Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Albert Halder

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
German

Occupation
  
Architect


Years active
  
25

Name
  
Albert Halder

Albert Halder

Born
  
9 October 1855 (
1855-10-09
)
Biezkofen, Wuettenberg, Germany

Died
  
1901 (aged 45–46) London, England

Notable work
  
Sans Souci, Memorial Hospital building Bulawayo

Albert Hubert Halder (1855 – 1901) was a German architect, civil engineer and businessman who practiced in South Africa (Pietermaritzburg and Barberton) and in the then Rhodesia in Bulawayo. Halder was born in Biezkofen, Württenberg, Germany on 9 October 1855 and died in London, England in 1901.

Contents

Early years in Germany

Halder Grew up in the southern regions of Germany, At age 12 he attended Realschule, a technical high school, in Stuttgart, Germany. After high school, the next four years he attended multiple Polytechnic schools in Vienna, Stuttgart and Strasbourg, Germany. He eventually past the state examination in 1875 at Stuttgart. After graduation he got employed by the German State Railroads as well as serving one year in the German army as an engineer before beginning private practice in Stuttgart.

Years in Southern Africa

In about 1881 Halder had moved to South Africa where he practiced as an architect in Pietermaritzburg. It was here where he designed his best-known and probably best preserved house, Sans Souci (1883-1884). This home has an unusual classical portico ornamented with swags of fruit and flowers. It was among the few private houses illustrated in the 1906 book Twentieth Century Impressions of Natal.

Halder moved from Pietermaritzburg to Barberton In 1886, two years after gold was discovered there. He got the job of government architect and was consulted by the board of the Barberton Hospital on the design of the new Hospital Building. During 1886 Halder perform the role as Chief Inspector for the construction of the railway line to the transvaal. In December of that year Halder became a partner in the firm, R.A. Lavertine & A.H. Halder - architects and surveyors. The firm proposed plans to the city council for the new Dutch Reformed church that was to be built but did not get awarded the contract.

In 1888 Halder Held an appointment as claims inspector in the Barberton area. In December 1888 Halder was instructed by the Minister of Mines of the South African Republic (Transvaal) to collect mineral examples from the mines in the area for display at the Gold Fields stand at the Paris Exhibition of 1889. Halder became a fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects and in August 1888 he became a corresponding member of the Imperial Institute of Civil Engineers and Architects of Vienna.

Halder left Barberton around the beginning of 1889 for the Witwatersrand, That year he traveled to Europe to attract investments for the Witwatersrand goldfields. He visited Antwerp, Amsterdam, Brussels, Berlin, Frankfurt, the Paris Exhibition, and Vienna including giving numerous lectures on South Africa specifically mining in the Transvaal before members of the Imperial Institute of Civil Engineers and Architects of Vienna. He returned to the Witwatersrand to represent several syndicates and private individuals.

Late 1890, Halder applied for the post of State Mining Engineer for the South African Republic but didn't get the position. This prompted him to leave the Witwatersrand and move to Pietersburg where he applied for naturalization as a citizen of the South African Republic. Halder then went onto Bulawayo where he designed the Memorial Hospital building in Jameson Street and a few office buildings. By 1897 he had returned to the witwatersrand and resided in Johannesburg where he wrote a paper "Mining in Rhodesia" that was published in the Transactions of the Institute of Mining Engineers (Newcastle upon Tyne, 1897, Vol. 13, pp. 609–611).

At around the turn of the century Halder moved to London where he remained until his death in 1901.

References

Albert Halder Wikipedia