Sunday, March 22, 2015

JD's Meats, formerly Australian Bank of Commerce; Pambula Co-operative Creamery and Dairy Company offices, Pambula:


Item details:
Current status*:
Listed in Schedule 5, Local Environment Plan.
Name of item:
Pambula Butchery.
Former name/s:
Australian Bank of Commerce; Pambula Co-operative Creamery and Dairy Company office; Honeysuckle meats;
Item type:
Built.
Item group/collection:
Finance.
Item category:
Bank.
Street number:
21
Street name:
Quondola Street
Suburb/town:
Pambula.
Local Government Area:
Bega Valley Shire.

Property description:
Lot 13, DP 777556
Owner category:
Private.
Current use:
Butchery shop
Former use/s:
Australian Bank of Commerce; Pambula Co-operative Creamery and Dairy Co. offices; temporary Pambula Post Office.

* Refers to the site's inclusion in Schedule 5 of the Local Environment Plan.

Significance:
Statement of significance: The present day Pambula butchery building is significant because of its associations with two important institutions in Pambula, the Australian Bank of Commerce (formerly the Australian Joint Stock Bank) which was the town’s first banking institution, and also the Pambula Co-operative Creamery and Dairy Company, the group that has been attributed with having perhaps the most significant impact on the town’s economic stability. The design of the building is considered significant in that it is unique to the village, whilst the material (brick) is unusual, being that it was not generally used locally in anything other than important public buildings. Situated on a prominent corner site in the centre of the township, the building has the capacity to make an important contribution to the town’s character and atmosphere.

Level of significance:
Local

2006.
Description:
Designer:

Builder:
George Tomkins (of Canterbury).
Physical description:
Single storey brick shop with a high masonry roughcast parapet featuring restrained decorative mouldings and an awning at the front overhanging supporting cement columns. The Toalla Street frontage shows the position of two window apertures, which have been bricked up. The building is painted in Mission Brown with the parapet and columns a deep cream and some elements picked out in white. The front façade has been altered to incorporate a modern aluminium framed glass shop front.
Physical condition:
Not inspected but the building appears structurally sound. Many of the original interior elements such as counters and safe have been altered and/or removed.
Construction date/s:
1913/14.
Modifications and dates:
C. 1928; C. 1976.
Further comments:



2010.

History:
Historical notes:
The Pambula branch of the Australian Bank of Commerce was constructed between 1913 and 1914. The bank had purchased the site in 1911, with the manager of the local branch of the CBC Bank writing to his Chief Inspector in April that year that “…the Australian Bank of Commerce bought a corner block the other day,” although he did not indicate whether he thought they intended building at that time. This report is supported by records at the NSW Lands Department, which show the conveyance of part of Lot 1, Section 40, to the Australian Bank of Commerce.

Tenders for construction of the new building were advertised in October 1913, and the following year, a requisition was received by the Imlay Shire Council from the local Australian Bank of Commerce manager, Mr. J. N. Small, “…to erect horse rail in front of new bank premises at Pambula.”

As with others throughout the colony, the local branch of the Australian Bank of Commerce began as the Australian Joint Stock Bank. Commencing business in Sydney in January 1853, the company continued to operate until the financial depression of 1893, when business was suspended. It was then reformed as a Limited Company, and continued to operate under this banner until 1910, when it was reconstituted as the Australian Bank of Commerce.

The bank had commenced business in Pambula in 1883, leasing a building belonging to Mr. J. Behl. It is believed that this stood on the site now occupied by Pambula Plaza, very close by their eventual destination. This earlier building was described as “…of a modest design - long, low, rather pretty cottage, occupying a retiring position within a neat and sightly paling fence that marks the boundary of the allotment whereon the cottage stands, and adjuts on to the street.  The general appearance of the whole would indicate the quite serious business that is transacted within the building.” However, by 1887, dissatisfaction was being expressed with the premises, a writer commenting “The residents hope to see the bank erect a more pretentious building on the present site, and perhaps the directors will replace the little crib at present used when they finish the Bega building!” The site was eventually sold in 1915.
The Australian Bank of Commerce continued to operate from the 1913/14 built structure until late 1927, when the local branch was closed down and business removed to the Bega branch.

Early the following year, the Pambula Co-operative Creamery & Dairy Co moved their offices into the building. This proved a real boon to the township, with suppliers coming to town once a month for the Saturday meetings, collecting their supply cheques and then settling accounts with local businesses. This had the effect of almost ensuring that butter factory suppliers kept their business in Pambula and is considered one of the foremost reasons why the town was the commercial centre for so many years. Many older residents recall the people in the streets on factory meeting days, and the increased level of business done in those times. Around 1964/65 the Dairy Co. purchased the building, continuing to occupy it, along with the Pambula branch of the Primary Producer’s Union who had also been using the premises from at least the mid-1930’s for their various activities and meetings.

Following destruction of the Pambula Post Office by fire in June 1936, the Department also moved in to the old AB of C building. Although this was only intended to be very temporary, the secretary of the Pambula Co-operative Creamery and Dairy Co wrote in November that year to complain of the ongoing situation, stating “We were assured verbally that it would be only a matter of four or five months time from the date on which the Post Office burned down until the new office would be erected, it is now over five months and nothing has been done to relieve us of the inconvenience. The present position is that two clerks and the Secretary are crowded into one small room, where all the work has [sic] done and all records kept in addition to this, the Board meetings of the Company are held in the same room, comprising seven directors, Manager and Secretary…” The same month, the local branch of Primary Producers Union wrote to similarly complain, pointing out “The premises at present rented by the Postal Department are in normal times completely occupied by our own and the Pambula Dairy Co organisation and at present, due to the part occupation by Post Office, we are greatly inconvenienced…” Once the owners of the building, Godfrey Brothers, indicated that occupation may not be available beyond the end of December that year, the postal department moved to have a new facility erected.

Following the closure of the Dairy Co-op in 1974, the building was purchased by local resident Ian Robinson. It was he who erected the awning at the front of the building and undertook the other conversions necessary to house a butchery. This included removal of the cedar counter top and safe. The building has housed a butchery business ever since.


C. 1920.

Themes:
Australian theme:
New South Wales theme:
Local theme:
3: Economy - Developing local, regional and national economies.
Commerce – Activities relating to buying, selling and exchanging goods and services.

3: Economy - Developing local, regional and national economies.

Pastoralism – Activities associated with the breeding, raising, processing and distribution of livestock for human use.

3: Economy - Developing local, regional and national economies.

Industry – Activities associated with the manufacture, production and distribution of goods.

5: Working
Labour – Activities associated with work practises and organised and unorganised labour.

8: Developing Australia’s cultural life.
Creative endeavour – Activities associated with the production and performance of literary, artistic, architectural and other imaginative, interpretive or inventive works; and/or associated with the production and expression of cultural phenomena; and/or environments that have inspired such creative activities.


Application criteria:
Historical significance
SHR criteria (a)


Historical association significance
SHR criteria (b)

Aesthetic significance
SHR criteria (c)


Technical / Research significance
SHR criteria (e)


Rarity
SHR criteria (f)


Representativeness
SHR criteria (g)


Integrity:



Listings and study details:
Merimbula Pambula Strategy Study.
Pambula Guidelines, Suzannah Plowman for BVSC, 1994.

Information sources / bibliography :
Bega District News
Bega Gazette
Bega Standard
Brown, Stella, oral communication
Candelo & Eden Union
CBC Bank, Official records.
Dunn’s Almanac
George, Allan, oral communication
Imlay Magnet
Munn, Chappie, oral communication
NSW Lands Department records
Pambula Post Office, NAA Series MP33/1, item NSW/1938/348
Pambula Voice
Robinson, Ian, oral communication
Sand’s Sydney & NSW Directory
Tetley, Kevin, Bega, information per.
Whelan, Betty, oral communication

Author and date:
© Angela George. All rights reserved.
July 2006.



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