Rippon Lea Estate - 2 February
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Master Bedroom Breakfast Table
Elegant breakfast setting.
Louisa Jones inherited the estate from her father, Ben Nathan, along with substantial financial resources. She undertook extensive remodelling and renovation of the house to allow her to entertain on a lavish scale. The interior of the house was redecorated in a restrained classical 1930s style, drawing heavily on Hollywood film style of the 1930s and Syrie Maugham's "all white room" as influences. These renovations substantially altered most of the surviving Victorian features of the house—for example, the wallpaper in the entrance hall and corridors (originally embossed in gold) was over-painted in white, as were the marble columns around the main entrance.
Master Bedroom Breakfast Table
Breakfast and afternoon tea was served at this little table which sits in an alcove of the Master bedroom. It provides a lovely outlook onto the extensive gardens.
On Frederick's death in 1903, the property was sold to a consortium of real estate developers who had plans to demolish the house and subdivide the land. The house was empty for six years, while the developers sold off various parcels of land, particularly the orchards and paddocks. However, before the final carve-up of the estate could be undertaken, the leader of the consortium, Sir Thomas Bent, died and the property was put on the market in 1910. It was bought by Ben and Agnes Nathan, who owned the Maples chain of furniture stores in Melbourne.
Built for Frederick Sargood, and named after his mother's maiden name, Rippon, with "lea" being an English word for meadow. The style of the house has been described as "polychromatic romanesque" and the architect, Joseph Reed, was said to have been inspired by the architecture of the Lombardy region of northern Italy.