En: William Charles Vahland

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William Charles Vahland

The National Trust Heritage Festival from April 18 to May 26, 2015 will commemorate a milestone centenary – the death of William Charles Vahland, one of Australia’s most important 19th Century architects

Vahland designed over 200 buildings across Greater Bendigo and the Goldfields region over nearly six decades. He left his mark most prominently in Bendigo by designing The Capital Theatre, the Bendigo Art Gallery, the Bendigo Town Hall and the Alexandra Fountain, which are all magnificent testaments to the vision of this man.

A German migrant, Vahland arrived in Melbourne by ship in 1854 and travelled straight to the Bendigo goldfield in search of riches. It was three years after gold was first discovered in the Bendigo Creek but he did not strike it lucky.

Instead Vahland, like many migrants, saw there were many other opportunities in his new country. There were miners aplenty but what the goldfields needed were builders and architects to develop permanent buildings and layout a town centre. Drawing on his architectural training, Vahland built his own home in Barkly Terrace (which still stands today) and opened the first of four architectural practices at 2 Pall Mall Chambers with German architect Robert Getzschmann.

But Vahland not only designed the gems of Bendigo’s civic buildings, the centre of Echuca, where he also had an office, is the result of Vahland’s genius for designing buildings that are grand and elegant but also serve a judicial and civic purpose. He was not a man to restrict his craft and skill to a specific form and designed hotels, churches, banks, theatres, libraries, colleges and schools, wine cellars, hospital buildings, fountains, residences and ornamental features such as gates.

Vahland, who later became an Australian citizen, also nurtured the idea of the ‘great Australian dream’. He built a number of homes called ‘Vahland Villas’ and assisted with developing a building society to loan money to help the miners move out of tents and work towards owning their own home. Today, that loan scheme is better known as the Bendigo Bank.


During May 2015 come and see for yourself the incredible legacy left by one man who shaped the Goldfields region. Click here to see all the events related to Vahland celebrations.

Biography

William Vahland is best known for his design of many of Bendigo′s prominent public and private buildings.1 But in many ways, Vahland′s story also reflects that of other successful German migrants who made Bendigo their home.2 Political turmoil and the prospect of riches on the goldfields saw Germans seek out a life on the Bendigo diggings. In 1857, 1,266 Germans (4 per cent of the population at that time) were recorded as being present on the Bendigo goldfields mainly in the areas of Diamond Hill, New Chum Gully, Victoria Hill and Ironbark, and the Whipstick.3 In 1859, 500 German stonemasons were brought to the area to break a strike instigated by the movement for an eight-hour day on the Melbourne to Sandhurst railway line.4 These German migrants made significant contributions to the district in engineering, geology, religion, mining, the arts, viticulture, architecture and building.5 At the age of 26 years, Carl Wilhelm Vahland arrived in Melbourne in September 1854 on board the sailing ship ′San Francisco′. Within a few days, he was on his way to the Bendigo diggings with companions from the ship, among them Jacob Cohn (later founder of Cohn′s Brewery in Bridge Street, Bendigo), who became a lifelong friend. Vahland may have also travelled out with another family member, perhaps a brother. A child was born to an Adolphe Vahland and his wife, Anna (nee Sager), in 1855 at Sandhurst,6 and in 1858, Adolphe was teaching German classes in the town; interested persons were asked to submit their details to the office of Vahland and Getzschmann.7 Vahland found no fortune in seeking gold in Bendigo. Instead he took up work as a carpenter, and opened a carpenter′s shop in Bridge Street ca.1855 where he made gold cradles and other diggers′ accessories. In October 1856, ′the inhabitants of Sandhurst and the surrounding district′ were informed that William Vahland, architect, had opened an office in McCrae Street, opposite the Black Swan Hotel, where ′plans, specifications, and the superintendence of works′ could be organised at moderate charges.8 In March 1858, Vahland entered into partnership with another German architect, Robert Getzschmann, and moved the practice into offices at 2 Pall Mall. In 1872, Vahland employed German architect, Wilhelm Eduard (William) Nicolai, as a draftsman and clerk of works.9 The partnership operated until Getzschmann′s death in 1875. Perhaps because of a connection with German miners there, in 1862 Vahland travelled to Dunedin, New Zealand, for some months at the peak of the Otago gold rush to take up a position as a senior partner in an architectural business, Vahland and Monson. He returned to Bendigo in 1863. In January 1892, the partnership of W. C. Vahland and Son was established after Henry, Vahland′s eldest son, having finished his training in architecture at Diepholz in Germany, joined the firm. In 1895 Vahland and Son moved to a two-storey building, designed by the firm, constructed at 254 Hargreaves Street.10 William Vahland retired from the architectural practice at the end of 1900 and, in 1901, Henry formed a partnership with architect John Beebe (the brother of William Beebe, also an architect in Bendigo), at which time Vahland and Beebe added another storey to the offices in Hargreaves Street.11 After Henry died in 1902 aged 42 years, William Vahland returned from retirement and re-joined the firm until 1912, when John Beebe became the sole operator.12 Vahland′s firm was not the only architectural practice operating in the goldfields town of Bendigo,13 but the firm′s output was prolific, particularly during the period 1870-80 when it employed a staff of seven. Vahland tended towards the French Renaissance in his lushly decorated bank facades in Bendigo and used the mansard roof in his public buildings, such as the Bendigo Town Hall. In this, as in his Hellenistic Greek work, architectural historian Miles Lewis suggests, Vahland was influenced in some degree by current fashions in Germany.14 Vahland and his firm designed and directed the building of many of Bendigo′s finest buildings, including the Town Hall, the Shamrock Hotel, the Bendigo Hospital, the Bendigo Benevolent Asylum, the School of Mines, the Mechanics Institute, the Princess Theatre, the Bendigo Masonic Temple, the Cascades in Rosalind Park, the Alexandra Fountain, the Sandhurst Club, the Commercial, National and Colonial Banks, the grandstand at Canterbury Park, Eaglehawk, as well as churches, commercial buildings, and private homes. The firm also opened an office in Echuca, and erected buildings in Hay, Deniliquin, Lorne, Lancefield, Rochester, Rushworth, Swan Hill, Yarrawonga and Benalla.15 In addition, Vahland was also the architect for branches of the Union Bank constructed in northern Victoria.


Carl Wilhelm Vahland was born to parents Johann Ernst Otto, a master builder, joiner and cabinet-maker, and Augusta Sophia Caroline (nee Scheele) Vahland on 2 October 1828 in the town of Nienburg an der Weser in the Electorate of Hannover, later part of Germany.

The youngest of six sons and several daughters, he was baptised in the Lutheran Church in Nienburg. Vahland finished his general schooling in Nienburg in 1844, then worked with his father for several years. In 1850, he entered the Polytechnic Baugewerkschule (School of Building) at Holzminden in the Duchy of Braunschweig-Luneberg, later part of Germany, a most prestigious tertiary college that provided training in building and architecture. After an initial examination, Vahland was accelerated to ′second class′, thereby completing only two years of the usual required three-year course of study.

The founding director of the college, Friedrich Ludwig Haarmann, established it after a commission of examiners identified that many traditional building skills had been lost and trades could not keep up with technology. Haarmann tended to classicism in architecture. His curriculum placed importance on solid geometry, building construction, working drawings, estimates and design. Haarmann also emphasised the need for harmony between domestic and rustic buildings, and between commercial and public buildings.

In his final ′testimonial′ or report card from the Baugewerkschule, Vahland received a ′good′ or ′very good′ for subjects that included spelling, mathematics, physics, descriptive geometry, sketching, designing, structures of buildings, order of columns, building law and regulations, surveying, and bookkeeping. After completing his studies in March 1852, Vahland travelled for a period, then practised architecture in Hamburg and Bremen. In 1852 he was appointed engineer for the building of a section of railway line between Hannover and Kassel and set up an architectural practice in Diepholz, near Hannover. Because of his concern about political turmoil in Hannover characterised by a number of temporary alliances with both Prussia and Austria, and a wish to avoid military service, in 1854 Vahland sailed for the Australian goldfields and arrived in Bendigo in the same year.

Carl Wilhelm Vahland took out Australian citizenship on 20 July 1857, which may have prompted him to anglicise his name to William Vahland. In the same year Vahland designed and built his own residence at 58 Barkly Terrace, Bendigo. He soon took out shares in a number of local gold mines and, with other investors, leased 100 yards of the British and Foreign Reef at Tin Pot Gully in 1857.

On 21 July 1859, William Vahland married Jane Barrow at ′Charterhouse′ in Runnymede (now Elmore) and changed his religion from Lutheran to Church of England. Jane was the eldest daughter of Henry and Elizabeth Barrow, who had emigrated from Norfolk in 1843 when Jane was two years old. Jane and William Vahland made their home in Barkly Terrace and had ten children in the ensuing years: Henry Ernest born in 1860; Eleanor Mary born in 1864; Charlotte Elizabeth born in 1866; William Christian born in 1869; Frederick Bismark born in 1871; Alice Audrey born in 1873; Laura Gertrude born in 1876; Doris Gertrude born in 1880; Ernst Otto born in 1883; and Margery born in 1885 (see Figure 1). Sadly, three of the Vahland children died: William in 1869 aged six months; Laura in 1878 aged 23 months; and Charlotte in 1883 aged 16 years.

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