Frank Rusconi
Frank Rusconi (20 August 1874 – 21 May 1964) was, together with his brother, Joseph, quarry owner and monumental mason of Gundagai, New South Wales, Australia.
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He was born at Araluen near Braidwood, New South Wales, the son of a Swiss goldminer and monumental mason, Peter Rusconi and his Australian-born wife Mary (née McCarthy).[1] Peter Rusconi was responsible for the stonework of the bridge over Majors Creek and the Anglican church in the mining village of the same name.[2]
After his mother's death, the family returned to Switzerland while Frank was a child. At age 15, he was apprenticed first in Italy and then Switzerland in the marble trade.[1]
Rusconi returned to New South Wales in 1901. He worked with his brother and father near Orange, New South Wales in a marble quarry they had discovered and developed.[1]
He settled at Gundagai in 1905. He died nearly 60 years later in nearby Cootamundra having been an active member of the Gundagai community since settling there.[1]
Notable works are:
- the Dog on the Tuckerbox – Rusconi made the base of the Dog on the Tuckerbox monument and the rest of the object was cast at 'Oliver's Foundry', Sydney.[3]
- the Marble Masterpiece, a miniature building constructed of 20,948 individual pieces of marble. Work commenced in 1910 and was completed 28 years later. The work is on display in the Gundagai tourist office.[4]
- tombstones are at Gundagai, Orange, Cudal and Galong cemeteries; the largest and most dramatic is a pair of white marble monuments to the Ryan family at Galong,
- two war memorials at Gundagai
- the marble altar in Tumut Catholic church
- A monument for a child at Galong
- Monument at Gundagai
- Monument at Gundagai
- Cenotaph at Gundagai, designed and built by Rusconi
- The Dog on the Tuckerbox
- Rusconi's "Marble masterpiece"
- Detail of masterpiece
- Tools used by Rusconi to carve his masterpiece, now in Gundagai Historical Museum
- Rusconi's house in Gundagai, 'Araluen' on Sheridan Street near the cenotaph
- Rusconi's own grave at Gundagai cemetery
References
- Kerr, Joan (1988). Rusconi, Francis Philip (1874–1964). Retrieved 17 July 2006.
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ignored (help) - Interpretive signage near Majors Creek bridge.
- Butcher, C. 2002, Gundagai: A Track Winding Back, AC Butcher, Gundagai, pp 212–213.
- Butcher, Cliff (2002). Gundagai: A Track Winding Back. Gundagai, New South Wales, Australia: A. C. Butcher. p. 206. ISBN 0-9586200-0-8.