Redleaf

Redleaf is now the Woollahra Council Chambers

Redleaf in Double Bay, New South Wales is a building of historical significance and is listed on the State Heritage Register.[1] It was built in 1863 as a private residence and was home to several notable people until 1940 when it was sold to the Municipality of Woollahra. Today it is the Woollahra Council Chambers.

Commodore William Walker

William Benjamin Walker
Elizabeth Corientia Browne, wife of William Walker

William Benjamin Walker (1820-1889) who was the first Commodore of the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron commissioned the architect George Allen Mansfield to build Redleaf in 1863. He was born in 1820 in Parramatta and was the son of William Walker (1787-1854) a Scottish merchant who traded in NSW and London and was described by some as "a merchant prince".[2] His father established the firm William Walker and Co. in the 1820s and engaged family members as shareholders to run the firm in Australia while he mostly lived in England. His father also acquired large tracts of land in NSW one of which was Kameruka near Bega where he built Kameruka Homestead.

William became one of his father's agents in Australia and married Elizabeth Corientia Browne in 1845 in Victoria.[3] The couple went to live on the Kameruka Estate after their marriage.[4] His wife Elizabeth Corientia Browne was the sister of Thomas Alexander Browne better known as the author Rolf Boldrewood. William was renowned for living the life of the English country gentleman and is described by Rolf Boldrewood who visited them. He said.

They lived the happy untrammelled free life of the Australian Squire for such in effect is the status and surroundings of the pastoral proprietor of flocks and herds colloquially termed a Squatter.. And the large stock holder with his herd of cattle, his flocks of sheep, his stud of well-bred horses lived much the same sort of life as his English precursor, the Lord of the Manor.[5]

Mary Braidwood Mowle also visited them on their Kameruka property and described Elizabeth as "a pretty looking English woman with bright sparkling eyes and lady like unaffected manners". William was said to be "altogether an agreeable lively companion"[6]

They later bought some land at Double Bay and in 1863 built Redleaf. William was an enthusiastic sportsman and he organised a meeting of 19 yachtsmen in his office and they decided to form a club which was subsequently called the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron. William became the Club's first Commodore.[7] He was also a Member of the NSW Legislative Assembly between 1863 and 1867.[8] The family did not live at Redleaf for long. They were obliged to leave in 1867 and return to England to live permanently. The house was rented from 1867 to 1872 to Henry Cary Dangar and his family.

Henry Cary Dangar

Henry Cary Dangar

Henry Cary Dangar (1830-1917) was born in 1830 in Port Stephens in NSW.[9] His father was Henry Dangar (1796-1861) who was an early pioneer and wealthy pastoralist.[10] Henry Cary was educated in England at Cambridge University and became a lawyer. He returned to Sydney but did not continue to practice law and instead followed his father into pastoral pursuits and was a famous breeder of race horses. In 1865 Henry married Lucy Jane Lamb (1841-1914) who was the daughter of Captain John Lamb, a naval officer, politician and merchant.[11] Soon after their marriage they rented Redleaf for about five years. They then moved to Grantham in Potts Point.

In 1873 John Gray Brewster and his wife Frances rented Redleaf for two years. John was a stock and station agent who owned the firm Brewster and Trebeck.[12]

William Busby

William Busby circa 1870
Redleaf (middle house) in about 1880.

William Busby and his wife Catherine bought Redleaf in about 1875. William was born in 1813 in England and came with his family to Australia at the age of 11. His father was John Busby, a Government Official. He and his brother Alexander became pastoralists and William acquired a very large property near Cassilis in NSW which he called Dalkeith. It became a notable horse stud.[13]

In 1856 he married Catherine Anne Woore who was twenty three years his junior. Catherine's father was Thomas Woore who owned a property called Pomeroy near Goulburn.[14] The couple had four sons and eight daughters. In 1867 William became a member of the NSW Legislative Assembly and held this position until his death. He was, active in the Agricultural Society of New South Wales, a director of the Mercantile Bank of Sydney; and a foundation member of the Australian Club in Sydney. In 1875, he was elected a member of the Royal Society of New South Wales.

When he died in 1887 the property was placed on the market. The advertisement for its sale is shown. The Lassetter family bought the house and moved into it in about 1892.

Frederic Lassetter

Frederic Lassetter
Redleaf (middle left) and St Bridget's in about 1900

Frederic Lassetter (1828-1911) was born in 1828 in Taunton, England. He came to Australia with his family in 1832 at the age of four. They moved to Launceston, Tasmania and his father who was a Wesleyan Minister opened a school.[15]

In 1850 he went to Sydney and joined the firm of his uncle Lancelot Iredale which was called L. Iredale and Company. This firm had been foundered in 1820 and was a hardware and general merchandise store in George Street. Two years later he married his cousin Charlotte Hannah Iredale. The couple had four sons and two daughters. Over the next ten years Frederic worked to develop the firm and in 1863 it was renamed F. Lasseter and Co. which was later to become one of the biggest department stores in Sydney employing over 1000 workers.

In 1897 he built a house next to Redleaf called "St Brigids" for his son Arthur Bowring Lassetter (1868-1935) and his new wife Mabel Annie Slater (1865-1941). The couple had been married the previous year. Arthur was a lawyer who had been educated at Cambridge University.[16]

Frederic died in 1911 and Redleaf was sold in 1913 to Thomas Storie Dixon (1886-1916). However Thomas died three years later in France during the War.[17] The house was again sold and bought by William Hooke Mackay.

William Hooke Mackay

William Hooke Mackay

William Hooke Mackay (1858-1939) was born in 1858 in Dungog, NSW. His father was John Kenneth Mackay (1828-1909) a wealthy pastoralist who owned the station "Cangon" near Dungog.[18] William also became a grazier and lived on the property Anambah near Maitland. He bred racing horses and owned a famous winner called Beauford.[19] In 1885 he married Adelaide Ann Hooke (1865-1922) who was his cousin. The couple had seven children – four sons and three daughters. All of their four sons volunteered for service during World War I and returned home to pursue pastoral pursuits.

He amassed considerable wealth and bought Redleaf at the age of 60 as a place of retirement. He died there at the age of 81 in 1939 and the house was bought by Woolahra Council. For the first five years they rented the property to Mrs Annie Hall who turned it into a venue for weddings, parties and other events.[20] It later became the Council Chambers and still serves this function today.

References

  1. NSW Heritage Register. Online reference
  2. Australian Dictionary of Biography (1787-1854). Online reference
  3. Family Search website. Onlline reference
  4. The Queenslander, 10 May 1928, p. 6. Online reference
  5. Clarke, Patricia 1986 "A Colonial Woman: Mary Braidwood Mowle", Allen and Unwin, p. 157.
  6. Clarke, Patricia 1986 "A Colonial Woman: Mary Braidwood Mowle", Allen and Unwin, pp. 157-158.
  7. Sydney Morning Herald, 9 July 1937, p. 8. Online reference
  8. Parliament of NSW website. Online reference
  9. Obituaries Australia, Online reference
  10. Australian Dictionary of Biography, "Henry Dangar". Online reference
  11. Australian Dictionary of Biography, "John Lamb" Online reference
  12. Australian Dictionary of Biography. Online reference
  13. Australian Dictionary of Biography website, "William Busby". Online reference
  14. Australian Dictionary of Biography website. Online reference
  15. Australian Dictionary Biography, "Frederic Lassetter". Online reference
  16. Alumni Cantabrigienses, Vol 2, 1900. Online reference
  17. The Sydney Morning Herald, 15 December 1916, p. 6. Online reference
  18. Singleton Argus, 22 April 1909, p. 3. Online reference
  19. The Northern Champion, 23 December 1939, p. 1. Online reference
  20. Australian Women's Weekly, 23 November 1940, p. 7. Online reference

Coordinates: 33°52′21″S 151°14′51″E / 33.8726°S 151.2476°E / -33.8726; 151.2476

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