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BLACKET, EDMUND THOMAS (1817-1883), architect,
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son of a London merchant, was born at Smithfield, London, on 25 August 1817.
He was educated at the Milhil school, a Congregational college, near Barnet. On
leaving school he went into his father's office and three years later, at the
age Of 20, took a position in a linen mill in Yorkshire. He was much interested
in architecture and spent his holidays sketching and measuring old buildings,
but his father opposed his taking up this profession, and in June 1842 Blacket
left England intending to settle in New Zealand. He had letters of introduction
to residents of Sydney, and obtaining a position as an inspector of buildings
and teacher in the Church of England schools, decided to stay there. In 1845 he
began to practise as an architect, and in 1850 was appointed colonial architect
at Sydney. His salary was only £300 a year and the discovery of gold having
caused much increase in the price of living, Blacket in 1854 resigned from the
public service and began private practice. He had been promised the main
building for the university, which was begun at the end of that year and
finished about 1860. The main front measures 410 feet in length, and has a tower
in the centre 90 feet high. The great hall, a beautifully proportioned piece of
work at the right hand end, is 135 feet by 45 feet, with an open-timbered roof
70 feet from the floor. Blacket was also responsible for the St Paul's College
building.
Blacket became established as a leading architect in Sydney and was
especially known for his churches. Among these may be mentioned St Andrew's
cathedral, Sydney, for which he was not entirely responsible; Goulburn
cathedral; St Phillp's, Sydney; St Thomas's, North Sydney; St Mark's, Darling
Point; St John's, Glebe; St Stephen's, Newtown and St Paul's, Burwood. It is
possibly regrettable that he was not asked to work out a plan for later
university buildings, but it is likely that the immense development of the
university would have caused such a plan to have had little value. Blacket died
suddenly at Sydney on 9 February 1883. His wife died many years before and there
was a large family. One of his sons, Cyril Blacket, born in 1857, was in
partnership with his father, afterwards designed the chapter-house for St
Andrew's cathedral, and was elected president of the Institute of Architects,
New South Wales, in 1903.
Blacket was a remarkable example of a self-taught architect. He began his
work at a bad period, and there was little beyond his natural good taste and his
drawings of old Gothic buildings to guide him. The facade of the university
building remains one of the finest pieces of Gothic in Australia, and though
objection has been taken to a want of proportion between his towers and spires
and the churches to which they are attached, his works have still a high place
among the buildings of the period. Personally he was a man of the strictest
probity with a great love for his profession.
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