| DAY,
James Philip (1850-1933), gardener and curator, was born at Barwon
Lakes (Connewarre) on December 18, 1850, a son of John and Jane Day.
From 1879,
perhaps earlier, he was employed as a gardener at the Geelong
Botanical Gardens, subsequently foreman until being appointed by the
Council Curator of Parks and Gardens on March 30, 1896. It was
to be a term beset by many difficulties. His appointment
coincided with Council's Markets and Gardens Committee retrenching the
labourers at the Gardens, a decision brought on by a severe recession.
The Gardens were
then hardly 40 years old with many of the trees approaching maturity
and requiring an ample water supply to maintain good condition.
However, "the service from Garden Street was little better for
the Botanical Gardens than that to a householder", according to
Cr. Howard Hitchcock.
More staffing
difficulties and other restraints were created by the Great Wars;
nevertheless, he supervised with distinction until resigning on April
30, 1927, completing a term of 31 years, longer than any other
Curator. He removed from the Curator's Cottage at the Gardens to
reside at 59 Skene Street, Newtown.
In 1888 he was a
member of the foundation committee of The Geelong Horticultural
Improvement Society, continuing until its demise in 1896. That
society was soon followed by Geelong Horticultural Association to
which he was elected a vice-president, earning later an honorary life
membership.
For more than 50
years he had a very active membership of Aberdeen Street Baptist
Church Geelong, including a long period as a deacon. It was
there he married Emma Elizabeth Summers on June 28, 1883. They
had five children; one, Lieut. Norman Frank Day, dying of wounds in
France in 1918.
He died at his
residence on June 11, 1933; Mrs. Day survived until March 25,
1939. Both were interred in Eastern Cemetery, Geelong.
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