Harry Corones: All we know about the Kytherian hotelier and businessman

·

Haralambos ‘Harry’ Corones M.B.E was a “perennial”, “exuberant”, and “impish” hotelier, businessman, and freemason and is known as “the uncrowned king of the West”. 

His career extended from cafés, silent-picture cinemas, vaudeville shows, all the way to hotels, but he’s best credited for naming Qantas’ first five aircrafts – Hermes, Atlanta, Apollo, Diana, and Hippomenes. 

Corones also opened the first cinema in the remote suburb of Charleville in south-west Queensland. 

His extensive legacy in the town is survived by the 90-year-old heritage-listed Hotel Corones.

Hotel Corones opened in 1929 and stands in Charleville today (Left: Hotel Corones) (Right: Fay Fordham on Pinterest)

Early life and career:

Haralambos ‘Harry’ Corones was born in Frylingianika, Kythera, Greece to fisherman Panayiotis Coroneos and Stamatea Freeleagus on 17 September, 1883. 

Corones completed his military service as a first aid orderly at 21 years old. He emigrated to Sydney, Australia three years later and arrived on 10 August, 1907. 

Six weeks later he moved to Brisbane to be with his mother’s relatives and work in the Freeleagus brothers’ oyster-saloon in George Street. 

He moved to Charleville in 1909 where he bought and ran the Paris Café and a silent-picture cinema and vaudeville show with performers across New South Wales and Queensland in remote south-west Queensland. 

He became an Australian citizen in June 1912 and married Eftehia, daughter of Father Seraphim Phocas, at the Holy Trinity Church in Sydney’s Surry Hills on 29 April, 1914. 

His involvement with Qantas began when he bought 100 original shares in the company in 1922. He catered for the airline, supplying picnic hampers and sit-down meals for transit passengers in a converted hangar at Charleville airport. 

Harry Corones and aviation pioneer Nancy Bird in Charleville, Queensland, 1935 (Photo: State Library of Queensland)

Hotels remained his focus, however. He leased and demolished the Norman in Charleville in July 1924 to begin construction of the 50,000 euro luxury Corones Hotel. 

Hotels and aviation went hand in hand for Corones. Charleville was a stop-off point for the aviation industry and hosted a suite of visiting celebrities, including the Duke of Gloucester, Gracie Fields, and Peter Dawson. 

In 1929, after five years of planning and construction, the new hotel contained a lounge and writing room, a dining-room for a hundred and fifty people, a private and a public bar, a barber’s shop and a magnificent ballroom seating 320 people at a banquet. Upstairs were ornate bathrooms, 40 rooms and a private lounge. It was “the best equipped and most up-to-date hotel outside the metropolis”.

There are now daily tours through the Hotel Corones celebrating the grand vision of architect William Hodgen and Corones himself. 

Legacy: 

Poppa and Nana Corones with three of their children (Photo via SBS Greek)

The Charleville Hospital nurses’ quarters were named the Harry Corones Block. 

He served on local fire-brigade board along with the hospital’s board and was member of the original committee of the ambulance centre into his later years. 

He was appointed as a Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 1965. 

Harry Corones died aged 88 on 22 March, 1972, at his resident hotel in Charleville. 

His wife died two years later. 

He is buried with Anglican rites in the local cemetery. 

Source: ANU’s Australian Dictionary of Biography (ADB), Woolly Days

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Kalymnian Brotherhood of Darwin threatens legal action over octopus dispute

The Kalymnian Brotherhood of Darwin is threatening legal action against the NT Government following a food safety dispute over octopus.

‘Want to honour legacy’: Con Kalamaras on Estudiantina’s soulful tribute to Greek music icons

In the lead-up to the show, The Greek Herald spoke with Estudiantina member and organiser Con Kalamaras about what to expect.

Meet the Greek sisters behind Adora: A 30-year legacy of handmade chocolate and heart

If you’re looking for a new spot in Sydney to satisfy your sweet cravings, Adora Handmade Chocolates is the place to be.

Young artists shine in ‘First Light’ exhibition at opening of That Art Place in Carlton

More than 65 young artists from the St George area in Sydney had their creative moment in the spotlight on Saturday, July 12.

Peter Tsolakides leads Australia’s first cryonics facility amid scientific doubts

Peter Tsolakides, founder of Southern Cryonics, is leading Australia's venture into cryonic preservation with a facility near Holbrook, NSW.

You May Also Like

Professor James Arvanitakis welcomes University of Wollongong to the Fulbright Program

“We're... excited for the myriad opportunities this will open up for scholars from both [Australia and America],” Arvanitakis says.

Greece condemns Turkey’s ‘repeated threats of war’

Greece's Foreign Ministry has slammed what it called Turkey's 'repeated threats of war' in an official statement on Wednesday.

Ambitious new project seeks to create first Greek archive of oral history

Though the most common method of capturing history today is writing it down, the oldest is undeniably retelling it. Long before the popularisation of...