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James Manning

James Manning was the Clerk of Works who arrived on the Scindian 1 June 1850 with Edmund Henderson, Comptroller-General of Convicts, and Thomas Dixon, Superintendant of Convicts, and the first group of convicts.

Campbell:
James Manning was born in 1814, qualified as a civil engineer and worked in the general building industry before joining the Ordnance Department as a foreman in 1847. From there he transferred to the Fremantle Convict Establishment in 1850. While providing services to the army, Ordnance Department personnel remained civilians. As the Establishment wound down from 1868 Manning remained in WA and worked in the Royal Engineers Office and as manager of the Fremantle Works Department until his retirement in 1872. Campbell: 2.2.

Erickson:
MANNING, James, b. 17.8.1814 (England), d. 22.7.1893 (Frem), arr. 1.6.1850 per Scindian with family (wife, 2 chd & servant), m. Jane YELDHAM b. 1813 d. 26.10.1877 (Frem). Chd. Emily Armit b. 1853. James, Jane. Clerk of Works Conv. Est. 1850: 1862 Clerk Public Works; 1863 Chairman Frem. Town Trust; JP. Fremantle 1854, residence "Park Cottage", Town Lots 1851 & 1854 & then "Bardrop". In charge of Convict Estab. buildings & works including jetties & bridges, travelling up to 5000 miles per annum supervising. Retired 1872. Employed 4 T/L men 1867-1874. (Erickson)

Oldham:
James Manning (1814-1893), architect and builder, was born on 17 August 1814, at Burdrop, near Banbury, England. After qualifying as a civil engineer he worked in London with charge of the houses of many peers. In the Ordnance Department he served in the remodelling of Tilbury fort in 1847-49. Appointed clerk of works in Western Australia he sailed with Captain E. Y. W. Henderson in the Scindian and arrived on 1 June 1850. He played an active part in the building programme initiated in the colony by the convict establishment. The precise contribution of Manning and others is difficult to assess because some designs were by officers of the Royal Engineers and such important public buildings as Government House, Pensioners Barracks and Perth Town Hall were constructed jointly by the imperial and colonial Public Works Departments. Most records of the imperial department left the colony after transportation ended but the remainder indicate that Manning had special ability in the use of timber. The fine jarrah hammerbeam ceiling of Perth Town Hall was probably his design although the main structure was designed by R. R. Jewell.
Plans bearing Manning's signature include the convict depot (1856, 1859) at Mount Eliza, the commissariat stores (1856) and guard-house at Fremantle, the residency (1866) at Albany, the first stage of the customs house, bonded store, post office (1868) and gaol additions (1866, 1870) at Geraldton, the court-house, bonded stores (both 1866), Toodyay gaol (1868) and police stations at Northampton and Williams (both 1867), Kojonup and Lower Blackwood (both 1868) and the second stage of Government House at Rottnest. He also constructed the wooden jetties at Albany, Vasse, Bunbury, Fremantle and Champion Bay, bridges over the Upper Canning, several on the Albany Road, the King and Kalgan Rivers, the Avon at York, Northam and Newcastle (Toodyay), the most notable being the Fremantle Traffic Bridge (1864-66) known as Hampton's Folly. The colony's roads, iron lighthouse at Point Moore and the two leading lights at Champion Bay were monuments to his supervision.
A justice of the peace, Manning retired from the imperial department with a pension of £300 in 1872 but continued to design and build. He died on 22 July 1893 at his home Burdrop, Fremantle. The pall-bearers at his funeral were distinguished citizens. Predeceased on 26 October 1877 by his wife Jane, née Yeldham, he was survived by a son and two married daughters. (Ray Oldham, ADB)

References and Links

Campbell, Robin McKellar 2010, Building the Fremantle Convict Establishment, PhD, UWA (Faculty of Architecture). Available online to download (not from this site) as a 40MB PDF.

Erickson, Rica et al. 1987 (etc.), Bicentennial Dictionary of Western Australians, UWAP.

Hitchcock, J.K. 1929, The History of Fremantle, The Front Gate of Australia, 1829-1929, Fremantle City Council: 33.

Image from Ewers.


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This page incorporates material from Garry Gillard's Freotopia website, that he started in 2014 and the contents of which he donated to Wikimedia Australia in 2024. The content was originally created on 20 July, 2017 and hosted at freotopia.org/people/manningjames.html (it was last updated on 13 March, 2024). The donated data is also preserved in the Internet Archive's collection.