PRINTING STAMP

1900 - 1940
Overview

A wooden block, with a metal plate. On the plate the text [SPECIAL RESERVE] has been engraved in reverse so when stamped the words read the right way. The text has been engraved to for a crescent shape. It is a Letterpress Printing production Block, used when printing wine bottle labels.

Historical information

This Derry Na Sura Winery label printing block was part of a collection of wine making equipment owned by Clement Edward Pike who was the manager of the winery from 1938 to the late 1940s. Mr Pike was born in South Australia where he learnt to become a winemaker. He came to Western Australia in 1938 to manage the winery. He returned to South Australia in the 1950s.
In 1894 Martin Jull in partnership, with his soon to be brother in law, Dr Ferguson Stewart they planted 26 hectares of grapes on the northern side of the Neerigen Brook overlooking the main road to Perth. Malbec, Cabernet Sauvignon, Shiraz and Grenache varieties of grapes were planted. Their first crop was successful and sold for £5.
In 1896 Dr Stewart sold his share of the vineyard to the English Baronet Sir Arthur Stepney, the Earl of Carnarvon. In 1904 Martin Jull sold his share due to increasing demands from work. Sir Stepney planted another 100 acres of vines over the next decade and named the property Derry Na Sura meaning Valley of the Vines. In 1909 Sir Stepney sold the vineyard to Mr Sewell and Mr Crocker.
The vineyard continued to steadily grow with 19,000 gallons of wine being produced in 1910 and reaching a maximum production of 30,000 gallons a year in the 1920s. At the same time the vineyards ports became well known winning awards at the Royal Agricultural Society Show
The Great Depression (1929-32), soon followed by World War Two, hit the vineyard hard. Sales dropped, labour was hard to find, the vines were getting old and the cost of rehabilitating the property was deemed too high. In 1951, the land was sold to Mick Mouritz who cleared away the vines to make way for grazing. This only lasted a few years before he subdivided the land and sold it for housing. Today the land is the suburb of Mount Nasura.

Details

Details

Registration number
cwa-org-33-AK1984.668B
Width
8.5000 cm
Height or length
2.4000 cm
Depth
5 cm
Year
1900
Year End
1940
Statement of significance

This object is a part of a collection that represents the skills and scientific knowledge required to produce wine and fortified wines in a commercial vineyard and how the products of the wineries were sold and marketed across Western Australia. The collection also represents the important role wine making played in the agricultural development of the City of Armadale from the late 1800s to the mid 1900s. During this period several large and small commercial vineyards operated along Albany Highway and the South West Highway.

Primary significance criteria
Historic significance
Comparative significance criteria
Object’s condition or completeness
Rare or representative
Well provenanced
City of Armadale - History House

City of Armadale - History House

Organisation Details
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