Melbourne Town Hall,often referred to as simplyTown Hall,is theadministrative seatof thelocal municipalityof theCity of Melbourneand the primary offices of theLord Mayorand city councillors of Melbourne. Located on the northeast corner ofSwanstonandCollinsstreet in thecentral business district of Melbourne,Victoria, Australia,the building was completed in 1887 and heritage listed on theVictorian Heritage Registerin 1974. The building is frequently used for art and cultural events such asconcerts,festivals,theatrical playsandexhibitions.[2][3][4]
Melbourne Town Hall | |
---|---|
General information | |
Status | Completed |
Type | Town hall |
Architectural style | Second Empire |
Location | 90-130Swanston Street,Melbourne,Victoria |
Country | Australia |
Coordinates | 37°48′55″S144°58′00″E/ 37.815145°S 144.966777°E |
Construction started | 1867 |
Completed | 1887 |
Owner | Council of the City of Melbourne |
Official name | Melbourne Town Hall and Administration Building |
Type | State Registered Place |
Designated | 9 October 1974 |
Reference no. | H0001[1] |
Heritage Overlay number | HO746[1] |
History
editMelbourne was officially incorporated as atownon 13 December 1842, withHenry Condellas its firstMayor.However, it was not until 1854 that its first Town Hall was completed. Begun in 1851, the work ground to a halt with the beginning of theVictorian gold rush.Thefoundation stoneof a new, grander Town Hall was laid on 29 November 1867 by the visitingPrince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh,after the demolition of the first.[5][6]The current town hall officially opened on 11 August 1870 with a lavishball,which was personally funded by the Lord MayorSamuel Amess.[7][8][9]
The foundation stone of the additional frontporticowas laid in 1887, andSir Henry Weedonlaid the foundation of the administrative annex building on 27 August 1908.[10]
An earlycinemaeventSoldiers of the Crosspremieredat the Melbourne Town Hall on 13 September 1900 to an audience of about four thousand people.[11]
In 1913, the city hired a hall keeper in his 30s named James "Jimmy" Dewar, a Scottish immigrant andBlack Watchveteran fromDundee.He continued to work there loyally for 30 years.[12]James lived with his wife and family in the Hall's penthouse, raising their children there, and retired in 1943. During their upbringing in the Town Hall, their only playing space was a small asphalt yard where the children went "pigeon-nesting" on the roof.[13]
In his obituary in 1946,The Argusreported that James was a familiar face at the Hall in this era. In his duties, he greeted various visitors from locals to royals, including theFrench General Paul Pau,thePrinces of Wales Edward VIII,andPrince Henry, the Duke of Gloucester.James was described as a "friend, guide, and philosopher" to many Lord Mayors of Melbourne.[14]When opera singerDame Nellie Melbaperformed at the Hall in 1928, she wanted to give an encore, but her piano had been packed up and there was no music. James lent her his piano from his upstairs penthouse so she could perform.[15]
On 1 February 1925, a fire destroyed a large part of the town hall, including the main auditorium andpipe organvalued then at £15,000.[16]It was rebuilt and enlarged, extending east over the site previously occupied by the Victoria Coffee Palace, an earlytemperance hotelfrequented by Melbourne's power brokers. The rebuilt section lost some of Reed's original flourishes including the elaboratemansardroof.
In 1964,The Beatlesattended a civic reception at the Melbourne Town Hall. "Outside 20,000 teenagers had gathered to obtain a glimpse of the pop idols. Again, frenzied and hysterical cheering and uncontrollable screaming erupted when the Beatles emerged."[17]
Architecture
editThe Town Hall was designed by the famous local architectJoseph Reedand Barnes, in theSecond Empirestyle. Reed's designs also included theState Library of Victoria,theRoyal Exhibition Building,andMelbourne Trades Hall.
The building is topped by Prince Alfred's Tower, named after the Duke. The tower includes a 2.44 m diameter clock, which was started on 31 August 1874, after being presented to the council by the Mayor's son, Vallange Condell. It was built by Smith and Sons of London. The longest of itscopperhands measures 1.19 m long, and weighs 8.85 kg.
The building and the portico, excluding the interiors, were first classified on the basis of its Venetian Renaissance facade architecture by the National Trust in 1964 and reclassified in 1971.[18]The organ and the 1927 murals byNapier Waller[19]commissioned for £1,700[20](a 2021 value of A$138,340.00)[21]are also classified as historically significant at the State level. They were painted directly in line onto the newly installedasbestosCelotexacoustic tiles in a redecoration of the Auditorium after a fire in 1925.[16]Waller, who had been given a free hand in devising the artworks explained that the figures were not intended to be allegorical, but to create rhythm, and that line-work was used because a skin of paint would interfere with the panels' sound-absorbing quality. The actual painting on the series of 7 metre high by 4m wide wall sections from Waller's half-scalecartoonsproduced in hisDarebinstudio was undertaken by H. Oliver and Sons under the artist's supervision.[22]
Organ
editThe Main Auditorium includes a magnificentconcert organ,now comprising 147 ranks and 9,568 pipes. The organ can be played by a fixed console located directly beneath the front pipes or by a secondary mobile console which is placed in close view of the audience for recitals. This organ is of great significance as it is the largest and most comprehensive pipe organ in Australia (measuring by number of voices/stops, the Sydney Opera House organ has more pipes thanks to its entirely "straight" design; there is no borrowing or duplexing at all whereas the Melbourne Town Hall organ makes extensive use of borrowing in the pedal division). The organ is best suited for romantic and symphonic works but is capable of playing just about anything thanks to its vast tonal resources.
History of the organ
editThe organ was originally built by Hill & son (of England) in 1872 before a fire destroyed it in 1925.[16]A new organ constructed by Hill Norman & Beard was installed in 1929 and has since then been rebuilt and enlarged bySchantz Organ Companyof the United States of America from 1995 to 2001 at a cost of $4.5 million.[23]The rebuild included 2 new floating divisions (Fanfare & Bombarde), many new voices and a secondary moveable console
Specification
editThe stop list is as follows:
I. Choir | II. Great | III. Swell | Pedal | IV. Solo | Bombarde | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Contra Salicional | 16 | Double Open Diapason | 16 | Contra Violone | 32 | Gravissima | 64 | Quintaton | 16 | Grand Diapason | 8 |
Horn Diapason | 8 | Tibia Profunda | 16 | Bourdon | 16 | Double Open Diapason | 32 | Harmonic Claribel | 8 | Principal | 4 |
Corno Flute | 8 | Contra Geigen | 16 | Violine | 16 | Tibia Profunda | 32 | Flute Celeste | 8 | Grave Mixture | V-VI |
Flute Celeste | II | Open Diapason I | 8 | Diapason Phonon | 8 | Contra Bourdon Acoustic | 32 | Violoncello | 8 | Fourniture | IV-V |
Lieblich Gedeckt | 8 | Open Diapason II | 8 | Geigen Principal | 8 | Contra Violone | 32 | Cello Celeste | 8 | Grand Chorus | VI-VIII |
Salicional | 8 | Diapason Phonon | 8 | Flauto Traverso | 8 | Open Diapason | 16 | Salicional | 8 | Contra Posaune | 16 |
Voix Céleste | 8 | Tibia Plena | 8 | Cor de Nuit | 8 | Tibia Profunda | 16 | Concert Flute Harmonic | 4 | Posaune | 8 |
Lieblich Flöte | 4 | Harmonic Flute | 8 | Bourdon | 8 | Great Bass | 16 | Nazard Harmonique | 2 2/3 | Clarion | 4 |
Gemshorn | 4 | Hohl Flöte | 8 | Gamba | 8 | Bourdon | 16 | Harmonic Piccolo | 2 | ||
Echo Viola | 4 | Rohr Flöte | 8 | Gamba Celeste | 8 | Lieblich Bourdon | 16 | Tierce | 1 3/5 | ||
Harmonic Piccolo | 2 | Gamba Major | 8 | Aeoline | 8 | Contra Bass | 16 | Schalmei | 16 | ||
Dulciana Cornet | III | Octave Diapason | 4 | Vox Angelica | 8 | Violone | 16 | Tuba | 8 | ||
Tuba Sonora | 8 | Octave Phonon | 4 | Principal | 4 | Geigen | 16 | French Horn | 8 | ||
Cor Anglais | 8 | Principal | 4 | Harmonic Flute | 4 | Contra Salicional | 16 | Corno di Bassetto | 8 | ||
Closed Horn | 8 | Tibia Octave | 4 | Rohr Flute | 4 | String Bass | 16 | Clarinet | 8 | ||
Cremona | 8 | Wald Flöte | 4 | Octave Gamba | 4 | Quint | 10 2/3 | Orchestral Oboe | 8 | ||
Octave Quint | 2 2/3 | Harmonic Quint | 2 2/3 | Prestant | 8 | Fanfare | Orchestral | ||||
Stopped Quint | 2 2/3 | Piccolo | 2 | Principal | 8 | Tuba | 16 | Contra Viola | 16 | ||
Super Octave | 2 | Salicetina | 2 | Geigen Principal | 8 | Sub Trumpet | 16 | Tibia Clausa | 8 | ||
Fifteenth | 2 | Tierce | 1 3/5 | Flute Major | 8 | Tuba Sonora | 8 | Viol d'Orchestre | II | ||
Tierce | 1 3/5 | Chorus Mixture | V | Bass Flute | 8 | Tuba | 8 | Orchestral Strings | II | ||
Grand Fourniture | VI-VII | Grave Mixture | III | Stopped Flute | 8 | Trumpet Victoria | 8 | String Celeste | II | ||
Chorus Mixture | V | Sharp Mixture | III | Lieblich Bourdon | 8 | Octave Sonora | 4 | Octave Viola | 4 | ||
Mixture | IV | Double Trumpet | 16 | Violoncello | 8 | Tuba | 4 | Orchestral Strings | |||
Contra Trombone | 32 | Bassoon | 16 | Super Octave | 4 | ||||||
Trombone | 16 | Cornopean | 8 | Fifteenth | 4 | ||||||
Fagotto | 16 | Trumpet Victoria | 8 | Open Flute | 4 | ||||||
Trumpet Victoria | 8 | Orchestral Trumpet | 8 | Grand Fourniture | VI | ||||||
Tromba | 8 | Horn | 8 | Fourniture | IV | ||||||
Harmonic Trumpet | 8 | Oboe | 8 | Diaphone | 32 | ||||||
Clarion | 4 | Vox Humana | 8 | Double Ophicleide | 32 | ||||||
Clairon | 4 | Contra Fagotto | 32 | ||||||||
Tuba | 16 | ||||||||||
Octave Diaphone | 16 | ||||||||||
Ophicleide | 16 | ||||||||||
Posaune | 16 | ||||||||||
Trombone | 16 | ||||||||||
Bassoon | 16 | ||||||||||
Schalmei | 16 | ||||||||||
Tuba | 8 | ||||||||||
Trumpet Victoria | 8 | ||||||||||
Trumpet | 8 | ||||||||||
Bassoon | 8 | ||||||||||
Clarion | 4 |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ab"Melbourne Town Hall and Administration Building".Victorian Heritage Database.Government of Victoria.Retrieved22 August2023.
- ^"Melbourne Town Hall | Melbourne, Victoria | Attractions".Lonely Planet.Retrieved23 October2023.
- ^"Melbourne Town Hall".Melbourne Writers Festival.Retrieved23 October2023.
- ^"Melbourne Town Hall | Venue Hire | Functions | VenueNow".venuenow.com.Retrieved23 October2023.
- ^"VISIT OF THE DUKE OF EDINURGH".Hamilton Spectator & Grange District Advertiser.No. 605. Victoria, Australia. 30 November 1867. p. 2.Retrieved16 February2017– via National Library of Australia.
- ^"THE MELBOURNE TOWN-HALL: PAST AND PRESENT".The Australasian.Vol. LXXXIX, no. 2, 315. Victoria, Australia. 13 August 1910. p. 36.Retrieved16 February2017– via National Library of Australia.,PHOTOGRAPH: THE TOWN-HALL, BUILT 1850–53, PULLED DOWN 1868.
- ^"THE GRAND FANCY DRESS BALL GIVEN BY THE RIGHT WORSHIPFUL SAMUEL AMESS MAYOR OF MELBOURNE, ON THE OPENING OF THE NEW TOWN HALL, 11th AUGUST, 1870".Illustrated Australian News for Home Readers.No. 162. Victoria, Australia. 10 September 1870. p. 161.Retrieved16 February2017– via National Library of Australia.
- ^"DEATH OF ALDERMAN AMESS".The Argus (Melbourne).No. 16, 224. Victoria, Australia. 4 July 1898. p. 6.Retrieved16 February2017– via National Library of Australia.
- ^"NEW COUNCIL CHAMBER".The Australasian.Vol. LXXXIX, no. 2, 315. Victoria, Australia. 13 August 1910. p. 36.Retrieved16 February2017– via National Library of Australia.
- ^"Happy birthday to our Town Hall admin building #melbourne",City of Melbourne on Instagram
- ^Bertrand, Ina (1988).Perry, Joseph Henry (1863–1943).Vol. 11.Australian Dictionary of Biography,National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
- ^"OBITUARY".Argus.25 February 1946.Retrieved19 January2024.
- ^"WOMEN'S NEWS".Herald.20 January 1943.Retrieved19 January2024.
- ^"Brilliant Civic Ceremony".Herald.6 June 1935.Retrieved20 January2024.
- ^"Sun News-Pictorial (Melbourne, Vic.: 1922 - 1954; 1956), Monday 30 April 1928, page 35".trove.nla.gov.au.Retrieved20 January2024.
- ^abc"Melbourne Town Hall On Fire: Concert Hall Demolished: City Organ Destroyed: Victoria Coffee Palace In Danger: An Early Morning Outbreak".The Age.2 February 1925. p. 9.Retrieved7 April2023.
- ^The Beatles in Melbourne,OnlyMelbourne
- ^"Melbourne Town Hall - Organ & Napier Waller Murals".Heritage Victoria National Database.Retrieved7 April2023.
- ^Moore, William (1 October 1932)."Art and Artists".Brisbane Courier.p. 18.Retrieved7 April2023.
- ^Moore, William (1 September 1927)."At Home and Abroad".Art in Australia.Third series (21): 10.
- ^Hutchinson, Diane; Ploeckl, Florian (2023)."Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of Australian Amounts, 1828 to the Present".Measuring Worth.Retrieved7 April2023.
- ^"Mural Beauty: Artist Explains Work on Town Hall Panels".The Herald.11 August 1927. p. 14.Retrieved7 April2023.
- ^"Town Hall Grand Organ".City Collection.8 October 2019.Retrieved28 October2019.