Looking for Ludwig in Leichhardt

BY Adra Anthoney

In 1848 German explorer Ludwig Leichhardt set out from the Darling Downs in southern Queensland bound for the Swan River settlement in Western Australia, and was never seen again. It remains one of Australia’s most enduring unsolved mysterious, and now there is a competition to commemorate Ludwig’s life. Ludwig is the subject of a Leichhardt and Annandale photo competition. Spanning 25 weeks, a cut-out figure of the famous 19th century explorer has been ‘hidden’ in a different local business each week. To enter, the public is encouraged to seek out the image and post or “selfie” with him on the Leichhardt and Annandale Business Chamber’s Facebook page. Anitra Morgana, Executive Officer of the Leichhardt and Annandale Business Chamber, said the event was formed to raise community awareness about Ludwig Leichhardt.

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“To celebrate the bicentenary year of Ludwig Leichhardt’s birth, and toraise awareness of how Leichhardtgot its name, the competition was created as a way of involving the community and local businesses in a fun activity in the lead-up to the 27th annual Norton Street Italian Festa in October,” she said. Last week’s winner, Jacqueline Van Goeverdun, “found” Ludwig at Grind Expresso Bar on Norton St, and won a $40 gift voucher sponsored by the café. “I think it was a great idea to help promote the area and the places of business in it,” said Salvatore Crino, manager of event sponsor, Grind Café. “We had some people coming in [the café] and saying, ‘What’s this Ludwig competition?’ They obviously had their iPhones and took photos. “We initially put [the cut-out] where the posters were so you couldn’t really see it – it was sort of camouflaged in there but the people found it. We moved it generallyaround the place.” The Ludwig cut-out has since moved to a new ‘hiding’ place and two $100 shopping vouchers are up for grabs this week. The clue provided is “Ludwig is getting into the community spirit in #Leichhardt’s piazza del mercato”.

WW1 and WW2

Recognition of War Memorial – Callan Park

April 18, 2013

Friends of Callan Park (FOCP) want to see the unique ‘Harbour Bridge’ War Memorial at Callan Park conserved and protected.

The memorial is a replica of the Sydney Harbour Bridge and was completed in 1931, the year before the actual Sydney Harbour Bridge was opened.

It was unveiled by the Governor of NSW, Sir Philip Game, on 4 August 1931 on the Veterans site.

The memorial is currently located in front of Repat B Ward on the southern side of the Waterfront Oval.

Douglas Grant, an Indigenous WW1 veteran, designed the memorial and constructed it with the help

War Memorial

Photo: J Ridding, 2007

of other veterans residing in the Repatriation wards at Callan Park. A number of wards were built along the foreshore specifically for war veterans.

“Friends of Callan Park have been active in seeking the care, restoration and protection of this wonderful memorial to our ex-service personnel. We have arranged for temporary protection of the memorial but are seeking assistance from Council to ensure the appropriate ongoing recognition and protection of the memorial.” according to the Acting President of FOCP, John Stamolis.

Many of the buildings in this part of Callan Park housed repatriation soldiers, men who returned from war suffering from shell shock – often described as chronic nerve cases.

Douglas Grant (of the 13th Battalion, like W. T. Shirley who built the Sphinx memorial at Turramurra) lived at Callan Park and built a replica of the Sydney Harbour Bridge as a War Memorial and, with other patients of B Ward, erected the Memorial.

On 4 August 1931, the 17th anniversary of the beginning of the war, the Governor, Sir Philip Game, unveiled the memorial. He declared it was a symbol of unity and hoped it would stand for years ‘as an inspiration to you all to do what you did during the four years of the war, and have been doing ever since – sticking it out in the good old Australian and British way’. Patients applauded and the Governor planted a wattle.

The Sydney Morning Herald, 5 August 1931 – Douglas Grant second right

The Sydney Morning Herald, 5 August 1931 – Douglas Grant second right

Douglas Grant was a man of Aboriginal parentage and white Australian upbringing who joined the AIF and became a prisoner at Bullecourt. After the war he worked as a labourer at Lithgow and was secretary of the loc

al RSL. Douglas Grant drank heavily and the cottages at Callan Park were a sanctuary for he and the other men of the Lost Legion.

He was bitter about the fate of returned soldiers and Aborigines and wrote about “A Broken Pledge”.

Extract from Sacred Places, War Memorials in the Australian Landscape, K. S. Inglis assisted by Jan Brazier, Miegunyah Press at Melbourne University Press, 1998, p243

World War 1 and World War 2 Links

Register of War Memorials in NSW

Australian War Memorial

Terricks Hospital – Balmian Road 1932 -1951

Does anyone have family who were born a the Terricks hospital roughly located at 483 Balmain Road from 1932 – 1951. Prior to this it was located at 151 (now 69) Cecily Street Leichhardt.
Dr Barry of Balmain who resied at 449 Darling Street Balmain and Nurse Constance delivered many babies between 1921-1951. Do you hav eany family phortographs that show the Terricks Hospital.

Talk – Migrants for Aboriginal Rights : Solidarity with Refugees

Don’t forget to book in for this Event this Thursday 16th May 6:00pm

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One major area of activism has been support for Aboriginal rights. It included the formation of a coalition in 1988, promoted by FILEF and involving several progressive organizations from other Ethnic Groups, to coincide with celebrations of the Bicentenary, or rather Invasion Day, as the Aborigines call it.

Another big area to which FILEF directs its commitment is the issue of migrants, of any kind, but especially, in more recent times, of asylum seekers, escaping from situations of crisis and danger, mostly caused by the very nations who now want to reject them back. Among our initiatives, public meetings accompanied by publications and photo exhibitions.

The presentation will include screening of Fabio Cavadini’s Film Protected (1975) about Palm Island and addresses by Aboriginal representatives.

Thursday 16 May
6:00pm
Leichhardt Library
23 Norton Street, Italian Forum, Piazza Level, Leichhardt
Free Event

Bookings required – 9367 9338 or localhistory@lmc.nsw.gov.au

Open Day – Under the Spire @ Hunter Baillie Church

libevent-hf04-08-smlThe Hunter Baillie Church’s sandstone spire has towered over Sydney’s Inner West since 1889. Visit the historic Blacket Brothers neo-gothic Church and enjoy free recitals at 1, 2 and 3 pm by Ralph Lane OAM on the 1892 Hill and Son Organ. The Church and Annandale’s history will be on display in the 188u6 Arts and Crafts brick school hall. 2 pm Guided walk of Annandale’s War Memorials by local author, Marghanita da Cruz ($25 with afternoon tea, numbers limited, bookings essential.)

Sunday 21 April
12 noon – 4:00pm
Hunter Baillie Memorial Church Annandale
Free Inspection of church, historical display, talks and  organ recital
Afternoon tea – $5
Guided walk – $25, including afternoon tea
All money proceeds are for the conservation of the church
Enquiries – 9969 8071 or mhbeaver@bigpond.net.au

Book now for Balmain’s first walking tour designed for your ipad and mobile phone

The launch of the Balmain Association’s new self guided Internet walking tour of Balmain Colonial Architecture 1840-1860

will be presented by Red Ant Media and Margaret Wallace. Do you want to create an online walking tour? come and learn form the experts from Red Ant Media.

To view this great online walk click the logo below.

 

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Family History, Land Title and WWI workshops for April 2013 at SAG.

Society of Australian Genealogists:
120 Kent Street
Sydney
NSW 2000
Tel: 02 9247 3953 Fax: 02 9241 4872  E: info@sag.org.aufamily tree

Visit their website
www.sag.org.au
for further details.

April 2013
Sat 6 Apr
120 Kent St
10.30 am – 12.30 pm
Tracing WWI ancestors beyond using NAA – Kim Phillips
$20 / $30 1914 will be the centenary of the commencement of WWI. Learn about tracing WWI ancestors beyond the NAA website and accessing information about battlefield sites such as Gallipoli and the Western Front. How do you prepare for your
own visit to the battlefield sites?
Sat 6 Apr
120 Kent St
1.30 pm – 3.30 pm
‘The Battle Continues’ – Soldier Settlement after WW1 – Selena Williams, SRNSW
$20 / $30 Selena Williams from State Records NSW will outline how returned WW1 soldiers and nurses were eligible to take up land under the Soldier Settlement Scheme in NSW and how to locate them in online indexes and other records. The reality of
life on the land and the difficulties these settlers experienced will also be highlighted.
Tues 9 Apr
Your Place
8.00 pm – 9.00 pm
Webinar: NSW BDM Records – Marilyn Rowan
$10 Members only
NSW Transcription Agent Marilyn Rowan will share her extensive experience in searching the NSW online BDM indexes to their full potential and show you how to get the most out of these vital birth, death and marriage records.
Thur 11 Apr
120 Kent St
10.30 am – 12.30 pm
Getting Started on your Family History – Kerry Farmer $10 Members only Limit 10
For new members with no family history research experience.
Learn the basics of how to start researching and what to do.
Fri 12 Apr
2/379 Kent St
10.30 am – 12.30 pm
County Spotlight: Bedfordshire, Berkshire & Buckinghamshire – Joan Healy & Philippa Garnsey
$30 / $45
Limit 14
Join us at 379 Kent for this session which will highlight selected online sources and other types of material available for these three counties and where they can be found in the SAG library.
Sat 13 Apr
120 Kent St
1.30 pm – 3.30 pm
The National Archives (UK)
Discovery catalogue – Heather Garnsey
$20 / $30 The National Archives UK holds a vast array of government records. See how the new ‘Discovery’ catalogue works, how it makes these records more accessible and enjoy a virtual tour of the TNA website.
Mon 15 Apr
2/379 Kent St
10.00 am – 11.00 am
Library Orientation Tour Free Members Only Join us for a tour of the SAG library – learn about its layout and the services offered.
Wed 17 Apr
Your Place 8.00 pm – 9.00 pm Webinar: NSW Lands Department – Carole Riley $10 Members only
Learn about how to use the NSW Lands Department website
to find titles, maps and plans from home.
Sat 20 Apr
120 Kent St
10.30 am – 12.30 pm
Online Family Trees
– Kerry Farmer
$20 / $30 Many sites online now allow you to store your family tree online. Whether you want to advertise your interests, collaborate with others or even just store the information privately for your own use, what are the risks and benefits of
sites like Rootsweb, FamilySearch, Ancestry.com, Lost Cousins, findmypast, TNG, WeRelate – and others?
Sat 20 Apr
120 Kent St
1.30 pm –
3.30 pm
Introduction to Australian Land Research– Carole Riley $20 / $30 Are you confused about the terminology used in records for Land titles, deeds, maps & plans? Join Carole for a beginners introduction to researching this topic and navigating the
relevant websites.
Thur 25 Apr ANZAC DAY – Public Holiday
The SAG Library at 379 Kent St and SAG headquarters at Richmond Villa, 120 Kent St will be CLOSED for ANZAC DAY.
Sat 27 Apr
120 Kent St
10.30 am – 12.30 pm New Zealand Research Group – NZ Wars & Brick Walls in NZ research – Pauline Weeks $8 / $12 At the inaugural meeting of SAG’s New Zealand Research Group, Pauline Weeks will discuss the New Zealand Wars.
Where, When, Why & Who was involved and how to research the British, Colonial, Australian and Maori Troops. Brick Walls in NZ research will also be covered.

Balmain Catholic Cemetery and St Columba’s Church and Parish 1857 – 1988

Patrick Callaghan attended St. Columba’s primary school between about 1940 and 1945 and fifty years later when writing his family history, he recalled seeing fallen headstones in the ‘out of bounds’ area of the school grounds. His first inquiries about the possibility of their having ever been a cemetery on this site led to several dead ends but eventually he discovered that between 1868 and 1902 the land which now houses St. Columba’s church, presbytery and school was originally acquired to provide a local Catholic cemetery for the people of the then very extensive Balmain  parish of St Augustine and thus the Balmain Catholic cemetery came into being..

 By the 1950’s all traces of the old cemetery had disappeared and even worse the burial register had been lost. The end result was that it seemed that a cemetery had never existed on that site and that if there had been a cemetery there, no one had any idea of who and how many had been buried there.

 Patrick then set himself the task of writing the history of the cemetery and the church and school which followed. The book details the establishment and growth of both the original church of St. Columba’s and the Holy Souls (to give the church it’s full title) which opened in 1898 and was extended in 1917 plus the original school building which opened in the 1920’s and the presbytery which opened in 1938.

The school has been extended several times as the population grew………. The land for the cemetery was acquired by Father John Joseph Therry in a gentlemen’s handshake deal from James Norton. How this land deal came about between a committed Catholic and a committed Protestant makes fascinating reading. Many historians regard John Joseph Therry as the founder of the Catholic church in Australia and through its links to Father Therry, St Columba’s church and school have important historical links to the earliest days of Catholicism in Australia.

 Many former students of St. Columba’s school were interviewed as part of putting this book together and some humorous stories were recalled, not the least of which was the night the priest’s vestments caught alight during an evening service.

Parishioners memories of the first four parish priests at St. Columba’s are also included in the book, together with a list of all the St. Josephs nuns who worked or lived at St Columba’s.

 However, finding those buried in the Balmain Catholic cemetery was a different kettle of fish, the lack of any available burial records made it impossible to know how many were buried in the old cemetery, so Patrick set himself the goal of finding and recording 1000 of those buried in this old cemetery.

This proved to be a monumental ten year task, which is now complete and in addition to the book mentioned above he has produced a searchable CD of the 1000 burials discovered in the Balmain Catholic cemetery.

 About 25 sets of remains were moved to other cemeteries but most of those buried in the Balmain Catholic cemetery remain where they were originally laid to rest and those attending the church or school have the bones of many Balmain pioneers beneath their feet. Most were ordinary people of Balmain and Leichhardt but there are some notable exceptions, John Greenway Punch being one, he was a master mariner, ship owner, a well known businessman and a Balmain councillor, he, and his wife and son were buried in the Balmain Catholic cemetery and in 1931 their remains and their impressive headstone was moved to Northern Suburbs cemetery. Many family groups were buried in the old cemetery, Tancred was a well known Balmain name and more than 20 of that name were buried in the old cemetery.

The CD of the burials lists all those found and the source of the information .and will be a boon for those family historians who suspect their relatives may have been buried in this old cemetery.Patrick is always happy to do look ups for those interested in burials in this cemetery and is always on the look out for additional information or stories about the cemetery or the church and school which followed. He can be contacted by email at: balcolyn@activ8.net.au     The CD may be purchased by contacting Patrick direct.

the book is now for sale at Leichhardt Library for $20.00