This article by Kathie Rieth was originally published in our Society newsletter in October 2010.
Caernleith, No 8 Springdale Road, and
Braeside, No 9 Arnold Street, Killara
In a response to my last column that mentioned the two
houses in Pymble for Eric and David Pratten, I was asked
whether they were related to Pratten Brothers, Printers and
Publishers. Yes they were!
Eric and David were sons of
Frederick G Pratten who, with his half-brother Herbert,
started the firm in the late 1890s. Readers may know of
H E Pratten, Minister for Trade and Customs, who died
suddenly on his 63rd birthday while addressing a meeting of
his constituents at Turramurra. The Prattens also had
extensive interests in alluvial tin mining in the Federated
Malay States, and in Australian fruit pulp. Herbert’s obituary
in The Times described him as “One of the pioneers of the
New South Wales fruit-preserving industry”.
Eric and David grew up in Ku-ring-gai. In February
1907 their father bought two properties in Killara: the large
two-storey house Cairnleith, No 8 Springdale Road, and
No 9 Arnold Street (apparently vacant land), which shared
a rear boundary. Both were purchased from Richard
Pickering Sellors, described at the time as ‘Astronomical
Observer’.
Curiously (to us in this digital age) electoral
rolls gave his occupation as ‘computer’. A contemporary
explanation of this term is found in a 1911 article noting he
was “chief computer, trigonometrical survey, Department
of Lands” and had been appointed as state representative
at the 10th International Geographic Congress in Rome.
Sellors was “a gold medallist in mathematics of Sydney
University and was for many years astronomical observer
at the Sydney Observatory… in charge of the trigonometrical
computations at the Lands Department… recently deputed
to compute the data for the projection of the large
Commonwealth map of Australia…”
Sellors moved into Cairnleith c.1900.
According to KHS
member Jennifer Harvey, the house was designed by
architects Clamp & Smith in late 1899. The Pratten family
lived in Cairnleith from 1907 to 1910, moving to Braeside
in 1911, and then in 1914 to No 98 Mona Vale Road, Pymble.
It appears Braeside was built between 1907
and 1909. Was it designed by Spain & Cosh, who in 1910
designed Pratten Brothers’ new five-storey building at 26-
30 Jamieson Street, Sydney?
In May 1908 the same
architects were calling tenders for a residence in Arnold
Street: no further information has yet come to light.
FG Pratten sold Cairnleith in 1911 to Ella, wife of
architect Henry Budden. By 1928 it was the home of
bloodstock salesman Arthur Inglis. Pratten sold Braeside
in 1917 to Amy, wife of jeweller Edward Nettleship. Only
Braeside, No 9 Arnold Street, is listed on
Ku-ring-gai’s LEP.