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ANZAC COTTAGE

AUSTRALIA'S FIRST ANZAC MEMORIAL
The Anzacs
were still fighting in the gullies of Gallipoli when, in October 1915, the Mount
Hawthorn Progress Association formed a committee to build 'Anzac Cottage'
(sometimes called 'Anzac House') in Kalgoorlie St, (No. 38) Mt Hawthorn, a
developing suburb 5 kilometres north of Perth. The Association wanted to
perpetuate the then very new name 'Anzac' and build a monument that would be
useful, providing 'a home for a wounded soldier who took part in the famous
landing'
Members of the Progress Association started the
fund-raising by contributing the large sum of 5 pounds each and the heavily
timbered bush block was prepared by volunteer labour on Saturday, January 29,
1916, 'when about 30 men assembled armed with shovels, saws and axes, to clear
the land'. 'At 4 o' clock the Ladies Patriotic Guild regaled the workers with
afternoon tea'. After this, the last standing tree - they called it 'Lone Pine'
- was felled.
The following Saturday, February
5, seventy drays loaded with donated building materials, formed a spectacular
half-mile procession through James St, Perth, accompanied by about 150 men, all
on their way to the Mt Hawthorn building site:
Mrs Roberts, the 'Soldiers'
Queen', headed the procession in her motor car, which also carried a Metters
stove and copper, and was accompanied by two other decorated motor cars. Then
came 20 drays of stone, 27 of bricks, one of lime, 3 of tiles, 12 of timber, 1
of cement and paints, 1 of scaffolding, 1 tiled grate, 1 large enamel bath, 1 of
refreshments and 1 of sundries. The procession was viewed by thousands as it
proceeded to Mt Hawthorn and, on arrival at 'Anzac', was greeted by hundreds of
enthusiastic men, women and children.
On Saturday the twelfth of
February, the 'busy bee' construction of the house commenced at 3.30 am and by
1pm the number of volunteer workmen on the site had reached two hundred. The
first sod was ceremonially turned by the 'Soldiers' Queen'. Hot dinners were
provided for the tradesmen, the Police Band provided the music and a local rifle
club fielded the Honour Guard for the Governor, and for his wife, Lady Barron,
who laid the inscribed foundation tablet. A crowd of thousands, it was claimed,
looked on in their Sunday-best. Construction of the house was completed by 'bed
time'. As the official souvenir booklet of the event put it, 'Mount Hawthorn was
en fete...'.all that day
The festivities were repeated when the
cottage was officially opened by Premier and Mrs Scaddan on April 15 and handed
over to the returned Anzac the following day - a Sunday. There was more
celebrating then, including bands, cadets and Girl Guides. A flag-pole had been
built in the front garden upon which the Australian flag - bearing the motto
'Anzac' - was to be hoisted each Anzac Day at 4.30am, the time of the first
landing at Gallipoli
Anzac Cottage was to house a
returned Gallipoli digger and his descendants for as long as they needed, to
'ensure that the cottage will remain for all time a monument to what Lord
Kitchener has termed "A remarkable record of valour" '. Private C. J. Porter and
his wife, Anne, were the lucky couple granted the cottage, their good fortune
deriving from Porter's participation in the fighting at Gallipoli, where he had
been wounded. Porter publicly declined the home, saying he did not wish to
receive something his comrades in arms could not have. But he was prevailed upon
to accept the honour. The Porters and their four daughters lived in the house
for many years. Private Porter died in 1964, his wife four years later, and some
descendants did indeed live on in the cottage until the 1970s
In 1991, after a period of uncertain ownership and legal difficulties, the
cottage passed into the keeping of the Vietnam Veterans' Association of
Australia, WA branch. In cooperation with the Mt Hawthorn Anzac Cottage
Restoration Group and with a grant from the Lotteries Commission and the
generosity of many donors, the VVAA (WA) restored the building as closely as
possible to its original condition in 1995-6. The cottage is now the
headquarters of the VVAA (WA).
In 1996 a new tradition of the
'Sunset Service' was established at the Cottage. A brief but effective ceremony,
this event is the last Anzac Day observation in the nation.
Anzac Cottage has been Classified by
the National Trust, by the WA Heritage Council and is included in the Register
of the National Estate. As well as having outstanding local, state and national
heritage significance, Anzac Cottage is the country's earliest World War 1
memorial - and perhaps the most unique of the Australia's many war memorials. It
is also a folk building, having been erected as part of the grassroots
response to the Gallipoli campaign
and, through its place in the suburban community, part of local lore and legend.
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