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VerityC (talk) 04:55, 24 April 2018 (UTC)WikiD: Women, Wikipedia, DesignNew editor from Melbourne

Overview

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Lady Jean Brodie-Hall (Verschuer) AM FAILA (born 1925) is a founding member of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects[1] and had a long and distinguished career as a landscape architect in Western Australia before her retirement in 1981. She is acknowledged as a leader in West Australian landscape architecture[2] and received a national award for landscape architecture in 1990[3].

Early Life

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Jean was born in Rockhampton in 1925, married Ivan Barnes Verschuer in the 1951 and remarried [Charles Brodie-Hall] in 1980. She has four siblings.

She studied nursing at the Children’s Hospital (now Princess Margaret Hospital), working in London and Melbourne, before settling back in Perth with her family in the late 1940s. After marrying dentist Ivan Barnes Verschuer in 1951, she enrolled in a horticultural course at Perth Technical College, balancing caring for her three young children.

Professional Career

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Jean was a founding member of the [Institute of Landscape Architects] (AILA) and served on the Institute’s federal council for 10 years as a delegate to the [Federation of Landscape Architects] (IFLA), and as President for two years[4].

During the 1960s, Jean’s early projects were through the architecture firms of Forbes & Fitzhardinge and Summerhayes & Associates, where she was a consultant to large public companies, private firms, government agencies and local councils on a range of projects. These included standard-gauge railway stations, the Salvation Army village in Hollywood, Western Australia, and the design of major mining towns and their surrounds.[4] [5][6]

Following the incorporation of the AILA and her admission as a founding member, Jean opened a private practice in Kalamunda, Western Australia. She worked extensively for the Western Mining Corporation on their Kambalda project, at the Kwinana Nickel Refinery, the Kalgoorlie Nickel Smelter and the Agricola College for the School of Mines[4].

In 1970, Jean was engaged by [University of Western Australia] (UWA), initially to report on the changes to pedestrian and vehicle movement caused by the recently completed underpass from the north of the campus. On the retirement of the curator, she was appointed the inaugural University Landscape Architect in 1974, responsible for planning, design and maintenance of the campus, in the office of the University Architect until her retirement in 1981. She was responsible for the improvement of Whitfeld Court, the Sunken Garden, Somerville Auditorium, the Great Court, the Tropical Grove, the Oak Lawn, Jackson Court, Prescott Court and Whelan Court[4].

Awards and Recognition

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In 1979, Jean became a Fellow of the AILWA and was awarded the AILA Award in Landscape Architecture in 1990. She was awarded an Order of Australia for conservation and the environment in 2001.

Jean Brodie-Hall has maintained strong connections with UWA, helping to establish the UWA Friends of the Grounds[7], becoming Patron of the UWA Centenary Trust for Women[8], The Kwongan Foundation for the conservation of Australia's biodiversity[9], and serving tirelessly on numerous committees.

List of Awards

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1980 Fellow of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects

1981 Fellow of Curtin University

1990 Awarded the Medal of the Institute of Landscape Architects

2001 Member of the Order of Australia

2004 Chancellors Medal UWA

External Links/Further Reading

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WA Women in Landscape Architecture, short film, 2014

1984, English, Video edition: Landscape architecture in Western Australia [videorecording] : founder figures : special guest, Jean Verschuer.

Freestone, Robert (2010) Urban Nation: Australia's Planning Heritage. CSIRO Publishing

Saniga, Andrew (2012) Making Landscape Architecture in Australia. UNSW Press


References

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  1. ^ "Award for landscape architect - The Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995) - 1 Oct 1990". Trove. Retrieved 18 March 2017.
  2. ^ Jones, David (1997). "20th Century Landscape Design in Adelaide: Three Significant Designers". Journal of the historical society of South Australia. 25: 35-57.
  3. ^ "Award for landscape architect - The Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995) - 1 Oct 1990". Trove. Retrieved 18 March 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d "Jean Verschuer". Australian Women's History Forum. AWHF. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  5. ^ Brodie-Hall, Lady Jean. "The UWA Historical Society". UWAHS oral history portal. The University of Western Australia. Retrieved 18 March 2017.
  6. ^ Jacques, Mark. "Ten esteemed fellows of Australian landscape architecture". Landscape Australia. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  7. ^ "Friends of the Grounds". Friends of the Grounds. UWA. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  8. ^ "Centenary Trust for Women". Centenary Trust for Women. UWA. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  9. ^ "The Kwongan Foundation". The Kwongan Foundation. UWA. Retrieved 1 November 2017.