No. 1530 - Ross - Ellenthorpe Hall (Methodist Church)

Ellenthorpe Hall is a country house and farming estate on Auburn Road west of the town of Ross in the Midlands.

According to Reverend Max Stanstall, author of ‘Tasmanian Methodism - 1820-1975’, Ellenthorpe Hall was the venue for fortnightly Methodist services which were held regularly from the mid 1870s until 1886. In 1904 an attempt was made to revive religious services but these lapsed after only three months.

Ellenthorpe Hall was the home of George Carr Clark and Hannah Clark. The two storey sandstone house was built in 1826 using convict labour. It was the first school for young ladies established in Tasmania. It opened in September 1827 with Hannah Clark hand-picking students from the leading families of the colony. The school soon gained the reputation of being a highly regarded establishment. Amongst its wealthy clients was Eliza Collins, the daughter of Tasmania’s first governor, David Collins.

With the economic downturn of late 1830s the school at Ellenthorpe Hall was closed. 


Ellenthorpe Hall was a venue for Methodist services in the 1870s and 1880s. Photograph: Sir Ralph Whishaw. Libraries Tasmania, Item Number: NS165/1/401


Sources:

Stansall, M. E. J and Methodist Church of Australasia. Tasmanian Methodism, 1820-1975 / [by M.E.J. Stansall ... et al] Methodist Church of Australasia Launceston, Tas. 1975 

northernarchitecture.us/country-houses/ellenthorpe-hall





Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Welcome to Churches of Tasmania

No. 592 - Gretna - St Mary the Virgin - "Worthy of Imitation"

No. 624 - Dunalley - St Martin's Anglican Church - "In grateful memory of the men who fought in the Great War"