The Girl who loved Ned Kelly

 

Last Night Paul ‘ O Keefe delivered a powerful and compelling unique family history to a packed crowd at the Balmain Town Hall. Paul grew up in Balmain and his family have lived there for three generations.  Paul has uncovered their family ties to Ettie Hart, Paul’s Great Great Grandmother who was Ned Kelly’s secret love and longtime sweetheart. This is a  historical gem of a story, Paul’s presentation takes you on a journey packed with facts, documents and compelling ties to the famous Australian legend of Ned Kelly.

Paul will be Re- Neducating again at Randwick Library

History Group Series, Randwick Library

Thursday April 12, 10.30-11.30am

Where: Randwick Branch Library, Level one, Royal Randwick Shopping Centre, Belmore Road, Randwick

Free event, bookings essential. Call: 9314 4888

Don’t miss out

 

http://www.neducate.com.au/neducate/The_Girl_Who_Loved_Ned_Kelly.html

The National Library of Australia digitises 50 years of The Australian Women’s Weekly

The National Library of Australia digitises 50 years of The Australian Women’s Weekly with DatacomIT

Since 1994, the National Library of Australia has financially supported the preservation of nationally significant material through the use of its Community Heritage Grant programme. However, it was not until 2009 that the Library initiated its first large scale project to digitise the entire available collection of the first 50 years of The Australian Women’s Weekly (The AWW).

Check out Trove

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/title/112

New light rail line follows the old goods line

The proposed new extension of the light rail line follows the old Goods Line. In 1910 it was suggested taking a new railway route alongside the new Long Cove Canal (now Hawthorne Canal) through Leichhardt. Their plan was to install a new intersection at Dulwich Hill on the Bankstown line and linking this to Rozelle, Glebe Island and eventually Darling Harbour. On June 30 1916 the goods line on this route,  opened for traffic.

Now the light rail runs along the same line from Catherine Street, Lilyfield to Central Station. The  light rail extension will run from Lilyfield to Dulwich Hill along the historic goods line.

Total length from Lilyfield to the Dulwich Hill Railway Station is 5.6km.  Approximately nine stations will be built along the 5.6km extension at:

  • • Leichhardt North
  • • Hawthorne
  • • Marion
  • • Taverners Hill
  • • Lewisham West
  • • Waratah Mills
  • • Arlington
  • • Dulwich Grove
  • • Dulwich Hill Interchange

Researching Family History

For Family History enthusiasts check out some software that could assist your organisation and research with

Family Tree Maker – Free Update for Version 2012 brought to you by Gould Genealogy.

We also have a subscription to Ancestory.com  which can be accessed at both Leichhardt and Balmain Library.

Sydney Sands Directory on microfieche

Sydney Directory 1865 (Sands). 1865. Directories are a great resource for genealogists, social and local historians … no they don’t give you BDM details, but they can give you all the interesting information about a person and the place they lived in.

The Sands’ directories are among the most comprehensive and best known of Australian directories. 1865 was the fifth year of release for the “”””Sand’s Sydney Directory””””. Similar in style to earlier years, this one contains 13 directories in one.

You will find the following included:

  • Street Directory (lists houses/businesses street-by-street, together with the head of the household and occupation)
  • Suburban Directory (lists persons in the suburbs alphabetically by surname, together with their address, and sometimes occupation)
  • Alphabetical Directory (lists persons in Sydney alphabetically by surname, together with their address, and sometimes occupation)
  • Trade and Professional Directory (occupations are listed alphabetically, with a listing of each person, and address – similar to current day yellow pages)
  • Banks, Insurance and Other Companies
  • Artistic, Literary, Scientific, and Benevolent Institutions
  • Masonic Institutions
  • Government and Official Directory
  • Ecclesiastical Directory
  • Legal Directory
  • Medical Directory
  • Municipal Directory
  • Colonial Directory (contains details on heads of parliament and governmental positions for each Australian state, and New Zealand)
  • hundred of adverts are also included, which make for interested reading in themselves!

Covering both Sydney and its suburbs, this will be a useful reference for all with connections to the region at this time. Also included is a small Almanac section which lists ‘Remarkable Events’ for every day of the year.

Leichhardt Street Names

Leichhardt Street

This year Patrick James completed a comprehensive Local Study on the Origins of Street names in Leichhardt. Did you know that Norton Street was named after James Norton a Sydney Solicitor and one of the crossing streets… Marion street was his wife.  Patrick has compiled a report which includes 135 streets in Leichhardt included in the report are old, new, obsolete and recycled street names.

Here are a sample of Street Names

Abattoir Road Road leading to the Glebe Island abattoir.  See Catherine Street.  NB two different roads Abattoir Road, Petersham (Leichhardt) and Abattoir Road, Pyrmont (Sands 1871).  Sydney Morning Herald, Tuesday 19 August 1862, page 5… Mr. Walter Beames stated that in the year 1831, a requisition was sent into the Government for the proper formation of (Abattoir Road), together with an estimate and plan showing the probable expense (£3000). No attention, however, was paid to this memorial, and some short time back another petition, signed by 400 or 500 persons, was sent in, but with like result…
Balmain Road After William Balmain, surgeon and landholder, born 2 February 1762, Perthshire, Scotland, died 17 November 1803, London Road from Petersham to Rozelle; after the suburb name. The Government road to Balmain (1842, 1859)
Edith Street After Edith Lucy Doust, eldest child of Isaac Doust landowner and developer of       Doust’s Subdivision.
Gillards Avenue Now McDonald Street, within McDonald Estate, in part previously called Gillards Avenue (after James Gillard landowner and developer) and Sutton Street.
Piper Street After John Piper, plan dated 1842

To view the complete copy of the report visit our Online Catalogue


Mondo and More: 20th Century Greening of Leichhardt – Local History Project

Local Historian Roslyn Burge has completed a brilliant  project on the Greening of Leichhardt. Attached is a detailed report on the shifting patterns in the greening of Leichhardt and domestic gardens represented across the different suburbs in the Leichhardt municipality; comprising of photographs, maps, aerials, oral histories, streetscapes and individual gardens. It considers the shift from growing vegetables for domesticate consumption to ‘lifestyle gardens’ and decorative planting. Also consider the development of community gardens and increased native planting and the amazing work done by locals to build up green areas in their Local Area.  The Oral Histories accompanying this research will be made available online in 2012. Keep posted.

Report :   Mondo & More

Phillip Bray

Interview with Phillip Bray by Roslyn Burge

Janice Cave
Bonnie Davidson
David Fonteyn
David and Ann Liddle
Sara Makkinga
John & Jocelyn Morris
Penny Pike
Lorraine Shannon
Jan Wood
Patty Todhunter
Irene Thomas

This Project is part of the Leichhardt Council Local History Grant Scheme. for more information click on the link.

How the second Woolpack Inn became the first Leichhardt Council Chambers

The Bald Faced Stag hotel was built in the early 1830s by Abraham Hearn on the corner of Parramatta Road and Balmain Road. The pediment on the current hotel implies that it was named the Bald Faced Stag from its inception. However in the early years it may have been known by several different names. By 1843, still owned by Hearn, it had become the Woolpack Inn with Thomas Shaw as licensee. A cluster of early pubs appeared in this stretch of road, as it was an overnight stopping point for the first days journey of bullock teams from Sydney to Parramatta and where mail coaches made their first and last stop. When the railway was built in the 1850’s the stage coach and bullock team traffic declined.

Original Bald Faced Stag one of Sydney’s Earliest Pubs c1830 Corner of Balmain Road and Parramatta Road. (the first Woolpack Inn.)

In about 1843, and until 1850 the entrepreneurial Thomas Shaw conducted a racecourse on land leased on the other side of Parramatta Road, extending towards the present railway line and with a grandstand in present Railway Street (about where  the Tongan Uniting Church now stands). Race meetings were patronised by the sports fans of Sydney paying from 2s 6d to one guinea (21s) to attend, and they only permitted entrance was, of course a gate opposite the Woolpack/Stag. The course was small with tight bends but on occasion it was said that up-to 10,000 people attended -about 20% of Sydney’s population at the time. (1)

John Thomas Hamilton Hill, the son of Francis Hill (Shaw) was born in 1869, and lived for 24 years in a house next door to the Council Chambers (Woolpack Inn). When he died in 1945, he left in his will that this painting, by W. Scott of the racecourse in 1845,   be given to the Mitchell Library. His description of the buildings in his own handwriting was included with the painting.

This painting was also used as a backdrop to the opening credits in the ABC documentary, Rogue Nation, written by Michael Cathcart in 2009, covering the first 40 years of the colony’s history.

Buildings reading from left to right.

1.         Two cottages, Prospect and Hay Street corner. R Parker owner and occupier, Captain Whitney owner and occupier

2.         Abraham Hearn owner.

3.         Abraham Hearn owner and occupier.

4.         The Woolpack Inn, lessee Thomas Shaw owner Abraham Hearn.

5.         Robert Barrell, storekeeper, owner occupier (Alderman on first Petersham Council).

6.         Charles Hughes owner.(To be transferred to Nicholas & Harriett Newnham in 1847).

7.         House just erected. Built for a hotel, and opened in 1847 as the Woolpack Inn.

The name being transferred from the older one, when Shaw’s license expired.   – Charles Hughes owner and licensee.

8.         Cottage especially built for, and occupied by police constable. – Charles Hughes owner.

9.         Occupier Mr. Tranter.

10.       Unidentified church.

11.       Johnstone Family mansion.

In 1846 Thomas Shaw & Abraham Hearn parted company. Shaw spent 1847 running the Starr Inn in Parramatta. Previously in 1844 Thomas Shaw’s father – in – law, Charles Hughes along with his wife Sarah (Peyton) purchased three blocks of land on the corner of Hay Street. (First called Piper then MacKenzie Street) He then signed over lot 1 the first block on the corner of  Hay Street to his newly married daughter Harriett and her husband Nicholas Newnham. (2) (There is one account which says the first brick house on Parrmatta Road was standing on this site and was occupied for some time by Mr. Tavener a large land owner (3). On previous records Charles had been described as a butter merchant, but on this document he is described as a victualler.  Nicholas is described as brewer, which he was at the Kent Brewery. (His brother having entered into partnership with the Tooth Bros.) Then Charles Hughes commissioned a larger family home for the second block, and apparently this was constructed by son-in-law Thomas Shaw who was also a carpenter/builder. So by 1847 the name Woolpack was transferred to this new public house with Charles as licensee, situated 100 metres closer to Sydney than the original Woolpack Inn. This probably required Abraham Hearn to re name his hotel the Bald Faced Stag.

Charles died in 1848 having appointed Nicholas as his executor. The following year 1849, Sarah Hughes remarried and her new husband, Robert Oliver became the licensee of the Woolpack Inn, which he retained until 1854.  In 1855 Harriett and Nicholas decided to sell their property to William Henry White for 850 pounds (4). In 1869 this property was sold by White to Aaron Wheeler, who was for some time the toll keeper at the Johnston Creek toll gate and along with the others instrumental in establishing the Leichhardt Municipality in 1871 (5).

The last recorded entry of Sarah Hughes’s Woolpack Inn was in the 1867 edition of Sands Directory. Sarah died in 1868, Nicholas Newman as the executor of Sarah’s will, sold Lots 2 & 3 and all their buildings to Henry McNamara in 1870  for £550.(6)

Henry McNamara was an alderman on the first Petersham Council which was established in 1872. Early maps show the site of the first Leichhardt Council and Working Man’s Institute, to be on Lot 2.  Aformer public house would be an ideal site for a Working Man’s Institute as their principal activity was as a billiard saloon. The first meeting of Leichhardt Council met in 1872 at the Working Man’s institute, it is possible that it was one building serving two purposes. (7)

By combining Sands and the rate books the occupants of the properties from Hay Street to Catherine Street in 1872 were: Aaron Wheeler – cottage 6 rooms, Leichhardt Council, the Working Man’s institute, Henry McNamara’s – House 11 rooms and stables, John Thomas Ireland, Thomas Shaw, carpenter. There is no indication of how many buildings were actually involved. It may be that 11 rooms plus eleven out houses actually housed Thomas Shaw and his family, John Ireland, The Working Man’s Institute and the Council Chambers. This proposition is supported by two sources. Firstly the Redmond Estate was not subdivided and sold off until 1880. In 1872 the blocks of the estate on Parramatta Road were only paddocks.

Secondly, the following is an account, written in the 1870s about traveling into Leichhardt from Sydney ” Just past White’s Creek was a road leading to the abattoirs, this being known as Bullock Road, (now Catherine Street), a place in those days of considerable risk to pass on market days by reason of the mobs of cattle being there driven. A few yards beyond here, still on Parramatta Road-were two buildings, one of them occupied as the Leichhardt Council Chambers, the other at the corner of what is now known as Hay Street, being the resident of Aaron Wheeler. A few yards further west at the corner of Balmain Road, was the Bald Faced Stag Hotel owned and occupied for many years by Mr Charles Hearn, who afterwards became one of the earliest Alderman of the Municipality” (8)

Leichhardt Council Chambers remained at this site until 1888 when a new Town Hall was erected at the corner of Norton and Marion Streets.  In 1854, the same year that Robert Oliver relinquished the lease of the Woolpack Inn to Vincent Howell.  Henry Hughes, the eldest son of Charles and Sarah Hughes had purchased land in the Wardeville Estate, on the opposite side of Parramatta Road, about 50 metres further east than the Woolpack Inn. (9) He built the Petersham Inn, in 1860 and for some years both hotels, owned by members of the same family, operated on opposite sides of the road to each other, until the Woolpack Inn finally closed in 1867. As  well as owning the Petersham Inn, Henry Hughes was the licensee, almost every year from 1866 to 1880. Although he had many business interests including brick-making and land speculation, he also found time to be an alderman on the Petersham council from its inception in 1872 until 1894. He died in 1897.

Parramatta Road was redeveloped around 1937, at which time the original Petersham Inn was demolished and replaced by a new two storey hotel slightly further east on the corner of the newly opened Phillip Street, where it stands today. The small street behind it memorializes the Hughes name. (10)

This account of the two Woolpack Inns was compiled from the following references by Ron and Milton Hill (Great grandsons of Thomas Shaw and from family history records originally researched by Olga Newton and Jess Hill (Great grand Daughters of Thomas Shaw) and with the assistance of the following references. )

We also acknowledge the contribution of Don Hughes(Great Great Grandson of Charles Hughes) and his family history.

Any further historical information which adds to this story would be appreciated. Please contact Milton Hill at j_m_hill@tpg.com.au

(1) Marrickville People & places- Meander, Cashman & Carolan.

(2,4,6,8 & 9) Lands Department- Old Title Indentures, Conveyances.

(3, 5, 7 & 9) The Jubilee history of Leichhardt – A Vialoux & C.M Reeves

(10) C. Meander  (1985) Pubs – heritage Vol. 2,  Nov.pp11

Maps:

Image:

Bald Face Stag Link to Article

For a complete copy of this study please contact Local History at Leichhardt Library localhistory@innerwest.nsw.gov.au

Bald Faced Stag History

The Queen Victoria Maternity Home for Women and Babies

The Queen Victoria Maternity home once operated out of  61 Albion Street, Annandale. It opened in 1895 for unmarried mothers for whom no charge was made. Matron Attenborough took charge in 1896  and remained their until 1924. The building was left to the Presbyterian Church in 1926 when George Lewis the founder of the hospital died. The number of inmates varied from eight and six beds the six bed ward being for waiting patients. A report in 1929 stated that 300 children were born at the hospital each year.

Nursing Babies 1929

Western View of Queen Victoria Maternity Hospital c.1929

A ladies auxiliary of the hospital was formed in in 1952 by Mrs Hope Figtree. The auxiliary devoted its time and talents to serving the hospital in many ways including gifts to the board of considerable amounts of money for the reduction of capital debts before the Hospital came under the Hospital Commission.

In 1979 community groups were negotiating to open up Queen Victoria hospital in Annandale for emergency accommodation at the time it was vacant whilst the NSW health commission and the Presbyterian Church were negotiating it’s return to the church. The building contained a cottage, a flat, a flatette, more than 30 bedrooms, nine large rooms and about eight offices.

61 Albion Street Annandale c. 1970

Architectural Information: is thought that the central block (with rear wings) was built c.1845. the building has been greatly added to throughout the century.  It was called “Macquarie Lodge” and after the Johnstons sold Annandale it was occupied by Sidney Smith, M.L.A. It is listed with the National Trust of Australia, it’s significance lying in the fact that it is one of the oldest buildings in the whole Municipality and the only Georgian building of the Johnston era still standing in Annandale.

References: Leichhardt Local History Vertical files

Annandale Association Buildings Register

The Media and Democracy

THE BALMAIN INSTITUTE

invites you to our first

Q&A session

Media commentators set the scene and reporters write their version of

“The Facts”

You will have the chance to hear how it works from experts and question them from your view.

There will be prepared and impromptu questions from the audience.

The participants are

Tony Stephens, Double Walkley Award winning reporter and profile writer.

Bruce Petty, Academy Award winning political cartoonist.

Catharine Lumby, reporter and Director of the Journalism and Media Research Institute, UNSW.

370 Darling Street, Balmain

The venue:

Balmain Town Hall,

7.00 pm, Thursday, 29th September 2011

Enquiries: damianc@bigpond.net.au

History Week….. a Gastronomic success

Well what a week of some great events with over 140 people attending over five days. With the theme this year being EAT  we invited you to EAT History as we delved into the Edilble, Appetising and Tasty bits of history of Leichhardt. We needed to look no further than the major contribution that the Italian Families, locally run Italian eateries, delicatessens, fruit shops and butchers both historic and current which have contributed to the culinary landscape of Leichhardt. Il Cibo a photographic exhibition paying homage to some of Leichhardt’s great cafes and fine food outlets is on until September 30th, so make sure to pop down to the Italian Forum on the Piazza Level for a viewing.  Featured in the exhibition is the renowned Mezzapica patisserie which opened in 1952, still in the family it continues to offer traditional Italian biscotti such as Napoli, Mandorlati, Croccantini, Florentine, Amaretti and Mostaccioli to name a few. Around 1962 Mezzapica was considered the only place to go for Italian cakes, biscuits and pastries for all occasions. One of the great pictures in the exhibition is a hauntingly beautiful photograph of original owner Angelo Mezzapica standing next to a seven tiered wedding cake unique to that era. Other pictures include  internal changes to the shop from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s with a shot as it is today. Although freshly painted the heritage listed shop front has changed very little with its vintage signage preserved. The exhibition also displays the patisserie La Fiorentina which once operated out of 508 Parramatta Road..which was a popular cake stop for locals in the 1960’s 1970’s and 1980s, offering a different but just as great range of Italian cakes and biscuits.

Angela Mezzapica opened 1952

Mezzapica shopfront 2011

La Fiorentina 508 Parramatta Road closed 1998

Bar italia Staff 2011 with their famous "No Skim, No Soy No Light milk" sign

Bar italia est. 1959

.

The walking tour

Both History week walking tours were marvelous fun. Walk one  which featured Mezzapica as the main stop was led by Sicilian born Mauricio Bruno from Siracusa who shared a wealth of knowledge about Italian food more notably the traditional Sicilian recipes that can be found in traditional restaurants like La Giara in the Italian Forum. Walk two featured the lovely Italian tunes on the piano accordian by musician Libero Osorio, this walk featured a fantastic cake shop, patisserie and deli..Locantro Fine Foods tucked away in Catherine street. Run by two generations dynamically combining what was a well known delicatessen with what is today a thriving hot spot for locals offering great coffee, quality cakes, patisseries and bread all made on site. Run by Franca and Vitorrio originally from Abruzzi and Salina in Italy along with their two sons Patisserie chef Pino Locantro and Adriano Locantro.  For a copy of the walking tour click here

Adriano Locantro 2011

Vittorio and Pino Locantro 2011

A bit of Background…so how did Leichhardt become so Italian?

By the 1930s, things Italian began shifting towards Leichhardt, and in the post war era, Leichhardt quickly surpassed Balmain and Glebe in Italian character and became Little Italy as it is known as today. In the broader Leichhardt municipality Italian business changed from being dominated by specialist trades such as mosaic layers and stonemasons in the late nineteenth century, to predominately food related retail especially fish shops and green grocers in the early decades of the early twentieth century. The post war period has seen the suburb of Leichhardt particularly, as well as the broader domain of Leichhardt Council became an established Italian business area, encompassing real estates, travel agents, law firms, clothing shops, restaurants and cafes. In 1976, there were 176 Italian businesses operating out in Leichhardt.

For more information o the growth of the Italian community and businesses in Leichhardt click here for a paper by Widhyastuti, I

PERCEIVED ETHNIEHUB:

SUBURBAN LAND DEVELOPMENT AND MIGRANTS’ PLACE-MAKING

For More History Week Events visit here

IWC
Ciao