The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
Book and exhibition reviews
BOOK AND EXHIBITION REVIEWS
[/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][et_pb_column type="3_4" specialty_columns="3"][et_pb_row_inner admin_label="row_inner"][et_pb_column_inner type="4_4" saved_specialty_column_type="3_4"][et_pb_blog admin_label="Blog" fullwidth="off" include_categories="192" show_thumbnail="on" show_content="off" show_more="off" show_author="on" show_date="on" show_categories="on" show_pagination="on" offset_number="0" background_layout="light" use_dropshadow="off" use_border_color="off" border_color="#ffffff" border_style="solid" show_comments="on" header_font_size="14" meta_font_size="11" body_font_size="14"] [/et_pb_blog][/et_pb_column_inner][/et_pb_row_inner][/et_pb_column][et_pb_column type="1_4"][et_pb_sidebar admin_label="Sidebar" orientation="left" area="sidebar-1" background_layout="light" remove_border="off" header_font="|on||on|" header_font_size="14" header_text_color="#971c1f" body_font_size="12"] [/et_pb_sidebar][/et_pb_column][et_pb_fullwidth_image admin_label="Fullwidth Image" src="https://s3.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/slnsw.dxd.dc.prod.dos.prod.assets/home-dos-files/2015/06/COSA_1888-City-of-Sydney-Birdseye-view_CROP_centre2.jpg" show_in_lightbox="off" url_new_window="off" animation="off" use_border_color="off" border_color="#ffffff" border_style="solid"] [/et_pb_fullwidth_image][et_pb_row global_module="9305" admin_label="row" make_fullwidth="on" use_custom_width="off" width_unit="on" use_custom_gutter="on" gutter_width="1" padding_mobile="off" allow_player_pause="off" parallax="off" parallax_method="off" make_equal="off" column_padding_mobile="on"][et_pb_column type="4_4"][et_pb_text admin_label="Text" background_layout="light" text_orientation="left" use_border_color="off" border_color="#ffffff" border_style="solid" custom_padding="20px|10px|20px|20px" text_text_color="#dd3333"]Major sponsors Community partnerships
[/et_pb_text][et_pb_image admin_label="Image" src="https://s3.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/slnsw.dxd.dc.prod.dos.prod.assets/home-dos-files/2017/07/logos2017.jpg" show_in_lightbox="off" url_new_window="on" animation="off" sticky="off" align="center" force_fullwidth="off" always_center_on_mobile="on" use_border_color="off" border_color="#ffffff" border_style="solid" alt="sponsors logos" use_overlay="off" url="http://home.dictionaryofsydney.org/about/"] [/et_pb_image][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row]David Bowie's Sydney film clips
Well, it's a sad opening to 2016 for music fans with the gob-smacking announcement of the death of David Bowie on Monday night. So I thought we should pay tribute to him and acknowledge a special Sydney connection. He filmed the videoclip for "Let's Dance" - one of my favourite Bowie songs - partly in a pub in Carinda (north-west NSW) and then partly in Sydney. So we get some landscapes of Sydney from around 1983, when the the song was released. Here's the link to the clip on YouTube. There are a few scenes you might recognise - on the harbour, at a Sydney beach, in a machine shop (this was in Guildford), in the Strand Arcade, and just down the road from the studio, literally on the road on Broadway among the traffic. The young Aboriginal pair, Terry Roberts and Joelene King, were chosen from Sydney's Aboriginal and Islander Dance Theatre to star in the video. Bowie said in an interview at the time that he wanted to present Australian Indigenous people in a capitalist white society and highlight the conflicts and difficulties between the two cultures. He also called out Australia for what it was - an extremely racist country. And Bowie also filmed another clip in Sydney on the same album - China Girl. There are scenes down around the Chinatown district in a restaurant and along Dixon Street, and again there are scenes of Sydney Harbour showing a hydrofoil (remember them?) heading towards Circular Quay, the Sydney Harbour Bridge, and the Sydney Opera House, with a musician playing the double bass on the Man O'War Steps. Again, this was a song that explored racism. You can read more about Bowie's socio-political stance in these songs here: http://www.bowiedownunder.com/letsdancevideos/letsdancevideos.htm And I bet you can nominate some other film clips of international artists that incorporate some great scenes of Sydney. Let us know. [embed]https://youtu.be/N4d7Wp9kKjA[/embed] Miss today's segment? You can catch up here via the 2SER website. We are back for another great year of Sydney history segments in partnership with 2SER. Tune in 2SER Breakfast with Mitch Byatt on 107.3 every Wedensday morning at 8:20 am.
A year in review
- Pemulwuy and Bennelong - The history of Aboriginal resistance to white celebrations of settlement is a big hit.
- The 1938 Day of Mourning rarely leaves our top ten essays.
- 18 footers racing Sydney Harbour 1921
- Bodgie Styles for Spring 1951 Almost-deserted Sydney beach (except for pretty, dark-haired Joan Francis) was chosen by bodgie David Roper, 17, to air leopard-skin trunks, with tail
- Bondi Beach
- Pleasure Park at Tamarama, c.1890
- Botany Bay sunrise 2007
- Ice! ice! ice! newspaper advertisements 1855
- Audio excerpts of oral histories around Liverpool really bring the district's early history to life.
- We've also encouraged to get you out on the streets and exploring our history by publishing a walking tour of convict Parramatta in our smartphone app.
- Tourist Sydney
- Centennial Park
- Drag and cross dressing in Sydney
- First Fleet histories
- Writing in Sydney
- NAIDOC Week celebrations
- Sydney’s governesses
- Long Bay prison
- Randwick Racecourse
- A Walk Through Convict Parramatta
- Bodgies and African American Influences in Sydney
Annual reports
ANNUAL REPORTS
[/et_pb_text][et_pb_text admin_label="annual reports 2013-16" background_layout="light" text_orientation="left" use_border_color="off" border_color="#ffffff" border_style="solid"]2017
Dictionary of Sydney Annual Report, 2017 (1.33 MB) PDF2016
Dictionary of Sydney Annual Report, 2016 (1 MB) PDF2015
Dictionary of Sydney Annual Report, 2015 (181 KB) PDF2014
Dictionary of Sydney Annual Report, 2014 (1 MB) PDF2013
Dictionary of Sydney Annual Report, 2013 (1.2 MB) PDF [/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column_inner][et_pb_column_inner type="1_2" saved_specialty_column_type="3_4"][et_pb_divider admin_label="Divider" color="#ffffff" show_divider="off" height="20" divider_style="solid" divider_position="top" divider_weight="1" hide_on_mobile="on"] [/et_pb_divider][et_pb_divider admin_label="Divider" color="#ffffff" show_divider="off" height="20" divider_style="solid" divider_position="top" divider_weight="1" hide_on_mobile="on"] [/et_pb_divider][et_pb_divider admin_label="Divider" color="#ffffff" show_divider="off" height="20" divider_style="solid" divider_position="top" divider_weight="1" hide_on_mobile="on"] [/et_pb_divider][et_pb_text admin_label="annual reports 2009-12" background_layout="light" text_orientation="left" use_border_color="off" border_color="#ffffff" border_style="solid"]2012
Dictionary of Sydney Annual Report, 2012 (1.1 MB) PDF2011
Dictionary of Sydney Annual Report, 2011 (2 MB) PDF2010
Dictionary of Sydney Annual Report, 2010 (443 kb) PDF2009
Dictionary of Sydney Annual Report, 2009 (1.3 MB) PDF2007/8
Dictionary of Sydney Annual Report, 2007/8 (1.3 MB) PDF [/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column_inner][/et_pb_row_inner][/et_pb_column][et_pb_fullwidth_image admin_label="Fullwidth Image" src="https://s3.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/slnsw.dxd.dc.prod.dos.prod.assets/home-dos-files/2015/06/COSA_1888-City-of-Sydney-Birdseye-view_CROP_centre2.jpg" show_in_lightbox="off" url_new_window="off" animation="off" use_border_color="off" border_color="#ffffff" border_style="solid"] [/et_pb_fullwidth_image][et_pb_row admin_label="Row"][et_pb_column type="4_4"][et_pb_text admin_label="Text" background_layout="light" text_orientation="right" text_font_size="10" use_border_color="off" border_color="#ffffff" border_style="solid" saved_tabs="all" global_module="11276"] Detail from MS Hill's 1888 map 'The City of Sydney', a birds-eye view over the city looking to the south and west across Darling Harbour. http://dictionaryofsydney.org/image/97526 [/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][et_pb_row global_module="9305" admin_label="row" make_fullwidth="on" use_custom_width="off" width_unit="on" use_custom_gutter="on" gutter_width="1" padding_mobile="off" allow_player_pause="off" parallax="off" parallax_method="off" make_equal="off" column_padding_mobile="on"][et_pb_column type="4_4"][et_pb_text admin_label="Text" background_layout="light" text_orientation="left" use_border_color="off" border_color="#ffffff" border_style="solid" custom_padding="20px|10px|20px|20px" text_text_color="#dd3333"]Major sponsors Community partnerships
[/et_pb_text][et_pb_image admin_label="Image" src="https://s3.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/slnsw.dxd.dc.prod.dos.prod.assets/home-dos-files/2017/07/logos2017.jpg" show_in_lightbox="off" url_new_window="on" animation="off" sticky="off" align="center" force_fullwidth="off" always_center_on_mobile="on" use_border_color="off" border_color="#ffffff" border_style="solid" alt="sponsors logos" use_overlay="off" url="http://home.dictionaryofsydney.org/about/"] [/et_pb_image][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row]Pauline Curby, Randwick
Pauline Curby, Randwick (Randwick, NSW: Randwick City Council, 2009). 1–404. ill. (some col.), ports., col. maps, facsims. ; 30 cm. Published to mark the occasion of 150 years of local government in the City of Randwick. ISBN: 9780908510085. RRP: $69.95
If you’ve ever visited the beaches of Maroubra, Bondi or Clovelly, or walked the streets of gracious terraces and working cottages of Randwick, you’ll enjoy the authoritative work Randwick by Pauline Curby. Chapters follow chronologically and by themes like 'Moving to the Underworld' or 'Randwick at War' which allowed me to easily dip into an area that interested me. I was surprised at the amount of industry that had once employed so many –often demolished to make way for housing – a theme which was as relevant after World War I when garden suburbs like Matraville and Daceyville were promoted as it is today with the development of Victoria Park on a former racecourse and factory site. And with so many photographs to enjoy – the beach beauties, the Randwick racegoers, the houses large and small – this is a very satisfying coffee table book and reference for anyone interested in all manner of history from La Perouse to Centennial Park. Jenny McInerney 2015Jillian Brown, The University of Sydney: Postcards 1899–1955 and Photographs
Jillian Brown, The University of Sydney: Postcards 1899–1955 and Photographs (Sydney, NSW: Jillian Brown), 1–141. ISBN 978 0 646 92881 4.
A hundred years or so ago the impressive gothic revival buildings of the University of Sydney were a popular tourist attraction, particularly those surrounding the Quadrangle – the magnificent Great Hall, the Clock Tower, the Nicholson Museum and the new Fisher Library. Postcards, a cheap and easy way of communicating and sharing experiences, were produced in their millions in many countries, and cards with views of the university were popular purchases for those living in or visiting Sydney. Though the picture postcard has long been in decline as a medium of communication it continues to fascinate collectors (known as deltiologists from the Greek deltos, ‘writing tablet’ or ‘letter’). Jill Brown, a former staff member in the university’s Fisher Library, is proudly a deltiologist and her speciality is postcards depicting the university. In a labour of love she has selected and published 87 cards from her much larger collection – the mere tip of a postcard iceberg. Jill is also a keen photographer and in many cases she contrasts the cards with recent photographs of the same scene. Her expertise enables her to date many of the otherwise undated cards by reference to, for example, when trees were planted on the front lawns and elsewhere and when cranes loomed over the roofs during the construction of the original Fisher Library, now MacLaurin Hall. Not surprisingly most of the cards reproduced are of the main building (the ‘Eastern Range’) as the university’s most outstanding architectural feature. But there are cards and more modern photographs of Sydney Grammar School, where the university began; St Andrew’s, St Paul’s and Women’s Colleges; the Institute building; the Holme building; the former Sydney Teachers’ College; Fisher Library (MacLaurin Hall); the Anderson Stuart building; the Conservatorium; the lake in Victoria Park with the university in the distance; student groups and scenes in lecture theatres; the Quadrangle; and other scenes and buildings familiar to all who know the place. As well as documenting the university pictorially, Jill Brown’s book is a reflection of social history because although her primary aim is to reproduce the pictures on the fronts of these cards she also transcribes the messages on the backs. What sorts of things did people typically say on a postcard a century ago? Of necessity their messages were brief. Often they were banal and inconsequential – 'Hope you are having a good time and enjoying the best of health', 'Wishing you the Compliments of the Season', 'Could you & your mother come and see us on Thursday afternoon', and so on. Other messages are of more interest – 'Tasted a ripe ‘paw-paw’ fruit today, would on the whole prefer an un-ripe turnip', 'This is where Guy is studying for a licence to kill [i.e. Medicine]'. Many crammed longer messages into a small space by means of tiny script and use of abbreviations – everything from notes of tourism to reports of medical conditions – but only four of the writers mentioned the university or having been there. It seems that the cards were selected for purchase not so much for the relevance of their pictures but because they were readily available and suitable for a quick and friendly note to a friend or relative. To whom were these cards sent? Some in the collection are unused, but the others spanned the world. Foreign destinations are the most numerous (UK, France, New Zealand and elsewhere) followed by addresses in Sydney suburbs, New South Wales country towns and interstate. The university’s images were widely disseminated. The 87th and last card reproduced in the book represents the jewel in Jill Brown’s collection, a card for which she searched for many years. It is of the main building and Great Hall, from the north-east, and shows clearly the long-lost Angel of Knowledge triumphantly on her pedestal at the eastern end of the Great Hall roof. Seven feet tall and sculpted from sandstone, the angel was removed in 1874 for safety reasons and its whereabouts has become an enduring mystery. Photographs of it are rare, but Jill has found one. Jill Brown has produced a beautiful and nostalgia-filled book and anyone interested in the university’s history will find this a fascinating journey through its buildings and the people responsible for them. Copies are available for $40 through the Chancellor’s Committee Gift Shop under the Clock Tower in the Quadrangle at Sydney University, or by email at http://sydney.edu.au/ccs/shop/index.shtml Neil Radford 2015
Tony Allan, Typewriter: The History, the Machines, the Writers
Tony Allan, Typewriter: The History, the Machines, the Writers (New York: Shelter Harbor Press, 2015), 1–96. ISBN 978 1 62795 034 3. RRP: $16.99
More than 50 people are credited with inventing the typewriter, going back to the 17th century. The industrial revolution created mountains of paper needing armies of clerks to write and copy legal and financial documents. Inventors competed to devise a cheaper and faster way. Allan takes us through the different solutions which culminated in the first truly modern typewriter, the Underwood 5 of 1901. This sold in millions and Underwood became the world’s leading typewriter manufacturer. There are many illustrations of machines and typists, including Marilyn Monroe in 1949 with a typewriter balanced on her lap and showing plenty of leg. Perhaps she was advertising not typewriters but stockings for the modern typist. Mark Twain was probably the first serious writer to adopt the typewriter because he found he could type much faster than writing. In 1883 he submitted Life on the Mississippi to his publisher in typescript, the first author to do so. Other authors are listed with their favourite machines and there is a photo of Jack Kerouac working away at his Underwood Portable. Truman Capote famously said of Kerouac’s output “That’s not writing, it’s just typing.” Cormac McCarthy’s Olivetti, bought from a pawn shop in 1963, was auctioned for charity in 2009, bringing $254,500. He bought an identical replacement for $20 and continued writing. Conan Doyle used the typewriter in one of his stories in which Sherlock Holmes traced anonymous typed letters to their source. Movies that have featured typing, typists and typewriters in their plots are listed and summarised. The rise of the word processing computer has not led to the demise of the typewriter. They are popular in developing countries where the electricity supply is unreliable and in recent years the Russian government reverted to using typewriters for sensitive material because they can’t be hacked. Since 2010 the 'type-in' has become a social event in many countries, groups gathering at bookshops or coffee shops for hours of typing fun. Look at http://type-in.org and be amazed. Allan’s engaging and comprehensive survey presents enough typewriter facts and photos to excite the collector and to interest the layperson. Neil Radford 2015Jacqui Newling, Eat Your History: Stories and Recipes from Australian Kitchen
Jacqui Newling, Eat Your History: Stories and Recipes from Australian Kitchen (Kensington, New South Wales: Sydney Living Museums and Newsouth Books, 2015), 1–272. ISBN: 9 781 74223 468 7. RRP: $49.99
As curator and resident gastronomer at the Museum of Sydney, Jacqui Newling gives us a unique perspective on culinary history of Australia. Weaving together the available produce of the day and stories from the simplest or best equipped kitchens, Newling gives us a rich understanding of the ingenuity and skills of the women whose recipes are available here to try. Adapting English recipes to use wonga pigeon or wallaby added colour to colonial times but the flavours often depended on your economic status. Mustards, cloves, nutmeg or cinnamon could only be afforded by wealthier households but ginger was much more affordable so enjoying the Gingernuts gave me a new appreciation their social status and flavour! Well indexed and beautifully illustrated, the stories and recipes add a new dimension to ‘making do’ – preserving, waiting for the iceman or the milko, or coping with early Kooka stoves.
While the stories continue through post-war migration of the 1960s and 70s, the emphasis is very much on the first century of our culinary history – making it an ideal read for anyone who wants to appreciate our social history through the table we sat at or the food that was served. And it gave me some great ideas for sharing the four generations of handwritten recipes I’ve inherited of my own family’s journey through food. Jenny McInerney, 2015 Available from Sydney's Living Museums, New South Books and all good book stores!
Hilary Bell, The Marvellous Funambulist of Middle Harbour and Other Sydney Firsts
Hilary Bell, The Marvellous Funambulist of Middle Harbour and Other Sydney Firsts, illustrated by Matthew Martin (Kensington, New South Wales: New South, December 2015). ISBN: 978 1 74223 440 3 RRP $24.99
This is a beautifully crafted and rather entertaining history of unexpected ‘firsts’ that have happened in Sydney. From the first use of ether by a dental surgeon, to Quong Tart’s first tea rooms, the book explores a number of people, places and events that have shaped our city today. Written in witty short rhymes, we also learn about the first pistol duel in 1788, the first cemetery in 1792 and the first traffic light in 1933. Towards the end there is a ‘second helpings’ section which elaborates more information on the stories explored in the book. Matthew Martin’s illustrations add greatly to the charming style and the overall impression is something of a cross between Horrible Histories and Dr Zeuss – all wrapped up with a particular Sydney flavour. The Marvellous Funambulist will appeal to children in the 8–12 age range. It will also delight adults reading it aloud to younger children. A great stocking filler for all Sydneysiders this Christmas. Catie Gilchrist November 2015