Architects - First Stage 1911
Black was present at the inaugural meeting of the South Australian Institute of Architects (SAIA) on 20 September 1886 (Jensen and Jensen 1980). According to listings in the architects journal Salon in 1914 and 1916, he was a Fellow of the SAIA, and served the Institute first as Honorary Treasurer, then as Honorary Secretary. He was Vice-President between 1914 and 1915 and a Council member in 1916. Black was a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) (‘Officers Members’ 1916). He was also a member of the Council of the South Australian Institute of Surveyors (Burgess 1907) and had a long association with the Adelaide Orpheus Society (Burgess 1907).
Black’s early projects included work surveying and laying out the privately financed Holdfast Bay railway line with Rowland Rees (Page 1986; Donovan and Painter 1990) and a second placed competition entry for a sewerage and drainage scheme for the Melbourne and Metropolitan Board of Works (Burgess 1907). Black & Hughes won several competitions including the Port Augusta Town Hall (1886) (Jensen and Jensen 1980) and the Mount Gambier Institute additions (1887). Adelaide’s Mutual Life Association (Page 1986), Grenfell Street, was designed by the contractor J. Jude of Blackman & Sulman, Sydney (Jensen and Jensen 1980), and erected under the supervision of Black & Hughes. Black & Fuller won the design for a new hall in Mount Gambier in 1904 (Burgess 1907).
Black was commissioned to design and erect ‘superior residences’ on one and a half acres in Grote Street, Adelaide, for Mr Ruthven Smith (Burgess 1907). Black & Fuller later worked for Ruthven Smith on the design and supervision of a block of ‘mansion flats’ which materialised as a five-storey ‘modern’ building, the Ruthven Mansions (1911-13) at 15-27 Pulteney Street, Adelaide (Register 1915). The second stage (1915) was built abutting the first.
Ruthven Smith commissioned Black to design the Empire Theatre (1910) on Grote Street, Adelaide. The Empire was the last live theatre to be designed and built in Adelaide prior to the rise of motion picture theatres. It survived for live performances until 1952 when the site was taken over for the Peoplestores building (Page 1986: 177).
Black’s projects spanned several decades and benefitted from the availability of new materials and technologies. Two stand out: Ruthven Mansions that introduced South Australians to a new ‘design for living’ in the form of apartment housing (Page 1986), and the modern crematorium at West Terrace.Christine Sullivan
Citation details: Sullivan, Christine, ‘Black, Alfred Barham’, Architecture Museum, University of South Australia, 2008, Architects of South Australia: Information sourced from the SA Architects database
Henry E. Fuller worked as an architect in South Australia from the late nineteenth to early twentieth centuries and is best known for two prominent Adelaide buildings; the Stock Exchange and Ruthven Mansions.
Henry Ernest Fuller was born in 1867. He was the seventh son of the prominent South Australian Henry Robert Fuller. Fuller senior was a lawyer and Mayor of Adelaide. As Mayor, ‘he was the first Australian Chief Magistrate to receive the [Duke of Edinburgh]’ when he visited Australia (Burgess 1907: 544). In 1893 H.E. Fuller married Margaret, the eldest daughter of Reverend J. Sunter – the Rector of St. Paul’s Anglican Church. They had two sons and one daughter. One of their sons, Charles, died in the Great War, and another, Basil, was wounded. In 1907 Fuller and his family were living in the residence known as ‘Lauriston’ in the suburb of Eastwood. Fuller died on 18 February 1962 aged 94 (SLSA Family History Database).
Fuller ‘gained his knowledge of architecture by dint of intelligent study in his native city [of Adelaide]’ (Burgess 1907: 544). His early education was undertaken at Hahndorf and Prince Alfred Colleges. He began his architectural training with J.G. Beavor to whom he was apprenticed as an articled student for four years. Over this time he developed his construction knowledge. After completing his Articles, he continued with the practice of Wright, Reed, & Beavor and worked as a draftsman. Fuller further refined his drafting skills when he began working for E.H. Bayer. After several years of practical training, he recognised the need to balance his experience with academic tuition.
He stopped practising for a year to study arts at the local School of Design. In 1891 he returned to practice and worked as chief draftsman for four years for the well-known Adelaide architect Alfred Wells.
In 1896, when Fuller was 29 years of age, he started his own practice (Page 1986: 118). Later in 1911 he went into partnership with Alfred Barham Black. However this partnership only lasted for two years until 1913.
One of Fuller’s most important professional affiliations was with the South Australian Institute of Architects (SAIA). In 1907 he was a Fellow and the Honorary Treasurer of the SAIA (Burgess 1907: 544) and from 1913 to 1915 he was the SAIA President (Freeland 1971: 101). In the following year he was Vice-President of the SAIA (The Salon 1916: 22). Fuller actively participated in professional debates. In 1916 in the Salon journal he argued the merits of registration for architects and in the same year discussed the high quality of local academic architectural education (Collins et al. 2005: 30-31). He also had an interest in town planning (Garnaut Forthcoming 2008). Given Fuller’s arts education, it is not surprising that he was also the Treasurer and Librarian of the South Australian Society of Arts.
Fuller’s public profile was not only defined by his work as an architect but also his ecclesiastical associations. He was active in religious circles and was the Secretary of the Church of England Sunday School Union. Indeed, he was also a member of the Synod and the Standing Committee. Fuller had a keen interest in music and held the position of Local Secretary for the Trinity College Musical Examinations, London (Burgess 1907: 545).
Fuller designed several significant buildings. He prepared competition drawings for the National Mutual Insurance Company building in Collins Street, Melbourne.
In 1899 Fuller and Hedley Dunn, a former partner of architect Edward Davies, were awarded second prize for the Young Women’s Christian Association (Y.W.C.A.) design competition. Dunn and Fuller went onto win both first and second prizes for the Stock Exchange design competition. This building was constructed in 1901 and is an excellent example of Federation Arts and Crafts architecture. Fuller continued to win design competitions. Black and Fuller won the competition for the Mount Gambier Institute additions and later they designed Stage One of the avant-garde Ruthven Mansions, a multi-storey apartment building which ‘embraced modernism’ (Collins et al. 2005: 33). The first stage of Ruthven Mansions was built in 1911-12 and the second stage in 1914. Ruthven Mansions provided luxury accommodation and included the latest technological advancements ranging from ‘a central vacuuming system … [to] mechanical ventilation and electric lifts’ (Collins et al. 2005: 33). Fuller was also responsible for other buildings including St. Oswald’s Church of England and rectory at Parkside, the Parkside Institute (c.1923), as well as several residential buildings. He worked not only in metropolitan Adelaide but also across the State including country areas such as Quorn, Barmera, Truro and Yacka. Fuller retired c.1949-50 (RAIA 1949: 109) (RAIA 1950: 121).
Susan Collins
Citation details
Collins, Susan, ‘Fuller, Henry Ernest’, Architecture Museum, University of South Australia, 2008, Architects of South Australia:
