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

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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

2011 Hunter Baillie Spring Festival of Music

(Established in 1994 to raise funds for the restoration of the historic

1890 Hill & Son organ in the Hunter Baillie Memorial Presbyterian Church).

Since winning the ABC Symphony Australia Young Performers Award in 1999 percussionist Claire Edwardes has secured her place at the forefront of international performers in her field.

September this year will mark her premiere appearance in Hunter Baillie’s Spring Festival of Music.

No stranger to the Australia Young Performers Awards herself is Christina Leonard who was a national finalist in 1992 and who also appears for the first time at the 2011 Festival.

Together they will treat the Festival audience to solo and duo compositions for the engaging combination of marimba and saxophone in fun and funky interpretations of music new and old.

When: Sunday, 25 September at 3.00 pm(complimentary refreshments from 2.30 pm)
Where: Hunter Baillie Memorial Presbyterian Church,Cnr Johnston & Collins Streets, Annandale
Tickets: $30, $25 (Pensioner/Student), $12 Child, $65 Family
Bookings: 0417 226 545 or concerts@hunterbaillie.org.auwww.hunterbaillie.org.au