Leichhardt Post Office

History Week 2010 is coming!

Join us in History Week 2010 for a walk down the streets of the past and into the lives of those you pass. Explore the biographies of our leaders, those who shaped our world and the ordinary worlds of lesser known identities.

From a celebration of Sydney’s Italian fruitshops at Leichhardt Library to the stories of those who left their mark on local landscapes at Callan Park and on Balmain’s waterfront there is plenty going on this September. Download our events guide here (PDF reader required): HISTORYWEEK2010webflyer[1]

With over 200 events across NSW, History Week is about celebrating the best in community and professional history, highlighting its role in our cultural life and inviting people to get involved. During History Week, community groups, local councils, libraries, archives, museums, universities, cultural institutions, professional and amateur historians across NSW open their doors to present the latest in today’s historical research – fascinating stories, artifacts and experiences about both our past and ourselves today. The NSW wide guide to events can be found here: www.historycouncilnsw.org.au/events/history-week-2010

History Week 2009

Celebrate the NSW National Trust sponsored Heritage Festival 2009

 – OUR PLACE IN SPACE: UNDER THE SOUTHERN CROSS

 Cook and Leichhardt: How Explorers Found Their Way

 Friday, 17 April, 2009 

 On his first expedition travelling overland from Moreton Bay to Port Essington, during 1844-45, the explorer Ludwig Leichhardt used the same methods of establishing his position that Captain James Cook had employed on his first voyage, over 70 years earlier. Astronomers at Greenwich Observatory, in particular, Astronomer Royal Neville Maskelyne, who was the villain of the piece in Dava Sobel’s best selling book Longitude, perfected the method of lunar distances as a way of determining longitude.  Longitude, one of the two coordinates necessary to establish position on the Earth’s surface, is difficult to determine, while the other, latitude, can be found relatively easily by observing suitable stars.  In this illustrated talk, the curator of astronomy at Sydney Observatory, Dr Nick Lomb, will explain the method of lunar distances, talk about how James Cook became the first ship’s captain to know his position and discuss Leichhardt’s journey.

 Time: 6.30 pm – 8.00 pm.

 Venue: Within the Leichhardt Town Centre (exact location to be advised depending on Nos. of patrons)

 Cost: Free event

Light food & refreshments will be available.

 Bookings essential please RSVP to 9367 9223

 Marine Officer, Convict Wife. The Johnstons of Annandale

  Wednesday, 8 April, 2009 

 Few Colonial families can boast the fascination of such characters as Major George Johnston, his convict mistress, later wife, Esther Abrahams and their experiences in the young colony of New South Wales.  Author Dr. Alan Roberts will speak on his recently released book ‘Marine Officer, Convict Wife. The Johnstons of Annandale’, funded by Leichhardt Council through the Annandale Urban Research Association.  All copies of the book, for sale on the night, will be signed by the author.  All welcome.

 Time: 6.30 pm – 8.00pm 

 Venue: Annandale Town Hall79 Johnston Street, Annandale (behind Annandale Neighbourhood Centre).

Cost: Free event

 Light food & refreshments will be available and books sold at the event will be signed.

 Bookings essential please RSVP to 9367 9223.

Leichhardt Council quarry, Moore Street, Leichhardt, ca 1920  

Leichhardt Council quarry, Moore Street, Leichhardt, ca 1920

The Water’s Edge

Wherever waters rise or fall, there is a story. . 

ELLEN  WILLIAMS

Remembers time spent as a teenager at Leichhardt Baths, on the site of today’s Leichhardt Park Aquatic Centre

 “They were wooden tidal baths. They were very nice at high tide but they were a little bit on the nose when it was low tide. … We used to have our races every Sunday morning, and when we had the carnivals … it used to get packed with people coming down to see us.”

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HOWARD  HORWOOD   

On working at Mort’s Dockyard, Balmain in the 1950s

  “I’ve seen some terrible accidents on the waterfront … I’ve seen a couple of guys fall into the Dock and killed. … You’d see a hell of a lot of accidents on the waterfront … It was part of the game.”

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 ROSE WALKER

On Balmain’s foreshore in the 1930s and ‘40s

 “We used to go down to the small beach that was down at Birchgrove Park. We’d paddle in the water and go and watch the 18 footers go out of the boat sheds, they’d be all decked out to go down the harbour to sail in the races on Saturdays and Sundays, that would have been in the late ‘30s.

 As far as I know, most of the boat sheds are not there now – on one side of the bay units were built, the boat sheds were pulled down and they built these new units. We used to walk down Louisa Road, through the park and go down to Long Nose Point. We’d spend the afternoon watching the boats go off; they used to sail them around Cockatoo Island, this was during the early parts of world war 2.

 Down at Elkington Park we’d see the American war boats going in to Cockatoo Island for repairs and you’d hear them playing all the latest American songs, like before they were released here. “Deep in the Heart of Texas” was one song I remember. We’d sit in the park and you’d hear these songs coming across the water from Cockatoo. You know, I‘ve been to Singapore and to Hong Kong, and I still believe Sydney’s got one of the best harbours in the world.”

 We want to hear from you – share your stories of life at the water’s edge in the Annandale, Balmain and Leichhardt area with us! – simply post your memories below. .