Imperial Hotel, York

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Architectural styleVictorian Filigree
Location31°53′28″S 116°46′06″E / 31.8911°S 116.7682°E / -31.8911; 116.7682, Corner of Avon Terrace and Joaquina Street, York, Western Australia
Construction started1886
Renovated1987, 2018
Imperial Hotel, York
Imperial Hotel, York, in 2018
Interactive map of the Imperial Hotel, York area
General information
Architectural styleVictorian Filigree
Location31°53′28″S 116°46′06″E / 31.8911°S 116.7682°E / -31.8911; 116.7682, Corner of Avon Terrace and Joaquina Street, York, Western Australia
Construction started1886
Renovated1987, 2018
TypeState Registered Place
Designated13 July 2007
Reference no.10725
References
[1]

The Imperial Hotel was the first hotel to be built in York, Western Australia that adopted the new "Australian hotel" style in hotel design, with a dominant position on a main street corner block, high and ornate double verandahs surrounding the façade and a main entrance onto the street.[2] The building is in Victorian Filigree style.

A poor road from York to Guildford had always been a major problem for the transport of produce.[3] In 1881, following the opening of the Eastern Railway from Fremantle to Guildford, the line was extended to Chidlow.[4][3][5]

Engineer/architect James William Wright and engineer Edward Keane successfully tendered for the Eastern Railway line extension to York, and the line was extended in 1885.[6]

Subdivision and construction

In York, in 1885, part of Avon Locations X and Y on the south side of South Street and owned by merchant John Henry Monger Jnr was subdivided.[7] Location Y was traversed by the Eastern Railway line, then under construction, and the York station yard was located within the new subdivision. Already on the land was the Sisters of Mercy convent and school, on South Street, and the York Mechanic’s Institute on Avon Terrace (where the Town Hall is now situated).

James Grave and Edward Keane acquired Lots 12 and 13 on the corner of Avon Terrace and Joaquina Street, which led directly to the railway station. Grave was an investor in the railway line extension to York.

On 18 December 1885, Grave, Keane, William Mumme and Frederick Monger obtained a £4,000 mortgage from the Bank of New South Wales, presumably to pay for part of the cost of construction of the hotel.[8] Frederick Monger was the son of John Henry Monger Jnr, and Mumme was a major partner in the Swan Brewery and owned a small brewery in York.[9] The hotel was under construction in November 1885.[10] No tenders for the construction have been located.[11] The contractors were A. J. Castledine and A. B. Wright, and the work was supervised by Castledine.[12]

Opening

On 29 May 1886, Frederick Thomas Pamment advertised his intention of applying for a Publican’s General Licence for the hotel. The place was described at that time as containing thirteen bedrooms and four sitting rooms, exclusive of those required by the family. The licence application notice revealed that Pamment was leasing the hotel from Keane, Monger, Grave and Mumme.[13]

A report on the hotel appeared in the Western Mail in July:[14]

The “Imperial Hotel”, is finished and will be opened on Thursday next..... One noticeable feature in the building is that the bar trade is entirely distinct from the hotel, while a suite of detached rooms, now nearly complete, are intended for second class lodgers. Along the entire front of the hotel is a handsome balcony over one hundred feet in length, from which a nice view is obtained. The landlord Mr. F. T. Pamment, late of the Clarendon Hotel Perth, aided by workmen from the W.A. Manufacturing Company, has had a stiff week of it in making preparations for the opening.....Adjoining the Hotel there is to be a large music hall 70 x 50 feet in the clear and material is now being carted for its erection. The whole of the works have been constructed under the immediate superintendence of Mr Castledine who deserves every credit for the care he has taken.

The hotel was opened on 8 July 1886, but the event received only a brief sentence in the local newspaper with the comment that the place "seems to be favoured with a fair share of public patronage".[15] An advertisement that appeared in the Western Mail in October 1886, describes the hotel as having private dining rooms, special suites of rooms, sample rooms for commercial travellers, plunge and shower baths, a splendid billiard room fitted with one of Alcock’s best tables, and good stabling and loose boxes with an attentive ostler in attendance. The second class accommodation mentioned in the earlier description was also referred to.[16]

Fire

On 10 February 1894, around midnight, a fire broke out in a group of shops in a galvanised iron building immediately adjoining the Imperial Hotel to the north. These shops had been there since at least 1889.[17] The shops were Hillman & Co’s furniture and upholstery warehouse where the fire started, and north, Mr Lewis’s tailoring and fabrics establishment. A crowd of several hundred gathered and were unable to do anything about the shops but were able to prevent the fire from burning down the Imperial Hotel. The flames broke through a window into one of the bedrooms but “they were successfully combated”. “The billiard room below would appear to have suffered to a greater extent the walls being damaged together with a number of billiard cues, balls etc. Fortunately the wind was blowing the flames away from the hotel otherwise the main building would have suffered to an alarming extent. Furniture was removed out into the street, the spirit room emptied, while horses and vehicles were taken from the stables and placed in safety away from the premises.”[18]

Charles Playter

Subsequent history

References

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