Charles Atkins Hornabrook (c.1833 – 26 August 1903) was a businessman in the colony of South Australia who made a fortune from property development in the city of Adelaide and investments in Broken Hill Proprietary and other mining prospects. He is remembered as the owner and developer of the York Hotel, at the time regarded as Adelaide's finest.[1]
The widower John Mitcham Hornabrook of Egloskerry, Cornwall, with his children Ann Greenfield Hornabrook and Charles Atkins Hornabrook arrived in South Australia in December 1838 aboard Glenalvon. In December 1849 John Hornabrook applied for the publican's licence for the York Hotel, a modest family hotel at the south-east corner of Rundle and Pulteney streets, previously held by its founder Jane Bathgate (died June 1869). He was successful, but only on the casting vote of the chairman.[2]
In 1854 the licence was transferred to John Bray, previously landlord of the "Grace Darling" and "Glenelg Hotel", and most likely John Hornabrook's brother-in-law.[original research?]
John Hornabrook married Sarah née Shephard, whose sister Anna Shephard (died 18 July 1876) married one John Bray, date and location as yet unknown and died before her.[3] There are three John Brays known in South Australia at the time, one being John Cox Bray, another a miner in Moonta. The third John Bray (c. 1812 – 1 March 1868), who arrived aboard Hartley in October 1837 and died at residence, Pulteney Street[4] is a likely candidate.[original research?]
The fact of his daughter Alice marrying someone of a similar name may be entirely coincidental.[original research?] Bray was not an uncommon surname in 1850s South Australia.
C. A. Hornabrook first became interested in Rundle Street in 1851, when he leased Town Acre 39 from Samuel George Smith, of the London banking firm of Smith, Payne & Smiths, then sublet it for building.[6]
In 1857 he applied, successfully, for the licence for the York Hotel previously held by his father, then by John Bray. That same year he married Eliza Maria Soward,[citation needed] half-sister of architect George Klewitz Soward.[5] In 1863 the first major improvement was commissioned: a separate building adjacent on Rundle Street with seven bedrooms with balconies projecting over the footpath, and a bathroom. Soward was the architect and Charles Farr the builder.[citation needed]
In 1867 he purchased a property between Third and Fourth Creeks near Magill, previously owned by Dr David Wark,[7] but apparently not Wark's residence "Alton", which was owned by Daniel Chappell between 1862 and 1876.
In 1868 he had Charles Farr pull down the old portion of the York Hotel, and in its place build a new "pile" designed by Daniel Garlick.[8] George Scarfe, the (unmarried) man largely responsible for the preeminence of Harris, Scarfe & Co., was a longtime resident. In 1878 substantial additions were made by Woods & McMinn, notably the addition of two billiard rooms and a row of shops.[9] W. E. Ford was the new licensee, but Hornabrook retained ownership until 1900, when he sold it for £28,000 by the Melbourne firm of Foy & Gibson.[10]
In 1874 he commissioned Farr to build the imposing residence "Dunheved House" later "Kalymna" (architect Thomas English),[14] which still stands at 28 Dequetteville Terrace, Kent Town.[15]
A large collection of their furnishings and household goods was sold by auction in 1879 prior to leaving, with their six youngest children, on a trip to England by the clipper Hesperus, sharing the saloon with the Rischbieth family.[16] Hornabrook returned alone in April 1882 on the steamer Cuzco, staying at "Landrowna Terrace", Victoria Square, resigned his directorship of several companies including Grove Hill Gold Mining Company. In 1887 he offered some £30,000 worth of shares at auction in a slow market.[17] He then became, with J. M. Wendt and a few others, a major shareholder in the Baker's Creek gold mine at Hillgrove, New South Wales.[18]
In 1891 he had a new residence built at the south corner of East Terrace and Gilles Street, designed by George Klewitz Soward, naming it "Eöthen". In 1928 it became the home of Sir Lavington Bonython and his family, renamed "St Corantyn".[19][5]
John Mitcham Hornabrook (c. 1812 – 23 August 1862), whose first wife Margaret Hornabrook née Atkins, died 18 February 1837, arrived with his two children in South Australia in December 1838 aboard Glenalvon. He married the widow Sarah Attwood, née Shephard (c. 1811 – 26 May 1902) on 23 November 1847. Her daughter Annie Attwood (c. 1844 – 26 February 1860) drowned at Glenelg.[22] Sarah's mother, Ann Shephard (c. 1864 – 18 September 1848), died at their home on Rundle Street.
After the death of her husband, Sarah and their three children, Lilla (b.c. 1846) and twins Joseph and Alice (b. 1850) made an extended visit to England, returning aboard Yatala in 1866. The widow Sarah Hornabrook was living at "York Villa", Mitcham in 1873, South Terrace, Adelaide in 1876, died at "Eothen", East Terrace.[23]
John Mitcham Hornabrook (c. 1812–1862) married the widow Sarah Attwood, née Shephard (c. 1811–1902) on 23 November 1847. They had three children together:
Joseph Hornabrook (c. 1799 – 7 April 1876) was the elder brother of John Hornabrook, died at South Terrace home of his sister-in-law