The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
Sydney’s modernists

![The Home: an Australian quarterly, Vol. 21 No. 9 (2 September 1940) p 54 - 55 via Trove]](https://s3.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/slnsw.dxd.dc.prod.dos.prod.assets/home-dos-files/2017/08/nla-obj-387284991-5657-SMLR.jpg)
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The mysterious Mr Eternity



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The Great Strike of 1917


This silver Lily-White medal was designed by Newtown jeweller William Trantum in 1918. The Amalgamated Society of Engineers commissioned and issued the medal to its members who remained out on strike.
Courtesy Trades Hall Association, photographed by Greg Piper

Courtesy Trades Hall Association, Sydney, photographed by Greg Piper

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Catherine Jinks, Charlatan The Dishonest Life and Dishonoured Loves of Thomas Guthrie Carr, Stage Mesmerist
Catherine Jinks, Charlatan The Dishonest Life and Dishonoured Loves of Thomas Guthrie Carr, Stage Mesmerist
Vintage Books, Penguin Random House Australia, North Sydney, 2017, pp 1-256 (plus notes), ISBN: 978 0 14378 554 5
Between 1865 and 1886 Thomas Guthrie Carr was rarely out of the celebrity spotlight. Known throughout the Australian and New Zealand colonies, Carr was a one-man travelling circus of many different, and eclectic ‘talents’; medical quack, mesmerist, phrenologist, electro-biologist, amputater, pamphleteer, public speaker and entertainer. His seven-foot plus frame inspired awe in some and many people avidly followed his lecture circuits and showered him with lavish praise and money. He often performed at large theatres and filled the lecture halls of mechanics' institutes and schools of arts in towns and cities across the colonies. Yet celebrities then, as they do today, strongly divided public opinion into devoted supporters and ruthless detractors. Carr had many of these too. Some contemporaries believed that mesmerism was nothing but a hoax, a false sham, together with hypnotism, pain-free surgery, animal magnetism and astrology which, were related ideas of whack-quackery then in vogue. As such they regarded Carr as a complete shyster, a peddler of humbuggery and balderdash, an imposter, a charlatan and a criminal fraudster. Carr’s personal temperament did not do much to lessen this damning view of him. He could be charming and brilliantly witty, but he was also at times violent, litigious, cunning, offensively rude and ruthlessly cutting – all personal traits that perhaps well fitted his rather dubious line of work. Scandals, bankruptcies, defamation and libel cases followed him throughout his turbulent career. If Carr had lived fifty years earlier, when ‘pistols at dawn’ often settled disputes between gentlemen, he would have certainly been the sort of rogue cad to find himself embroiled in such affairs of honour. But it was an affair of honour involving an allegation of mesmerising one Eliza Grey and then committing a rape upon her which forms the pivotal focus of Catherine Jinks’ new book Charlatan. This alleged crime and the subsequent court case which ensued, turns a remarkable and at times ‘un-make-up-able’ colonial figure and his extraordinary life and career into a thrilling piece of crime, intrigue and suspense. The author keeps the mystery tightly wrapped up until near to the end. It is a very effective hook and whilst the story ebbs and flows with Carr’s travels across colonies and different decades, the central premise is always there in the background. It is highly effective because the reader is simply enthralled to get to the bottom of the mystery. And so pages keep getting turned. Readers are unlikely to warm to Thomas Guthrie Carr. However the story is just so brilliantly bonkers and so curious as to be utterly compelling. Jinks’ has a lovely light style of writing and throughout there is a dry, subtle humour. And yet this is also a fascinating piece of social and cultural history. It has been thoroughly researched and many leading figures of the day find their way into the colourful cast of characters. Sir William Manning, the Duke of Edinburgh and the mad Dentist of Wynyard appear, together with a supporting motley crew of dodgy mesmerists, dubious actors, duplicitous publicists and hired tricksters. The biographical story of Thomas Guthrie Carr is certainly a remarkable one. This book provides a fascinating insight into one man’s extraordinary life but also a vividly painted snapshot into life as it was lived in colonial Australia. Quite simply it is a fabulous book indeed. It will appeal to everyone simply keen to read a great ‘truth is stranger than fiction’ story. Also recommended for readers interested in Australian history, curious eccentrics of the past and the politics and theatre of celebrity and public opinion in the late nineteenth century. Dr Catie Gilchrist July 2017 Available from all good booksellers! Click here to read an extract on the Penguin Books website.Categories
On our way

Moving the Dictionary
Over the last year we've been working on moving the Dictionary's content on to a new platform hosted by the State Library of New South Wales. Over the next few days you may notice some changes to the site as we flip the switch and start rolling out these modifications. We've had teams of volunteers testing and checking the data during this process but if you do notice anything decidedly odd which we've missed, like strange characters in the text or missing links, please let us know. We have moved the Dictionary from an open source database platform called Heurist, which was developed by the former Arts eResearch unit at the University of Sydney, to Drupal 8, an open source content management system. While you will notice some changes to the Dictionary on its new platform, as much as possible has been kept the same given the available resources and the disparity between the two platforms. This has required a high degree of customisation and a lot of seriously impressive work from the incredible team at the Library in order to replicate as much of the Dictionary's functionality as possible.Changes
We have also been able to include some improvements to the site, like our new searchable and sortable Browse menus, which received several thumbs-ups from our volunteer testers. You'll be able to search within each of these menus by an item's title, and refine the search by type as well. You'll even be able to sort entries in the Dictionary by publication date! These title searches are in addition to the Dictionary's general search across the site, which is always available via the Search window in the right hand column. The general search function does work slightly differently, so if you've regularly done a particular search on the Dictionary you may notice the results are not always in quite the same order as they were. Credits and citations for images and multimedia material will now appear now when you scroll over a thumbnail so you'll be able to see their source details immediately rather than having to click through to the full record. The options to share a page in the Dictionary via social media or email have been modernised and enlarged and moved to the top of the page, so make the most of that! We can now create 'See Also' connections between pages on the Dictionary, allowing us to do things like link historical entities with contemporary Dictionary contributors. Keep an eye out for those in the right hand column where an item's 'Connections' sit. We have had to lose some things for now like our overlaid maps sadly, but hope that in the future we may be able to look at these again if funding allows, and maybe even incorporate other additions and improvements. The Dictionary URLs will remain the same or will be redirected permanently.Thank you
Moving the Dictionary onto this platform at the State Library ensures that its content will be archived and remain accessible, even after there is no longer funding to keep adding to the site, and we're very grateful to the Library for making this possible. This transition has been funded by a special grant from the City of Sydney Council, the Dictionary's founding partner between 2006‐2016, and we'd like to thank them again for their long term support of the Dictionary of Sydney.
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Aging gracefully




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Pip Smith, Half Wild
Pip Smith, Half Wild
Allen & Unwin, 2017, ISBN: 9781760294649, pp1-390
During the winter of 1920, Sydney was gripped by the spectacularly scandalous story of Eugenia Falleni. Falleni had for many years pretended to be a man called Harry Crawford. Harry was small but strong and worked in typically male jobs. He knew how to ‘act like a bloke’ and could smoke and spit and drink as hard as his work mates. He had also married two women, one of whom had mysteriously disappeared in 1917. So when the ‘man-woman’ was later accused of having murdered his/her first ‘wife’ Annie Birkett, the city (and indeed the story reverberated around the country) was plunged into a gripping crime of murder and passion. But it was also much more than this too; a thrilling tale of a life on the run, illegitimacy, illegal marriage, dysfunctional motherhood, secret strap-on dildos and two fat fingers up to the stratified, stuffy conventions of hetero-normative gender roles. Pip Smith’s first novel Half Wild recounts and recreates this extraordinary story, successfully blending an exhilarating mixture of historical fact with her own soaring imagination. The result is an unputdownable page turning triumph of a book. I read it over two long sessions quite simply because I could not wait to find out what unfolded next. And yet, as an historian, I already knew the story of Eugenia Falleni. With a colourful cast of over thirty characters the novel is split into four uneven parts. Part one re-imagines Eugenia’s early life growing up in an Italian family in Wellington, New Zealand. This part of the book is the least evidence based. And yet it is here where the author shows her true strengths because Falleni’s early life is also the most imaginative and vividly written part of the book. A tomboy who refused to embrace the refined trappings of femininity and indeed schooling, young Eugenia could not be tamed. Even by seduction, rape, a forced marriage and the cruelties of nineteenth century institutionalisation. Eventually, dressed and disguised as a man – perhaps as a means of self-protection and probably to earn a better wage - she escaped the stifling nature of migrant Catholic Italian life in New Zealand and sailed to Sydney. Part two is told from Harry’s point of view and is a short account of Crawford’s life up to 1920 and the time of his arrest. It is based on Crawford’s initial statement to the Sydney police. Part three comprises the main body of the book and it is here where we meet a motley crew of Sydney characters, neighbours, friends, and children. It is beautifully set against the backdrop of early twentieth century Sydney and the years of social volatility both during and immediately after the Great War. The ‘disappearance’ of Crawford’s wife Annie in October 1917, the later discovery of her burnt body by the Lane Cove River and Harry’s subsequent life is told from many different viewpoints – neighbours, friends, policemen, Eugenia’s daughter Josephine, Annie’s son Harry Birkett and Crawford’s second wife Lizzie. In less capable hands such to-ing and fro-ing and the thick layering of characters might threaten to become messy and complicated. However Smith’s writing, crafted with care, simply makes the busy drama even more intense and beguilingly captivating. Eugenia’s daughter Josephine later played along with the charade of her ‘father’ Harry Crawford. Harry Birkett too seemed to know although the author leaves the reader on the knife-edge of speculatively guessing. To be sure, at the time, a few people knew about Harry’s real gender identity and some nosy neighbours suspected something was not quite right. Most however were completely in the dark and Smith skilfully uses the ‘who knew’ suspense to add a further mysterious layer of tension to the plot. The reader is actually left wondering if Harry’s second wife Lizzie in fact knew or not. Apparently the sex was utterly amazing (although it was always in the dark) and a few months into their marriage she announced that the couple were going to have a baby. Was she indeed utterly ignorant, woefully naïve and innocent or simply complicit in the duplicitous life they were living? In August 1920 Eugenia Falleni was tried for the murder of Annie Birkett. She pleaded not guilty however the jury found her guilty and she was sentenced to death. This was later reprieved to life in Long Bay Gaol. Smith uses the trial reports of the Sydney press to convincingly recreate some of the court scenes. She also skilfully writes the court proceedings from the perspective of the middle class women who faithfully attended the theatre of the courtroom every day during the trial. This brilliantly captures the horror and yet fascination and utter titillation which this case generated in 1920s Sydney. Part four swiftly charts Falleni’s time at Long Bay, her eventual release as ‘Jean Ford’ and her untimely death in Sydney in 1938. Prison had changed her, softened her, and perhaps even tamed the ‘half wild’ one. I was left wondering if she was indeed guilty of murdering her first wife Annie Birkett. The author does not make her feelings definitively known yet to be honest at this distance, in time, it perhaps no longer matters. Ultimately Falleni’s story is one of a restless life spent in search of identity and belonging, but also one of hardship and yet survival. She had a fierce desire to break down the restraints of gender stereotypes and prohibitive sexual norms, and to instead find acceptance and equality and meaning. And it is this, which makes the story of Eugenia Falleni such a universal and in so many ways relevant tale for today. Dr Catie Gilchrist July 2017 Available at all book sellers and online at Allen & Unwin here, where you can also read an excerpt from the book.Categories
Barangaroo



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Isaac Nathan - ‘Australia’s first composer’


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A Humorous Rollerskater


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