Friday, 2 April 2021

Edna Walling and my weird 6 degrees of separation summer

Edna Walling and my weird 6 degrees of separation summer

Young Edna

This year , early as it is , one person has been constantly appearing as a footnote to events that have happened  to me or I have been involved in. That person is a legendary garden design/ landscaper, writer, photographer, conservationist and godmother of the girl power movement - the late Edna Walling.

It’s like some weird six degrees of separation that involves Miss Walling and me.

I recently found out from a Facebook group dedicated to the suburb where I grew up, that within 200 metres of  my family home in Jordanville (now Chadstone were two Edna Walling gardens.

 Our house was on the very eastern edge of the Housing Commission estate and up the hill situated on the aptly named Grandview Parade was a very fine property called Robin Hill that was so out of place it resembled the mansion above the suburbs in the movie Edward Scissorhands. The home belonged to Lewis B Milne an executive for the company that owned Skipping Girl Vinegar. The house was built in 1946 during the height of Walling’s popularity. In its position, it commanded views almost equal to that from the top of Mt Dandenong. 

The original owners had long sold it and moved on before I arrived. The Commission estate began construction in 1949 and the view from the front yard was rapidly changing, instead of empty paddocks was now rows of concrete houses. 

I’d move too.

Robin Hill today
The high walls and steel gates only offered a glimpse through the bars but I always remember the gardens were so lush and well maintained, whoever the owner was at the time. The other was supposedly on the other side of the railway tracks on Salisbury road but I don’t recall any house even remotely impressive as Robin Hill on that street.                 

 But it was there, I’ve seen the plans.

Robin Hill before the estate with acres of paddocks.Circa 1946






Robin Hill (highlighted) during construction of the Housing Commission estate


The Lady, the legend.

Edna Walling was born in England in 1895 and came to Australia with her parents and sister via New Zealand in 1914. Settling in Melbourne Edna enrolled at the Burnley School of horticultural graduating when she was 22. (An institute many would be aware of, I, myself have three close relatives I can name who have been there.)  She first started working as a gardener when a chance encounter to plan a garden by an architect began a whole new career. More commissions followed and within five years she had built a flourishing practice in garden design.  Walling developed a unique style and attracted many rich, influential and famous clients. These included many industry leaders, professionals, and exclusive clubs. Dame Elizabeth Murdoch, Dame Nellie Melba and Frank Packer were among her clients. Soon her reputation spread to other States. Her regular gardening columns (1926-46) in Australian Home Beautiful enhanced her reputation and extended her influence. She was also a regular contributor of articles to many other magazines.

Edna at work

By the 1940s Walling's was a household name and she capitalized on her popularity by publishing a string of successful books, as well as this she was a keen photographer with well above-average skills. She obviously liked taking photos more than being in them, for finding multiple images of her is difficult.

Interconnecting Universes.

Tudor Village at Mawarra Sherbrooke

In early March a rather influential gentleman and talented artist was taken from us before his time. Jamin Swaneveld. He had a remarkable memorial service in Lake Emerald Park the same month and it stirred up some long dormant memories. 
Jamin building the Village

 
About 15 years ago Jamin and I often chatted in his little shop in Belgrave. One of our conversations was how he and his family were temporarily lodging in a bungalow that was part of an estate next to Sherbrooke Forest in the Dandenongs. This particular estate had a garden that was designed by Edna Walling and it was still in pristine condition. He said he was going to make a Tudor Village that would fit perfectly with the aesthetic of the garden. I remember saying how that would be a novel idea and that was the last I thought of it. After Jamin’s death, I was looking through old photos and found a picture of him in his shed working on the almost complete village. 
The Village prior to installation
Then, whilst researching Miss Walling a bit more discovered the estate he was referring to was Mawarra, a famous example of Edna Walling’s design work and incidentally one of her own personal favourites. To add sugar to the dessert I found an old video from a mid-2000s episode of channel 9’s Postcards, and right at the end, we have the presenter Lauren Phillips tiptoeing through the miniature village that Jamin constructed.

It was a glorious find.

Before

 
After



 

A new home another connection

There are a few local connections to Miss Walling. When she was in her mid-20s she established a residence in Mooroolbark and named it Sonning. This became her base for almost 40 years establishing her nursery and gathering around her a group of like-minded people for whom she designed picturesque 'English' cottages and gardens. She named the area BickleighVale village in honour of the town she grew up in England. It became a sanctuary of sorts and its residence were predominantly female. The village still remains, and its roads are still unpaved, it was and remains an extraordinary experiment in urban development.

A retired Edna
I was looking through the excellent collection of Walling designs at the StateLibrary online, and discovered a plan for a Mrs Jessie Cook of Boronia but as yet haven’t been able to locate the address or if it was a commission piece.

Edna Walling’s style was influenced by her memories of the English gardens of her childhood, the stonework of the aptly named Ellis Stones and her love of Australian flora. Her designs were often water coloured to give clients a more intimate feel of how the finished garden would appear.

The Boronia Garden for Mrs Cook

An example of Walling's water coloured plans


Walling left Melbourne in 1967– though she travelled far and wide during her career  for her work- to the warmer climes of Queensland and died in 1973.

Edna Walling was truly a great Australian who left a massive legacy and I recommend researching or even visiting her existing gardens in the area if the chance arises just like I have, thanks to a few chance events and some great memories.

EXAMPLES OF EDNA WALLINGS WORK

 

Bibliography

www.adb.anu.edu.au/biography/walling-edna-margaret-11946

Wikipedia

State Library Walling Design archives

www.bickleighvalevillage.com.au/