Monthly Archives: August 2011 Back

Beating Heart: exploring the role of the main street in the life of a regional Queensland city.

This month’s well attended Out of the Port session was Beating Heart: exploring the role of the main street in the life of a regional Queensland city.

Flinders Street occupies a significant place in the hearts and minds of the people of Townsville. It has been the hub of public celebrations, social struggles, conflict, commerce, war and change. Beginning with Robert Towns’ dislike of the muddy dirty pathway, Flinders Street has been the location of many of the major events held in Townsville.

Beating Heart’s presenter Trisha Fielding, who works for CityLibraries Townsville, shared Flinders Street’s journey through photographs and memoirs, many of which are available from the Townsville Library image collection, published in her first book Flinders Street, Townsville: A Pictorial History which was awarded a High Commendation at the National Trust of Queensland Awards in 2010.

Guest speaker Trisha Fielding and Louise Denoon, Manager Queensland Memory at Beating Heart , Out of the Port  Trisha Fielding presenting at the Out of the Port session on Flinders Street, Townsville,  Trisha Fielding at the Out of the Port session

Flinders Street has been the home of cafes, theatres, hotels, royal visits, jubilant celebrations for the end of WWII and the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. It was even reputedly, on 16 September, 1901, the place of the first ever unfurling of the new Australian flag.  It was also the scene of  destructive fires,  weekly communist party meetings under their own Tree of Knowledge, gunfire and political protests such as on Bloody Sunday when 3,000 meatworkers protested over their wages and conditions.

Lower Flinders Street, Townsville, ca. 1873 - John oxley Library image number 24406  Eastern end of Flinders Street, Townsville, ca. 1889 - John Oxley Library Image Number 204805  Federation parade in Flinders Street, Townsville, Queensland, 1910 - John Oxley Library Image number  111681 Townsville Railway Station at the western end of Flinders Street, 1924 - John Oxley Library Image number 242508

The fabulous photos in Trisha’s book chronicle the changing times and fashions, the style of buildings including the iconic ‘sugar shaker’,  car models  and the look of bygone eras.  After years of Flinders Street being a pedestrian mall, it has recently re-opened to traffic and is again a busy thoroughfare for the people of Townsville and its visitors.

Variety of stores and hoardings in Flinders Street, Townsville in front of Carroll’s Drapery Store, 1927  - John Oxley Library Image number 259305 Busy scene on Flinders Street, Townsville, 1929 - John Oxley Library Image Number 62507 Laying concrete in front of the Central Hotel, Flinders Street, Townsville, 1924 - John oxley Library Image Number 259241 View of shopping complex, ‘The Mall’, Townsville, Queensland, 1986 - John Oxley Library image number 228153

Join us next month for Beneath the veneer: furnishing Queensland interiors in the late 19th century.  Using a number of case studies for Brisbane, Tracey Avery will focus on the complex issues of politics, climate, labour and economics that had an impact on the furnishing choices of Queenslanders.

Tracey is Director, Strategy and Policy at Heritage Victoria, a Victorian State Government agency within the Department of Planning and Community Development. She was a Co-Project and Curatorial Manager, James Cook Museum, Cooktown for the National Trust of Queensland and was Cultural Heritage Manager at the National Trust of Australia (Victoria). A PhD candidate in Architecture at the University of Melbourne, she has published on interior and object design history, most recently a chapter in the Design History Reader (Berg, 2010).

This is an Out of the Port free lunchtime talk, presented by the State Library’s John Oxley Library and the Department of Environment and Resource Management,  12.30 – 1.30 on the 3rd Wednesday of every month at the State Library.

Karen Hind

Librarian – John Oxley Library

Flood Mitigation in Queensland

In the wake of the disastrous floods of 2010/11, there have been many suggestions as to ways and means of mitigating such floods. Especially after the recent release of the interim report of the Queensland flood commission of inquiry.

Given Queensland’s history of extreme weather, this situation is nothing new. In the aftermath of the 1893 floods, much the same thing happened. Enter  George Phillips, a civil engineer who had a truly memorable theory about flood mitigation in Brisbane. On the grounds of expense he dismissed the possibilities of using dams and/or  creating artificial canals or diverting the river,  in favour of a simple solution: let’s remove Kangaroo Point! He claimed that by widening  and deepening the path of the Brisbane River, you would enable the flood water to flow freely, and thus minimize the damage.. Moreover by so doing you could improve the port of Brisbane, according to his little book, The mitigation of floods in the Brisbane River, published in 1901.

George Phillips, 1907. John Oxley Library Image 64716.

Who was George Phillips? He was an extraordinary man who was by turns an explorer, politician, surveyor and civil engineer. Phillips was born in England in 1843 and died on June 2, 1921 in Queensland; his family migrated to Australia when he was eight. He qualified as a surveyor  and civil engineer, and  accompanied William Landsborough in his expedition through the Diamantina country in 1866. With Landsborough he undertook further exploration of the Gulf country, and did much to open up that part of Queensland. In 1874 he joined the Railway Department and remained in its service until 1886 as surveyor and engineer.  He entered the political arena and served as MLA for Carpentaria between 1893 and 1896. In later years he had a private practice as engineer and surveyor.

He was also an advocate of another notable solution to Brisbane’s water problems, namely the use of the Stradbroke Island water source for Brisbane’s supply. Not surprisingly, neither suggestion  was ever acted on.

Trudy Bennett

Librarian – John Oxley Library

Posted in Brisbane, Collections, Events, People | Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

View our comments policy.
Your email address will not be published.

*

Queensland State Archives Townsville Seminar: getting the most out of our online resources

QSA’s Niles Elvery presenting in the Townsville Library meeting room 28 July 2011. QSA’s Jane Wassell presenting in the Townville Library meeting room 28 July 2011.

On Thursday 28 July 2011 Queensland State Archives ran a free seminar at the Flinders Street library in Townsville. The seminar ran from 1:30pm to 4:30 pm and two presenters covered a range of content dealing with online resources including:

Indexes
Online Enquiry form
Exhibitions and Historical essays
Using the catalogues – ArchivesSearch and Image Queensland

Many of the forty-four (44) attendees enjoyed the opportunity to ask specific questions during the seminar and to have on the spot demonstrations of searching techniques. Lively discussions continued during afternoon tea and following the presentation.

Niles Elvery

Manager, Public Access – Queensland State Archives

Posted in Collections, Events, Guest blogger, People, QLD State Archives | 1 Comment

One comment

  1. My collegue and I attended this seminar. I found that now we can access the historical essay 10x faster than before.

    Thank you.

    Qld house prices

Leave a Reply

View our comments policy.
Your email address will not be published.

*

Looking back at the Ekka

 Since the first Exhibition of 1876 held at Bowen Park with an estimated attendance of 15,000-17,000 when Brisbane’s total non indigenous population was only 27,000,  Brisbane’s RNA Exhibition has been an annual event.  Initially a grand affair, with men attending in their suits and ladies in their finest garments, food was served on long tables and the first show bag was not full of chocolate or chips but was a free bag of coal.

At the 1911 Brisbane Coronation Exhibition the 36th annual show, which ran from the 7 – 12 August there were 42 display sections.  Attendance for the principal day, Wednesday, was estimated at 54,000 although there was some skepticism as to the accuracy of the final numbers.  On people’s day,footpaths were black with pedestrians, all good-naturedly elbowing their way along. The Women’s Christian Temperance Union had the catering rights for meals.   The show was opened by the Queensland Governor Sir William MacGregor who declared it “one of the most important national institutions in the corporate life of our great and progressive country”.

Milling crowds at the Brisbane Exhibition, August 1935 - John Oxley Library Image number 121272  Edward, Prince of Wales, at the Brisbane show, July 1920 - John Oxley Library image number 203784  National Exhibition at the Show Grounds Brisbane - John Oxley Library Image number 67420 Children enjoying a ride on the miniature railway at the Brisbane Ekka in 1948 - John Oxley Library image number 74901

Visitors came from all over Australia and included the Governor of South Australia, Sir Day Bosanquet and his wife.   On one day, 800 excursionists travelled from Tweed Heads to Brisbane on a special train and reportedly anyone who hadn’t planned ahead had trouble getting accommodation in the city.    In celebration during the festival, the principal streets of Brisbane were decorated with flags and businesses decorated their shop windows.  The Richmond Examiner said “one cannot help but be impressed with the magnificent exhibits and the diversity of climate.  Taken all through, the show is a splendid advertisement for the state”.

Horse team in action at the Exhibition Ground, RNA Show Brisbane, 1925 - John Oxley Library Image Number 48616  Children admiring a prize winning horse at the Ekka, Brisbane, ca. 1906 - John Oxley Library image number 147707 an image of a pencil drawing by William Robinson, 2007. John Oxley Library Image 8149-4v000r001

As well as being a great exhibition of all things Queensland, competition is an integral part of the show.  According to the book Showtime “the opportunity to vie for prizes and the precision of the regulations that govern competition have been constant feature”. P31.  Now advertised as Queensland’s premier competition judging event, the Royal Queensland Show, now receives around 24,000 entries across 20 major categories each year.

The RNA recruits nationally and internationally recognised experts for each competition area to ensure the highest standard of judging.   Some exhibits have been around since the very first exhibition.  The first sheepdog trials were held in 1889 and the wood chop dates from 1899. Some competitions have enviable prizes such as the Quilts across Queensland competition with a prize pool of $14,000.  There is a constant revision of the exhibition schedules.

Exhibit to promote the sisal and hemp production industry in Queensland, 1907 - John Oxley Library image numer 257530  State Farm disply at the Exhibition, Brisbane, 1912 - John Oxley Library image number 254930  Illustrated front cover from The Queenslander, August 22, 1935 - John Oxley Library image number 505749

State Library of Queensland has some significant Exhibition Records including Royal National Agricultural and Industrial Association Records 1875-1948, Prize schedules for various years, ring programmes, art exhibition catalogues, OM74-23 National Agricultural and Industrial Association of Queensland Records 1909, various posters including 10 days in August : memories of the Ekka, How to win at the Ekka : Queensland College of Art, Department of Education Stand, The Frank Nicklin Pavilion and a range of illustrated newspaper front pages especially of Queenslander, hundreds of photographs including API-44 Brisbane Show Photograph Album 1912, ephemera items including advertisements and badges, also  Arthur J Hingston Cartoons 1899-1910.

Browse Ekka materials in One Search, the library catalogue 

A set of photographs of the Ekka from times past is also available on Flickr Commons  

The Ekka website has been archived by the State Library for a number of years. You can view the site over time on PANDORA, the web archive.

Karen Hind – Librarian, State Library of Queensland

Toowong Cemetery marks 140 years

Queensland’s second governor, Colonel Samuel Wensley Blackall, was the first soul laid to rest in the Toowong Cemetery, formerly known as the Brisbane General Cemetery in January 1871.

Governor Blackall. John Oxley Library Image 36888. His Excellency, Governor Blackall with Mrs Verney and Mrs Terry in 1869. John Oxley Library Image 165859. Colonel Blackall. John Oxley Library Image 3813. Colonel Blackall, Governor of Queensland, with his family. John Oxley Library Image 165864. Sir Samuel Blackall is seated between his aides, Brisbane, 1870. John Oxley Library Image API-001-0001-0013. Colonel Samuel Wensley Blackall. John Oxley Library Image 194354.

To mark the cemetery’s 140th aniversary a re-enactment of Governor Blackall’s burial was held on 24 July. The present Governor of Queensland, Her Excellency Ms Penelope Wensley AC, was present at the event and quoted the following from the Brisbane Courier of 23 January 1871 in her speech:

“There has been no Governor of this colony before or after seperation, who has been so much loved and so much respected as the one who used to sign himself plain “Sam Blackall”…when the history of Queensland is hereafter written, our children and their children will be taught to revere the name Samuel Wensley Blackall, who died too early in his career of usefulness.”

Re-enactment of the burial of Governor Blackall, 24 July 2011. Photo by Egil Gausel. Re-enactment of the burial of Governor Blackall, 24 July 2011. Photo by Egil Gausel.

Friends of Toowong Cemetery President Hilda Maclean said her volunteer run association relied on such newspaper accounts of the burial to recreate the event as there are no original photographs to refer to.

Whilst the John Oxley Library does have photographs of Toowong Cemetery in its collection we would love to have more as this is the largest cemetery in Queensland forming an important record of the history of Brisbane and the people who have lived here.

Contact us on 38407880 if you know of any interesting images of Toowong Cemetery.

Simon Farley

Manager, Client Services – John Oxley Library

Posted in Brisbane, Collections, Events | Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

View our comments policy.
Your email address will not be published.

*

The Hempress of the Barcoo – What an Englishwoman saw in Qld in 1892

“The India rubber bath stands us in great stead, we always get a cold bath every morning.” pp 132-133

Alice Heber Percy, of Hodnet Hall, Shropshire, travelled with a rubber bathtub and a notebook, carried a shotgun and a polished interest in her surrounds, and was hastily vaccinated against smallpox in Sydney in 1892. She managed a visit to the Botanical Gardens and to the “Actualization Gardens” before heading out of town to escape possible quarantine, knowing that smallpox had been found onboard the ship. She was a woman from England who travelled First Class on the Ophir and then the Oraya, passing Spain and Gibralter and disembarking at Port Said where, as an educated seeker-of-experience she visited a Bedouin Camp and described it in detail. In fact, her diary is full of excursions and asides of the edifying and entertaining variety. Her writing is elegant and there are often maps and illustrations too, which made me imagine contemplative evenings with coloured pencils and ink, before realising that the diary was likely constructed after the fact, from a more weather-stained and crossed-out original that no longer exists.

Alice Heber-Percy Diary held in the John Oxley Library Collection. ‘I crowned you the Hempress of the Barcoo’ and swaggered off with his hands in his pockets.” P 162

Instead, this is another diary in the John Oxley Library, which begins as a shipboard tale and ends as both international and Australian, as colonial life becomes both an experience and a site for stories and performance. Shearers, the sugar industry, station life, the quality of hotels, inferior circuses and outback “characters” all appear, but again and again the Aboriginal domestic workers and adjacent Aboriginal “camps” are described and visited as tourist sites.

Most of the Australian excursions in the diary happen in Queensland. There’s an opaque family history behind it, in which an uncle was apparently killed by Aborigines. The story seeps through, but isn’t entirely spelled out.

And while there is a tone of privilege and what we might now call “entitlement” to her diary, it also is defined so very clearly by intelligence and curiosity. By energy, however hearty.

It also pulls you up, with reminders of what nineteenth-century British womanhood could encompass. Heading out to look at the animals and breathe in the bush, seeing a Large Native Bear in a Gum Tree and then “bagging” it. She was handy with a gun. Wondering how to take home a kangaroo she’d shot, and had the “blackboy” skin, as a memorial of this Queensland adventure.

As always, there’s the economy too. Some of the properties she visits with her family belong to family friends; others seem to be paid sites, stops along the way, in a sort of fin de siecle “farm stay”, with a corroberee or boomerang throwing for entertainment in the evening, although at the property near Marlborough, she said the latter “performance was poor”. It was Sunday, 31 July:

“In the evening we walked down to the Blacks camp, and talked to them, and admired the little piccaninny who is fat as butter, and with a skin like velvet, he wears no clothes; the gin his mother down nothing but nurse, and play with him all day long; there are very few children among the blacks, all the tribes are dying out, expedited greatly by their excessive love of smoking Opium, they implore the Chinaman to empty his pipe when he has finished smoking, that they may have the refuse: a law has been past [sic] making it illegal to sell them Opium; also if they catch cold it always settles on their lungs and now that they have taken to wear clothes instead of possum rugs, they get wet and never change out of wet clothes . . .”

At another stop on the journey, she describes dances that were performed by local Aboriginal people in great detail, and then adds that, “Mr Shaw gave the Blacks a lot of Lollipops and Tea and they were quite happy.” P 150

Some people may find these 1890s descriptions distressing. She seems to reveal a complicated set of relationships and attitudes, and while almost every station she visits has an associated camp, many also have servants who are described, in particular, by their clothes, their uniforms, their symbols of work. At Elderslie Station, for example, Mrs Slaggart:

“dressed the Black Gins who do the household work in white dimity edged with red, and their aprons with bibs, the same; I watched them camp in a circle on the ground just outside the verandah and eat up the remains of breakfast, and dinner without any plates, they smoked short clay pipes afterwards.” P 133

While the whole diary is framed by the great shipboard journey on the Ophir and the Oraya, domestically, they travel in many different ways. Cobb & Co, horse, and by train from Rockhampton to Longreach, which was crowded because of a racemeeting on the 27 August. And then, as they travelled out to visit various stations, it was the state of the landscape that struck her, after a long drought, where “all the uneaten grass is straw coloured” and the ground around the waterholes has been eaten down to the state of a thoroughfare from the other side of the world: “bare like a turnpike road.” There’d been no rain for 19 months. Even so, there was time for the working life of a station to be part of the show, and so they watched the shearing, whose industrial conditions and political tendencies were carefully controlled and explained for an educated visitor who carefully recorded the processes for us. The version of work comes from the station owner, Mr Chermside:

“The Shearers are well paid men, they move from Station to Station as there is work, usually the same hands are employed year after year, they own as a rule two good horses, one to ride, and the other a pack horse, and carry with them a comfortable tent; the station feed [?] them with good rations, the shearers provide the Cook.” P 131

And so while in hindsight we see the 1890s shearers strikes and their role in both nationalism and union tradition, that particular part of a self-conscious identity passed this woman traveller by. Other familiar stories, and archetypes, do crop up though. Along with the “servant problem”, stories of irreverence and the larrikin, the puncturer of ego, and perhaps the putting down of certain types of women, are also there to be found in this diary. And stories need not be experiences, to be included. This one was told to her, about a woman who lived somewhere on the Barcoo River, and who held herself in very high esteem. She was, it was said, “very exacting with her servants” and insisted that her cook come and wait at table – and she told John, the cook, to take the covers off:

“he took the cover off the junk of salt beef, and clapped the cover on Mrs Cameron’s head saying ‘I crowned you the Hempress of the Barcoo’ and swaggered off with his hands in his pockets.” P 162

Domestic and other workers are everywhere in the diary. Not just the Aboriginal domestic workers and the travelling shearers, the cooks with a sense of humour and the hotel workers of questionable skill, but at the Homebush Sugar Plantation there were Pacific Islanders – “kanakas” she calls them – who worked the cane; and they were waited on by a “Cingalese” servant (who, it’s been argued, might represent a colonial, Singaporean version of living in the North, where “manservants” of various ethnicity took a particular version of Asian colonialism as its model – or at least, this is an argument that’s been made for Darwin. Does it hold true for Qld, I wonder? This has been argued in the unpublished work of historian Claire Lowry). Again, this is an opportunity for her to present a detailed disquisition on methods of sugar cane farming.

And so with her learned exposition and enthusiastic, descriptive engagement with Australia and with Qld, sometimes it’s hard to know what to make of a curious incident, apart from its curiosity. The importance of the handkerchief and hat, even, reminds us that social codes really are specific and historical. And then there’s cross-dressing eccentricity. Impossible to make a hurried conclusion about this, but I’ll make a stab at a bit of playful role reversal:

“Mr and Mrs Beardmore are quite crazy. Mr Beardmore they tell us dresses up in his wife’s clothes and cooks the dinner, he is very fond of this amusement. She goes out with a handkerchief tied under her chin she told us that she will not wear a hat, and that he will not buy poor old Mags a bonnet; they are a strange couple, and are both as mad as hatters.” (Sun Oct 9th), p 166

And then, in November, while neither the diary nor the trip is over, Alice travels by steamer to Townsville and begins her journey home. She didn’t follow through all the byways and places she might have, however:

“We stopped at Cairns but we did not land, they told us there was nothing to see there.” P 187

Item referred to: Alice Heber-Percy Handwritten diary, SLQ, JOL OM86-20 (Box 9193),10 March 1892 – 6 Jan 1893

Kate Evans, Historian in Residence, John Oxley Library

Posted in Brisbane, Collections, Guest blogger, People | 1 Comment

One comment

  1. Kate, a beautiful blog: loved the cross-dressing Mr Beardmore, and the hyempress story.
    but also a great example of both the richness and the unreliability of “travellers” tales as first hand accounts.Passing through you get both vidid descriptions, msome insights and lots gossip that later needs disentangling

Leave a Reply

View our comments policy.
Your email address will not be published.

*

Rock around the Block…who was Rock “N” Roll George

Currently on show at the Queensland Museum is a wonderful exhibition that celebrates a local identity and enigma known to generations of Brisbanites as Rock “N” Roll George.

Rock around the Block Exhibition Rock around the Block Exhibition Rock around the Block Exhibition Night view of Queen Street, Brisbane, ca. 1959. John Oxley Library Image lbp00005.

The late George Kiprios, who passed away in 2009, was well known around town and was often seen chatting to people in Queen Street, where he parked his car outside the Black Cat Café, on a Friday or Saturday night.  He loved his car, a Holden 48-215 which his mother bought, new from Handasyde Motors, Stones Corner, back in 1952.

George became a fixture in the 1950s Brisbane night life which was filled with bodgies and widgees. He became instantly recognisable by his checkered shirt and purple trousers.

Rock “N” Roll George by Bill Diacos, Oil on Canvas Holden 48-215

George drove his car around Brisbane for more than four decades; he would be seen socializing at the dances held at Cloudland and cruising around checking out the local talent at the milk bars and cafes around the City and New Farm.

State Library’s Queensland Memory staff were recently treated to a tour of Rock around the Block. We often receive queries from the public wanting to know more about George so we wholeheartedly recommend a visit to the show if you are curious. Looking at comments left on 612 ABC’s website at the time of his passing it is clear that many in the community have their own memories of George.

This exhibition is a great tribute to a local legend. For more information about the exhibition click here 

Janette Whitehead

Library Technician – John Oxley Library

Posted in Brisbane, Exhibitions, People | 1 Comment

One comment

Leave a Reply

View our comments policy.
Your email address will not be published.

*

Corner store photographs

Over a cup of tea talking with a friend it was brought to my attention that the trusty old fashioned convenience store is becoming dangerously close to extinction. I remember walking to suburban “corner” stores as a child to buy a mixed paper bag of one and two cent lollies and later as an adult shopping for essentials due to the pure convenience.  The reminiscing led me to take up the challenge of finding these  family owned stores around Brisbane. After seven hours of driving around and asking anyone who would listen to my plight, I could only find ten, which  was alarming. On my quest the  architecture was prevalent but was mostly being inhabited by other cottage industry such as hairdressing salons.

Dean Saffron – Photographer

The John Oxley Library has recently acquired a collection of six photo essays by Brisbane photographer Dean Saffron. The topics include: Brisbane corner stores, Bizzell’s Garage in Paddington, the Birdsville races, repair of the cruise ship”Pacific Dawn”, construction of 111 Eagle Street Brisbane and a series on transportation to work. See the John Oxley Library blog for updates.

Windsor Road, Kelvin Grove

Morgan Terrace, Bardon

Bent Street, Toowong

St Pauls Terrace, Spring Hill

Melton Road, Northgate

Stafford Road, Stafford

Nash Street, Rosalie

Manson Road, Hendra

Dean Street, Toowong


Stuartholme Road, Bardon

The Watermelon cake: Amy Schauer and her cookbooks

Amy Schauer (1871-1956), after training at Sydney Technical College, taught and demonstrated cookery in the Brisbane area from 1895 until the 1930s. Her work included public lectures on invalid cookery during the 1919 influenza epidemic and classes for members of the Australian Army Medical Corps during World War I.  Her cookbooks were used widely in Queensland both in Domestic Science Colleges and in homes.

The Australian Dictionary of Biography entry on Schauer states that she “wrote popular cookery books which were used in Queensland kitchens well into the 1960s” but I still regularly use her Schauer Australian Fruit Preserving and Confectionery (first published 1908; my copy was printed around 1982) for making chutneys and jams. Where else can you find a recipe to deal with an oversupply of loquats, five options for mango chutney, six for tomato chutney, twelve for melon jam or a recipe for prickly pear jam (not surprisingly this one begins: “Great care is required in preparing this jam”)?

The 9th edition of The Schauer Australian cookery book (Brisbane: Smith & Paterson, 1946) held in the John Oxley Library is comprised mainly of recipes for very practical country dishes using whatever was on hand –Scrub turkey (braised or roasted), Bech-de-mer soup, Sheep’s head broth, Sausage fritters, Cold tea pudding and thirty-one variations of scones. So it was with some amusement that I came across a recipe for a fanciful cake – a watermelon cake. Not using watermelon as an ingredient nor watermelon flavoured, but in the shape of a watermelon.

A layer of white cake forms the ‘rind’, with the centre of the cake/watermelon tinted pink and holding sultana ‘seeds’. Green icing completes the picture.

Watermelon Cake served on Queensland Centenary tablecloth.

After two attempts I managed to make a watermelon cake fit to be seen at a morning tea at State Library. It seemed appropriate to serve it on a 1959 Queensland Centenary tablecloth recently found at my mother’s home, with tea poured from a teapot manufactured to celebrate the visit to Australia of their Majesties the King and Queen in 1952. Unfortunately King George VI and Queen Elizabeth didn’t make it to Australia because of the death of the King, but that didn’t stop the teapots making their way into the world.

For further information on Amy Schauer’s life see The Australian Dictionary of Biography.

Helen Cole

Librarian – Australian Library of Art

Posted in Collections, People | 2 Comments

2 comments

Leave a Reply

View our comments policy.
Your email address will not be published.

*

Gala launch of picture book, Flood, at State Library

Flood by Jackie French.

The picture book, Flood, written by Jackie French and illustrated by Bruce Whatley, was given a gala launch at State Library on 2 August. Publisher, Scholastic Australia, produced the picture book in response to the 2011 Queensland floods and will donate all net proceeds from its sale to the Premier’s Flood Disaster Relief Appeal.

Premier Anna Bligh at the launch of Flood.

Queensland Premier, Anna Bligh, praised the book saying, ‘It is as much a story about the strength of the spirit of Queenslanders. Good things spring from the bad,’ she said. ‘That’s Flood’s story and my message to the readers of this beautiful book.’

Jackie French

Author, Jackie French (above), is claimed by State Library as a ‘Queensland author’ because of her roots here. She told the gathering how she enjoyed growing up in Brisbane where floods whirled under the verandah posts and she didn’t have to go to school. Her adult perspective during the 2011 flood was more sober. She told how she fretted about her father whose home is on the riverbank and spent most of her time on the phone to him getting updates of the rising waters and how the family, neighbours and loved ones were coping and what they were doing for the flood efforts.

Bruce Whatley

Illustrator, Bruce Whatley (above), discussed the courage and selfless acts of heroism shown by adults and children alike: ‘A tugboat captain fights the raging currents to guide a mass of concrete through the bridges of Brisbane, and a boy tells rescuers to take his little brother first …’

Children from three primary schools badly affected by the floods attended the launch. They were the Milton State Primary School, Northern Christian College and All Saints Primary School from Albany Creek.

General Manager of Publishing for Scholastic Australia told the children that their publishing house will be giving a copy of Flood to every school library in Australia and will also donate $100,000 worth of books to classroom libraries that have been affected by floods, cyclones and fire-damage across Australia.

Premier Bligh shares the story of Flood with two children from flood ravaged Milton State Primary School.

Premier Bligh shares the story of Flood with two children from flood ravaged Milton State Primary School.

General Manager of Publishing for Scholastic Australia, Andrew Berkhut, presents a framed panel of an original artwork from Flood to the Chair of the Library Board of Queensland, Prof. Roland Sussex, for the State Library’s collection.

General Manager of Publishing for Scholastic Australia, Andrew Berkhut, presents a framed panel of an original artwork from Flood to the Chair of the Library Board of Queensland, Prof. Roland Sussex, for the State Library’s collection. The accompanying text on this page of the picture book reads, ‘There were so many heroes now.’

Signed copy of Flood.

This signed copy of Flood will be housed in the John Oxley Library. Note Jackie’s little autograph cartoon of herself!

State Library also captures selected websites and online publications in PANDORA, Australia’s web archive. To view the online archive relating to last summer’s Queensland floods click here.

Dr Leanne Day
Queensland Authors Librarian

Posted in Brisbane, Collections, Events, People | 1 Comment

One comment

Leave a Reply

View our comments policy.
Your email address will not be published.

*