Byera Hadley
{{Short description|Australian architect and educator (1872–1937)}}
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Byera Hadley (1872 – 26 November 1937) was an Australian architect and educator. He led the architecture programme at Sydney Technical College, which was the forerunner of the University of New South Wales Faculty of the Built Environment's architecture programme. He is known less for his buildings than for the scholarships issued in his name, as the Byera Hadley Travelling Scholarships, by the NSW Architects Registration Board.
Early life and education
Byera Hadley was born in Cotham, Bristol, then part of Gloucestershire in England. He was the third son of E.A. Hadley and Florence Hadley. The family was comfortably off and Byera attended a private school in Clifton, Bristol.{{cite web | title= Byera Hadley: a biography| url=https://www.architects.nsw.gov.au/download/Byera%20Hadley%20Biography.pdf | access-date=28 January 2025| first =Michael |last=Bogle |publisher=NSW Architects Registration Board| quote=originally authored by Michael Bogle to mark the 60th anniversary of the Byera Hadley Travelling Scholarships}}
Hadley arrived in Sydney in 1887. In 1888 he enrolled in the architecture programme at Sydney Technical College (STC) architecture programme, and was awarded 1st grade in his first‐year course in model drawing, and honours in freehand drawing.{{cite web | title=Byera Hadley (1872-1937)|date= August 2011| first =Michael |last=Bogle | url=https://www.be.unsw.edu.au/sites/default/files/upload/newsblogsevents/BogleMichaelByeraHadley.pdf | access-date=28 January 2025}}
Career
=STC=
Hadley was working for the STC as "assistant lecturer, architectural classes" by 1899, and was promoted to "assistant teacher of Architectural and Trades Drawing" in the same year.
While also designing buildings in private practice, Hadley continued to teach part‐time at STC. In 1914, the superintendent, J.W. Turner, first fell ill and then retired. James Nangle, then lecturer‐in‐charge, was appointed first in an acting capacity and then promoted to the position, and Hadley was put in charge of the architecture course. Under his leadership, a formal five‐year architecture course was established by 1918, which was designed to fulfill the requirements of the new Architects Registration Act. Recognition of the course diploma was given by the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), which meant that student architects trained at STC after 1923 were exempt from RIBA exams.
=Architectural practice=
He founded his private practice in 1897, as "B. Hadley, Architect", and became a Fellow of the Institute of Architects NSW in 1899. One of his earliest commissions was a solicitor's residence called Melrose House, on Grantham Estate (now Grantham Heritage Park, Seven Hills). The house is retained as a heritage building.{{cite web | last=McGowan | first=Ian | title=Heritage Buildings | website=Home | url=http://itmcgowan.net/blacktown/heritageb.php | access-date=28 January 2025}}
He designed Botany Town Hall in early Italian Renaissance style, and had various other commercial commissions. His buildings included the Sydney United Friendly Societies Dispensary and Medical Institute building in Macquarie Street (1902); Willoughby Town Hall (1903),{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article14541288 |title=Development of Willoughby. |newspaper=The Sydney Morning Herald |issue=20,432 |location=New South Wales, Australia |date=3 September 1903 |accessdate=28 January 2025 |page=5 |via=National Library of Australia}} and the Baumann Café (1904) in Pitt Street. Apart from Renaissance revival, he also employed Gothic Revival (such as the original wing of the Wesley College, Sydney University and its 1919 chapel) and Romanesque Revival style in some buildings.
After retirement from the STC in 1927, Hadley maintained his architectural practice until his
death in 1937. During this time he designed, among others, Annesley School for Girls in Bowral for the Methodist Church (1923); the Colonial Mutual Building, 74 Pitt Street (1924); the Vickery Memorial Chapel (1926; in honour of Ebenezer Vickery MLC); Leigh College, Strathfield South, New South Wales, (1927); and the Wesley Hall in Rose Bay (1929).
Personal life
In January 1899, Hadley married Florence Debelle of Petersham.{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article14194269 |title=Family Notices |newspaper=The Sydney Morning Herald |issue=18,976 |location=New South Wales, Australia |date=7 January 1899 |accessdate=28 January 2025 |page=1 |via=National Library of Australia}} A son was born on 4 December 1902.{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article165383657 |title=Family Notices |newspaper=The Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser |volume=LXXIV |issue=2216 |location=New South Wales, Australia |date=24 December 1902 |accessdate=28 January 2025 |page=1678 |via=National Library of Australia}} A daughter born in 1907 died at 10 months old in February 1908.{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article14917240 |title=Family Notices |newspaper=The Sydney Morning Herald |issue=21,868 |location=New South Wales, Australia |date=18 February 1908 |accessdate=28 January 2025 |page=6 |via=National Library of Australia}}
Hadley left the family home before his son was earning a living and made a small monthly payment to his wife. Florence trained as a nurse in order to provide for herself and for her son's education.
In the 1920s Hadley lived in a house he designed and named Hopes on acreage in Welby on the outskirts of Mittagong. In the 1930s he sold the property to members of the Cull family. The property is now known as Welby Park Manor.[https://www.wsc.nsw.gov.au/files/assets/public/v/2/council/strategies-amp-plans/local-planning-strategy-2015-2031/wsc-welby-village.pdf Welby Village Precinct Plan] Retrieved 28 March 2025. Fred and Ada Cull were Wesleyan benefactors who made possible many of the buildings Hadley designed for the Methodist Church in New South Wales.[https://www.wesleycollege-usyd.edu.au/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/The-Wesleyan-2016-web.pdf The value of Fred and Ada Cull's contribution to Wesley in today's terms would be over 20 million dollars] Retrieved 28 March2025.
His final residential address was 137 Livingstone Road, Marrickville. In his later years Hadley was cared for the nurse Rita Haley.
Death and legacy
Hadley died suddenly on 26 November 1937 at Marrickville,{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article17415528 |title=Family Notices |newspaper=The Sydney Morning Herald |issue=31,171 |location=New South Wales, Australia |date=27 November 1937 |accessdate=28 January 2025 |page=10 |via=National Library of Australia}} {{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article247327165 |title=Family Notices |newspaper=The Daily Telegraph (Sydney) |volume=II |issue=215 |location=New South Wales, Australia |date=27 November 1937 |accessdate=28 January 2025 |page=10 |via=National Library of Australia}} of circulatory disease, and buried at Woronora Cemetery.
He left an estate worth £10,825. He left £500, as well as furniture and household and personal effects, for his nurse Rita Haley, and provided for an annuity of £200 for his wife. He left his library to the college, and the UNSW archives contain many of Hadley's notes, books, and photographs.
Hadley will included a bequest of £10,000 for the establishment a travelling scholarship, to be known as the Byera Hadley Travelling Scholarship. It was to be administered by the Board of Architects NSW, and available to graduates of the STC and Sydney University. The establishment of the scholarship was widely reported.
By 1939, Hadley's widow Florence, then 67, applied to the Equity Court for financial relief under the Family Maintenance Act. The judge was sympathetic and ordered that she be paid £100, as well as receiving "the net income of the estate (about £427 a year) for the rest of her life". The scholarship fund would come into effect on her death. The Permanent Trustees Co. and the Board of Architects (now the NSW Architects Registration Board) jointly managed the Byera Hadley estate until Florence Hadley's death in 1945. Negotiations between the two parties continued until 1950 when the Board specified the criteria for the scholarship thus:{{blockquote|The Award is to be made to the student and/or graduate who in the opinion of the Board gives promise of profiting most by study abroad, upon such evidence by way of competitions or otherwise as the Board may determine from time to time…".}}
The inaugural winner of the scholarship was Bryce Mortlock, in 1951,
with conservationist Milo Dunphy being awarded in 1953. Other past winners include Ken Woolley, Colin Griffiths, Lawrence Nield, Deborah Dearing, Rachel Neeson, Stephen Collier, Sam Marshall, David Holm, and Tse Hui Teh.{{cite web|date=2007 | title= Byera Hadley Travelling Scholarships: Who was Byera Hadley?|publisher=NSW Architects Registration Board |url=https://www.architects.nsw.gov.au/download/WHO%20WAS%20BYERA%20HADLEY.pdf | access-date=28 January 2025}}
BHTS today
The Byera Hadley Travelling Scholarships (BHTS) are today administered by the NSW Architects Registration Board (ARB). The purpose is stated thus:{{cite web | title= Byera Hadley Travelling Scholarship|publisher =NSW Architects Registration Board| date=2024 | url=https://www.architects.nsw.gov.au/download/BHTS/Byera%20Hadley%20Application%20Form.pdf | access-date=28 January 2025}}{{blockquote|to provide financial support for the promotion and encouragement of students and/or graduates in architecture to undertake a course of study, research, or other activity approved by the NSW ARB. The Scholarship program must involve travel, which may be overseas or within Australia.}}
Several scholarships may be awarded, worth up to A$15,000 in the student category, and up to A$30,000 to graduates. Only students or graduates of an accredited architecture program offered by a NSW university are eligible for the award, which is judged on merit.
In 2024, five scholarships were awarded; three to graduates and two to students, with a total prize pool of $145,000.{{cite web | title=2024 Byera Hadley Travelling Scholarship announced | website=NSW Architects Registration Board | date=29 November 2024 | url=https://www.architects.nsw.gov.au/news/728-2024-byera-hadley-travelling-scholarship-applications-open | access-date=28 January 2025}}
The Byera Hadley Travelling Scholarship Fund is a registered trust fund with charitable status, administered by a small board.{{cite web | title=The Trustee For The Byera Hadley Travelling Scholarship Fund | website=ACNC | url=https://www.acnc.gov.au/charity/charities/22c5d964-38af-e811-a961-000d3ad24182/documents/acd8b500-c16e-eb11-b1ab-000d3ad1f9f4 | access-date=28 January 2025}}
References
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Category:Australian architects