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[[File:Manor 2010.jpg|250px|right|thumb|The Manor from Illuka Road, 2010]]
'''The Manor''' is a mansion at 2-10 Illuka Road, Mosman, NSW, Australia that served as home to a [[Theosophy|Theosophical]] community beginning in 1922. Located in a suburb just north of Sydney, it is listed on the registry of heritage places in New South Wales.<ref>[https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/heritageapp/ViewHeritageItemDetails.aspx?ID=2060212 "Manor House, The"] in NSW Government Office of Environment and Heritage website. Accessed 28 June 2020.</ref>
'''The Manor''' is a mansion at 2-10 Illuka Road, Mosman, NSW, Australia that served as home to a [[Theosophy|Theosophical]] community beginning in 1922. Located in a suburb just north of Sydney, it is listed on the registry of heritage places in New South Wales.<ref>[https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/heritageapp/ViewHeritageItemDetails.aspx?ID=2060212 "Manor House, The"] in NSW Government Office of Environment and Heritage website. Accessed 28 June 2020.</ref>



Revision as of 19:07, 28 June 2020

The Manor from Illuka Road, 2010

The Manor is a mansion at 2-10 Illuka Road, Mosman, NSW, Australia that served as home to a Theosophical community beginning in 1922. Located in a suburb just north of Sydney, it is listed on the registry of heritage places in New South Wales.[1]

History

The house was originally built in 1904 for William John Bakewell, a brick and tile manufacturer. He did not live in the mansion long; by 1922 it had been empty for several years.

Karel van Gelder, father of Dora van Gelder Kunz, was a Dutch planter and Theosophist who had moved to Sydney from Java. believed that the future of humanity lay in establishing equitable, self-sustaining communities. While living in Sydney, he heard of an empty 55-room mansion locally known as "Bakewell's Folly" that was situated in Mosman overlooking Sydney Harbour. He toured the property, and quickly brought Charles Webster Leadbeater to see it. The matter was discussed with local Theosophical families:

The end was that the different families met in council and that Bishop Leadbeater invited Mr. van Gelder to assume the most difficult task of managing the community. He accepted, the rooms in the house were divided amongst the families, the lease signed for three years with two years' optional extension, and on August 3rd, while a howling southerly was shaking the house, the first group of new inhabitants came in, consisting of Walter hassel, Hely Labberton, Lucius van Gelder and myself [Koos van der Leeuw].

During the next week Bishop Leadbeater, with the Köllerström family, the van Gelder, Mazel and Vreede families and "those without family" arrived. They were chaotic days those first two weeks of the Manor. Mr. van Gelder certainly had a great task to perform, and, with the thelp of the whole household, he accomplished it successfully; the community never experience any serious trouble. This certainly proves the splendid spirit in which all undertook the work and the willingness of all who hitherto had run their own households to fit in with whatever was necessary.[2]

Physical description

The NSW registry of heritage places provides this description of the architecture:

Federation Queen Anne/Arts-&-Crafts. This is a large and imposing dark-brick residence, located on a broad site addressing Iluka Road at the bottom of the slope of Morella Road. Essentially linear in design, it has dominant gabled roof elements parallel to the street, and secondary gables projecting forwards with single-storey verandahs between them. One of these gables protects the columned entrance. The first floor rooms are generally in the roof space and are marked by a series of prominent street-facing gabled dormers. Part of the building has a third storey with rendered walls and a hipped roof. Its form suggests that this could have in earlier times been a narrow rectangular belvedere, but the fabric evidence of this is unclear without closer examination. The house roofs are terracotta tiles with shingled gable areas and some gable screens. Windows are generally triple-light ensembles with top sashes divided into small panes. Chimneys are tall and corbelled, with terracotta pots.[3]

Many of the rooms were lined in beaten copper.

Current status

Since 1950, the building has been owned by The Manor Foundation Ltd. The Australia registry of charitable organizations give this "Summary of Activities":

Our activities provide a spiritual and educational centre, and its work is to spread teachings of Theosophy so that the inspiration of the Ancient Wisdom of all cultures may be shared throughout Australia and the world. It maintains close links with other T.S. centres and theosophists in other countries, providing a peaceful haven for retreats and for those aspiring to the spiritual life. [4]

Notes

  1. "Manor House, The" in NSW Government Office of Environment and Heritage website. Accessed 28 June 2020.
  2. J. J. van der Leeuw, The History and Work of the Manor, unpublished manuscript cited in Frank Chesley and Kirsten van Gelder, A Most Unusual Life (Wheaton, Illinois: Quest Books, 2015), 61-62.
  3. "Manor House, The" in NSW Government Office of Environment and Heritage website. Accessed 28 June 2020.
  4. The Manor Foundation Ltd. in the ACNC Charity Register. Accessed 28 June 2020.