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 The Michaelis family were one of the most notable Jewish families in St Kilda . One members of the family, Moritz Michaelis, lived in Linden in Acland Street which now houses the City of Port Phillip's regular art exhibitions. His brother, Frank lived in Robe street in a house called 'Orwell'. Frank's son Archie was an MLA for the St Kilda area. Some of their story is in the article below.

Mr. Frederick David Michaelis, 1861-1935 who was educated at Wesley College, entered the company in 1878. His father was associated with the late Mr. Isaac Hallenstein in founding the company. Mr Michaelis was keenly interested in the activites of the Old Wesley Collegians and was a past president of the association. About 1902 he became interested in the affairs of the Alfred Hospital. He was elected president of the board of management of the hospital in 1927, a position which he held at his death. On one occasion when told of new scientific apparatus Mr. Michaelis promptly gave £500 so that it could be purchased for the hospital. Another generous gift was £5,000 toward the cost of Hamilton Russell House. Mr. Michaelis also made many other generous benefactions to charitable institutions. As Chairman of the St Kilda foreshore committee Mr Michaelis took a leading part in improvements which have been effected on the Esplanade. He was also chairman of the St Kilda Cemetery committee. This article was published: in the Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 15 , 2000 online in 2006

Frederick David Michaelis (1861–1935) from Argus by J. S. Levi
The death occurred suddenly yesterday of Mr. Frederick David Michaelis, managing director of Michaelis, Hallenstein, and Co. Pty. Ltd. Mr. Michaelis, who was at the warehouse on Monday, died in his sleep early in the morning. He was aged 74 years, and was the father of Mr Michaelis M.L.A., who is a director of the company.Sir Archie Reuben Michaelis (1889–1975)
Messages of sympathy were received yesterday from all parts of Australia by the company and by the family. Three of Mr. Michaelis's brothers are directors of the company. He is survived by a widow, one son (Mr Michaelis M.L.A.), and one daughter (Mrs Lewis Cohen of Sydney). The funeral will leave his home in Robe street St Kilda at 2.30 p. m. to-day for the St Kilda Cemetery.

Sir Archie Reuben Louis Michaelis (1889-1975), businessman, politician and Jewish leader, was born on 19 December 1889 at St Kilda, Melbourne, eldest child of Australian-born parents Frederick David Michaelis, merchant, and his wife Esther Zillah, née Phillips. Moritz Michaelis was his grandfather. His aunt Alice Michaelis was a founder (1912) and president (1944-46) of the Lyceum Club, Melbourne. The close-knit family gathered at Linden, the Michaelis mansion in Acland Street, St Kilda, on Friday nights to observe traditional ceremonies and rituals in preparation for the Sabbath. 

Archie attended Wesley College, Prahran, and Cumloden School, East St Kilda; in 1903 his parents took him to England and enrolled him at Harrow School.Returning to Melbourne in 1908, he entered the family tannery business, Michaelis, Hallenstein & Co. Pty Ltd. In 1912 he was sent to England to gain experience in the firm's London office. He served (from 1914) in the Honourable Artillery Company and went with his battery to the Middle East. After being commissioned (1916) in the Royal Field Artillery Special Reserve, he was posted to Ireland and Greece. He trained for the Royal Flying Corps in Egypt in 1917, but contracted malaria and influenza and was repatriated in 1919. Archie's brother and three first-cousins had died or been killed in World War I, and the family required his active involvement in the business. On 14 January 1920 at Tusculum, Potts Point, Sydney, he married his cousin Claire Esther Hart (d.1973).

In the late 1920s Michaelis began to take an interest in politics. He became associated with the Australian Legion and later the Young Nationalist Organisation, and valued his lifelong friendship with (Sir) Robert Menzies. In 1932 he was elected to the Victorian Legislative Assembly for the United Australia Party, wresting what had been the safe seat of St Kilda from the Australian Labor Party. During the 1935 election campaign anti-Semitic pamphlets were distributed in St Kilda. In parliament, Michaelis was the foremost advocate of legislation (1939) that made third-party motorcar insurance compulsory; towards the end of World War II he worked to prevent the transfer of vital powers from the States to the Commonwealth. In 1945, with (Sir) Thomas Maltby and three other dissident Liberals, he helped Labor to defeat the Dunstan-Hollway government. From 2 October to 21 November he was minister without portfolio in Ian Macfarlan's 'stop-gap' government. He rejoined the Liberal Party in December 1946. Elected Speaker in 1950, Michaelis served in that role until his retirement in 1952. He was knighted that year.

Chairman (1948-65) of the family firm and of its parent company, Associated Leathers Ltd, Michaelis was a generous supporter of charities. As treasurer of the Emergency Relief Committee, he had helped Jewish victims of the 1929 riots in Palestine. He was a member (1940-70), president (1945) and chairman (1947-51) of the Patriotic Funds Council of Victoria, and a board-member (1935-72) and vice-president of the Alfred Hospital. He also chaired the Victorian branch of the Australian Jewish Historical Society and served on the board of the Melbourne Jewish Philanthropic Society.

Like his father and grandfather before him, Michaelis was president and a trustee of the St Kilda Hebrew Congregation. He was a friend and disciple of its rabbi, Jacob Danglow, whose wife was his aunt. Michaelis became a defender of the Anglo-Jewish establishment within the Australian Jewish community. As founding president (1939-40) and spokesman of the Victorian Jewish Advisory Board, he resisted attempts to secularize the Jewish community's leadership. Opposed to Zionism, he publicly defended Sir Isaac Isaacs's anti-Zionist letters and articles. When some member of the Jewish community condemned Isaacs and his supporters, Michaelis declared that he would not be 'dragooned into silence'. In 1947-48 he helped to fund the short-lived anti-Zionist journal, Australian Jewish Outlook. Like Danglow, he later made his peace with the independent state of Israel.

In retirement, Sir Archie maintained a lively interest in community affairs and wrote frequent letters to the press. He relinquished his membership of the Victoria and Peninsula golf clubs and his social games of tennis, but continued to enjoy a weekly game of poker, crossword puzzles and reading (he was vice-president of the Kipling Society, London).

In 1966 he published a brief memoir, Before I Forget. Survived by his three daughters, he died on 22 April 1975 at South Yarra and was buried in St Kilda cemetery.

1945 The house was used for the RAN (Royal Australian Navy for rehabilitating soldiers https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/C199747

940s and 1950s the Bialystocker, Warsawer and Radomer Landsmanshaftn maintained separate refugee hostels in Robe Street St Kilda, Punt Road South Yarra. The Robe Street site was 19 Robe Street - the site of Orwell.The Landsmanshaftn were societies of immigrants who came from the same town or region. They were named for the members’ birthplace in Europe. In Melbourne they emerged with the arrival of Yiddish-speaking refugees. The earliest was the Bialystocker Centre, founded with the first wave of Yiddish immigrants in 1928, but they were given stronger impetus when Holocaust survivors settled in Australia. The Landsmanshaftn were integral to the new immigrants’ adjustment in their Australian home since they provided emotional, cultural, social and even financial support. At the same time, these organisations were important fund raising bodies for the Jewish Welfare Organisation and later for the United Israel Fund.
In 1955 there were known to be scores of Landmanshaftn in Melbourne. Meetings were held in private homes, at the Kadimah and in a designated “home” such as the Bialystocker Centre.A journal, Der Landsman, published by the Federation of Polish Jews and the Federation of Landsmanshaftn in Australia, appeared regularly from December 1964 until September 1970 and occasionally after that until 1991. As the immigrant generation diminishes, the Landsmanshaftn have declined and dwindled. In 2010 the Bialystocker, Krakower, the Warsaw Centre, the Lodzer Centre, Zaglembier, Chelmer, Lomzer, Kalisher and Radomer Landsmanshaftn still exist in Melbourne. https://www.monash.edu/arts/acjc/yiddish-melbourne/organisations/landsmanshaftn