John Curtin at Home
John Curtin's parents never knew the security of home ownership.
Homes for all
| When Curtin was only five years old his father was forced through ill health to resign from the police force and seek employment as a publican. For the next eight years the family lived in increasingly impoverished circumstances, first in Melbourne and then in a succession of country towns before returning to Melbourne where Curtin's mother assumed the main burden of supporting her husband and four children. It's not surprising then, that once installed in his own home in Cottesloe, Curtin refused to move to a bigger home despite his wife's urging and their capacity to afford a more substantial house. When Curtin became prime minister in 1941, Australia was experiencing a housing shortage which grew to an estimated 250,000 to 300,000 houses by the end of the war. In 1943, as part of the Curtin Government's plans for post war reconstruction and Curtin's own dream that all Australian families would be able to own their own homes, the Commonwealth Housing Commission was established. Its brief was to investigate how adequate housing could be provided for Australians. The War Service Home Scheme, which built houses for ex-service personnel, was one outcome of the Commission's work. Designs tended to be simple and utilitarian not only because of lack of materials or money but also because until 1952 house size was limited by legislation. By 1954 most Australian homes had only five rooms, but the bathroom had moved indoors and there was space for the family car in the yard. |
![]() Plan of John Curtin's house & site at 24 Jarrad St. Cottesloe, 1999. Records of Considine and Griffiths Architects Pty Ltd, JCPML00553/1 |
The Curtin House
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![]() Curtin house, 24 Jarrad Street, c1939. Records of the Curtin Family. JCPML00382/36 |
Enclosing the verandahs
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![]() The Curtin family, 24 Jarrad St Cottesloe, 1937. Records of the Curtin Family. JCPML00376/40 |
Home for a working journalist and parliamentarian
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![]() John Curtin reading c1942. Records of the Curtin Family, JCPML00381/33 |
'There is nothing that is not in a great book'
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![]() The front room, 24 Jarrad Street, Cottesloe, 1943. Records of the Curtin Family. JCPML00376/35 |
Kip - the real master of the Curtin household?
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![]() Mrs Elsie Curtin and Kip the dog, Cottesloe WA, 1942. Records of the Curtin Family. JCPML00376/21 |
More information on John Curtin at Home is available in the web resource Visiting John Curtin at Home. Endnotes
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