The Hugh D.T. Williamson Foundation aims to support and strengthen communities across Melbourne and rural Victoria by enabling the establishment of educational opportunities, building leadership skills, addressing health and environmental concerns as well as identifying ways to enhance the cultural life of all Victorians through the arts. The Trustees source potential projects and take a close interest in the progress of each, encouraging partnerships and building on projects’ successes.
ABOUT
Hugh Dean Thomas Williamson was born in Ballarat, Victoria in 1901. His father was a mechanic. He joined the Ballarat Banking Company aged 16 beginning a career in banking, initially in regional Victoria, and which culminated in his appointment in 1954 as General Manager of the ANZ Bank, a position he held until his retirement in 1961. He laid much of the groundwork for the ANZ Bank’s strong performance over subsequent decades. He served as President of the Bankers’ Institute of Australasia from 1955 to 1961, the year he was appointed CBE.
Thereafter followed a busy second career in retirement holding positions on various boards and committees bringing to them his business and life experience. He was involved with many organisations including the Royal Melbourne and Freemasons Hospitals, the Salvation Army, the National Gallery of Victoria, the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, and was honorary treasurer of the Victorian Arts Centre Trust. He was a founding Trustee of the William Buckland Foundation and this became a model for his own philanthropic legacy.
A “man of the people” Hugh took a strong interest in the lives of all he came across particularly admiring those who made the most of what life had handed them. He was known for his hard work, common sense, dislike of waste of any kind and his commitment to the betterment of the broader community of Victoria and, in particular, Ballarat.
Hugh Williamson died in 1985. Under the terms of his will the Hugh D.T. Williamson Foundation came into being in 1986 with a corpus of funds of more than $4 million. He appointed his friends Denis Tricks AM, Martin Carlson OAM, Malcolm Menelaus and Harry Carrodus as founding Trustees together with a representative of ANZ Executors and Trustee Company Limited . He gave little direction to the Trustees except that they not forget Ballarat and that grants made can only support initiatives within Victoria. Under the wise and careful stewardship of the founding Trustees, the corpus of the Foundation grew enabling a large and wide-ranging group of organisations and projects to be supported. The current Trustees are committed to building on this legacy, and remaining true to Hugh Williamson’s hopes and expectations for the Foundation he created.
TRUSTEES
Founding Trustees
Denis Tricks AM
With a career in stock broking with Wm. Noall & Son, Denis Tricks knew Hugh Williamson through Hugh’s own interest in the stock exchange. Denis served with him on the Building Committee of the Arts Centre and succeeded Hugh as Honorary Treasurer of the Arts Centre. Denis was also on the Audit and Finance Committees. His interests were broad, including his ownership of a cut flower growing and exporting business in Gippsland. He was also Chairman of the Wildflower Advisory Committee for the Australian Government’s Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation.
Denis Tricks served as Chairman of the Hugh D.T. Williamson Foundation until his retirement in February, 2015
Martin Carlson OAM
A career in arts administration brought Martin Carlson and Hugh Williamson together, through their joint membership of the Victorian Arts Centre Building Committee. With a background as an educator in Australia and overseas, and with a keen interest in the performing arts and design, Martin brought to the Foundation an encyclopaedic knowledge of the arts scene in Melbourne. As Chairman, Denis Tricks described, he was ‘innovative, bright, the spark of all of us…with great integrity’.
Martin Carlson took the role of Chairman on Denis Tricks’ retirement in February, 2015, a position he held until his retirement in 2021.
Harry Carrodus
The Trustee who knew Hugh Williamson the longest, Harry Carrodus met Hugh in 1948 at the Bank of Australasia (later to become ANZ). Harry later became his secretary and Hugh became his mentor. He gave Harry a key piece of advice as to how to get on in the bank: ‘being on the front line, meeting people and fostering customer relations.’ Denis Tricks speculated that Harry was chosen by Hugh because he was ‘a lovely man with a soft heart – generous and kind and the throbbing conscience of the Trust.’
Harry Carrodus served as a Trustee of the Hugh D.T. Williamson Foundation until his retirement in March 2014.
Malcolm Menelaus
A surgeon, paediatrician and scholar, Malcolm Menelaus spent most of his career at Melbourne’s Royal Children’s Hospital where he was Chief Orthopaedic Surgeon from 1982 to 1990. A man of many interests, Malcolm painted, enjoyed working on his property and sailing. Malcolm knew Hugh through his father, a banker, and father-in-law, Hugh’s GP. They became steadfast friends. In his last twenty years, Hugh called in on Malcolm and his family every Sunday, always at 5 pm.
Malcolm Menelaus served as a Trustee of the Hugh D.T. Williamson Foundation until his death in September 2000.
TRUSTEES
Current Trustees
Stephen Newton AO
Following an extensive career in Education where he served as Chair of State and National sector organisations, and as a school principal for twenty five years, Stephen Newton chose to make his next contribution in the community welfare sector. He is a past Chair and member of the Board of Anglicare Victoria and currently serves as Chair of the Board of the Brotherhood of St Laurence and as a Director of the Epworth Medical Foundation. He became an advisor to the Hugh D.T. Williamson Foundation in 2012, was appointed a Trustee in 2014, and became Chairman of the Foundation in 2021.
Susan Hughes
Susan began her career as a solicitor but most of her working life has been involved with schools in a variety of roles including parent representative and school council member. She has volunteered in various legal and consumer representative roles. She has a strong interest in creating opportunities for young people to embrace their potential. She has been a Trustee since 2011.
James Garde
James is a financial adviser specialising in mergers & acquisitions and corporate finance. He spent in excess of 30 years with PwC in Melbourne and London and subsequently was the Executive Director of a significant Australian family office. He is an experienced executive and non-executive director across various industries including retail, property, media, financial, and children’s disability services. James was appointed as a Trustee in 2021.
EQT
FUNDING
Who we fund
The Foundation funds organisations and projects in the areas of: the Arts; Education; the Environment; Health and Community Wellbeing; Leadership and Community Development; and Local and Regional Development. Provision is made for support at times of particular need such as responding to natural disasters and other emergencies or significant issues and events such as the COVID-19 Pandemic.
The approach of the Trustees is to engage strongly with those individuals and organisations which receive support.
Here are some examples of projects and initiatives we fund
GRANTS
2021 Grants | ||
Grant recipient | Project | Description |
Education | ||
Melbourne Indigenous Transition School | 364 Church Street Alumni Boarding House | Contributing capital funding for the renovation of the new MITS Boarding House which will house MITS alumni supporting them to successfully complete their education in Melbourne. |
Melbourne Recital Centre | Making Waves | Supporting MRC & Virtual Schools Victoria to address the significant lack of specialist learning and performance opportunities for student composers, especially those living in outer-metro and regional Victoria. |
Mornington Peninsula Foundation | Continuing the Elevate pilot | Helping to extend by one further year a trial within Western Port Secondary School (WPSC) to implement Oakwood school practices to retain students of a similar cohort at Western Port Secondary College and thereby improving engagement and retention of students at risk of exiting the system. |
Museums Victoria | First Peoples Cadetship Program | Funding to support the creation of pathways and opportunities for Koorie youth across the museums, cultural heritage sector, and back on Country, whilst connecting with First Peoples cultural material and knowledge held within museum collections across Australia. |
University of Melbourne | Enhancing First Nations Discipline Expertise at Science Gallery Melbourne | Funding to enable employment of First Nations professional in the area of Media and communications, Digital experiences, Curatorship, or Collections to help ensure that First Nations knowledge and representation is embedded within the operations of the Gallery. |
Environment | ||
Yarra Valley ECOSS | ECOSS Crops for Community program | Funding to support the employment of a horticultural trainer and a disability worker to enable ECOSS to engage people with an intellectual disability in their programs for growing, cooking and preserving food for sale at events or donation to other community groups in the region. |
Health & Community Wellbeing | ||
Alkira | Opening the world to all abilities | Helping to replace aged and basic computer equipment and facilities to enable greater accessibility for people with intellectual disabilities. |
DoGood Volunteers | Twelve & Thirteen Programs | Contributing to the cost of employing a Program Manager on a full time basis to enhance the programs’ ability to educate program participants about social justice issues and to deliver more benefit to the programs’ charity partners. |
Habitat for Humanity, Victoria | Crib Point Project | Supporting an affordable housing project that will help people experiencing disadvantage to own their own home on the Mornington Peninsula. |
International Specialised Skills Institute | Innovation in Ageing International Fellowships | Providing funding for the awarding of 2 Fellowships per annum designed to stimulate improved quality of life for older Australians by supporting practitioners to access to global best practice and disseminate this information across the aged care sector. |
Royal Melbourne Hospital | June Allen Awards | Providing funding for an additional award in 2021 to enable nurses at Royal Melbourne Hospital (especially those who have been involved in frontline care during the pandemic to undertake further study, travel overseas (as appropriate) and to make a significant contribution to patient care and treatment at the RMH. |
The Queen’s Fund | Assisting women in crisis | Supporting The Queen’s Fund to financially assist and empower single women and children in Victoria who are in distress, crisis or emergency situations. |
The Salvation Army | Family Support worker for Bridgehaven | Providing parenting support and skill development, alongside the Bridgehaven AOD treatment program to assist women in their recovery journey and enable them to make more successful transitions back into the community. |
Yooralla | A picture is worth a thousand words: Snaps and Stories to measure goal attainment by people with disability | Funding for the cost of developing the Snaps and Stories application will help people with disability to overcome the barriers and challenges they face in establishing and achieving meaningful goals. |
Youth Live4Life | Implementation of Live4Life in the Bass Coast & South Gippsland Shires | Supporting the implementation and embedding of a successful community grown, evidence-based model for improving youth mental health and reducing suicide across rural and regional communities. |
Leadership & Community Development | ||
Local & Regional Community Development | ||
Birchip Cropping Group | Regenerative Farming forum | Supporting a 2021 farming forum, in Birchip, with leading industry panellists which will seek to provide an industry consensus on the definition on “regenerative farming”. |
Birchip Cropping Group | Hugh D.T Williamson- BCG Research scholarships | Investing in young agriculturalists to support their research capability, and to build a human capital resource base that has skills to support the sustainability of Victoria’s farmers into the future. |
Responding to natural disasters and other emergencies | ||
Bug Blitz | Bug Blitz field events for bushfire-affected schools | |
Regional Leadership Australia (Victorian Regional Community Leadership Programs Secretariat Inc) | Gippsland Regional Community Leadership Program project: - East Gippsland Tool Drive II | Supporting the communities of East Gippsland to heal and grow following the devastating Black Summer bushfires through the implementation of a regeneration project developed by the local communities for those communities. |
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2022 Grants | ||
Grant recipient | Project | Description |
Arts | ||
Arts Centre Melbourne | Maintenance and upkeep of The Hugh Williamson Room | A contribution towards the costs associated with the ongoing maintenance and upkeep of The Hugh Williamson Room at Arts Centre Melbourne. |
A is for Atlas | Dining Room Tales | Funding for the delivery of four Dining Room Tales (DRT) events in communities in Victoria’s west. DRT is a ‘global-local’ social art practice centred on food that seeks to connect diverse audiences and build healthier, more empathetic communities. |
Education | ||
River Nile Learning Centre | Facility fit-out | Funding for the fit-out of new premises. |
River Nile Learning Centre | Social Worker role | Supporting the employment of a social worker to support the wellbeing and ongoing education of the students attending RNLC. |
Sovereign Hill Museums Association | First Nations Cultural Officer | Supporting the engagement of a First Nations Cultural Officer to develop and deliver museum education programs and build cultural competency amongst Sovereign Hill Museum workers. The Officer will also support the Museum’s programming team to develop and deliver First Nations programming for the public. |
The Salvation Army | Hugh Williamson Scholarship Fund | Supporting education and training opportunities for young people in Melbourne’s west/north. |
Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Foundation | Kitchen Garden Program community support | Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Foundation Kitchen Garden Program community support Funding to support the employment of a Community Engagement Officer to provide specialised assistance to regenerate and activate kitchen garden programs throughout Victoria. |
Environment | ||
McClelland Sculpture Park + Gallery | Environmental Systems Manager | Funding to support the employment of an Environmental Systems Manager to lead key landscape restoration and renewable energy projects over the next three years as McClelland pursues its ‘art with nature’ focus. |
Sovereign Hill Museums Association | Sustainability Roadmap | Funding for the development of a Sustainability Roadmap to address three key drivers of the future direction of Sovereign Hill – becoming a “Net Producer” of energy by 2030; having a well-articulated and actionable Biodiversity Plan at Narmbool; and meeting the expectations of growth in their education commitments into the future. |
Health & Community Wellbeing | ||
Alkira | Opening the world to all abilities project | Contributing funds towards the installation of wheelchair lift to support all abilities access to Alkira’s new computer hub facility. |
Epworth Medical Foundation | Brookes Nursing and Midwifery Academy at Epworth | Contributing funds towards the development and establishment of the Brookes Nursing and Midwifery Academy at Epworth to better develop and retain nurses and midwives in the health workforce. |
Global Gardens of Peace | VASS Project | Funding towards the design and construction of a ‘forest food garden’ at Yooralla’s Ventilator Accommodation Support Service. |
Global Gardens of Peace | Operational funding | Contribution towards the annual operating cost of this voluntary organisation that builds gardens for vulnerable communities. |
Royal Melbourne Hospital | June Allen Award | To enhance patient care and treatment in Victoria by supporting the education and development of nurses at Royal Melbourne Hospital through the June Allen Award that was established by Hugh Williamson during his lifetime. |
The Queen’s Fund | Assisting women and children in crisis | Supporting The Queen’s Fund to financially assist and empower women and children in Victoria who are in distress, crisis or emergency situations. |
The Salvation Army (Hobsons Bay Corp) | Just Brass | Supporting the creation of opportunities for children and young people in the Laverton area to learn a musical instrument and have their personal, social and spiritual development needs attended to. |
The Salvation Army (Hobsons Bay Corp) | Refugee support | Contribution towards the work of supporting people to be released from refugee camps in Turkey, Kenya, Uganda, Sudan, Egypt, Eritrea, Jordan, and Lebanon, to reunite with their families and settle in Australia. |
Wallara | Inclusive Jobs Hub | Contribution towards the cost of building Wallara’s Inclusive Jobs Hub at Sages Farm for the purpose of scaling up Wallara’s capacity to create work pathways and paid jobs for people with intellectual disability. |
Leadership & Community Development | ||
Local & Regional Community Development | ||
Clunes Neighbourhood House | Clunes former Free Lending Library: Planning works prior to renovation | Contribution towards the cost of the Planning works prior to renovation of Clunes former Free Lending Library |
Responding to natural disasters and other emergencies | ||
Greater Shepparton Lighthouse Project | Supporting families in Greater Shepparton to recover from the floods | Funding to support the community impacted by recent floods. The GSLP team is working directly with impacted families to navigate existing systems, advocating for access and essential changes to services, providing individual support to families and filling the gaps of what is currently available. |
Regional Leadership Australia (Victorian Regional Community Leadership Programs Secretariat Inc) |
Contact
The Foundation does not have an open grant round process. The Trustees prefer to be active in the community and to build relationships with people and organisations undertaking work in the areas of focus for the Foundation.