Day House, Dalkeith

Author

Heritage Council

Place Number

04635

Location

166 Victoria Av Dalkeith

Location Details

Other Name(s)

Day House
Residence, Day Family

Local Government

Nedlands

Region

Metropolitan

Construction Date

Constructed from 1939

Demolition Year

N/A

Statutory Heritage Listings

Type Status Date Documents
(no listings)

Heritage Council Decisions and Deliberations

Type Status Date Documents
RHP - Assessed - Consultation (Preliminary) Current 25 Aug 2017

Other Heritage Listings and Surveys

Type Status Date Grading/Management
Category
Municipal Inventory Adopted 15 Apr 1999
Classified by the National Trust Classified 14 Apr 1998
Municipal Inventory Adopted 23 Oct 2018 Category B
Municipal Inventory Adopted 27 Apr 1999 Category B

Values

The place is rare as an Interwar Mediterranean double storey residence in Western Australia.

The place is one of the finest examples of Marshall Clifton’s architectural accomplishment.

The place is associated with John Day, a prominent medical professional in Perth.

Physical Description

‘This two-storey brick building was commissioned by Dr John Day, later a prominent ophthalmologist in Western Australia, for a family home to recant the design elements and ambience of the architect, Marshall Clifton’s own home built a few years before. Clifton’s design success resulted from his interpretation of Spanish ‘Peasant architecture’ into the Western Australian scene. The eloquence of the use of brick in a decorative manner; tiles; wrought iron; window boxes and shutters and the Cordova tiled roof was the recipe for Clifton’s success. This house is the most intact example of his work as his own house has been altered at least twice since Clifton died, each change diminishing the values and ambience of the remaining fabric.’ ‘The design style of the Day Residence lies somewhere between the Mediterranean and Spanish Mission styles of the Interwar period (1915 – 1940). The building does not have the flamboyance of a decorated parapet, a corbel course, stucco finish, or twisted columns of the Spanish Mission style while it does have the simplicity of informal massing, light coloured walling, low pitched roof and American influence, whereas the major influence on Clifton’s work in this important period of his output is clearly from the Mediterranean with the connotations of simple, vernacular peasant architecture.’

History

‘John Leonard Day was born in Albany, Western Australia in 1899. He was the son of William john Day and Maude Alice Day who had come to Albany from South Australia in 1892 and set up a bakery in 1896. William Day was Mayor of Albany from 1915 until 1921. The Days had three sons and then three daughters, John Leonard being their second son.’ ‘John was educated at Perth Modern Scholl from 1913 following his primary school education in Albany. He was a keen sportsman and maintained a friendship with the headmaster, Mr Joe Parsons and his family all his life. He commenced medical studies at the University of Western Australia at the Irwin Street building in 1919 and graduated from the University of Melbourne in 1925. He became a Resident Medical Officer at Perth Hospital in 1926 and commenced private practice in 1928 from premises at 361 Lord Street, East Perth. Day met Mollie Louise Taylor from West Pingelly in1935 and they were married the following year by Canon Percy U Henn at the Chapel at Perth College in October 1936.’ ‘The newly married couple sailed to England where Day trained in ophthalmology at the Royal Eye Hospital in London as Resident House Surgeon under the Dean of the Medical School, Sir Benjamin Rycroft. They returned to Perth in October 1938 and Day set up a practice specializing in ophthalmology in the new Mercantile Mutual Life Building at 179 St Georges Tce in Partnership with Dr Claude Morlet. He was also appointed as an Honorary Assistant Ophthalmologist at Royal Perth Hospital. The Days engaged the services of Marshall Clifton to design their new residence and they moved in later in 1939. The Day Residence remains in 1998 in the ownership of Dr John Day’s son, Hubert and his wife.’ ‘In 1942, Dr Day was commissioned as a Captain in the Army Medical Corps and worked at Hollywood General and Repatriation Hospital. After the War he was elevated to the position of Honorary Ophthalmologist at Royal Perth Hospital, a position he maintained until 1956. He was involved in medical affairs including the British medical Association, becoming Vice president in 1950 – 1951 and state President in 1950-51. In addition to his work at the Royal Perth Hospital, most of his private surgery was performed at St John of God Hospital, Subiaco.’ ‘Dr Day was the foundation president of the Guildford grammar School parents Association in 1955 and in 1957 was elected to the Governing Council of the School. He was also a shareholder in Woods Airways, a small private airline operated by captain James Woods between Maylands and Rottnest Island. Dr Day visited stations in the Kimberley’s, Cockatoo Island, and he took holidays at Albany, West Pingelly and in the Southwest. Dr Day suffered a debilitating eye disease in 1957 and his health suffered a setback in 1958 forcing him to reduce his workload. He continued working until his health failed in February 1964 and he died in March of that year.’ ‘There was a distinguished association between Dr John Day, the specialty of Ophthalmology and General Medical practice in Western Australia. Dr Day was well known and respected in his professional life and was well supported in his social life by his wife Mollie.’ ‘Marshall Walter Gervase Clifton, born 3 September 1903 in Wokalup, Western Australia on a farm managed by his brother. His family moved to their own property when Marshall was seven. They initially lived in a tent, the children having to walk several miles to school each day. Marshall’s artistic achievements impressed the Inspectors of Schools, Mr Hughes such that he was invited to stay with the family and attend the Northam High School. In 1922 he matriculated to commence a four-year engineering cadetship at the Public Works Department.’ ‘He studied architectural subjects with the Sydney International Correspondence Schools supplemented by other subjects at the University of Western Australia to complete his articles in 1926. In 1929, he completed his Board Examinations and travelled to England the following year. He worked in the office of the architect, E Vincent Harris and studied at the School of Architecture at the Royal Academy. He travelled through several European countries including Spain and finishing in Russia where he commenced his return to Perth in 1932.’ ‘He joined Herbert Parry in a partnership which lasted until 1937 when Clifton commenced on his own account. Clifton had been appointed Honorary Artist and architect for the Royal Western Australian Historical Society in 1936 and Honorary Architect for the National Trust of Australia (WA) in 1965.’ ‘In the period between 1937 and 1942 when Clifton joined the army, his reputation for design was established. A number of residential commissions were undertaken by him in this period including the design of his own residence at 70 Johnston Street, Mosman Park, generally considered to be his finest work. His friend, Dr John Day commissioned Marshall Clifton to design a residence in the same idiom. The site characteristics were quite different as the outlook from the Day site lies to the South and west, a difficult orientation in the Western Australia climate, particularly near the ocean. The shape of the Day is tapering whereas the Mosman Park site was rectangular. These factors alone understandable elicited quite different solutions although the ambience of both houses was the same and they both shared a number of details.’

Integrity/Authenticity

High

Condition

Moderate

Associations

Name Type Year From Year To
Marshall Clifton Architect - -

Place Type

Individual Building or Group

Uses

Epoch General Specific
Present Use RESIDENTIAL Two storey residence
Original Use RESIDENTIAL Two storey residence

Architectural Styles

Style
Inter-War Mediterranean

Construction Materials

Type General Specific
Wall BRICK Common Brick

Historic Themes

General Specific
PEOPLE Early settlers
DEMOGRAPHIC SETTLEMENT & MOBILITY Land allocation & subdivision

Creation Date

28 Jul 1997

Publish place record online (inHerit):

Approved

Last Update

12 Jul 2022

Disclaimer

This information is provided voluntarily as a public service. The information provided is made available in good faith and is derived from sources believed to be reliable and accurate. However, the information is provided solely on the basis that readers will be responsible for making their own assessment of the matters discussed herein and are advised to verify all relevant representations, statements and information.