Adelaide. Highgate. A side view of the Lutheran Chapel in Concordia Lutheran College. : 無料・フリー素材/写真
Adelaide. Highgate. A side view of the Lutheran Chapel in Concordia Lutheran College. / denisbin
| ライセンス | クリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示-改変禁止 2.1 |
|---|---|
| 説明 | Born at Port Elliot in 1857 to the Reverend George and Martha Taplin. He was one of thirteen children born to George and Martha. He married Flora Mary Winch. He lived most of his adult life at Malvern Adelaide. He died 29th May 1927 and was buried in Mitcham cemetery. His children include: Leonard Thomas Eaton 1895 - 1961; Lillia Marjorie 1897 died a few days later; etc.Charles Eaton Taplin worked as an architect. He mainly designed residences and churches including: •Unley Uniting Church built 1898 (originally Manthorpe Congregational Church); the church and land cost £1,405. In 1903 he got the architectural tender to design a hall and Sunday school. •Kapunda Congregational Church Hall 1912;•Port Elliot Congregational Church 1899 now Uniting;•Parkside Congregational Church 1892 he was superintendent of works for the architect. • 1899 designed the new Wesleyan Church on Halifax Street. •1899 he was architect of 30 roomed two storey school fort Mr Royce at Malvern. Known as Malvern College. It is now the main old building of the Lutheran Concordia College. Concordia College moved to this site in 1905. In 1878 he was working in Naracoorte as a cabinet maker and the next year when his father Rev George died at Point McLeay. A son was born at Hindmarsh in 1880. In 1882 he was the secretary of the British and Foreign Bible Society.1883 he was architect of a boarding house on port road at Hindmarsh for the Bank of South Australia. He was working at Hindmarsh as a builder by then.In 1890 he was calling on the government to change their ways of treating Aborigines. By then he was living at Clifton Street Malvern. He led a government study group to the Finke River area etc. He had business premises in Gilbert street Adelaide and was selling real estate and letting houses by 1890. By 1892 he is advertising his services as an architect. June 1892 calling for tenders to erect a 6 roomed villa house in Wayville with his as architect.1892 he was an elected member of the councillor of Parkin Mission. 1892 tenders for erection of house in Rose Street North Unley. 1893 tenders for residence at Croydon; another at Clarence Park; still selling already built houses; in May 1893 a large advert selling houses at Rose Park, North Unley, East Adelaide; July 1893 advertising for a stone mason; December 1893 wanting plasterers. 1894 tenders for a residence at Hyde Park; November 1894 an investor in the Waukaringa gold mine company; and in November 1894 his real estate and architectural offices moved to 196c Towers Court, west side of Victoria Square. 1895 advertising his loans business for houses that he builds. For some years he was the secretary of the Manthorpe Congregational Church on Unley Road as well as the Aborigines Friends Association. He was also on the Executive Committee of the London Missionary society and the Congregational Union. He was also a Mason. In 1901 he was appointed as a Justice of the peace and he mainly sat on the bench in Adelaide Magistrates Courts but also the State Children’s Court. For many years he was a director of the Cooperative Building society. In 1901 he was on the Citizens Committee for the royal visit of Duke and Duchess of York and Cornwall. He was also the secretary of the Council of Churches. He was also sometimes the organist and conductor of the Unitarian Church choir and the city Church of Christ. Still advertising tenders for erection of houses in 1905. For his architectural work he had a quarry near Magill. In 1907 got tender for Wilson memorial hall on the grounds of the Kadina congregation Church and it would face Ewing Street. In 1907 his daughter Elsie Flora Taplin married Mr A Angel at Norwood. In 1915 still involved in many organisations especially the Cooperative Building society and the magistrate’s courts and his architectural practice and organ playing. In 1916 his third son Leonard had enlisted in NSW where Leonard’s brother is engineer in charge of the electricity supply of Parramatta. In 1917 he designed a shop and dwelling in Quorn. In 1917 he was elected to the advisory committee of the 1911 Aborigines Act. In 1918 he moved to a new residence in Florence Street Fullarton. He last cases on the bench were in 1925. 1925 got the tender for the new hotel in Lameroo. In 1925 as President of the Aborigines Friends Association he conducted a memorial service at Point McLeay Mission. 16 Aboriginal men enlisted and four of them were killed during World War One from Point McLeay now named Raukkan. He resigned from the society in February 1926. He was re-elected as Chairman of the Cooperative Building Society in March 1927. When he died in May 1927 he had been on the board of the Cooperative Building Society for 27 years. |
| 撮影日 | 2020-07-19 15:49:16 |
| 撮影者 | denisbin |
| タグ | |
| 撮影地 | |
| カメラ | DSC-HX90V , SONY |
| 露出 | 0.005 sec (1/200) |
| 開放F値 | f/4.5 |

