistance given them in the past. Latterly, however, fortune was not so kind to the deceased, although in a comfortable position when he died. He left Creswick for the metropolis, and became host of the Victoria hotel, Hotham, where he died on Saturday morning, after an illness of a few days, from English cholera. (5)

After the death of her husband, Mary Ann Anthony married James Adams in October 1882 and that is the last I can trace of her. (6)

On September 25, 1894 thirty-one year old Thomas married 27 year-old Polly Charlton at St Paul's Anglican Church in Bendigo. The Bendigo Advertiser this report of the wedding -
Fashionable wedding - At St. Paul's Church yesterday morning a very pretty and interesting ceremony was performed, when Mr. T. P. Anthony, local secretary of the Australian Mutual Provident Society, was married to Miss Polly Charlton, daughter of the late Mr. Charlton, of Sebastian. The church was splendidly decorated for the occasion, and the effect was highly creditable to the Misses Knight, of the firm of Knight Bros., who were entrusted with the work. Among the floral devices were a wedding bell, the initials of the bride and bridegroom, and a horseshoe showing "Good Luck." Tall graceful palms, ferns, and arum lilies were used in the decorations, the church being quite a bower of camellias and other choice flowers. The edifice was filled by friends of the contracting parties, the guests being accommodated in the centre of the aisle. Among those present were many prominent citizens.....he bride, who looked charming in a costume of ivory duchesse satin with full court train of handsome brocade falling from the shoulders; the front of bodice accordion pleated, with stylish draped Empire sash finished with orange blossoms and full puffed sleeves with duchesse lace from elbow, was given away by her brother, Mr. J. P. Charlton.  Her sister Elizabeth was one of the bridesmaids. (7)

Polly was the fourth of seven children of Robert and Mary Ann (nee Irwin) Charlton. At the time of her marriage only she, her brother John, sister Elizabeth, and their mother were still living. Robert Charlton had died in December 1878. The Herald had this short obituary - 
Mr Robert Charlton, J. P., died in Sandhurst yesterday. He was the opener of the Frederick the Great Company, Sebastian Reef, out of which he made a considerable fortune. (8)

The Argus had a longer obituary -
Mr Robert Charlton, a gentleman well known in connexion with the mining industry in this district, died at his residence, Sebastian, yesterday. The deceased first arrived in Bendigo in 1854, but after a brief stay proceeded to Maryborough and other places, finally returning to Sandhurst in 1864. He then, in company with some partners, commenced mining operations at Sebastian. The celebrated Frederick the Great claim belonged to him and his partners, and the proceeds of the mine not only gave fortunes to the party, but also added considerably to the income of the lessor of the ground by the royalty paid for the privilege of working the mine. The Frederick the Great plant is one of the largest in the colony. About 12 months ago operations at the mine were discontinued, and shortly afterwards Mr Charlton proceeded to England. The trip, however, would appear to have operated injuriously on his constitution rather than otherwise, for since his return a few months back he gradually failed, until yesterday morning, when he died, at the age of 45 years. Mr Charlton held the position of a justice of the peace for some time. He leaves a wife and family, who are well provided for. (9)

In January 1883, Polly's mother, Mary Ann, remarried to John Tawse Illingworth and she died in Bendigo in 1906 and left an estate of £7,860. (10)  

As you can see both Thomas and Polly came from well-off families and this, plus the sale of their Bendigo mansion and his salary with the Australian Mutual Provident Society, no doubt allowed them to build the new Sebastian in Beaconsfield Parade. I don't know what his salary would have been, but in 1909 the Australian Mutual Provident Society had assets  of £24,522,715, so it was a large business of which Thomas was a district manager and later the sub-manager. (11)


Australian Mutual Provident Society; District Secretary was Thomas Anthony.
Bendigo Independent, November 6, 1909 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article227820775


Thomas and Polly had three children - Lila in 1895; Hector in 1900 and Tom in  February 1910.  The elder two were born in Bendigo and their last child, Tom was born at Windarra Private Hospital in Toorak, when as we know, they were living in Canterbury Road, St Kilda.  (12)

It was while they were living at Sebastian, Beaconsfield Parade that their daughter Lila was married on March 16, 1915 to Cyril Vane Lansell, the son of  George and Harriett Lansell of Fortuna Villa, Bendigo. (13)  George Lansell, the Quartz King, had made a fortune from mining. His obituaries noted his influence in the mining field and in Bendigo - 
Bendigo owed much to the pioneers, and of these Mr. Lansell was perhaps the most striking figure. The prosperity of Bendigo depended on its mines, and Mr. Lansell, by the payment of miners' wages, had given employment to a great many people. (14)

The great quartz "boom" which sent a wave of prosperity over Bendigo in the late "sixties" and early "seventies," gave Mr Lansell his opportunity, and he entered into a scheme of investment which proclaimed the astute and wary, though distinctly courageous, speculator, whose value to a mining field is not to be measured by mere money. If one thing more than another has earned for the departed mining magnate the thanks of the community, it is that he inspired the weaker and more timid investors with courage and confidence. (15)

George Lansell's estate was valued for  Probate at £339,000. (16)  Before we leave George Lansell, Punch had this interesting comment in their obituary - Most Bendigonians, so 'tis said, believe that when they die, if good, they will go to St. Kilda. Mr. Lansell never took much stock in St. Kilda. He reckoned that Bendigo was just as good a place to live as to grow rich in.... (17)

The Anthonys lived at Sebastian until March 1921, when they sold and moved to Brighton. Thomas died at 120 The Esplanade, Brighton on August 12, 1929 and Polly died in South Yarra on May 21, 1945. They are buried at the St Kilda Cemetery. (18)


The sale of Sebastian, March 19, 1921

Sebastian was auctioned on March 19, 1921 and it was described as -
The residence is handsome in appearance, well designed, and contains:- on Ground Floor - Spacious entrance hall, with lavatory, drawing-room 20 x 16 and bay, dining-room 28 x 18 with two bays and conservatory, morning-room 16 x 17, maid's room 13 x 16 with wardrobe, kitchen with servery to dining-room, 2 pantries, storeroom, and laundry. Upstairs - Bedroom 20 x 16ft. 6in., with sleeping-out balcony and balconette leading off, dressing-room fitted with wardrobe and lavatory basin, bedroom 15 x 14, with balconette 18x 15ft. 6in., with bay 16 x 17; boxroom, and bathroom. Hot water service is installed. Land 99 x 165, laid out in garden, and lawns. Full steel garage. The house is modernly designed, tastefully finished, the rooms being large, well decorated and nicely arranged, and the position is one of the finest in this popular district, overlooking the bay, within easy walking distance of St. Kilda railway station, and convenient to pier, baths and cable car. (19)

Solomon Green (1868-1948)
Sebastian was purchased by Solomon 'Sol' Green, retired bookmaker, a racehorse owner and a business man, who had extensive property holdings - both rural and urban.  Sol, was born in England on August 1, 1868 to Judah and Elizabeth (nee Jacobs) Green. Judah was a publican, with an interest in horse racing. Sol came to Melbourne as a 15 year-old and after a few odd jobs became a bookmaker and was very successful, which gave him the capital to invest in property. (20)  

It was the Greens who renamed Sebastian to DynevorDynevor Downs, near Cunnamulla, was one of Sol's pastoral properties in Queensland, which he had purchased in 1914, thus the house name came from this property.  Dynevor Downs was established in the 1860s and was possibly named for Dynevor Castle, a 13th-century castle near Llandeilo, in Wales. (21)

In 1926, the Sydney Truth newspaper published an article on Sol Green, under the headline The Romance of Solomon Green, and the writer noted that - if there has ever been a quicker thinker or more successful man in the betting ring of Australia, India and South Africa than Solomon Green, I, who saw him operating in each of those countries, have failed to notice the individual. (22)

On February 9, 1892, 23 year-old Sol married 18 year-old Rebecca Mendes, the daughter of George Mendes and his wife Amelia, nee Ottolangui. George was an ironmonger and they lived in Coventry Street, South Melbourne. The wedding took place at Arcadia, Beaconsfield Parade, Albert Park, the service being  conducted by Rabbi Joseph Abrahams of the Melbourne Hebrew Congregation (who had, as a matter of interest,  conducted the marriage ceremony of General Sir John Monash and his wife, Hannah Moss in April 1891) (23) 

Arcadia was the home of Alfred and Emma Da Costa - Emma was Rebecca's sister.  Sol and Rebecca's marriage was quickly followed by the birth of a son, Robert Judah, on June 19, 1892; he was born at Arcadia. When their second son Louis Horace was born in January 1894, they were living at Sylvia, Beaconsfield Parade. In June 1903, their third son Arthur Jasper was born, also at Sylvia(24)

Arcadia and Sylvia were part of Amelia Terrace, on the corner of Beaconsfield Parade and Harold Street, numbered in 1903 Electoral Roll as 208-211 Beaconsfield Parade. Rebecca and Emma's brothers, Albert and Morris Mendes were also living at Amelia Terrace. (25)


Amelia Terrace, then 208-211 Beaconsfield Parade - where Sol and Rebecca were married and where their three sons were born. 
Sands & McDougall Melbourne and Directory - 1900

Rebecca's father, George Mendes, was an early settler in South Melbourne and he died in November 1901 - the Emerald Hill Record had this obituary - 
One of the oldest residents of South Melbourne passed away on Monday last in the person of Mr. George Mendes, of Coventry-street. The deceased gentleman, who was 80 years of age, was one of the early settlers of the Hill, arriving here in 1852, and for nearly the whole of that period resided in Coventry street. He built largely in South Melbourne, and the building in Coventry street now occupied by the Salvation Army, was erected by him in 1877 as a theatre at a cost of £10,000. Mr Mendes was a member of the South Melbourne Cricket Club and the Albert Park Bowling Club, and in the early days took a keen interest in rowing. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge and a Forester, and one of the founders of the first Druid Lodge in South Melbourne. His funeral on Tuesday was largely attended by a number of representative citizens. The funeral sermon was preached by the Rev. Dr. Abrahams. Mr.Mendes was married twice, and leaves a widow and grown-up family. (26)


Sol Green, c. 1947.
Possibly taken at what was to be named Sol Green Reserve in South Melbourne. Mr Green donated £2,000 to have the park made into a children's playground.
Photographer: Herald and Weekly Times, State Library of Victoria image  H38849/1677

Solomon Green died on May 11, 1948, aged 79. The Argus published this informative obituary outlining his life and his generous charitable donations  - 
Sol Green never failed the needy - Born of poor Jewish parents in London 80 years ago, Sol Green came to Australia when he was 19 to "make more than the 2/6 he was getting in London," and he travelled "fourth class because there was no fifth." He began as bookmaker's clerk, set up for himself as bookmaker at 22, and in a few years led his profession.

He bought racehorses and won well with them. He founded the Shipley Stud, at Warrnambool, in 1906, and bred Artilleryman and King Ingoda, both Melbourne Cup winners. He won again with Comedy King. He retired from the ring in 1910, a very wealthy man.  He dispersed the Shipley Stud eight years later, only to establish another - Underbank, at Bacchus Marsh - which he carried on until 1944. In all, his horses won almost £70,000 in stakes. But he did not concentrate on racing alone. He owned city hotels, shops, and warehouses, and several station properties.

His long series of charitable gifts - those known to the public - began in 1937, when he gave £100 for blankets for the poor, and subsequently increased it to £1, 000. Then in one year he gave the proceeds of a sale of thoroughbred yearlings, £1,500, to buy blankets for bomb raid victims in England. In 1943 he placed £50,000 in trust in perpetuity to enable returned servicemen to buy homes on easy terms, payments to be returned to the fund and reinvested in more homes.

Two years later he made substantial gifts to hospitals, and in September last year, on Yom Kippur, most sacred day in the Jewish calendar, as he lay sick in hospital, he gave £42,000 to be divided equally between Melbourne's five main hospitals. He followed it with two gifts of £5,000 each to the Royal Melbourne Hospital Centenary Appeal. Those are his recorded philanthropic activities. There were countless others, known only to himself and those he helped. He was not  a fool with money, but he never failed those in need.

His character is indicated best, perhaps, by portion of the letter to the Press in which he announced his Yom Kippur gift. "I came to Australia penniless, and this country gave me great opportunities to make my way in life," he wrote. "Today's gift is an expression of my gratitude. It is not made solely on my own behalf, but also on behalf of my many Jewish co-religionists to whom life has not been so kind. It is made, too, to support my plea that the people of this nation may always refuse to take part in any kind of religious or racial bigotry. I ask no personal credit for the gift. I am too old and tired for this to matter." (27)

Sol was buried at the Melbourne General Cemetery, as was his wife Rebecca who died on May 21, 1954. (28)  Solomon Green is remembered by the Sol Green Reserve in South Melbourne, which is bordered by City Road, Nelson Road, Montague Street and Coventry Street, the last named was where his wife, Rebecca, grew up. He donated £2,000 to have this park made into a children's playground.  (29)

Dynevor - Accommodation and later a Reception Centre
On December 7, 1950, Dynevor was auctioned, but passed in at £12,500.  In February 1951 the sale of the beautiful furnishings and effects of Dynevor were auctioned. (30)  


Dynevor for sale
The Argus, November 25, 1950 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article23031483

The next reference I can find is in May 1952, after Dynevor must have been turned into a guest house/boarding house, when a room was listed for rent. A subsequent advertisement in January 1953, described Dynevor as 1st class accommodation. (31)


Outside Dynevor, January 1963 - all dressed up for our Aunty's wedding.
My sister, Megan, in pink flock nylon; Mum, Wendy, in green silk; my sister Karen in yellow flock nylon and me in pale blue eyelet nylon.  Mum, who was 28 at the time, made all these dresses. 
Photographer: Frank Rouse, our Dad. This was originally a slide, which I scanned. 

Dynevor's life as a boarding house was short-lived as by October 1953 it had become a reception centre, and from that date onwards the building featured in wedding reports, twenty-first birthday reports and reports of other functions. (32)  In 1963 it was operated by Vernard James Bell and Violet Irene Bell, I have no information as to when they took over the business. (33) Its next owners were George Henry Whittle and Myrene Nita Whittle, and again I have no information as to when they took over the business. (34) Dynevor's  life as a reception centre ceased around the end of 1969; George Whittle died on June 1, 1970 and in January 1971, Myrene Whittle put to auction the catering equipment and fittings and furniture from Dynevor Receptions; selling  due to the demolition of the property. (35)  And that was the end of Sebastian / Dynevor.


The sale of equipment and fittings at Dynevor Receptions.
The Age, January 16, 1971, p. 27 from newspapers.com

325 Beaconsfield Parade today
Dynevor was demolished and Breakwater Towers, designed by Architect Sol Sapir, was constructed. It consisted of 24 apartments, with prices starting at $36,500 and the first advertisement I could find for them was at the end of September 1974.  (36)


Advertisement for Breakwater Towers
The Age, October 2, 1970, p. 40 from newspapers.com


Trove List
I have created  a list of articles on  Thomas Paul Anthony and  Solomon Green and their extended families and on Sebastian / Dynevor. Access the list here.

Footnotes
(1) Birth place - Anthony/Charlton marriage certificate
(2) Sands & McDougall Melbourne and Directories - on-line at the State Library of Victoria; Tom Anthony, born February 1910, birth certificate; Electoral Rolls at Ancestry.com; Bendigo Advertiser, September 4, 1909, see here; Bendigo Advertiser, October 13, 1909, see here.
(3) Thomas Anthony's birth certificate; Index to Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages.
(4) Ballarat Star, December 23, 1875, see hereBallarat Courier, February 2, 1880, see here; Ballarat Star, February 3, 1880, see here.
(5) Ballarat Courier, February 2, 1880, see here.
(6) The Argus, October 10, 1882, see here.
(7) Bendigo Advertiser, September 26, 1894, see here; Anthony/Charlton marriage certificate.
(8) Index to Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages; The Herald, January  1, 1879, see here
(9)  The Argus, January 1, 1879, see here.
(10) The  Argus, January 2, 1883, see here; The Age, July 10, 1906, see here.
(11) The Age, May 15, 1906, see here; The Herald, August 13, 1929, see here.
(12) Index to Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages;  Tom Anthony's birth certificate.
(13) Bendigo Advertiser, March 20, 1915, see hereBendigo Independent, March 20 1915, see here.
(14) The Argus, March 20, 1906, see here.
(15) Weekly Times, March 24, 1906, see here.
(16) The Herald, July 5, 1906, see here.
(17) Punch, March 22, 1906, see here.
(18) The Age, August 14, 1929, see here; The Argus, May 22, 1945, see here.
(19) The Herald, March 12, 1921, see here.
(20) Australian Dictionary of Biography entry by Chris McConville 
(21) Brisbane Courier, January 7, 1867, see here; Riverine Herald, February 28, 1914, see here; Encyclopaedia Britannica https://www.britannica.com/place/Carmarthenshire#ref711294
(22) Sydney Truth, May 2, 1926, see here.
(23) Green/Mendes marriage certificate;  Monash/Moss wedding - 
(24) Da Costa birth at Arcadia - The Argus, December 26, 1891, see hereThe Argus, June 23, 1892, see here; Weekly Times, February 3, 1894, see hereThe Argus, June 10, 1903, see here.
(25) Sands and McDougall Melbourne and Suburban Directory for 1900 - on-line at the State Library of Victoria; Electoral Rolls at Ancestry.com
(26) Emerald Hill Record, November 23, 1901, see here.
(27) The Argus, May 12, 1948, see here
(28) The Herald, May 21, 1954, see here.
(29) Emerald Hill Record, August 2, 1947, see hereEmerald Hill Record, September 27, 1947, see here.
(30) The Argus, November 25, 1950, see here; The Argus, December 8, 1950, see here; The Argus, February 3, 1951, see here.
(31) The Age, May 23, 1952, see here; The Age, January 19, 1953, see here.
(32) See my Trove list here.
(33)  Sands & McDougall Melbourne and Directories - on-line at the State Library of Victoria; Electoral Rolls at Ancestry.com
(34) Sands & McDougall Melbourne and Directories - on-line at the State Library of Victoria; Electoral Rolls at Ancestry.com
(35) Date of closure - there were reports in The Age of functions at Dynevor up to 1969, but I can't find any in 1970; George Whittle death notice - The Age June 3, 1970; sale of fixtures, equipment etc of Dynevor ReceptionsThe AgeJanuary 16, 1971. The Age is available on newspapers.com up to the year 2000. Myrene Whittle  died in July 1994 and like her husband her cremated remains are at Springvale Botanical Cemetery.
(36) The first advertisement I could find in The Age was on September 27, 1974. Architect - Sol Sapir https://www.builtheritage.com.au/dua_sapir.html

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Miss Helen Robertson - Secretary of the St Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society

In a previous post I wrote about Miss Robertson, one of two women who signed the petition in 1856 to alter the boundaries of the St Kilda Municipality. I identified her as Ellen Robertson from Fitzroy Street and have written about her here

There is another Miss Robertson who appears in the history of St Kilda, Helen Robertson (1)  who was from 1864 until her death in 1881, the Secretary of the St Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society. (2)  I wondered at first whether she was Miss Robertson, the petition signer, but I believe I have it right with Ellen, as the earliest I can place Helen in St Kilda is 1862.


Miss Robertson, of the St. Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society
The Argus, March 7, 1874 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article5865409 

The St Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society was established 1859, and we will let J.B. Cooper, the St Kilda Historian, explain the origins and purpose of the  Society -
The ladies of St. Kilda were energetic workers in causes that appealed to their sympathies, and among such causes, was the plight of poor people, who struggled for a livelihood, on the margin line, that divides penurious existence from actual want. Any temporary cessation from daily employment, any visitation of sickness upon the breadwinner, and such families became distressed ones needing help in money or kind. Then too there were the families who suffered from the improvidence of the breadwinner brought about maybe by intemperance. Be the cause what it may have been, the ladies of St. Kilda were of that charitable nature, that they could not allow the children, and wives, to suffer, without making an attempt to succour them. It was adjudged that the best method wherewith to deal with such cases was to establish a Ladies' Benevolent Society, and a meeting of ladies was held at the residence of Mrs. Purchase on October 11th, 1859, for that purpose. Two resolutions were adopted:- 1. That such a Society was necessary for the purpose of visiting and relieving the poor and 2. that the Society be designated "The St. Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society." Mrs. A'Beckett was elected to fill the office of President, Mrs. Cooke that of Treasurer, and Mrs. Shaw that of Hony. Secretary. A code of rules was drawn up for the guidance of the Committee. A second meeting was held on the 25th, at which Mrs. Alicia Jennings acted as President in the absence of Mrs. A'Beckett."

The Society's first report gives a glimpse into the necessities of the poor in early St. Kilda. Indigent persons to the number of 58 were relieved, and assisted, during the first year of the Society's existence. Some deserted wives were given the means to earn money by presents of mangles. The receipts for the year from charitable people (including £50 from the Council) were £230, and the expenditure in relief £365/12/1. The committee of the St. Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society was in the the habit of distributing bread, groceries, clothing, and firewood. Many poor people also had assistance given to them to enable them to pay their rent. In 1863, the society advanced money to two poor women for the purpose of buying sewing machines. Several individuals, sick and poor, had been sent to the hospital, and some old people to the Benevolent Asylum, wholly through the efforts made, and the influence used by the ladies of the society. Numbers of children in St. Kilda, whose parents were too poor to pay for their education, were sent to school at the Society's expense. The committee of the society established friendly relations with the authorities of the Melbourne City Mission. At the society's request, a missioner visited St. Kilda, once every week to visit the poor. For this service the committee paid to the mission the sum of £10 per year. 

The society afforded help to all indigent persons, without distinction of creed. The only limit to its bounty was the extent of its resources. In the report issued, by the Society in November, 1863, acknowledgement was made of the generous way, in which the residents of St. Kilda, had supported the Society. The cash account showed that the Society had commenced its year with a balance of £35/3/74, and that the subscriptions had totalled £73/7/- and the donations and payments £172/3/- making a total of £280/13/7½. The expenditure for the year had been £257/17/6, leaving a balance in hand of £22/16/1½. The cash receipts were swollen by the receipt of £50 from the Municipal Council of St. Kilda, a body of men who had the highest opinion of the St. Kilda Ladies Benevolent Society, an opinion that still lives in the corporate mind of the St Kilda Council towards the present members of this very useful society. The £50 was handed to the secretary of the Society, to enable the ladies to arrange that the children of the poorer classes should participate in the rejoicings at St. Kilda in celebration of the marriage of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales. (3)


St Kilda Day Nursery established
St Kilda Telegraph, April 3, 1875 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article109630297

One of the achievements of the St Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society was the establishment of a Creche on April 8, 1875, and again we will turn to J.B. Cooper  -
Creches did not exist in the same way today [1931] as they did fifty three years ago, though the want of a place where infants could be left by working mothers was, in degree, just as pressing as it is today. The St. Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society recognised the want, and the ladies of that society, made provision to meet it. On April 8, 1875, they opened, what they called, "The St. Kilda Day Nursery" in Somerset Street. The nursery, it was stated, was for "the benefit of the working women to enable them to leave their children, from the age of one month to six years, during their necessary absence from home." Advertisements were inserted in the newspapers, informing the mothers, that full particulars could be obtained from the nurse on the premises, from the honorary secretary of the Society, Miss Robertson, Acland Street. (4)

St Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society ceased functioning in 1963. (5)  There were many women, apart from Helen Robertson, with a long-term involvement with the Society, but they are a story for another day. 

It was from  the paragraph, above, about the Creche, that I discovered Miss Robertson, and then wondered if she was the petition signer. Helen, born in 1834, was the daughter of Dr Archibald Robinson and his wife Agnes Hamilton, she was the fifth of their six children, all born in Scotland
  • Isabella Gellie born 1824; died on May 9, 1856 aged 32.  
  • Archibald Moodie born 1825; died December 1, 1862, aged 37. 
  • Janet (known as Jessie) born 1828. Married John Russell Keays on October 8, 1855. Died February 8, 1857, aged 29, on the day she gave birth to a daughter, Jessie, who died 11 days later. 
  • Louisa Mary born 1830. Married John McLachlan on January 8, 1851 in Adelaide. Died September 16, 1856 at Spring Bank, Avoca River, aged 26. 
  • Helen born 1834. Died November 20, 1881, aged 47. 
  • Agnes born 1839. Married George Thomson on September 6, 1866. Died on October 26, 1900, aged 60. (6)
The family arrived in Melbourne in January 15, 1849 on the Duchess of Northumberland, Dr Robinson had acted as the Surgeon Superintendent on the voyage. They, at some time, moved to Heidelberg where Dr Robinson died on July 27, 1854. He was the first of the family buried at the Warringal Cemetery in Heidelberg, in three adjoining plots. Sadly, he was soon followed by three of his daughters, who died between May 1856 and February 1857 and in time by his wife and his other three children. (7)

The first connection I can find between the family and St Kilda was with Helen's brother, Archibald Moody Robertson, who in 1858 and 1859 was listed in the St Kilda Rate books, renting an 8-roomed wood and slate house in Acland Street from a Mr Lomas. Two questions of which I have no answers - were Agnes and her two unmarried daughters, Helen and Agnes, also living with their son and brother; and where was Archibald living in 1860, 1861 and 1862 before he died on December 1, 1862? (8) 


Miss Robertson presented with a purse of sovereigns. I wonder what she bought with them?

In 1862, Helen's mother Agnes began renting a 13-roomed iron house in Alma Road, next to a now demolished Congregational Church, which was on the corner of Alma and Barkly Streets (opposite the grand Presbyterian Church on the St Kilda hill).  The owner of the house was Mrs Fletcher, the widow of the Reverend Richard Fletcher, a Congregational minister, whose original church was also made of  iron and which could seat 250 worshippers. Mrs Fletcher was an original committee member of the Benevolent Society. (9)  Two years after that, in 1864, Helen took over as Secretary of the St. Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society from the original secretary Mrs Henry Steel Shaw. (10)  In 1866, young Agnes married George Thomson, at the house. The marriage was conducted by the Presbyterian Minister, Reverend Irving Hetherington and Helen was one of the witnesses. (11)


Agnes Robertson's property in Alma Street (now called Alma Road)
Sands & McDougall's Melbourne and suburban directory 1865, digitised at the State Library of Victoria

In 1873, Agnes and Helen moved to an 8-roomed brick house in Acland Street, rented from Robert Stroud. It was located on the corner of Jackson Street. They were still living there when Helen died of enteric fever on November 20, 1881, at only 47 years of age. (12)


Helen Robertson listed in the 1880 Sands and McDougall Directory. This was how I finally discovered her given name, all the newspaper reports of her activities as Secretary list her as Miss Robertson.
Sands & McDougall's Melbourne and suburban directory 1880, digitised at the State Library of Victoria


Helen's death notice
St Kilda Telegraph, November 26, 1881 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article107118170

After Helen's death, Agnes moved in with her youngest daughter, also called Agnes, who lived in Fawkner Street, St Kilda, and she was living there when she died on March 4, 1887 aged 89, having out-lived five of her six children. Agnes is also buried at the Warringal Cemetery. (13)

Helen Robertson and her colleagues at the St Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society provided a valuable service to the people of St Kilda in the days before aged pensions, widow's pensions and single mothers benefits, by looking after the elderly, the poor, the sick and their children. 

Trove list - I have created  a list of newspaper articles related to Helen Robertson, her work with the St Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society and her family, access it here.

Footnotes
(1) In all the newspaper mentions of Miss Robertson, her first name was never noted, I only discovered her name as she is listed in the 1880 Sands and McDougall Melbourne and Suburban Directory. Once I had her name I could start building the family tree.
(2) Helen became the Secretary in October 1864 -  The Age, October 14, 1864, see here.
(3) Cooper, John Butler The History of St Kilda from its first settlement to a City and after, 1840 - 1930, v. 1 (City of St Kilda, 1931), pp. 361-362. You can read this book on-line on the St Kilda Historical Society website - https://www.stkildahistory.org.au/publications/ebooks
(4) Cooper, op. cit., p. 363.
(5) Longmire, Helen St Kilda the show goes on: the history of St Kilda v.3 1930 to July 1983 (Hudson/City of St Kilda, 1989), p. 207. You can read this book on-line on the St Kilda Historical Society website - https://www.stkildahistory.org.au/publications/ebooks
(6) Dates of birth were estimated from age at death. Death dates and age at death taken from the headstones at Warringal Cemetery - photos taken by John William Constantine on Find a Grave;  death certificates of Archibald Robertson, Helen Robertson and Agnes Robertson (nee Hamilton) and death notice of Jessie and the birth notice of her daughter -  The Argus, February 9, 1857, see here.  I cannot find  a death notice for Archibald Moodie Robertson or any reference to his death in the Victorian Deaths Index. Marriage date of Jessie - The Argus, August 10, 1855, see here; Louisa - Melbourne Daily News, January 20, 1851, see here ; Agnes -  marriage certificate. 
(7) Arrival date - Shipping records at the Public Records Office of Victoria - Register of Assisted Immigrants from the United Kingdom VPRS 14; death certificate of Archibald Robertson.
(8) St Kilda Rate books are  on-line at the Public Records Office of Victoria - VPRS 8816 -  from 1857 and on Ancestry.com from 1859. 
(9) St Kilda Rate books, see footnote 8; The Fletchers are listed as living in the house in 1861, the Reverend Fletcher died on December 15, 1861 - death notice - The Age, December 16, 1861, see here;  J. B Cooper writes about the iron houses and buildings, including the Church, in his St Kilda history (see footnote 3) on page 243. Mrs Fletcher is listed in the First Annual Report of the St  Kilda Ladies' Benevolent Society, digitised at the State Library of Victoria, here
(10) Helen became the Secretary in October 1864 -  The Age, October 14, 1864, see here, due to Mrs Shaw leaving the district.
(11) Agnes Robertson/George Thomason marriage certificate.
(12) St Kilda Rate books, see footnote 8; 1880 Sands and McDougall Melbourne and Suburban Directory; Helen's death certificate.
(13) Agnes Robertson's death certificate.

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Wattle Path Palais De Danse, St Kilda

The Wattle Path  Palais De Danse was built in 1923 on the Esplanade in St Kilda, next to Alfred Square,  and Table Talk reported on its grand opening -
The Path of Pleasure. Flashlight at opening of Wattle Path Palais at St Kilda - The "Temple for the Dancing Muse," which has been erected on the Upper Esplanade, St. Kilda, and which claims to have the largest and finest dancing floor in Australia, was opened to the public with great eclat on Wednesday, October 31. It is an exceedingly handsome addition to the architecture of St. Kilda, with a very fine outlook over the waters, and the interior is splendidly appointed both for dancing and dinner parties, with an admirably selected orchestra each afternoon and evening. (1)


The Wattle Path Palais De Danse
Image from my collection


The opening of the Wattle Path Palais
Table Talk, November 8, 1923  http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article146466608

The Prahran Telegraph had reported on the building a few days before its opening and as it is a detailed description we will post the entire article -
Temple of the Muse - Wattle Path Palais - Splendour at St. Kilda.
On Wednesday, October 31, the most beautiful dancing hall and cafe erected in Australia will be opened at St. Kilda. For some months past many who have wandered along the Esplanade, St. Kilda, have wondered what the superb building being erected on the site of the once famous open air theatre known as Paradise was? At the end of seven months they are enlightened. It is the Wattle Path Palais de Danse and Cafe, St. Kilda, and it can accommodate 6,000 people! Something like a Palais!

In every way the Wattle Path is an asset to the St. Kilda Esplanade. The front of the building, facing the sea, is handsome in appearance, and later on there will be a rockery, set with palms, before the entrance. This is tiled in blue, to tone with the artistic colour scheme of blue, gold, and white, which is carried out through the building. In every season of the year the Wattle Path will be a place of brightness and exhilaration, filled always with bracing ozone. The typhoon system of ventilation pumps out the used air and floods the building with fresh air six times during the hour. The huge ballroom presents a magnificent sight with its expanse of gleaming white, studded overhead with deep orange and blue shades veiling the lights. Blue upholstery on the cane seats, blue carpets, and dark woodwork complete the scheme. It has been chosen for good effect by day as well as by night, for there are to be dance matinees twice weekly.

Around the sides of the ballroom is a wide balcony, really a second ballroom. Its kauri floor is similar to the big one downstairs. Here, the public may also dance, but it is expected that the balcony will he largely used for private parties. Sections of the sides can be screened off, and separate self-contained serveries deal with the refreshment problem. When the tables are set at one side, there is plenty of room to dance, the screened section forming a miniature ballroom for the party, if they so prefer it.

To cater for the thirst and healthy appetite that dancing invariably creates, there are several soda fountains and a large catering plant at Wattle Path. The man in charge of the soda fountains has evolved some "specials" sure to tempt the palates of thousands during the coming warm months. Light refreshments are served to order, but for those who desire something more substantial a cafe seating 400 persons runs the breadth of the building in front. Through the many windows may be seen the splendid sweep of the bay, and there is an open-air promenade over the entrance to the lounge downstairs. It is intended to conduct this as an all-day cafe, and bathers, visitors, and passing motorists should find it a boon. From 8 till 11 p.m. -  while the dancing is in progress -  the cafe will be reserved for patrons of the Wattle Path. The appointments in the cafe match in beauty and good taste the remainder of the building, and the smart uniforms worn by the staff tone with the general scheme. Downstairs in the kitchen the latest appliances are installed, which ensures that the food will be stored, prepared, cooked, and served in thoroughly hygienic manner. The big oven, the cost of which ran into four figures, can bake 3,000 pieces of pastry an hour. The engineer had to start the furnace three weeks ago, and kept it burning continuously, in order that the oven shall be in perfect condition to bake the first batch of Wattle Path cakes. (2) 


The Wattle Path Palais. In the window bottom left, Joe Aronson and his orchestra are advertised. 
There is more about Joe, below.
Detail of View of the Esplanade, St Kilda.  Valentine Publishing Co., State Library of Victoria image H2018.253/6    

The Wattle Path was built for the Wattle Path Palais de Danse and Cafe Ltd. This company was registered in August 1922 and it had a capital £40,000 in £1 shares. (3) The Subscribers were -
Stanley Manuel Young Freeman. Stanley was the managing director of the company and listed in the electoral rolls at Hornby Street and later The Avenue, both in Prahran; his occupation was a teacher. Stanley died September 25, 1945, aged 56. (4)
James Percy Griffen Sargent. He was the secretary of the company and the manager of the Wattle Path Palais de Danse. His address in the electoral rolls, where his occupation was listed as a clerk,  was Wild Street, Preston (also called Regent); however he moved for  a time to St Kilda, and then back to Wild Street in Preston, where he died on May 13, 1960, aged 80.(5)
Gilbert Macpherson Johnstone. Gilbert was a solicitor from Tasmania, but by 1924 he had moved to St Kilda. Gilbert died in New South Wales, on November 28, 1954, aged 70.(6)
Eustace Duncan. Eustace was an accountant from Alfriston Street in Elwood, who later moved to South Yarra. I have no other information. (7)
James Eustace. Presumably a brother to Eustace, but I can't confirm any information about him.

One of Stanley Freeman's first tasks was to advertise for a Musical Director for the Wattle Path, at a salary of £1000 per annum, a huge salary for the time. (8)  In 1920, for instance a factory worker was earning around £200 per annum and a manager or clerk around £300 per annum. (9)


Advertisement for Musical Director

The building was designed by architects, Beaver and Purnell and it was built by H.H. Eilenberg of Caulfield. (10) The Architect, Isidore George Beaver (1859-1934) had worked in Adelaide until 1893, when he moved to Melbourne to work on the National Mutual Life Association building in Collins Street. His work in Melbourne then consisted mainly of private  houses. In 1915 he formed a partnership with Arthur Purnell (1878-1964). They also had many residential commissions, but in 1924 they designed a new wing on the Homeopathic (later Prince Henry's) Hospital. Their partnership was dissolved in 1925. (11) 


The Architect's sketch for the Wattle Path Palais De Danse

Henry Harris Eilenberg of Kooyong Road, Caulfield, was the builder. In an article on Arthur Purnell by Melbourne University lecturer, Dr Derham Groves, he notes that Henry Eilenberg was Purnell's favourite builder. (12)  He built, amongst other things, the grandstand at the St Kilda Cricket Club in 1925; the St Kilda Synagogue in Charnwood Grove in 1926 and the Samuel Meyers Hall at this synagogue in 1940. (13) 


The Interior of the Wattle Path Palais. 
The caption reads - At Wattle Path Palais de Danse and Cafe on a recent Sunday afternoon.  Tables are laid on the dancing door for over a thousand guests, and, in consequence of the appreciation and patronage of the public, the management are now considering the advisability of throwing open the balconies. Music by a full orchestra is given every afternoon and evening (Saturdays included) under the direction of Mr. Joe Aronson. 
Tables can be reserved on application to the management. Telephone, Windsor 5441.

I came across this programme (on EBay)  for the Wattle Path Palais  from 1926. 

The programme advertises Joe Aronson's Roseland Orchestra, who was playing on Sunday, November 7, 1926. This is the detail of the playlist from the programme.

Joe Aronson, was an American, and was a popular musician and the first reference I can find to him being in Australia was in April 1924, when he appeared Direct from New York at the Wattle Path. (14)  


The Wattle Path presents Joe Aronson direct from America

During 1927 and early 1928 Joe and his Syncopating Symphonists played live on Radio 3LO, and listeners from all over Australia could tune in to hear him. The music programmes for 3LO were published in newspapers interstate, with the Western Australian papers reminding listeners that Melbourne time is two hours ahead of Perth. Joe left radio in February 1928 and played at the Green Mill Dance Hall in St Kilda Road for over a year. (15).  Joe returned to the United States by 1929 or 1930, and he was back in Australia in 1933 and also back on radio as Sports and Radio reported - 
One of the first saxophone players in the world, and now regarded as a leader in conducting jazz orchestras, Joe Aronson, of Chicago, has returned to Australia, and, as in 1927, is going to delight listeners in all States with his “Syncopated Symphonists,” which is the name of the band he has organised. In furtherance of his policy of building up the programmes of the Australian Broadcasting Commission throughout the national network, Major Conder, general manager, who in 1927, when controlling wireless stations in different States, had Aronson booming as an entertainer, has engaged the Chicago conductor and his band for a season of six months. All the States will be visited by the combination, which has been specially organised in Australia, and has been in rehearsal for over a month.  (16)


Joe Aronson
Australian Jewish Herald, December 22 1932 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article262185226

The Wattle Path was sold in June 1933. The Herald reported that the price paid for the Wattle Path
Palais is said to be approximately £23,000. The building cost £83,000 before it opened its doors as a dance resort about 10 years ago. (17)  It was purchased by Frank Thring, the film and theatre entrepreneur of Efftee Film Productions and became a modern talking picture studio. (18) However by December 1935, the building had returned to its original use and became the Streets of Paris  the first real continental cabaret ever presented in Melbourne. (19)  This was operated Henry Hans 'Harry' Kleiner, who in 1939 transformed the building into the St Moritz Ice Rink, advertised as the fourth largest in the world. It opened on March 10, 1939 (20) Harry still owned St Moritz in March 1953, however at this time he sold the lease to two Melbourne ice-skating enthusiasts, Ted Molony and John Gordon. (21)  

As you can see from the circa 1950s photograph, below,  the St Moritz building changed very little externally from when it was first opened as the Wattle Path Palais de Danse in 1923, having been designed by Isidore Beaver and Arthur Parnell and built by Henry Eilenberg. 

St Moritz closed in 1981 or early 1982 and was demolished in 1982 (22)


St Moritz Ice Rink, c. 1950s. The structure on the left is the St Kilda Boer Memorial in Alfred Square, designed by Arthur Peck (see more about this here)
Detail of Upper esplanade, showing St. Moritz, St. Kilda, c, 1950s. Photographer: Rose Stereograph Co. 
State Library of Victoria image H32492/6549. 


Footnotes
(1) Table Talk, November 8, 1923, see here. The Herald report on the opening, published November 1, 1923, can be read here.
(2) Prahran Telegraph, October 26, 1923, see here.
(3) The Herald, August 24, 1922, see here.
(4) Freeman - Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com; Sydney Sun, April 17, 1923, see here. Death notice: Suns News-Pictorial, September 26, 1945, see here.
(5) Sargant - Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com; The Herald, May 16, 1923, see here;  The Argus, March 6, 1925, see here. Death notice: the Age, May 16, 1960, p. 16; on newspapers.com.
(6) Johnstone - Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com. Death notice: Sydney Morning Herald, November 29, 1954, see here.
(7) Duncan - Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com
(8) The Herald, May 7, 1923, see here
(10) The Herald, May 16, 1923, see here
(11) Architects Database - George Isidore Beaver- 
https://architectsdatabase.unisa.edu.au/arch_full.asp?Arch_ID=146  Homeopathic Hospital illustration - The Argus, April 19, 1934, see here.
(12) Groves, Derham The Barlow File published in University of Melbourne Collections, Issue 5 November 2009 
(13) Henry Eilenberg - buildings The Argus, February 9, 1925, see hereAustralian Jewish Herald March 11, 1926, see hereAustralian Jewish Herald, May 30, 1940, see here. The Synagogue and the Samuel Meyers Hall were designed by Joseph Plottel (1883-1977) - I have come across him before and written about him here - https://thepalmtreeblog.blogspot.com/2026/01/the-palm-trees-in-palm-grove-deepdene.html. Harry Eilenberg died on October 16, 1960, aged 68. Death notice: The Age, October 17, 1960 p. 16, on newspapers.com
(14) The Herald, April 14, 1924, see here
(15) Perth Daily News, February 8, 1927, see here; Adelaide News, February 20, 1928, see here. The Green Mill opened in 1926 and was on the site where the National Gallery of Victoria is now located - corner of St Kilda Road and Sturt Street.
(16) Brisbane Sports and Radio, June 17, 1933,  here.
(17) The Herald, June 23, 1933, see here.
(18) The Herald, June 23, 1933, see here.
(19) The Age, December 23, 1935, see here.
(20) The Herald, March 8, 1939, see here.
(21) The Age, March 4, 1953, see here
Harry Kleiner - At the time of his death on January 18,  1959,  at the age of  72, Harry was listed as an auctioneer and also  owned the Central Hotel in Brighton. Death notice: The Age, January 19, 1959, p. 12 on newspapers.com; Obituary - The Age, January 19, 1959, p. 5 on newspapers.com
(22) The last reference to skating at St Moriz, which I can find in The Age on newspapers.com is August 1981, which doesn't mean, of course, that it didn't last longer. Demolition had commenced by May 1982, then it was stopped by the Builders Labourers Federation for a short time, but by then demolition work has already cleaned out much of the inside of the building and removed the verandah (see article below)


The Age, May 4, 1982, p. 14 from newspapers.com