The Captain Stirling Hotel is situated on Stirling Highway between Stanley Street and Florence Road. It was constructed between April and December 1935 for Edward Bartram "Bertie" Johnston. The newspapers at the time reported that the hotel was constructed for N. B. Robinson,[3] however Robinson was actually Johnston's solicitor (from the legal firm Abbott, Abbott, Andrews & Robinson) who made the license application on Johnston's behalf,[4] whilst he was out of the state.[5] It was designed by the architectural partnership of George Herbert Parry and Marshall Clifton.[6] The Captain Stirling Hotel was the first of three Inter-War Spanish Mission style hotels designed by Parry & Clifton, the second being the Inglewood Hotel (1935)[7] and the third was the Big Bell Hotel near Cue (1936).[8] The hotel was constructed by E. A. Allwood for a cost of £10,000.[3][9] Allwood was also responsible for constructing the Inglewood Hotel, the Capitol Theatre, New Oxford Theatre and the Plaza Theatre.[10]
During the 1950s, the eastern end of the building was extended with an office, associated entrance area, manager's quarters and a staircase.[11] In 1958 the owners opened the state's first drive-throughbottle shop with vehicular access from Stirling Highway.[12] It was designed with a modern butterfly roof by Bill Evans, from Marshall Clifton's architectural practice.[11]
In 1986 Marie Wordsworth, the daughter of Bertie Johnston, commissioned architects, Overman & Ziudeveld, to undertake extensive remodelling of the building, which included landscaping works and the expansion of the ground floor space to make it larger and more viable for functions.[13]
Architectural character
The Captain Stirling Hotel and drive-through bottle shop comprises a two-storey rendered masonry and tile hotel and a single-storey rendered masonry and asbestos bottle shop, adjacent to the hotel. The hotel is located close to Stirling Highway, with a courtyard below footpath level at the front of the building. The bottle shop is located in the car park, and accessed from Stirling Highway and Stanley Street. A carpark behind both buildings is accessed via Florence Road and Stanley Street.[11]
The hotel displays characteristics of Inter-War Mediterranean/Spanish Mission style of architecture, with arched openings, supported on pre-cast concrete twisted columns, first floor balconies, a central Dutch influenced gable, steel framed windows and arched entry supported on masonry columns. A balcony in the gable has a round arched opening with concrete moulding, and a juliet balcony with wrought iron tracery between the concrete balustrades.[11] The bottle shop has rendered and painted masonry walls, with a distinctive asbestos clad butterfly roof and steel framed windows.
^"Licensing Notices". The West Australian. Vol. 51, no. 15, 414. Western Australia. 18 November 1935. p. 10. Retrieved 14 October 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
^Rice, John C. (2006). Senator Bertie Johnston. Hesperian Press. p. 479. ISBN978-0-85905-384-6.
^"Something New". The Mirror. Vol. 15, no. 801. Western Australia. 11 September 1937. p. 20. Retrieved 14 October 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
^"Experienced Builder". Daily News. Vol. LV, no. 19, 496. Western Australia. 17 September 1937. p. 2 (Supplement to "The Daily News"). Retrieved 14 October 2016 – via National Library of Australia.