In the early 1950’s Mr Wieman arrived in Fremantle with his
tiny wife, fourteen children, and two- hundred and fifty doors, and a plan. Mr and Mrs Wieman believed, rightly, that
they’d landed in a country filled with opportunity.
Like
many Dutch migrants they went to lived in a suburb called Queens Park where the
land was affordable, and most importantly it was on a railway line. Mr Wieman
was a man of ingenuity; he had come to Australia with his two-hundred and fifty
doors because he planned to start up a door factory in Welshpool which is a
suburb close to Queens Park.
Mr Wieman
soon discovered that his two-hundred and fifty Dutch doors weren’t wanted. They
simply didn’t fit in with the climate and type of houses being built in West
Australia. Disappointed Mr Wieman might
have been, but he quickly made use of the doors that their new country didn’t
need – he made a house out of his doors, and it quickly became known as the
Door House.
I
remember the Door House well. As a child,
I ran through the house, opening doors, closing doors. I don’t remember any windows;
it seemed it only had doors. It wasn’t a
large house, how could it be, two-hundred and fifty doors only goes so far. It
was square shaped, and simply not big enough for the Wieman family, hence they
moved to go live in a house in Welshpool. Their new house sat alongside a factory
that Mr Wieman had set up and ran successfully for many years. The factory made
doors and fly-wired doors for Australian homes.
Many
families lived in the Door House.
For me,
the Door House came to symbolise the wonderful lifestyle and opportunities
available in Australia. Doors didn’t
close; they only opened in this country, giving poor migrants a chance, a
chance at having a better life.
Sadly,
the Door House is no longer there. But the memories of it live on in the hearts
and minds of many people, especially the Dutch community who lived in Queens
Park at the time.