Beverley Ussher (1868-1908) was an Australian architect who practiced mainly in Melbourne, Victoria from the 1880s until his death in 1908. He is known for the development of the local residential style, the Federation Queen Anne (also known as Queen Anne, Federation or Edwardian), characterised by complex tall red tiled roofs, projecting half-timbered gables and dormers, and wide timber verandahs, that became standard for houses across Melbourne in the period 1900-1915. He began developing the style from about 1892 in a series of houses, but is best known as part of the partnership of Ussher & Kemp from 1899 to 1908, which produced some of the most outstanding and creative designs in the new Queen Anne mode.
Beverley Ussher (1868 - 9 June 1908) was born in Melbourne and is thought to have articled in the mid 1880s with architect Alfred Dunn, newly arrived from his own articles with Alexander Lauder in Devon in the UK. After Ussher completed his articles he visited England and the Continent in 1887-8.
By then the dominant residential style in Britain was the Queen Anne Revival, which was beginning to have an impact on Australian architecture. The style was pioneered by architects Richard Norman Shaw and William Eden Nesfield in the late 1860s, creating a new picturesque architecture drawing elements from vernacular and late medieval houses, like half timbering and hanging tiles walling, red brick walls, projecting gables and tall chimneys. In Victoria, local architects including Oakden, Addison and Kemp, Nahum Barnet, Reed Smart & Tappin, and Hyndeman & Bates introduced the new approach and style to Melbourne from the late 1880s in both residential and commerical work. Alfred Dunn himself also produced Queen Anne house designs from 1890. Two of the partners of Oakden, Addison & Kemp - Henry Hardie Kemp and G. H. M. Addison - were British trained architects who had experienced the Queen Anne Revival first hand. The Queen Anne influence had already resulted in houses in this new idiom in Sydney as early as 1885, such as the grand Penshurst (demolished) by Walter Liberty Vernon. The style there is now known as Federation, and was very similar to the Queen Anne as practiced in Victoria, but somewhat different in materials and details.
While in London, Ussher possibly met English architect Walter Butler (1864 âÂÂ1949), who knew Alfred Dunn because he had also articled with Lauder. Butler was then working in London, moving within Arts and Crafts circles, and knew the designers W R Lethaby and Ernest Gimson. In 1888, perhaps with Ussher's encouragement, Butler emigrated to Melbourne, along with many of his siblings.
Both Ussher and Butler worked briefly together in Dunn's office, and then left to form a partnership in 1889, working together until about 1893, though not much of their output is known. An outstanding design of this period was Blackwood Homestead, built 1892-94, a sprawling single storey house with low bluestone walls, with projecting prominent half-timbered gabled bays, the latter a distinctive feature of the later Queen Anne villas. The Heritage Victoria citation notes that the "composition of the main building gives a distinctly Australian character to an architectural idiom derived principally from contemporary English works." In 1892 a sketch titled Cottage by the Sea by Ussher & Butler was published, signed by Butler. This was a large, rambling house with many features that would go on to define the Queen Anne villa, such as half-timbered gables, turrets and gazebos pushing through the extensive tiled roofs, tall chimneys and a wrap-around timber verandah.
By 1893, the country was in the grip of a depression that curtailed work for many architects in the mid 1890s, and the partners split up. Butler worked on his own briefly, then with George Inskip right up until 1907, then with Ernest Bradshaw, and was responsible for many notable houses in variations on the Queen Anne and especially the Arts & Crafts styles.
Ussher practised on his own for about six years, continuing to develop the new domestic Queen Anne style, with a series of houses, many now demolished. One of the earliest surviving is 21 Trafalgar Road, Camberwell (1893), which has Queen Anne features such as red brick, half timbering and a turned timber verandah, but quite steep proportions and gables at different pitches, while 23 Barry Street, Kew (1896) is closer to the mature Queen Anne in red brick, with a red tiled roof with a profusion of gables and an attic floor, turned timber verandah, and a distinctive 'witches hat' corner turret. The W. J. Clarke House in Clendon Road, Toorak (1897, demolished) was a large house, featuring a long hip roof with many projecting gabled roofs over two verandahs, which had brick piers instead of timber posts.
An orphanage called The Cottage by the Sea in sea-side Queenscliff was opened in 1895 (it was demolished in the 1930s); it is not known if there is any connection with the 1892 design by Ussher & Butler, but what was built was much smaller and more restrained, and with features closer to those that would later define the mature Queen Anne villa.
In 1894 Ussher designed a store for Brown Corke & Co at 267 Chapel Street Prahran, in a boldly new style for commercial architecture in Melbourne, using red brick, rounded piers, tall arches and Queen Anne detailing.
In 1899, Ussher formed a partnership with Henry Hardie Kemp.
Henry Hardie Kemp (1859 -1946) was born in Broughton, Lancashire. He articled in Manchester, and then worked and studied in London in the early 1880s. Arriving in Melbourne in 1886 he found a job with the established firm of Terry & Oakden. Leonard Terry had a distinguished career designing in particular many conservative classical banks, and had died in 1884, while Percy Oakden who joined in 1874 practiced a more progressive restrained polychrome brick Gothic. With the addition of G. H. M. Addison in 1887 the firm became Oakden Addison & Kemp, and was very successful, designing a range of landmark projects in the next few years, including some in Queen Anne style.
North Park (later Woodlands) in Essendon, completed in 1889 demonstrated the style in a grand composition, with its red brick, red tiled roof, and half-timbered gables. The 12 storey Australian Building in Elizabeth Street, amongst the tallest in the world, also featured red brick, and top levels of Queen Anne gables and a turret. Kemp is thought to have been the major driver of this output, since the sketch for North Park is signed by him, and Addison was in Brisbane designing independently, also in Queen Anne mode. Addison formally left the partnership in 1892, which was wound up when Kemp moved to Sydney in 1896.
Nothing is known of his work up until he came back to Melbourne and started the partnership with Ussher. After Ussher died in 1908, Kemp continued alone until 1911 when he joined with George Inskip (swapped for Walter Butler) until 1913. Between 1918 and 1929, he was in partnership with his nephew. F. Bruce Kemp. During this period he designed the early buildings for Scotch College in a half-timbered style reminiscent of his work with Ussher.
Ussher & Kemp produced some of the most influential and creative houses in the then-new Queen Anne style characterised by tall red-tiled roofs, projecting half-timbered gables, and timber verandahs, that became standard for houses across Melbourne in the period 1900-1915. This style of house was a complete break from the typical Victorian house of the 1880s, in render or polychrome brick, with Italianate details and cast-iron fringed verandahs. Architectural historian George Tibbits in his 1982 article The so-called Melbourne Domestic Queen Anne calls Ussher & Kemp a "brilliant partnership", who pioneered the application of British Queen Anne Revival influence onto residential work in Melbourne, and considered it to be a truly distinctive Australian creation, though he also notes the houses designed by Ussher alone before the partnership.
A typical Federation Queen Anne house in Melbourne (and Victoria) is attic-style, with an overall picturesque composition formed by a dominant red Marsailles tiled tall hipped roof, broken by projecting gabled bays and dormer windows for the upper floor rooms and tall chimneys. The walls are usually red-brick, with half-timbering and roughcast in the gables above projecting window bays, and a verandah supported on turned timber posts with timber trim. They often feature diagonal planning, with bays projecting on two sides, joined by the L shaped verandah, with the entrance on the corner or down one side, and sometimes a corner turret or gazebo. The planning is often diagonal, with a wide hall either off-centre or behind a front room, entered from the side, with main rooms projecting at right angles or on the corner. The main rooms often employ bay window or fireplace niches, with timber screens across the upper part of teh opening. Windows to the main rooms often feature leadlight with Art Nouveau designs.
The work of Ussher & Kemp included all these features from their beginning in 1899, and it was undoubtably one of the most accomplished and prolific of the many residential architects designing across Melbourne in the Edwardian era. Their work included variations on the sprawling attic style houses, well as other variations, including a two storey type with gabled rather than hipped roofs. Some later work was simpler, and took on features of the developing Arts & Crafts style. Their work is particularly found in the newer subdivisions in the eastern suburbs of Kew, Hawthorn and Camberwell (now collectively the City of Boroondara).
Houses
Other works