Ripponlea Mansion was built for Frederick Sargood (1834-1903), a man who became rich selling soft-goods on the Victorian goldfields, wife Marian and 9 children. The property designed by
Joseph Reed, Melbourne's most important architect then. Rippon Lea was built when there was much wealth in Victoria from the gold boom. This led to the building of many ornate mansions in
Melbourne and rural areas, called the
Victorian Italianate style. Sargood was a practical Victorian, laying a sophisticated underground watering system for the house which had its own electricity supply and internal toilets. Sargood was very interested in orchids and ferns, so his water and drainage system made the gardens thrive.
The mansion had 15 rooms when the Sargoods moved in. Plus 7 maids, butler, 7 gardeners, coachman and a groom. The garden was complex, including a large lake, large shrubberies and flower gardens, orchards of historical fruit varieties, a fernery and rose gardens.
In 1868 Sargood bought 27 hectares of scrub to establish his dream home and garden. In 1869 construction began on the
2-storey, 15 room mansion made from polychrome brickwork. This was a new material then when most important Victoria buildings were built in stone or stuccoed brick. The ground floor had the drawing & dining rooms, study and breakfast room. An unusual design feature was an outdoor pavilion adjacent to the dining room. On the 1st floor were 6 bedrooms, dressing room, nursery, earth closet and 2 bathrooms! In an adjacent single storey wing was a gunroom, maid's room and day nursery for the 12 children.
Frederick Sargood
Victoria’s first Minister for Defence
Rippon Lea Estate
Sargood entered the Victorian Legislative Council in 1874 and was a member for 23 years. Sadly Marian Sargood died delivering her 12th baby in 1878, so Frederick took the family and 3 staff to Britain, returning to Australia in late 1882. In 1883 he rejoined Parliament and became Victoria’s first Minister for Defence.
Meanwhile Sargood had remarried and had another child, so the Melbourne property had to be well renovated; he made changes and additions that reflected his increased wealth. The dining room was extended, a 2nd floor was added to the rear wing, a tower was built, the kitchens were remodelled and a veranda was added to the west front. Building began on a new, enlarged fernery. The drainage system was extended and the gardens re-designed in a less formal style.
Although he used different architects over a 30-year period, the style used was unusually consistent. In 1897 the house was renovated, the front entrance being remodelled into its present form. Many of the decorative features from that era remain eg the office was added and the dining room was redecorated. The house that had had 6 bedrooms now had 11, some for the staff, as was a large bathroom. Rippon Lea was used as an entertainment place for 500+ people, including overseas dignitaries. Sargood was knighted in 1890. His business continued prospering in Australia and New Zealand, and he was elected to the first Australian Senate in 1901. While on a trip to N.Z he became ill, dying in Jan 1903. That year Rippon Lea was sold for £20,000 by Sargood's widow who took her daughter back to Britain permanently.
Lounge room
behance
Ballroom
polka dot Wedding
A syndicate headed by
Victorian Premier Thomas Bent, bought the estate and furniture, but Bent never lived there. He used Rippon Lea for entertaining and charity events, then he began subdividing and selling off some of the land. Bent was forced from political office in 1908, dying in 1909 while under investigation for involvement in land scandals.
In 1910 the property was bought by
Benjamin Nathan, a man wealthy from the furniture business, owning 15 Maples Furniture and Music Shops in 2 states. He moved to Rippon Lea with his wife and daughters, returning the house to a family home. A private entrance lodge was built off Hotham St so he could continue to use the house for charity events eg in aid of WWI-related causes. Nathan introduced more native plants into the large garden, employing
15 gardeners, and building a large
conservatory and 14 glasshouses. Nathan died in 1935, leaving it all to a daughter.
Fernery
Rippon Lea Estate
View of the lawn and pleasure gardens from the veranda
Wiki
In 1921 daughter Louisa Nathan married lawyer Timothy Jones and had 4 children together. She modernised the home via Hollywood films: a new kitchen built on the ground floor, the dining room remodelled, modern tiled bathrooms installed, the original ballroom was replaced with a swimming pool and the billiard room became a new ballroom. The new entrance hall brought in more natural light. Turkish carpets were replaced by leaf-green ones, and the colour scheme softened. Rooms had an elegant neo-baroque style, again famous for entertaining and charity functions.
Timothy Jones died in 1958 and the widow sold some land to the ABC for their tv studios. In 1963 the Federal Government put a Compulsory Acquisition Order on acres of land to extend the ABC. There was a huge demonstration against the acquisition so in 1963 Mrs Jones wrote her will; at her death, the estate would go to the National Trust.
The Trust DID inherit the estate, the Acquisition Order was withdrawn and Rippon Lea honoured Mrs Jones’ commitment to preserve her gift to the Nation. It was first opened to the public in Feb 1974 and 100,000 people went through in 3 months. Visitors saw peacocks roaming around while geese, swans and other water-birds populated the lake. Chauffeur Ken Webb lived in the Coach House flat.
Since the National Trust inherited the property, it has been open daily to the public and popular for weddings. It has been used for films due to the integrity of the historic buildings and 7 hectares of pleasure gardens, magnificent trees and shrubberies, flower gardens, large fernery and lake. Hedges separated the ornamental gardens from the practical areas eg large kitchen gardens, stables.
Rippon Lea is one of Australia’s grand, self-sufficient suburban estates, 20 mins from Melbourne’s CBD. Listed on the 2006 National Heritage Register, it has most of the historical landscape and architectural interest preserved.