Peter John Wilson | |
---|---|
Born | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | 4 May 1869
Died | 21 February 1918
Drummoyne, New South Wales, Australia | (aged 48)
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation(s) | Architect, farmer |
Spouse | Sarah Owston |
Children | 4 |
Parents |
|
Peter John Wilson (1869–1918) was an Australian architect, known for a number of buildings in Western Australia (most notably the Melbourne Hotel). [1]
Peter John Wilson was born on 4 May 1869 in Melbourne, [1] the second son of Peter John Wilson (1840-1911), a lawyer, and Elizabeth Jane (née McGuire). [1] [2] He had four siblings. [1] They grew up at Boa Vista, a family residence in Kensington, a suburb of Melbourne. [1] His mother died in June 1878, when he was nine years old. [1] After his father remarried, to a woman named Mary, he had two additional half-siblings. [1] They lived at Royal Park Villa in Melbourne. [1] The family was hurt by the economic recession of the 1890s. [1]
He served as an apprentice for other architects, including William Pitt (1855–1918), when he was designing the Princess Theatre in Melbourne. [1] He then became an Associate of the Royal Victorian Institute of Architects in June 1892. [1] To escape the eastern economic recession, he moved to Western Australia, settling down in Fremantle. [1] [3] In 1892, he advised the architectural team on the addition of the proscenium to the Fremantle Town Hall. [1] [4] [5]
He designed a shop on Packenham Street in Fremantle for Cruickshank & Co. in 1894 and a cottage and shop in Rockingham for Mr J. Bell in 1895. [1] That same year, in 1895, he also designed two-storey shops on High Street, Fremantle opposite the Town Hall [6] as well as private residences in Beaconsfield, Fremantle and Cottesloe. [1] Additionally, he designed the brewery and cellars for the Fremantle Brewing Company and cottages on Gordon Street in Perth. [1]
In 1896, he was commissioned by investor John De Baun (1852-1912) to design the Melbourne Hotel on the corner of Hay Street and Melbourne Street (now known as Milligan Street), in Perth. [1] [7] [8] He also designed the former grandstand of the West Australian Cricket Association. [1] [9] A year later, in 1897, he designed a shop and offices on the corner of corner Market and Bannister streets in Fremantle for Holmes Bros & Co. [1]
In the early 1900s, he became a farmer in Cannington, Western Australia and was appointed a member of the Canning Drainage Board, [10] as well as joining the Canning Agricultural and Horticultural Society. [1]
Wilson died in Drummoyne, an inner western suburb of Sydney on 21 February 1918. [11] [12]
He married Sarah Owston, the daughter of Benjamin Mason and widow of William Owston, in 1893 in Fremantle. [1] [13] They had four children: Peter John (Jack) in 1894, Esther Enid in 1895, Doris Day in 1897, and Frederick Gladstone in 1899. [1] Both his sons died in action during World War I. [14] He later moved to New South Wales, where he died in February 1918.
Peter John Wilson | |
---|---|
Born | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | 4 May 1869
Died | 21 February 1918
Drummoyne, New South Wales, Australia | (aged 48)
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation(s) | Architect, farmer |
Spouse | Sarah Owston |
Children | 4 |
Parents |
|
Peter John Wilson (1869–1918) was an Australian architect, known for a number of buildings in Western Australia (most notably the Melbourne Hotel). [1]
Peter John Wilson was born on 4 May 1869 in Melbourne, [1] the second son of Peter John Wilson (1840-1911), a lawyer, and Elizabeth Jane (née McGuire). [1] [2] He had four siblings. [1] They grew up at Boa Vista, a family residence in Kensington, a suburb of Melbourne. [1] His mother died in June 1878, when he was nine years old. [1] After his father remarried, to a woman named Mary, he had two additional half-siblings. [1] They lived at Royal Park Villa in Melbourne. [1] The family was hurt by the economic recession of the 1890s. [1]
He served as an apprentice for other architects, including William Pitt (1855–1918), when he was designing the Princess Theatre in Melbourne. [1] He then became an Associate of the Royal Victorian Institute of Architects in June 1892. [1] To escape the eastern economic recession, he moved to Western Australia, settling down in Fremantle. [1] [3] In 1892, he advised the architectural team on the addition of the proscenium to the Fremantle Town Hall. [1] [4] [5]
He designed a shop on Packenham Street in Fremantle for Cruickshank & Co. in 1894 and a cottage and shop in Rockingham for Mr J. Bell in 1895. [1] That same year, in 1895, he also designed two-storey shops on High Street, Fremantle opposite the Town Hall [6] as well as private residences in Beaconsfield, Fremantle and Cottesloe. [1] Additionally, he designed the brewery and cellars for the Fremantle Brewing Company and cottages on Gordon Street in Perth. [1]
In 1896, he was commissioned by investor John De Baun (1852-1912) to design the Melbourne Hotel on the corner of Hay Street and Melbourne Street (now known as Milligan Street), in Perth. [1] [7] [8] He also designed the former grandstand of the West Australian Cricket Association. [1] [9] A year later, in 1897, he designed a shop and offices on the corner of corner Market and Bannister streets in Fremantle for Holmes Bros & Co. [1]
In the early 1900s, he became a farmer in Cannington, Western Australia and was appointed a member of the Canning Drainage Board, [10] as well as joining the Canning Agricultural and Horticultural Society. [1]
Wilson died in Drummoyne, an inner western suburb of Sydney on 21 February 1918. [11] [12]
He married Sarah Owston, the daughter of Benjamin Mason and widow of William Owston, in 1893 in Fremantle. [1] [13] They had four children: Peter John (Jack) in 1894, Esther Enid in 1895, Doris Day in 1897, and Frederick Gladstone in 1899. [1] Both his sons died in action during World War I. [14] He later moved to New South Wales, where he died in February 1918.