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Conrad Sayce
Australian architect and writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Conrad Harvey Sayce (1888–1966) was a British born Australian architect and writer.
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Conrad Sayce was born in Hereford and educated in England before migrating to Australia. He practised architecture in Melbourne with Rodney Alsop and the firm of Alsop & Sayce won the Hackett Competition for the design of Winthrop Hall at the University of Western Australia. The commission led to a legal dispute between the partners, from which Sayce withdrew.[1] As an author his works include poems, short stories and adventure novels which reflect his experience of outback life and landscape. He also produced literary works under the name of Jim Bushman.[2]
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Selected works
- The Valley of a Thousand Deaths (c. 1920)
- Golden Buckles (1920)
- In the Musgrave Ranges (1922)
- The Golden Valley (1924)
- The Splendid Savage: A Tale of the North Coast of Australia (c. 1925)
Notes
External links
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