Daniel Garlick

Soon afterwards Moses Garlick, a plasterer by trade, built on the banks of the Torrens Adelaide's first permanent dwelling;[1] unauthorised, as surveying of the city had not been completed.

[3] In 1841 Moses Garlick founded a timber and building business in Kermode Street, North Adelaide, and Daniel was practising as an architect by 1853.

[4] Around 1850 Moses Garlick passed the timber business to a Mr Turner,[5] and the family moved from North Adelaide to a 450 acres (180 ha) property in Munno Para East, dubbed "Uley" for their hometown Uley, Gloucestershire (also Colonel Henry Kingscote's birthplace), and later became the township Uleybury.

He ran his architecture practice from "Uley", later sharing an office with Smith & Cullen in nearby Gawler.

His projects included country houses, shops, churches and chapels in the city and the countryside north of Adelaide.

[4] Over the next fifteen years they changed their focus between Adelaide and Broken Hill several times, depending on the economic climate.

[16] A few weeks before he died in September 1902, Garlick entered into a new partnership with Henry Evan "Harry" Sibley (c.1867–1917),[17] which never was put into practice.

Moses Bendle Garlick (10 September 1784 – 1 October 1859) married (Heather) Rachel Smith ( –1832) Raimond Lapins (1982).

Methodist Church, Archer Street, North Adelaide built 1857. Hall to right was designed by Garlick 1883. Both demolished 1967
Methodist Church, Norwood. Designed by Garlick and completed 1878. Old church seen at right.