Ingleholme House, Turramurra NSW
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Ingleholme was the home built for John Sulman and family in Boomerang Street Turramurra in 1896. The family lived there until 1910.
Ingleholme from the North |
While living in Warrawee he built Ingleholme, in 17-23 Boomerang St, Turramurra, originally as a cottage for his parents.
Ingleholme and Grounds, 17-23 Boomerang St, Turramurra |
Photograph of the playroom, Ingleholme |
Sulman later redesigned the cottage into a sprawling home to accommodate his own family of seven children. The family lived in the house until 1910.
Fireplace in the New Room, Ingleholme, Turramurra, 1902 |
Sulman was continually changing and extending Ingleholme.
The building work was said to have 'caused a good deal of comment' from the neighbours who would 'drive round in their buggies on Sunday afternoons to see rooms "up in the air" as they phrased it…'
(The Story of Ingleholmeby John Sulman, 1927, manuscript MLMSS 4480/84).
The cottage had a formal garden which featured a substantial glasshouse and large eucalyptus trees. An array of topiaried evergreens, trimmed into shapes such as balls and spears, became something of a talking point in the neighbourhood. As did the children’s pet cow which grazed in the paddock beyond the formal garden.
In 1959 the property known as "Ingleholme", Turramurra, was purchased by the Council of Pymble Ladies' College to establish a second Preparatory and Junior School. In 1960 Ingleholme opened with 69 girls. Miss Janet Pettit was appointed Mistress-in-Charge.
Sulman, John
The Architect who began town planning in Australia as a formal discipline and did much to influence the plan of Sydney.Positions
Architect | St Andrew's College | 1892 | -1893 |
Architect | Yaralla house | 1893 | -1899 |
Architect | Ingleholme | 1895 | |
Architect | Daceyville | 1912 | |
President | Town Planning Association of New South Wales | 1913 | -1925 |
The Australian style, according to Sulman, could not be based on Gothic, - ‘a stone style,developed under the misty skies of Northern Europe’ as it did not meet the ‘multifarious needs ofmodern life’ nor in Queen Anne, ‘a red brick style, full of quaint conceits and pretty details’ lacking ‘dignity and strength’. What is needed, according to Sulman, is a ‘judicious combination and modification of forms' - http://www.dab.uts.edu.au/research/outcomes/zenadia-edwards.pdf |
Ingleholme and Grounds |
References
- State Library of NSW -http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/discover_collections/people_places/north/architects/sulman.html
College History Pymble Ladies' College - http://www.pymblelc.nsw.edu.au/About/College-History.aspx
- Sir John Sulman - http://www.dab.uts.edu.au/research/outcomes/zenadia-edwards.pdf
Sulman, Sir John (1849–1934) by Richard E. Apperly and Peter Reynolds - http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/sulman-sir-john-8714
John Sulman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Sulman
- Australian heritage photographic library - http://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/heritage/photodb/imagesearch.pl?proc=detail;barcode_no=rt49849
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