|
Florence
Taylor 1879 - 1969 architect
Florence
Mary Taylor (1879-1969), architect, engineer and publisher, was
born at Bristol England, eldest of five daughters of Eliza (born
Brooks) and John Parsons, a government employee. In 1888 the family
emigrated to Australia. Her father died when she was nineteen and
she began work as a clerk in an architect-engineer's office. (Many
men then combined what later were regarded as two separate professions.)
Florence decided to become a draftsman. She served her articles
with Edmund Skelton Garton, attended evening classes at the Sydney
Technical College, in building construction, architectural drawing
and quantity surveying, and lectures at the University of Sydney
Engineering School. At the college at first she was failed in all
her examinations; it took her eight years to compete the course.
In the office she was given the arduous task of writing out construction
specifications. She wrote later: 'They seemed to be never ending
and I thought I would never get around to designing homes and other
buildings though I used to get in at 7.30 am every day in a desire
to overtake my work.'
She became chief draftsman for John Burcham Clamp, the Diocesan
architect. In 1907 Clamp nominated her for associate membership
of the New South Wales Institute of Architects, the first woman
ever to be nominated; she was not accepted though Clamp strongly
defended her talents: 'She could design a place while an ordinary
draftsman would be sharpening his pencil.' It was not until 1920
that she was admitted to the Institute as Australia's first qualified
female architect.
In 1907 Florence married George Augustine Taylor, an architect-engineer
who had qualified at the University of Sydney. Taylor was a remarkable
man of diverse talents, a cartoonist, a 'Bohemian', a pioneer in
wireless, aviation and engineering. Florence shared many of his
interests. She learnt to fly in 1909. With him, she was a founding
member of the Town Planning Association of Australia (1913). Together
they started the Building Publishing Company which produced trade
journals, including The Australasian Engineer, Building and
The Commonwealth Home. Through these they campaigned for
urban planning and improved construction methods and materials.
They promoted the interests of engineers, architects and builders
with the government and the public, as in their organisation of
a petition from professionals supporting Walter Burley Griffin's
designs for Canberra.
George Taylor's early death in 1928 left Florence with a host of
tasks and responsibilities. She ceased publishing eight of their
eleven periodicals, continuing only Building (later Building,
Lighting and Engineering), Construction, and The Australasian Engineer.
She continued to produce a stream of town planning schemes which
she employed others to draw up, not being able to spare her own
time from publishing. Her schemes included traffic subways for Sydney,
a new airport at Newport, and an express route for traffic from
the centre of Sydney to its eastern suburbs. She travelled to Europe
and America and brought back planning ideas which she advocated
in her writings and speeches. Under her editorship the journals
became recognised organs of the engineering and building industries.
She sponsored design awards and had several named in her honour,
most importantly the Australian Institute of Metals Florence M.
Taylor medal and a plaque for distinguished service from the Master
Builders' Association.
She was appointed OBE (1939) and CBE (1961). The associations and
clubs in which she was strongly involved included the Arts Club,
the International Society of Australia, the Royal Empire Society,
the Royal Aero Club of New South Wales, The Royal Society of Arts,
and the Society of Women Writers. She was widely respected, even
if her talent for probing questions and sharp criticism irritated
some members of her profession.
Her views on the responsibilities of women were definite: 'For a
woman to marry, get into the small confines of her home and never
be articulate is a disgrace,' she said in 1953. 'There is not enough
mental occupation in the home and women never get a chance to shoulder
life's full responsibilities'. In l961 she retired in ill health
to live in semi-seclusion with her sister Annis Parson. She died
on 13 February 1969.
Christa Ludlow
|