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Cranlana, the first 100 years : the house, the garden and the people, Michael Shmith

Label
Cranlana, the first 100 years : the house, the garden and the people, Michael Shmith
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographic references (pages 244-246) and index
resource.biographical
contains biographical information
Illustrations
portraitsmapsplansillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Cranlana
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
Michael Shmith
Sub title
the first 100 years : the house, the garden and the people
Summary
In 1899, a 21-year-old Russian, Simcha Baevski, arrived at the Port of Melbourne in pursuit of a new identity and a new life. Renaming himself Sidney Myer, he founded a small drapery business in Bendigo, Victoria. From these beginnings Sidney accumulated significant wealth, which enabled him to buy an established retail business in Bourke Street, Melbourne, in 1911. This became The Myer Emporium, a Melbourne shopping institution whose enduring status no one could foresee. The year 1920 was to be a momentous one for Sidney: in January he married Margery Merlyn Baillieu and by November he had registered interest in a Toorak residence, Torrie, eventually to be renamed Cranlana, at 62 Clendon Road. When Sidney died suddenly in 1934, Merlyn was left not only a widow but also chatelaine of Cranlana and Mother of the Store. Over the ensuing years, Cranlana evolved in various ways, always with Merlyn at the helm. When Dame Merlyn Myer died in 1982, her children rallied to keep the dream alive. Adopting Cranlana's air of concealed mystery, this book guides the reader though its magnificent wrought-iron gates and into a garden and a house that breathes history -- one resonating with horticultural vitality, material beauty and human enterprise, yet a place still very much a living family concern and to date not open to the public
Target audience
adult