Showing 4 items matching "syme – kew (vic.)"
-
Kew Historical Society Inc
Archive (Series) - SYME Family
... Syme – Kew (Vic.)...Syme – Kew (Vic.) David Syme – Kew (Vic.) Geoffrey Syme ...Various PartiesReference, Research, InformationArranged by Secondary Values (value of records to users)David Syme migrated to Australia in 1852. His family were owners and publishers of The Melbourne Age. Properties in Kew associated with the family included Conisboro, Banool and Blythswood. In a biography given to the Kew Historical Society by the daughter of Geoffrey Syme, Dr Veronica Cordon, it is noted that these properties often were passed around between the family, and were all in close proximity to the Yarra River along Findon Crescent and Studley Park Road. Of all the property that the Syme family would come to own, only the Italianate mansion ‘Swinton’, located at 23 Swinton Avenue, remains. The file includes: Newspaper articles regarding the Syme family and properties, multiple pages of information donated by Veronica Cordon, a history of Woori Yallock which mentions David Syme, and a passenger manifest listing two members of the Symes family and arrival details. See also the separate subject file on Blythswood.syme – kew (vic.), david syme – kew (vic.), geoffrey syme – kew (vic.), conisboro – kew (vic.), banool – kew (vic.), blythswood – kew (vic.), the age – kew (vic.)syme – kew (vic.), david syme – kew (vic.), geoffrey syme – kew (vic.), conisboro – kew (vic.), banool – kew (vic.), blythswood – kew (vic.), the age – kew (vic.) -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Archive (Series) - Rockingham, Barkers Road
... John Herbert Syme – Kew (Vic.)... Rockingham – Kew (Vic.) John Herbert Syme – Kew (Vic.) Archive ...Various PartiesReference, Research, InformationArranged by Secondary Values (value of records to users)‘Rockingham’ was a house built along Barkers Road around the mid-1850s (exact year unknown). Now demolished, the property passed through many influential hands of Melbourne, including John Herbert Syme, once manager of the ‘Age’. The file includes: Newspaper articles on the demolition of ‘Rockingham’, and a letter directed towards the Kew Historical Society with a photograph of the property which is kept separate to the file.rockingham – kew (vic.), john herbert syme – kew (vic.)rockingham – kew (vic.), john herbert syme – kew (vic.) -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Archive (Sub-series) - Subject File, Depression, 1890s, 1993
Various partiesReference, Research, InformationSecondary Values (KHS Imposed Order)Subject file containing bound copies of research by Andrew Frost onto the impact of the 1890s Depression in Kew. The articles were later published in the KHS Newsletter. There is also a copy in the file of the Victorian Historical Journal (Vol 64 No.2, 1993), which includes references to Henry “Money” Miller and David Syme and the Bank Crash of 1893. economy and society - history - kew (vic), depression of the 1890s - kew (vic)economy and society - history - kew (vic), depression of the 1890s - kew (vic) -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Painting - Panoramic View of Kew and Abbotsford from the garden of Rockingham, V Maloney, 1952
The extensive formal landscaped gardens of Rockingham had been created in the 1860s, and by the 1950s remained bordered to the south by the Barkers Road cutting, and to the north by Blytheswood, the neighbouring Syme family property, By 1940, the Syme family were no longer the occupiers of Rockingham. John Herbert Syme had died in October 1939, and by August the following year, his wife had made the house and garden available, rent free to the Red Cross as a convalescent home for Australian soldiers injured in the Second World War. At the time, the house was described as containing twenty rooms, including a ballroom and a billiards room, with a garden of eight acres overlooking the Yarra. The task of renovating the house to conform to its new function as a convalescent home took a year, finally opening in August 1941. Community support for Rockingham was widespread and included the decision by the National Gallery of Victoria to loan pictures from its collection to decorate the walls. Calls were made for women around Victoria to donate fruit and vegetables from their gardens, which the railways agreed to freight for free. Other local support included the work by a team of boys to establish a three-acre vegetable garden within the formal terraced gardens. From the beginning, occupational therapy formed a key component of the rehabilitation of psychologically injured soldiers. This is confirmed by contemporary newspaper accounts of weaving, ironwork, leatherwork, basketry and gardening by patients. Numerous photographs, held by the Australian War Memorial (AWM) and the State Library of Victoria (SLV), record the importance of these rehabilitation activities. The painting of the view across the river to Abbotsford may have been painted in one of these occupational therapy sessions. For many decades it hung in the occupational therapy room. It must have been on view following the sale of Rockingham by the Syme family to the Red Cross in 1955, and subsequently, until the house was demolished and its grounds finally subdivided in 1977.View of Abbotsford from the garden of Rockingham (1952) was created by V Maloney. The vantage point of the artist was the garden of Rockingham, one of two mansions overlooking the Yarra owned by the Syme family. The artwork depicts a number of sites - especially factories - that have since been demolished.Signed by the artist, lower right "V Maloney"rockingham red cross convalescent home, hospitals - kew (vic), rosemary lade, art therapy