|
Charles
Webb who went on to design some of the most widely recognised buildings of
Melbourne was born at Sudbury, Suffolk, England on 26 November 1821 the son
of William Webb, a builder and Elizabeth née Hayward; after his
education at Sudbury Academy and apprenticeship with a London architect, he
followed in the footsteps of his brother James (q.v.) and migrated to
Port Phillip (Victoria) arriving 2 June 1849 on the Spartan; shortly
after both brothers formed a successful architectural and surveying
partnership (1849-54) their most important early commission being the design
of the original St. Pauls’ Church, Swanston Street (1850) and Mac's Hotel,
Franklin Street (1853), but mostly houses in the Brighton locality including
Chilton - 1 Wellington Street (1853). In partnership with Thomas
Taylor (1854-58), Webb designed the Gothic style Church of England Boys'
Grammar School, South Yarra (1856) noted for its “simplicity and lack of
ostentation, dignity and functional suitability”; St. Andrew’s Church,
Brighton (1856) and Christ Church, South Yarra (1856). Webb then practised
on his own for the next thirty years (1858-88) when two sons - Charles and
Alfred - joined him in the firm “C. Webb & Sons” - 161 Collins Street. A
contemporary of Lloyd Tayler
(q.v.), the list of prominent buildings still standing alludes to Webb’s
greatness as an architect and his belief to build “something permanently
rather that will be used only temporarily”; he once wrote “to be a good and
clever architect one must accumulate in the mind a great fund of material to
work on. Study well what others have done, make their ideas your own, and
they by study and application will generate or engender others”. These
include the Gothic Revival-styled Church of Christ, Swanston Street (1863);
Wesley College, Prahran (1864) (“an elegant structure in the plain style of
Italian architecture”); the classical Renaissance-styled Royal Arcade,
Bourke Street (1869); Christ Church, Dingley (1872); the Italianate mansion
Mandeville Hall - Mandeville Crescent, Toorak (1876); John Knox
Presbyterian Church, Gardenvale (1876); the £23,500 South Melbourne Town
Hall (1878); Tasma Terrace - Parliament Place, East Melbourne (1878);
the Tudor-style South Melbourne Primary School - Dorcas Street (1880);
Mosspennoch - Clarendon Street, East Melbourne (1881) for James Purves
(1843-1910) Q.C; the Grand Hotel (Windsor), Spring Street (1884); and
Charsfield - St. Kilda Road (1889). Described by a descendant as “a
tall man, erect of posture and immaculate of dress, smooth hair and a fluffy
white beard framing a serene face”, Webb was a foundation member of the
Victorian Institute of Architects (1856) and president in 1882-83. A
wealthy man by the 1880s with an estate of nearly £30,000, he died at the
home he designed in 1865, Farleigh - Park Street, Brighton on 23
January 1898 aged 76; his wife Emma née Bridges (d 1893) whom he married in
December 1851 predeceased him. |

(above) Charles Webb
(“The Victorian Historical Magazine”,
August-November 1970).
.jpg)
(above) Royal Arcade,
Bourke Street
(La Trobe Picture Collection,
State Library of Victoria,
IAN27/12/69/4)

(above) Monumental Headstone (enlarge
image) |