1869: St Katherine’s Church, St Helena, Victoria.

St Katherine’s Church, also known as the “Rose Chapel” and the associated heritage listed cemetery, is located at St Helena, twenty eight kilometres north of Melbourne.

A two light stained glass window in the chancel of St Katherine’s was erected to the memory of Anthony & Katherine Beale and a single light window in the south wall to the memory of Luther Maplestone. These windows were originally created by the Ferguson & Urie stained glass company of Curzon street North Melbourne in  1869.

The Church of England Messenger, Melbourne, Vic, Thursday 12th August 1869, page 8.
“The little church at St. Helena Park, near Eltham, built by the late Mr. Beale to the memory of his wife, and which, together with three acres of land, including a cemetery, has recently been presented by the family to the Bishop, was re-opened on Sunday, 4th ultimo. A new chancel and vestry have been built and other improvements affected, and two beautiful stained-glass memorial windows, by Messrs. Ferguson and Urie, have also been added.”

Photos taken 26th May 2013. Historical photos from the State Library,  J. T. CollIins collection, dates, pre 1957.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

St Katherine’s was originally built as a small private chapel by Major Anthony Beale, a retired paymaster of the East India Company who was formerly stationed on the historic island of St Helena in the Atlantic Ocean. The island is infamous as the place that Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) was exiled to after his defeat at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.

The British Government took over the administration of the Island of St Helena in 1836 and Anthony Beale and his family returned to England for three years, surviving on his yearly £500 pension from the East India Company.

Anthony, Katherine, and ten of their surviving children left London in early 1839 aboard the ‘Cecilia’, arriving at Launceston, Van Diemen’s Land (Tasmania), on the 29th July 1839[1]. Two of the elder sons, Edward and Anthony, remained in England to pursue military and medical careers[2]. Edward Charles Beale (1816-1877) reached the rank of Major-General (posthumously) in the Bombay Army having died aged 61 in London in 1877[3]. Anthony Beale (1817-1880) became Surgeon-Major of the Bengal Army and died aged 63 at Cheltenham, England, in 1880[4].

Two weeks after the Beale’s arrival in Launceston, at about 10 o’clock on the evening of the 14th August 1839, Beale’s eldest son Onesiphorus James Beale left their house and disappeared without a trace.

On the 18th August, in desperation, his father Anthony Beale offered a reward of 50 guineas for his recovery[5]. Nearly a month had passed with no news of his whereabouts and on the 12th September 1839, Anthony Beale and one of his sons (possibly the 15 year old Adam) departed Launceston for Port Philip aboard the “Perseverance” [6]. This may have been an early reconnaissance trip to secure a home near the newly proclaimed (1837) township of Melbourne before returning to collect the remainder of his family from Launceston.

Only a day after his departure for Port Philip, the body of Onesiphorus was found.

Just before 7 a.m. on the 13th of September, a fisherman named John Snailhurst found the body on the left bank of the North Esk River, a month after he had disappeared. An inquest was held on the 14th of September and his sister Catherine, and fellow traveller named Catherine Monk, who came from London with the family on the Cecilia, identified his body via his clothing, a handkerchief and the tattoo of an anchor on the right arm, and two hearts and a dart on the left. It was revealed that he had drowned on the evening of the 14th August 1839[7] whilst attempting to board[8] the ship Cecilia via a dangerously narrow plank, intending to visit Captain Waddell of the Cecilia, who was good friends with the Beal family.

The Beale family departed Launceston, aboard the “Perseverance,” on the 4th   of November 1839 bound for Port Phillip[9]. The eldest daughter, Katherine Ann Sibella Beale (1821-1907), remained in Launceston where she married John Burt, also of the East India Company, at St John’s Church at Launceston in January 1840[10]

Originally settling in the outskirts of Melbourne at New Town (now known as Fitzroy)[11], Anthony Beale later took up land in north east of Victoria near the River Plenty c.1841 where he built his home which he named after the island of St Helena where he was born and had spent 46 years of his life.

His wife Katherine Rose (nee Young) died at the St Helena estate on the 5th August 1856 and in 1858 Beal resolved to build a small private chapel in the garden next to his home in memory of his beloved Katherine. Known as the “Rose Chapel,” it was small one room building with a fire place and made of hand made bricks produced on the estate[12].

After Katherine’s death, his diaries fall into despair and paint him as lonely defeated man who spent much of his time in the tiny chapel he built. He died at St Helena on the 4th of September 1865 and was buried with his wife and other family members in the adjoining Church cemetery.

The chapel was later altered from being a private family chapel to a parish church by Beale’s son in law Charles Maplestone[13].

In 1869 the two light stained glass windows in the apse and a single light window in the centre of the south wall were erected as memorials to the Beal family. These windows were created by the Ferguson & Urie stained glass company of North Melbourne for a cost of £18/10/ [14].

The Memorial text at the base of the two light Gothic chancel window reads:

“IN MEMORY OF ANTHONY BEALE, WHO BUILT THIS CHURCH DIED 4 SEPT 1865 AGED 75 YRS”

“IN MEMORY OF HIS BELOVED WIFE KATHERINE ROSE. DIED 5 AUG. 1856, AGED 61 YEARS”

Another decorative single light memorial window, also by Ferguson & Urie, was erected in the centre of the south wall in memory of Luther, the son of Charles Maplestone.

The memorial text at the base reads:

“TO THE MEMORY OF LUTHER, THIRD SON OF CHARLES MAPLESTONE OF IVANHOE LODGE, WHO DIED AT ANNISKILLEN, QUEENSLAND, 18TH FEB 1869 AGED 23 YEARS”

Note: Mount ‘Enniskillen’ is between Longreach (in the north) and Charleville (in the south) in the Queensland outback.

A tablet in the church is in memory of Onesiphorus James Beale who drowned at Launceston on the 14th August 1839.

After Anthony Beale’s death, the Rose Chapel was left to the Church of England and was consecrated as “St Katherine’s” by Bishop Thornton of Ballarat on the 16th May 1876[15]. The nearby church of St Margaret’s, at Eltham, was also consecrated by Bishop Thornton on the same day and St Margaret’s has the earliest extant stained glass window by the Ferguson & Urie Company which was created in November 1861.

A century later St Katherine’s Church was destroyed by a bush fire which occurred on the 28th February 1957[16]. The local inhabitants of St Helena resolved to reconstruct their historic church and under the direction of architect Kenneth Crosier it was faithfully restored from old architectural diagrams and photographs and re-dedicated on the 7th November 1957.

Historical black and white photos of the interior of St Katherine’s, taken prior to the 1957 fire, show the Ferguson & Urie chancel window, the window on the south wall, and to the left of the chancel a WW1 memorial window, depicting St Michael, which was created by stained glass artist William Montgomery and unveiled on the 6th December 1919[17].

None of the original windows survived the fire but as part of the reconstruction effort, detailed replicas of the original Ferguson & Urie windows, and the St Michael window by William Montgomery, were re-created in 1957. The most likely firm to have undertaken this work at such high quality may have been the Brooks, Robinson & Co stained glass company of Melbourne. This firm started creating stained glass windows in the late 1870’s and was taken over by Email Pty Ltd in 1963. The company’s stained glass department was closed in 1967.

TRANSCRIPTIONS OF THE HISTORICAL NEWSPAPER ARTICLES.

Launceston Advertiser, Tas, Thursday 22nd August 1839, page 3.

“A FAMILY recently arrived in the Cecilia from London, named BEALE, has been plunged into the greatest affliction by the sudden disappearance of their eldest son, a gentleman of about twenty-four years of age, who left his home about ten o’clock on Wednesday evening, the 14th instant, and has not since been heard of. His absence is the more distressing, as there is reason to fear he has perished by drowning. It is supposed that he left home with the intention of proceeding on board the Cecilia, lying at the wharf, and may have fallen from the stage leading on board that vessel.

            Bills have been posted throughout the town, offering a reward of 50 guineas for the recovery of his body, if he be dead; or for information (if he be alive) which shall lead to his discovery. He is described as about 5 feet 9 inches, and as [sic] wearing a white hat, blue pilot cloth coat, brown and blue stripe trowsers, and colored stockings. We understand he is the eldest of a family of ten children, Mr. and Mrs. BEALE, senior, being advanced in years, which renders the affliction doubly distressing”.

The Cornwall Chronicle, Launceston, Tas, Saturday 31st August 1839, page 3.

FIFTY GUINEAS REWARD.
WHEREAS, about 10 o’clock on Wednesday night, the 14th inst. A young Gentleman, named Onisipherous James Beale, late a passenger by Cecilia, left his father’s house for the purpose, as it is supposed of going on board that vessel, but has never since been heard of, having it is feared fallen from an insecure plank into the River.
This is to give notice, that the above Reward will be paid to any person who will give such authentic information to his afflicted relations, as shall be the means of recovering his body, and upon their obtaining possession of the same. Or, should he be alive, a like reward will be paid to any person who will give me immediate intelligence where he may be found.
ANTHONY BEALE.
His dress when last seen, was a White hat, blue pilot cloth Coat, brown blue-striped Trowsers, coloured Stockings, and shoes. Age 24 years, height about 5 feet 9 inches.
August 18, 1839”.

The Cornwall Chronicle, Launceston, Tas, Saturday 14th September 1839, page 2.

“DEATHS.- …”
On the 14th August, Onisiphirous Beale, aged 24 years”

The Cornwall Chronicle, Launceston, Tas, Saturday 14th September 1839, page 2.

“An Inquest was held this day upon the body of the late Mr. Beale, the report of which reached us too late for insertion. Verdict – Found Drowned”.

The Cornwall Chronicle, Launceston, Tas, Saturday 14th September 1839, page 2.

SEPTEMBER 12.- …” “…Passengers per Perseverance, for Port Philip, A. Beale, Esq., Master Beale…”

 Note: ‘Master Beale’ was his son, possibly being the 15 year old Adam Beale.

 Launceston Advertiser, Tas, Thursday 19th September 1839, page 3.

“On Saturday last, before P. A. Mulgrave, Esq., Coroner, on view of the body of Mr. Onesiphorus James Beale, who it will be remembered was missed from his home, on the evening of the 14th ultimo, and for whose discovery the reward of 50 has subsequently offered. The body was found on Friday morning, by a fisherman, about two miles above Launceston, in the North Esk, and was fully identified by witnesses to whom deceased was known. From the evidence there could be no doubt that the deceased had fallen from a plank, going on board the Cecilia, late at night of the 14th July. The jury returned a verdict of Found Drowned”.

The Cornwall Chronicle, Launceston, Tas, Saturday 21st September 1839, page 1.

An inquest was held on Saturday last, the 14th instant, at the Ferry House, at the Bridge, before P. A. Mulgrave, Esq., Coroner, on the body of Mr. Onesipherus James Beale, a young gentleman who came out in the Cecilia, and has been missing for the last month, and for whom a reward of 50 guineas has been offered by his disconsolate father, who has just left the colony for Port Philip. The following is the evidence adduced:-
Catherine Monk – I came from England in the barque Cecilia, with Mr. Beale’s family; we landed at Launceston on the 29th July. The deceased Onesipherus James Beal was 24 years of age, always in good spirits, and on the best terms with his family; I never heard him express any intention of leaving them. He was quite well an in his usual good spirits on Wednesday, the 14th ult; Captain Wadell, of the Cecilia, spent a part of that evening at his father’s house, he left about 10 o’clock; I saw the deceased about 9 o’clock that evening; he wore the same clothes that are now on the body, as viewed by the inquest; I can speak positively as to the coat and trowsers and I know, by the marks on his arms, viz., an anchor on the right arm, and two hearts and a dart on the left arm, that they are the remains of Onesipherus James Beale; The handkerchief now produced was the property of the deceased, and I know he had it in his pocket on the 14th August last; I know he left his father’s house about a quarter of an hour after Captain Waddell that evening, I supposed he had gone into the gardens; some time afterwards search was made for him, and it was discovered he was absent; we supposed he had followed Captain Waddell, to whom he was much attached, and who he knew purposed leaving the port next morning.

Captain Bateman – I am Harbour master at Launceston. The barque Cecilia was lying alongside the wharf on Wednesday, the 14th ult.; the stage from the wharf to the Cecilia had been taken to pieces preparatory to her sailing next morning, and there was only a plank on the evening of that day from the wharf to the vessel; it was a very narrow plank, and required great caution in passing over it; I came on shore on it after dark that evening. The Cecilia was about a fathom and a half from the wharf; It was low water between 10 and 11 o’clock that night; there was only three feet and a half water between the Cecilia and the wharf; the mud was very soft and deep. Captain Waddell left Launceston about three weeks ago, and before he went the deceased was missing, and he (Captain Waddell) told me that he passed part of the evening of the 14th ult. in company with the deceased at his father’s house, and that he (the deceased) said he should call and see him on board that night, it was a dark night.

            Miss Catherine Beale – I am sister to the deceased Onesipherus James Beale; the last time I saw him was on Wednesday evening, the 14th ult., in my father’s house; he was in very good spirits that evening; captain Waddell spent part of the evening with us; the deceased wished to accompany him on board; Captain Waddell advised him not to do so; about 10 minutes after Captain Waddell left the deceased wished us all good-night; we supposed he had gone to bed; a few minutes afterwards I heard him go out the back door, and shortly after, as he did not return, he was sought for, and it was discovered he had left the house, and had taken his hat with him from his bed room. He had the mark of an anchor on one arm, and two hearts and a dart on the other; he had not had any difference with any person that evening, and was not labouring under any depression of spirits.

            Dr. Pugh – I have examined the body of the deceased Onesipherus James Beale. There is not any mark of violence upon it, and I have no doubt his death was caused by suffocation from drowning; the body appeared to have been lying in the water for a month or upwards.

            John Snailhurst – I am a fisherman; I found the body which has been viewed by the inquest about ten minutes before 7 o’clock yesterday morning, on the left bank of the North Esk river, about two miles from Launceston by water; the head was upon the mud on the bank; the other part of the body was in the water, except the upper part of the back; it was then in the same state as it is now. Joseph Firkin * was with me in the boat when I first saw the body; he was alarmed, and would not allow me to take it into the boat; we immediately returned to Launceston, and reported the circumstance to the Police.

 * This man was called Joseph Dudley by the man Snailhurst, while giving his evidence, but this is merely a bye name which he has, his proper name being Joseph Firkin, in which he was tried and convicted, and by which he is known to the Police.
– REPORTER.

 Joseph Firkin corroborated the former witness, as to finding the body.

 Constable Webster – In consequence of information I received from John Snailhurst, I went yesterday morning up the North Esk river in a boat, and found the body which has been viewed by the inquest in the same place and position as described by the two previous witnesses.

Verdict – Found drowned”.

From the evidence given at the inquest of the death of Onesipherus James Beal, it was identified that his cause of death was drowning, having fallen off the thin plank in the dark[18] leading from the Launceston wharf to the ship Cecilia on the evening of the 14th August 1839.

The Cornwall Chronicle, Launceston, Tas, Saturday 9th November 1839, page 2.

“EXPORTS…” “NOVEMBER 4. – Perseverance, (schooner,) 45 Tons, Dryden, master, for Port Philip…”

“…Passengers per Perseverance, for Port Philip, Anthony Beale, Esq., Mrs. Beale, Miss Isabella Beale, Miss Elizabeth Beale, Miss Rose Beale, Miss Margaret Beale, Master Adam Beale, Master Lindsay Beale, Master Young Beale, Master Haliburton Beale…”

Passengers are identified as: Anthony Beal Snr 1790-1869, Katherine Rose Beal (nee Young) 1795-1856, Isabella 1822-1840, Elizabeth Maria 1823-1899, Rose Ellinor 1826-1856, Margaret Lindsay 1827-1914, Adam 1829-1909, John Lindsay 1830-1911, James Young 1831-1905, Halliburton 1833-1899

The Cornwall Chronicle, Launceston, Tas, Saturday 18th January 1840, page 2.

“MARRIED – By special licence, by the Revd. Dr. Browne, at St. John’s Church, Launceston, John Burt, Esq., late of the East India Company’s Service, to Katherine, Ann, Sibella, eldest daughter of Anthony Beale, Esq., late Paymaster to the East India Company’s Establishment at St. Helena.”

Note: The Church of St John’s at Launceston has a stained glass window by Ferguson & Urie, but it wasn’t created unntil 1866.

The Australian, Sydney, NSW, Friday 4th November 1842, page 2.

“SEQUESTRATION OF INSOLVENT ESTATES.- The following persons have sequestrated their estates since the 1st of September:-…” “…Anthony Beale, settler, River Plenty…”

The Argus, Melbourne, Vic, Friday 10th December 1852, page 8.

“In the Insolvent Estate of Anthony Beale, of the River Plenty, in the Colony of Victoria, Settler.

NOTICE is hereby given, that Edward Courtney, Esq., of Melbourne, in the Colony of Victoria, has been hereby elected and confirmed a Trustee, for the collection, administration, and distribution of the estates and effects of Anthony Beale, the above-named insolvent, in room of Archibald Cuninghame, Esq., who has been removed from his office of trust on said estate, on account of absence from this colony.

Dated at Melbourne, this 9th day of December, AD, 1852,

FREDERICK WILKINSON,

Chief Commissioner of Insolvent Estate’s”.

The Argus, Melbourne, Vic, Wednesday 13th August 1856, page 4.

[Katherine Rose Beale (nee Young) 1795-1856]

“On the 5th inst., at St. Helena Farm, River Plenty, Katharine Rose, the beloved wife of Anthony Beale, Esq., aged 61.”

The Argus, Melbourne, Vic, Wednesday 6th September 1865, page 4.

[Maj Anthony Beale 1790-1865]

“BEALE.- On the 4th inst., at his residence, St. Helena, River Plenty, Anthony Beale, Esq., of the Hon. E.I.C.S., and formerly Paymaster-General of the Island of St. Helena, aged seventy-five years”.

Note: E.I.C.S – East India Corps Service

The Argus, Melbourne, Vic, Saturday 1st May 1869, page 4.

“MAPLESTONE.- On the 18th February, at Mount Enniskillen, Queensland, Luther, third son of Mr. Charles Maplestone, of Ivanhoe-lodge, and No. 8 Elizabeth-street, Melbourne, aged twenty-four years.”

The Argus, Melbourne, Vic, Monday 22nd May 1876, page 5.

“On Tuesday last the churches of St. Margaret’s, Eltham, and St. Katherine’s, St. Helena, both being in the same parochial district, were consecrated by the Right Reverend Dr. Thornton, Bishop of Ballarat, who was assisted by the Vicar-General, Dr. Macartney, and the Revs. Canon Vance and A. J. Pickering. At the former place the rite of confirmation was also administered to 54 persons, being the largest number that had ever assembled together in the district for that purpose. Large congregations were present to witness the ceremonies. A collection, which was made at the two places, realised the sum of £5. 5s. It is worthy of note that the St. Helena church was erected at the sole expense of one individual – the late Mr. Anthony Beale; and that the Eltham church, together with a commodious parsonage (though situated in a very poor district), were, when completed at a cost of over £1,600, entirely free from debt, a circumstance upon which the resident in that locality pride themselves greatly.”

The Argus, Melbourne, Vic, Friday 1st March 1878, page 1.

[Major General Edward Charles Beale 1816-1877]

“BEALE.- On the 31st December, 1877, at 66 Lansdown-road, Notting-hill, London, Major-General Edward C. Beale, Bombay Army, aged 61 years, Second son of the late Anthony Beale, Esq., H.E.I.C.S., and of St. Helena, River Plenty.”

The Argus, Melbourne, Vic, Tuesday 21st December 1880, page 1.

[Surgeon-Major Anthony Beale 1817-1880]

“BEALE.- On the 25th ult., at 12 Royal-crescent, Cheltenham, England, Anthony Beale, aged 63, late Surgeon-Major Bengal Army, third son of A. Beale, Esq., H.E.I.C.S., St. Helena, River Plenty”.

Northern Star, Lismore, NSW, Friday 12th December 1924, page 12.

“…There are tablets to the memory of Onsephesoris James, son of Anthony and Katherine Rose Beale, drowned in Tasmania on August 14, 1839[19], and to three of their great grandsons who fell in the Great War. A fine brass tablet, given by the mothers, commemorates the supreme sacrifice made by local soldiers…”

“…There are stained glass memorials to Margaret Lindsay Beale, who was born at St. Helena in 1827 and died in 1914, and to Luther, son of Charles Maplestone, Ivanhoe Lodge, who died in 1869. A nice stained glass window is a tribute to the district’s contribution to the A.I.F…”

The Argus, Melbourne, Vic, Saturday 15th March 1926, page 8.

“ST. HELENA

VICTORIA’S LINK WITH NAPOLEON.

By R. H. CROLL

Very far from Australia – a mere speck on the map of the South Atlantic – lies the lonely island of St. Helena, famous for the fact that it served as prison for Napoleon. Close to Melbourne – within the outer-suburban area, in fact – is another St. Helena. It, too, unlikely as the tale may seem, links up directly with the “eagle of Corsica.”
Major Anthony Beale, sometime paymaster-general to the East India Company’s forces in the British possession of St. Helena, supplies the association. Napoleon died in 1821. The East India Company resigned its interests in the island in 1834, and a few years later Major Beale retired on a pension of £500 a year, packed up his household goods, and transported them to Australia. Those were early days in Victorian annals, and when he established a home near where now stand the townships of Eltham and Greensborough he was a pioneer in the wilderness. Later he erected a chapel next to his house. That chapel stands to-day as a place of public worship, and the jubilee of its consecration for general service will be celebrated to-morrow 9Sunday). All values are relative; this shrine represents antiquity to Victoria. No reason has been advanced for Major Beale’s preference in all the wide world for this remote and scarcely known portion of the British dominions. In 1839, the year he arrived in Melbourne, the Port Philip settlement was still in swaddling clothes. The township had had its first land sale. It had escaped with a decent title after being threatened with such names as Bearbrass, Barchurp, Bearburp, Yarrow Yarrow, The Settlement, Glenelg, and Batmania, all of which were in actual use; and though, as Bonwick remarks, its affairs were a source of much merriment to the people of Sydney, the settlement was still a part of New South Wales.
So it was a tiny clearing in the bush that the newcomers saw when they arrived at the spot noted by Batman, four years before, as “the place for a village.” The party had come by way of Van Diemen’s Land, and while waiting in Launceston for a vessel to cross the Straits the eldest son of the Beale’s, Onesiphorus, was drowned in the Tamar. Beale kept a diary – still in the possession of the family – and he records therein his highly unflattering opinion of the land agents of the day, including John Pascoe Fawkner, who were united in their endeavours to unload upon the stranger some undesirable holdings. It is interesting to reflect to-day upon the possible value of even the worst of those old-time properties. Eventually Beale went as far afield as the Plenty River, then hopelessly out in the bush – he mentions being lost where now the City of Collingwood has replaced with houses the scrub and timber and on the brow of a pleasant hill, near where the ancient lava flow failed, he put in the foundations of his home. The house, built of imported weatherboards, with chimneys of hand made bricks, is intact to-day. Beale evidently had an eye for beauty. The outlook is over wooded hills, past Kangaroo Ground and Ringwood, to the blue lift of the high mountains at the back of Healesville.
A patriarchal life began. That was in 1842. The first break occurred when, as shown on a memorial window in the church, his wife died in 1856. The building dedicated to her memory he named Rose Chapel. It is a handsomely proportioned building of Gothic type. Stained glass windows shed delicate tones through the interior, and one reads there, and in the little graveyard without, much of the simple history of the place. The two leadlights beside the altar are in honour of the founder and his wife; at the south end are two more bearing inscriptions relating to the dedication of the chapel and the death of the eldest son. The dwelling-house is close at hand, and the family name is still represented by grandchildren and great grandchildren. In the churchyard, in true old-world fashion, the forefathers of the hamlet are buried.
Since the church building has been handed over to the Church of England for public use it has been renamed “St. Katherine’s,” and the graveyard has been opened as a general burying-place. But as portion remains sacred to the Beale family and its connections, and here may be learned the fact that Anthony Beale was born in 1790 and died in 1865. Here, too, lies a well-remembered identity in Charles Symons Wingrove, who was for 46 years secretary of the shire of Eltham. He died in 1905. In the outer portion lie the remains of Walter Withers, whose “Tranquil Winter” and other pictures in our National Gallery are perpetual delight. He loved this countryside. And it is fitting that this should be his resting place. An outstanding monument – outstanding from the nature of its inscription – is to Graham Webster, once a police magistrate, in Victoria. Born in Essex, England, in 1830 he died at Greensborough, Victoria, in 1903. The epitaph makes a remarkable claim. It reads:- “Here lies Graham Webster, the last of his race, who descended in one unbroken line from father to son for a period of 779 years.” That first forefather possibly saw the Crusaders!  It recalls Gray’s line:- “The paths of glory lead to the grave.”

Note:

England terminated its interest in the island of St Helena in 1836.

The Beale’s returned to England for about three years after leaving St Helena and departed London in 1839, arriving in Launceston 29 July 1839 aboard the ‘Cecilia.’ The family departed Launceston, aboard the “Perseverance,” on the 4th   of November 1839 bound for Port Phillip.

Advertiser, Hurstbridge, Vic, Friday 27th September 1929, page 1.

“A CHAPEL IN THE HILLS.
WHERE EARLY SETTLERS WORSHIPPED

(By E. J. T. Oliver in the “Argus” Camera Supplement)

“A few miles beyond Greensborough, and about 15 miles from Melbourne, on top of a grassy hill, stands a small church known as St. Catherine’s [sic] Chapel. It was built nearly 90 years ago by Major Anthony Beale, a retired paymaster of the East India Company, who had been at St. Helena during part of Napoleon’s exile.
Major Beale set out in a sailing ship in 1835, and by way of what was then Van Diemen’s Land he reached Victoria four years later. After having sought a suitable spot for a residence, he selected this breezy hillside, and here he built a substantial mansion, which still stands there, and which, in memory of his former island home, he called St. Helena. The house has also given its name to the district, which is still but sparsely populated.
Major Beale imported the timber with which to build his house, and it is in admiration and astonishment that visitors look at the stout beams and weatherboards that have withstood storms and defied decay for nearly 90 years. The house is built with the boards laid horizontally instead of upright, and the bricks of the huge chimneys are hand-made. Major Beale built some kind of brick kiln on the estate. The bricks are thin and narrow, and of a different color from that of the machine-made bricks of to-day. The dining-room fireplace is almost the size of a small room, with seats built on either side so that husband and wife might sit opposite to each other on winter nights.
The chapel, which was later added as a private place of worship, is indeed charming, with its gothic windows of stained glass. Through them beams of purple and gold light up the quiet interior. A beautiful little etching of the building hangs in the wall, “a gift from the etcher.” Church of England service is held there weekly, and the folk of the surrounding district file in to fill the old-fashioned pews, where the early settlers worshipped so long ago.
The church is surrounded by a graveyard, after the fashion of the land of Major Beale’s birth. Here lie the pioneers and their sons, and here we may read of one Graham Webster, descended in a direct line for more than 700 years and now sleeping, “the last of his race,” beneath Australian skies. Here also we may see the stone to the memory of Major Beale and his wife and several members of their family.
The roads that lead to this spot of interest are good, and motorists will enjoy the journey through Ivanhoe and Heidelberg. It is a delightful journey for a Saturday afternoon, with a picturesque objective for all who love quiet and beautiful places.”

The Argus, Melbourne, Vic, Tuesday 25th July 1944, page 3.

“ST HELENA PIONEER’S FUNERAL IN FAMILY CHURCHYARD.

“A link with early Melbourne was broken yesterday by the death of Mr Anthony Beale, of St Helena, near Greensborough. Mr Beale, who was 86, was a grandson of Major Anthony Beale, a pioneer settler of Greensborough district, who came with his family to Port Phillip settlement in 1839, from the island of St Helena, where he had been stationed as paymaster-general of the British East India Company for many years, including the period of Napoleon Buonaparte’s exile in captivity on the island. After living for a few years in a home built at New Town (now Fitzroy), the Beale family moved to a selection about 12 miles to the north near the Plenty River, in what is now the Greensborough district, and named their new home St Helena. The major’s wife, Katherine Rose Beale, died in 1856, and to her memory her husband erected the miniature chapel which still stands in a cluster of cypress trees by the St Helena home, a mile or so off the main Greensborough road. Originally it was named the Rose Chapel, but after Major Beale’s death it was given to the Church of England, and became known as St Katherine’s Church. The little churchyard has been used as a private burial ground for members of the Beale family, and it is there that Mr Anthony Beale will be buried on Wednesday after a service conducted in the little church by Rev. A. J. Barford, vicar of Greensborough. The home, from which the casket will be carried, is the fourth house built by the Beale family on the St Helena property.”

Footnotes:

[1] The Cornwall Chronicle, Launceston, Tas, Saturday 21st September 1839, page 1.

[2] Bryan James; http://www.ozgenonline.com/~mytwigs/beale_a.html; accessed 29 May 2013.

1876: All Saints, Church of England, Learmonth, Victoria.

On Monday the 5th of September 1859, the members of the Church of England at Learmonth held a public meeting at the Wesleyan School Room to consider the purchase of land to erect their church[1].

The new Church of England building was erected under the supervision of the Ballarat architect, Henry Richards Caselli (c1816-1885), and was opened on Sunday 20th January 1861 by the first incumbent of the church, the Rev Henry Newton Woollaston[2].

The church was originally known as “Wycliffe Church of England[3], after the Church of England reformer John Wycliffe (1320-1384)[4] but more than ninety years later was consecrated as “All Saints”  in July 1952 by Bishop Johnston[5].

At the liturgical east end of the church, behind the altar, is the oldest window in the church. It is a three light stained glass window crafted by Ferguson & Urie of North Melbourne. Even though the church was opened in 1861, the chancel window was not erected until 1876 when the new chancel was added.

This is confirmed by a couple of newspaper articles in 1876. The first, published in the Ballarat Star in April 1876 chronicled the event of the church Bazaar held on Easter Monday 1876. At the conclusion of the bazaar Mr. James Robertson of Mount Mitchell gave a £20 donation which was later considered by the church committee for use in purchasing a stained glass window.

In August of the same year the tabloids reported on the “Opening Ceremony” at which specific mention was made of the chancel window of stained glass supplied by “Urie & Ferguson”;

“…The whole of these improvements are heightened in their effect by one of Urie & Ferguson’s stained glass windows inserted in the chancel – as pretty, harmoniously pure, and pleasing a little work of art as one could wish to see…”

But despite the previous intimation that Mr Robertson’s £20 donation at the bazaar would be used to purchase the window, the donor was described as being a lady artist from the congregation:

“…This window is, we understand, the gift of a lady of the congregation, as a result of the disposal by art-union of several pictures painted by her for this purpose…” [6]

Photos taken: 2nd January 2013.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

The window is typical of early Ferguson & Urie colouring and geometric designs. The centre light has a scrolling ribbon with the text: “I am the living bread which came down from heaven” (John 6-51). The flanking windows have the symbols of Alpha and Omega, and stylised geometric designs of the Passion Flower in roundels at the top and bottom of each light. Above the three lights is a quatrefoil window depicting the cross with the intertwined letters “I.H.S.

Foot Notes:

[5] The Chronicle, Newspaper of the Anglican Diocese of Ballarat, Vol 121 No.5, October 2011, p6.

[6] The Ballarat Star, Vic, Tuesday 15th August 1876, page 3.


Acknowledgements:

Thanks to Joy and Norma Whittenbury for their assistance and enthusiasm for the history and for organising access to the church.

 

Short link to this article: http://wp.me/p28nLD-1xI

22-05-1897: Presbyterian Church, Werribee, Victoria.

In the last three years of the history of the Ferguson & Urie stained-glass company of North Melbourne they were still performing regional glazing repairs. On Friday 14th May 1897 a storm went through Werribee and damaged a stained glass-window at the Presbyterian Church (now Cross Roads Uniting) which was repaired by a tradesman from Ferguson & Urie. There is no evidence that proves the window was one Ferguson & Urie’s original installations from when the church was built in 1884.

The Bacchus Marsh Express, Vic, Saturday 22 May 1897, page 3.
“The strong northerly gale that was blowing across these plains on the night of Friday of last week, with its occasional severe gusts, has unfortunately not passed over us without doing some damage; for, in addition to the unthatching of stacks, on many of the farms, the north window, high up in the spire of the Presbyterian church, which is exposed to the full force of wind from the north, has been very badly damaged, necessitating complete renewal of the lead work, and a great deal of the glass. The damage was first noticed by the Rev. John McIntosh on Saturday; pieces of the lead work and glass were blown in and were strewn over the floor of the belfry; while the window itself was just hanging together, vibrating with the wind, which by this time had fortunately veered round to the west. He at once communicated with Mr. Adam Hastie, Mr. G. T. Chirnside’s manager, informing him of the damage, and at the same time wrote in to Messrs. Ferguson & Urie, of Melbourne, to send out a man at the earliest moment. When the tradesman arrived it was at once seen that the window would require to be taken out as the joints of the lattice lead work were, for the most part, broken, and the rods and stays were loose, so that in order to make a secure job, the window will have to be re-leaded. The repairs will possibly cost over £3, so that ‘its an ill wind that blows nobody good!”

Photos taken: 30th Dec 2010.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

As at 2012, the north an west facing belfry windows of the church are extremely unlikely to be of any original glass produced or at anytime repaired by Ferguson & Urie.

Related posts:

23-05-1896: Presbyterian Church, Werribee, Victoria.
1876: Werribee Park Mansion.


Short link to this page: https://wp.me/p28nLD-1w8

© Copyright

19-09-1874: Holy Trinity Church of England, Williamstown, Victoria.

The first Holy Trinity Church at Williamstown was a prefabricated iron building known as an “Iron Pot” (freezing in winter and boiling in summer). There were many of these “Iron Pot” churches imported from England and erected throughout the colony and this one was erected in Nelsons Place in Williamstown. The Rev. George Wilkinson was obviously not happy with this poor excuse for the house of the lord and began the movement to have a respectful stone church erected for his congregation in 1859. The foundation stone for the new Leonard Terry designed church was eventually laid on the 11th of February 1871 by Bishop Charles Perry and was opened on the 7th October 1874. The “pretty chancel window” described as being made by Ferguson & Urie, circa 1874, no longer exists and was replaced by the Charlotte & William Holten memorial window circa 1941. According to the Holy Trinity’s newsletter (The Pilot, Vol 2, Issue 3, April 2012, page 4): “The artist for this window is unknown. We do know it was made in England and brought to Williamstown by Mrs Dorothy Raverty 2nd, step mother of Reverend J. Raverty who had it installed in Memory of her parents.”

This newsletter item is not correct. The Holten memorial window was actually made by the Brooks, Robinson & Co stained glass company of Melbourne, who also made other windows in Holy Trinity.

All the original windows in the nave of Holy Trinity have also been replaced over the course of a century and are made by the artists and studios of William Montgomery, Napier Waller, Brooks Robinson & Co, and Alan Sumner.

The west four light window, with rose window above, and those in the clerestory, with the simple coloured borders and plain diamond quarries, are very likely be some of the original circa 1874 installations by Ferguson & Urie of North Melbourne.

Photos taken: 11th September 2010.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Williamstown Chronicle, Vic, Saturday 19th September 1874, page 2.

“THE NEW CHURCH OF ENGLAND.- The new place of worship which the adherents of the Church of England have just erected in Williamstown is one of the most handsome and commodious churches in the colony. With the exception of the tower and spire the building is now complete, and the conspicuous position it occupies makes it a prominent and pleasing feature in the town as seen from the Bay. The cost, as it stands, is £5000, and the erection of such a noble structure speaks well for the energy and liberality of the Episcopalians in our comparatively small parish, particularly as the new church when entered upon will be but slightly involved financially. The church, including the chancel, is 110 feet in length, and is from a design by Mr. Leonard terry, in the gothic style, with nave and aisles of lofty proportions. The material employed is bluestone, with freestone dressings. The interior has a very handsome appearance, which is heightened by the tone of the glazing, the body colour being amber with varicoloured margins. A pretty chancel window, made by Ferguson and Urie, imparts to that portion of the interior a very pleasing effect, which is continued in the rich yet simple decorations of the ceiling. The seating, to which the greatest attention has been given, is very convenient and comfortable. The material used is lightly stained Oregon pine. A lectern, from one of the best medieval workers in England, and the gift of Sir George Verdon, will shortly be added, and from the known liberality of the donor and the high reputation of the makers, will no doubt prove a further ornament. The substitution of a nice front picket fence for the old palings which have so long done duty has also contributed to the fine appearance of the church. The new place of worship will be opened on Friday, the 2nd prox, by the rev. pastor, Mr. Wilkinson.”

Also See:

Holy Trinity web site.

Flickr Photo album of Holy Trinity’s stained glass.

26-07-1885: St John’s Anglican Church, Port Albert, Victoria.

On the 14th of January 1884 the tiny wooden church of St John’s at Port Albert was burnt to the ground as a result of a bushfire. Less than a month later a tender of £262 was accepted for its re-construction with the official opening ceremony taking place on the 26th of July 1884.

The Ferguson & Urie three light stained glass window in the chancel is dedicated to Foster Griffiths, the infant son of Griffith Griffiths and Charlotte McCall, who died in October 1872. Griffith commissioned Ferguson & Urie of Melbourne to create a memorial window to his son with the intention of it being installed at a church in the nearby town of Foster but at that time a church had not yet been built at the town. After many years had passed without any action to have one erected it was eventually passed to the Reverend Betts who had it installed in the new St John’s Church at Port Albert in 1885. As at 2012 this is the only Ferguson & Urie window known to still exist in a wooden building.

Photos taken 24th April 2011.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

The text in the ribbons of the central window reads: “I KNOW THAT MY REDEEMER LIVETH Job 19-25”.

The scene depicting the empty tomb has the text below: “HE IS NOT HERE”. The scene does not specify a particular verse and could be one of four accounts of the resurrection written by Matthew, Mark, Luke or John.

Church Booklet – St John’s Anglican Church Port Albert – Melva F. James, Yarram & District Historical Society 2011, page 20.

“Stained Glass Window – In the Chancel of the Church is a magnificent stained glass window, the principal subject of which is the Saviour’s Resurrection.  The inscription on the bottom states “In Memory of Foster Griffith, died October 5th 1872.” Foster Griffiths was the infant son of Griffith Griffiths who was a prospector at Foster. On the death of his son at the age of six months, Griffiths obtained this window for the nearby town of Foster, but as there was no church in Foster, it was given to Rev. Betts, (who conducted services in the Foster Mechanic’s Hall), and was placed in the Port Albert Church when it was re-built after the fire.”

The window was restored in 1999 and a brass plaque to the left of the window reads:

“This window was restored in memory of Maud Robinson by the ladies guild and her family, in recognition of her service to this church”.

After the restoration of the windows, the memorial text at the bottom of the left lancet no longer has the first few words “In Memory of”, and instead, a duplication of the windows border colours were filled in its place which leads me to assume that this was not any kind of professional restoration but more like a local lead light enthusiast who merely filled the broken gap.

If Griffith had possibly commissioned Ferguson & Urie to create the window in 1873, but not installed until 1885, there would appear to be a 12+ year gap missing in the windows history. The design and grisaille pattern work employed in the window is typical of Ferguson & Urie’s early 1870’s work with the floriated cross. Other extant examples of the floriated cross in Ferguson & Urie windows can be seen at St Luke’s at Yea, St Barnabas at Balwyn, St John’s at Port Fairy, and St James at Drysdale.

Gippsland Times, Vic, Wednesday 29th July 1885. Page 3

“The opening of the new Church of England at Port Albert, which was built to replace the structure that was destroyed by fire in January, 1884, took place on Sunday last, when sermons were preached morning and evening by the Rev. C. P. Thomas, of Rosedale. The choir sang Jackson’s service and hymns appropriate to the occasion in a highly finished manner. There was a large congregation, filling the church both morning and evening to its utmost capacity. Next Sunday the Rev. Mr Groundwater will preach”.

Gippsland Times, Vic, Wednesday 16th January 1884, page 3.

EXTENSIVE FIRES
(BY ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH)
(FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENTS)

“PORT ALBERT, Tuesday Evening.

The most destructive fire that has ever occurred in this district was burning from about ten o’clock until sundown yesterday. The fierce north wind commenced to blow early in the morning, and a small fire that sprung up early in the day in the vicinity of the Old Port, increased in power, and came rushing madly on towards Port Albert, sweeping over many miles of country. Mr George Hastings and Mr John Rossiter, of the Standard office, had narrow escapes of losing their houses, situated on the Alberton road, as the wind kept veering round at intervals. However, owing to the timely assistance of a number of residents who turned out, the only loss sustained there was that of a fence enclosing one of Mr Rossiter’s paddocks, the fire being prevented from reaching a stack of hay and house close at hand. From here the fire crossed a metal road, destroying a wooden culvert, and making towards the township. The bells of the English Church were rung as an alarm, but a spark caught the wooden blocks and then the shingle roof, and in less than half an hour the church was completely demolished. The harmonium and seats were saved. The police buildings at Palmerston also caught fire, but they were with great difficulty saved. The escape of the township and the residences in the vicinity of Palmerston is hard to be accounted for”.

South Australian Register, Adelaide, Tuesday 15th January 1884, page 5.

“A destructive bush fire is now raging in the neighbourhood of Port Albert, South Gippsland. The English Church, a wooden building, was seized by the flames and burned to the ground in spite of the great exertions made to save it by the inhabitants.”

The Maffra Spectator, Vic, Thursday 7th February 1884, page 3.

“A special collection will be made at St. John’s, on Sunday evening, to assist in the rebuilding of the church burnt at Port Albert.”

Gippsland Times, Vic, Friday 13th February 1885, page 3.

“The tender of Mr. J. Avery, jun, has been accepted for the erection of the new church of England at Port Albert, the price being £262”.

Gippsland Times, Vic, Friday 29th February 1884, page 3.

“It will be very gratifying to our readers (says the Standard) to learn that the Rev Canon Chase, incumbent of St John’s Church, Melbourne, (acting of course in conjunction with the committee) has paid a very graceful compliment to the Rev. H. A. Betts, who formerly filled the office of curate at St. John’s. Since the destruction of the Port Albert Church by fire Mr Betts has exerted himself in various ways to aid the building fund, and he wrote to some old friends who attended St. John’s Church in Latrobe street during his curacy, asking them for a little private help. But this request appears to have been the signal for combined action, and on Sunday evening last, at a full choral service and harvest thanks-giving, a special collection was made “in aid of the building fund of the rev. H. A. Betts Church at Port Albert,” and the sum of £12 2s was the result. This agreeable surprise comes to us all the more acceptably on account of it’s warm-hearted and spontaneous mode of inception and consummation, and a word of commendation is due to the rev. Canon Chase and his committee (as also to the congregation as a whole) for this proof of good fellowship and kind remembrance towards their late curate, in the practical step they have taken to help a small congregation in the country to erect a building to take the place of that which was reduced to ashes by a bush fire on the 14th ultimo.”


Short link to this page: http://wp.me/p28nLD-175

© Copyright

24-06-1879: St Peter’s Church of England, Hamilton, Tasmania.

The three light chancel window at St Peter’s Church of England at Hamilton in Tasmania was created by the Ferguson & Urie stained glass company of North Melbourne circa 1880 and is a memorial to Ann Jane Wright (c.1835-1879). The original sketches for this window were done by Ferguson & Uries senior glass painter David Relph Drape and are held in the State Library of Victoria’s manuscripts collection. Photos of Drapes sketches and the window are included in the slideshow of images below.

St Peters is one of the oldest existing churches in Australia and even pre-dates the founding of Melbourne in Victoria. The church was designed by Edward Winch, Chief Clerk of the Colonial Architect’s Department, with some modifications by architect John Lee Archer (1791-1852). The cost was stated at £700 minus the tower and the first committee for the construction of the church was appointed with Mr.D.Burn as Secretary. The Government agreed to pay half the cost of the church and construction began in 1834 with J.J.Turnbull as builder. Apparently the walls had to be rebuilt in 1835, just after the laying of the foundation stone by Lieut. Governor Arthur in June, 1834 and the new builder contracted to complete it was W. Sibley. The church was consecrated on May 8th, 1838, by the first and only Bishop of Australia, the Rev Dr. W. G. Broughton, who also consecrated the burial ground. The first confirmation service was held on the same day at 10:30.

Photos were taken 7th October 2010.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

[View all images]

The Reverend George Wright arrived in Van Diemen’s Land on the ‘Fortune’ on the 21st March 1838, and became the third incumbent of St Peter’s circa 1844. He remained there for 30 years until failing eyesight forced him to retire from active work in 1875, but he still took an active role in many ceremonies alongside the new incumbent, the Rev Charles Andrews, from 1875 until mid 1878. The Rev George Wright’s wife, Anne Jane, died on the 24th of July 1879 and a minor reference to the triple light east window was mentioned in the Mercury in 1934, “The east window is a handsome “In memoriam” window erected by the parishioners and friends in memory of the wife of the Rev. Geo. Wright”. The memorial text on the window states:

“IN MEMORIAM | ANN JANE WRIGHT | DIED JULY 24th 1879”.

The three scenes depicted in the windows with accompanying chapter and verse are are:

MARK 10-14: (Suffer Little Children to come unto me).
LUKE 22-6: (Judas betrays Jesus).
MATT 26-7:  (The woman with the Alabaster box of precious ointment).

The Rev George Wright died on the 23rd of August 1893 and he and his wife Anne are buried in St Peter’s graveyard which surrounds the church.

An original sketch of this  windows design, by Ferguson & Urie’s senior stained glass artist, David Relph Drape, was found in the manuscripts collection at the State Library of Victoria. The style and colours are very typical of Ferguson & Urie’s work from the mid 1870’s to 1880’s. The glass painting also exhibits some signs of degradation of the brown medium used in facial features on the glass which at that time was a typical failing seen in other similar examples of Ferguson & Urie work of the same period. A copy of the original sketch and the window are depicted in the slideshow of photos.

The Mercury, Hobart, Monday 14th June 1937, page 9.

“ST. PETER’S, HAMILTON. Established 100 Years”.

“The 100th anniversary occurs this month of the completion of St. Peter’s Church of England, Hamilton, one of the oldest country churches in Tasmania. According to available records, it was reported in August, 1836, that the church would be completed in two months. This must have referred to the stonework, for a later report stated that the church was completed and inspected in June, 1837, a bill for the interior fittings having been dated June 14. In 1831 a movement was inaugurated with a view to the erection of an Anglican Church at Hamilton. The prime movers appear to have been Messrs. W. A. Bethune, of Dunrobin, William Roadnight, of Hamilton, David Burn, of Rotherwood, and Thomas Marzetti, of Cawood. A building committee was appointed, and in 1833 this included Messrs. W. S. Sharland, and Edward Lord jun., of Lawrenny, and other well-known pioneers. The foundation stone of the building was placed in position on June 26, 1834, by the then Lieutenant-Governor of Tasmania (Col. George Arthur), and the church was completed in 1837. The first rector was the Rev. M. J. Mayers, who came out from England with the first Archdeacon, the Venerable William Hutchins, in the Fairlie, which arrived at Hobart on January 6, 1837. Another passenger on the ship was Sir John Franklin, the new Lieutenant-Governor of Tasmania. St Peter’s Church was consecrated on May 8, 1838, by the Rt. Rev. Dr. W. G. Broughton, the first Bishop of Australia.

The Mercury, Hobart, Tasmania, Friday 29th June 1934, page 6.

“[…] The east window is a handsome “In memoriam” window erected by the parishioners and friends in memory of the wife of the Rev. Geo. Wright […]

The Mercury, Hobart, Tasmania, Wednesday 31st March 1875, page 2.

[In reference to Bishop Davies address to the Synod]:

“… I have ordained deacon, Mr. C. Andrew, who had previously worked in that diocese as a lay reader. He has undertaken the temporary charge of Hamilton, in order to relieve the Rev. George Wright, who, after many years of valuable service, has been compelled, I regret to say, through a physical infirmity, to abandon his duties for a season entirely…”

The Mercury, Hobart, Tasmania, Saturday 26th July 1879, page 1.

“WRIGHT- On July 24, at Hamilton, in her 44th year, Anne Jane, wife of Rev. George Wright, for thirty years incumbent of the parish. Friends are informed that the burial will take place on MONDAY NEXT, at 2 o’clock p.m.”

Launceston Examiner, Tasmania, Thursday 24th August 1893.

“DEATH OF THE REV. GEORGE WRIGHT. (BY TELEGRAPH)

WESTBURY, Wednesday, The Rev. George Wright, colonial chaplain, and former incumbent of Hamilton for many years, a very old and highly esteemed and Christian minister of the Anglican Church, passed away peacefully at his lodgings, Westbury, about midnight last night. His remains will be removed to Hamilton for interment, where he laboured so long in the service of his Master.”

External links:

Biography: Archer, John Lee (1791–1852)

The history of St. Peter’s Church, Hamilton, Tas., 1834 to 1934. by William George Brown.

1872: St Paul’s Anglican Church, Avenel, Victoria.

St Paul’s Anglican Church is located in the tiny township of Avenel which lies a couple of kilometers west of the Hume Freeway, and about twenty kilometers north of the township of Semour in central Victoria.

The foundation stone of the first Anglican church in the town was laid on the 26th June 1872 and opened on the 24th November 1872.

From 1872 to 1913 the church was located closer to the Hume Highway, but in 1913 a new red brick church was erected further to the north west of the township and the original stained glass chancel window, made by Ferguson & Urie of North Melbourne, was re-installed in it.

Other windows in the church were made at much later dates (post 1913) and some of the borders in those either side of the chancel windows have been made to complement similar patterns seen in the historical Ferguson & Urie window.  The most recent window in the church was created by ‘Guan Wei’ at ‘Almond Glass’ works in 2008.

Photos taken: 18th December 2011.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

The Seymour Express, Vic, Friday 10th April 1914, page 3.

“Consecration of St. Paul’s, Avenel. BY BISHOP OF WANGARATTA”.

“If there is one thing more than another of which the residents of Avenel have reason to be proud of it is the handsome and costly structures which they have dedicated to the service of God. The latest addition to these edifices has just been completed by the parishioners of St Paul’s church, and on Wednesday last was solemnly consecrated by the Right Rev. the Lord Bishop of Wangaratta, before a very large assemblage.

THE BUILDING

The church occupies a prominent position in the eastern portion of the town, and is a handsome structure – in the Gothic style of architecture, though very much modernised – of specially selected brick, with Portland cement facings. The foundation stone was laid on Nov 30th, 1913 in the presence of a very large gathering by Mr. E. Plummer J.P., the sermon for the occasion being also preached by the Bishop of Wangaratta. An account of the ceremony on parchment, mentioning the bishop, rector, church wardens and vestry men, was enclosed in a canister and placed under the stone. The eastern stained glass windows and the gable cross were transferred from the old church, which was built over 40 years ago. The lamps in the church were given by the vestry of St. John’s Church, Nagambie. The interior of the building is very handsome without being ornate. The chancel is wide and deep, and is spanned by a magnificent arch. The ventilation of the building has received special attention, there being an open ridge the full length of the building and while the walls are hollow to secure circulation of air and coolness they are fitted with the latest ventilators, which can be closed or shut as desired. The windows are of the very latest cathedral glass of a delicate green tint, and are made to open the full length of the window if necessary…”

Memories of Avenel by Amelia Jane Burgoyne 1958, page 48.

“In 1872, Lloyd Jones gave four acres of land, part of his property, to build an Anglican Church. On that site, in the old town, a pretty little church, St Paul’s was built, and was later beautified with stained-glass windows and some fine pieces of furniture presented by pioneer families in memory of their dear ones. The church was removed, about 1912, to the new town, somewhat to the regret of the older people, who had worshipped at the old site for forty years; but it is still the same pretty little church, though now on a site more convenient for the majority of residents. A recent addition to the interior fittings is the panelling of beautiful wood in the sanctuary, given by Mrs E. J. Shelton in memory of her husband, Captain John Shelton, who made the supreme sacrifice in the First World War”.


Short link to this page: https://wp.me/p28nLD-Qy

© Copyright