The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
Sydney’s horseracing history
Living with sharks on the Georges River
Happy 50th birthday Gladesville Bridge!
Cocky Bennett the Cockatoo
Prince Alfred's ill-fated tour
Last week we talked about the Duke of Edinburgh's visit to the Australian Museum and Henry Parkes' mongoose. It was quite an eventful tour for Prince Alfred, who was the second son of Queen Victoria. His visit to Sydney was part of a world tour on his steam frigate HMS Galatea and marked the first visit of British royalty to our shores. In the Australian colonies he visited Adelaide, Melbourne, Hobart and Brisbane, as well as coming twice to Sydney. He received a warm reception and there were many events hosted in his honour, including an impromptu fight between a snake and a mongoose at the Australian Museum. But it was during his second call into Sydney that things hotted up. This was a time of simmering sectarian tension in the colonies, between Irish Catholics and non-Catholics. On the Prince's visit to Melbourne, there had been a shooting incident between Orange and Catholic factions, as well as a riot at a free public banquet. Despite rumours in Sydney of possible sectarian strife, he agreed to attend a picnic at Clontarf, a popular picnicking spot, on 12 March 1868. The picnic had been organised as a fund raiser for the Sydney Sailors' Home by Sydney barrister and politician William Manning. During the event, an Irishman who had suffered considerable mental illness, Henry James O'Farrell, attempted to assassinate the Prince. Although O'Farrell fired his pistol at close range, the bullet, on striking the prince's back, glanced off the ribs, inflicting only a slight wound. William Vial, a coach-maker from Elizabeth Street who was standing nearby, wrestled the gunman to the ground, preventing further shots from being fired. For valiantly saving the Prince's life, he was presented with the Prince's fob watch (which is now in the collection of the State Library of New South Wales). The perpetrator, Henry O'Farrell, only narrowly escaped lynching by the crowd, and was immediately arrested. The wounded prince was nursed by the newly arrived Lady Superintendent of Sydney Hospital, Lucy Osburn. An assassination attempt on the Prince was a national scandal and wounded colonial pride. We almost killed the Prince! There was an outpouring of prejudice and racism towards Catholics and Irish. The day after the attempted shooting, 20,000 people attended a meeting in Sydney to express outrage at the assassination attempt. By the following week, there were daily 'indignation meetings' everywhere.
Anti-Irish sentiment boiled over, even in Parliament: the New South Wales Government, including Henry Parkes, passed the Treason Felony Act on 18 March, making it an offence to refuse to drink to the Queen's health, and tried unsuccessfully to uncover a conspiracy. To atone for the sin of a madman, citizens of New South Wales opened a public subscription fund to build a hospital as a memorial to his safe recovery. The Prince authorised his coat of arms to be used as the crest for the Prince Alfred Hospital (later Royal Prince Alfred Hospital), in Camperdown. Prince Alfred Park, on Cleveland Street, city park and Alfred street at Circular Quay were also named after Prince Alfred. Prince Alfred made a full recovery by the end of March 1868, left for England on the Galatea in early April and arrived on 26 June. And what was O'Farrell's fate? Clemency for O'Farrell was refused, despite the prince's own proposal to refer the sentence on O'Farrell to the Queen. He was convicted of attempted murder, despite his evident mental instability, and hanged on 21 April at Darlinghurst Gaol. Further reading: Assassination attempt on Prince Alfred 1868, Dictionary of Sydney, 2008 'Attempt to assassinate HRH Prince Alfred, at Clontarf', The South Australian Advertiser, 28 Mar 1868, p 2 --- You can listen to the podcast of Lisa's segment on 2SER Breakfast with Mitch Byatt this morning here.
Mr Parkes's mongoose
Last year we came across this cartoon from Sydney Punch in 1868 of Henry Parkes titled 'The Modern St Patrick; or, Parkes's "man-goose" at the Museum'. As St Patrick is traditionally credited with the removal of all the snakes from Ireland, we initially assumed that casting the anti-Catholic, anti-Irish Parkes in that role referred to him driving out some kind of metaphorical political or religious snakes from New South Wales (especially given his government's recent unpopular declaration that St Patrick's Day would not be proclaimed as a public holiday), and that the "man-goose" reference was probably a rude one to some connected controversy involving the Australian Museum's curator and snake-expert Gerard Krefft and the theories of Charles Darwin which he was disseminating in the 1860s. In the way of political cartoons, the drawing may indeed be referring to public perceptions of politicians, scientists, religion and Darwin's theories amongst other things, and if anybody can provide any further information into that, we'd be very grateful, but the main inspiration for the drawing was far less theoretical. During Prince Albert's visit to Sydney in 1868, he made a formal visit to the Australian Museum at 3 pm on Friday, 14th February (well before the assassination attempt on 12 March). He was accompanied by the Earl of Belmore, Mr Haig & Mr Brierley and was received there by Henry Parkes, the Colonial Secretary, Gerard Krefft, the Curator of the Museum, Dr Cox & Dr Bennett, and E Deas Thomson who arrived a bit late. There were, in the words of the Sydney Morning Herald the next day, "but few visitors in the museum at the time, and these had the good taste to leave the Prince and party to themselves; consequently his Royal Highness was enabled to spend a quiet hour looking through the building". After the Prince and this party had wandered around the museum for a while, examining some of the highlights of the collection and asking questions about Australian animals, Krefft produced a case with live snakes, took one out and placed it on the floor. Krefft then brought out a tame 'Timor mongoose', which walked around the snake, sniffing it, but left it alone. At this point, Parkes, the Colonial Secretary, produced from a bag he had brought with him a 'Ceylon mangouste', or mongoose, which, after initially trying to escape the room (the bag was, again according to the Herald "a mode of locomotion to which it was not accustomed") fought with and killed the snake. Parkes & Krefft had obviously planned the demonstration and deemed it to be a completely appropriate entertainment on the occasion, but it's difficult to imagine an Australian prime minister or New South Wales premier today carrying round a bag containing a mongoose when accompanying a Royal Visitor on a formal visit of one of Sydney's major institutions.
The Ceylon mongoose itself was presented to the Prince and went with him, part of a "large and varied collection of colonial birds & animals", when he departed the colony on the Galatea in May 1868. The mongoose was described as "docile and playful as a kitten". Parkes had a long term affinity with the mongoose family (to the point where the species was referred to subsequently as Mr Parkes's Mongoose). In 1883, he was recommending the gentle natures of the mongoose in parliament when the importation of mongoose was being debated as a possible solution to the rabbit problem. His family kept a pet mongoose at their home in Balmain until at least the 1890s, which was said to have been particularly fond of his wife Lady Parkes. The animal's ability to clear the house of the deadliest of reptiles was undisputed. The same article (Sir Henry Parkes at Home. (1891, January 31). Australian Town and Country Journal 31 January 1891, p31) tells us that "It may not perhaps be generally known that the Premier has a passion for pets, chiefly of the feathered tribe." In the grounds surrounding Hampton Villa, he had a Brazilian macaw, several silver pheasants, English blackbirds and thrushes, a golden opossum, three ibis, some curlews, a cage of pretty little birds from north Queensland and a kangaroo. Listen to Lisa Murray talking about Parkes and his mongoose on 2SER here!
History Week
Events
There are lots of events happening in History Week. Here are my picks:- Life Interrupted: Personal Diaries from World War I - a free exhibition up at the State Library of NSW
- The Annual History Lecture on the 9th September 6pm at The Mint - Professor Christina Twomey explores POWs in Post-War Australia
- Bites after Work: Perspectives on WWI Surry Hills Library, Thursday 11 September, 6.30pm–8pm
- South Sydney, WWI and the Home Front Waterloo Library, Saturday 13 September, 2pm–3pm
Community History Awards
- Coast: A History of the New South Wales Edge, by Ian Hoskins (NewSouth) Ian's also written about Waverton, Kirribilli, Neutral Bay, Sydney Harbour as cultural landscape, the islands of Sydney Harbour for the Dictionary.
- Sydney Mechanic School of Arts: A History, by Garry Wotherspoon (Sydney Mechanic School of Arts) Garry is a prolific writer for the Dictionary. He has written over 30 articles for the Dictionary, on everything from the roads to coffee to drag and cross dressing.
Multi-media prize
- Public Intimacies: The 1974 Royal Commission on Human Relationships, Michelle Arrow, Catherine Freyne and Timothy Nicastri (ABC Radio National Hindsight). Catherine Freyne has written some great biographies on Violet McKenzie and Norman Selfe, and also about the Sydney Technical College and the School of Arts Movement for the Dictionary.
Arthur Phillip
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- He was born in London on 11 Oct 1738
- HMS Sirius was the flagship of the First Fleet, which transported convicts and their guards from England to the new colony of Botany Bay in the late 1780s. The Sirius was commanded by Captain John Hunter and carried Arthur Phillip, the governor of the colony. The Sirius was wrecked off Norfolk Island in 1790. Its anchor and cannon were retrieved and were placed in Macquarie Place down near Circular Quay in 1907.
- Arthur Phillip governed the penal colony of NSW for its first five difficult years. He ruled the colony and its 1500 inhabitants with absolute power and responsibility for its survival.
- He laid the foundation for the first Government House only three months after the First Fleet landed at Sydney Cove.
- the site of Sydney's first Government House is where the Museum of Sydney now stands. One of the most significant items in the Museum of Sydney collection is an inscribed copper Foundation Plate that was laid on 15 May 1788 by Governor Arthur Phillip during the construction of Australia’s first Government House. Remarkably the plate was discovered between two sandstone foundation blocks by a telegraph line worker in 1899.
- Governor Phillip tried to obtain information about the Aboriginal people, their country, life and language by abducting men. Arabanoo was the first, but he died of small pox. Bennelong and Colebee were next. Bennelong travelled to England and back, and taught the settlers much about Aboriginal language and culture. Colebee became familiar with the Europeans but disappeared after 1806.
- Field of Mars (around Ryde and Eastwood)
- Looking Glass Bay - after giving a looking glass (mirror) to an Aboriginal man they met there in the bay, whilst exploring the Parramatta River
- Manly - The first official dispatch in 1788 from Arthur Phillip, governor of the newly founded imperial outpost in New South Wales, noted the 'confidence and manly behaviour' of the Aboriginal people encountered on the northern side of the entrance to Sydney Harbour. Thus Manly derived its name.
- Neutral Bay - Neutral Bay was named by Governor Phillip, when he decreed in 1789 that all non-British 'neutral' ships visiting Port Jackson were to anchor there.
The nuts and bolts of a Sydney Icon
The first closure was effected at 4.15 pm in the afternoon of the 19th August 1930, but there was a subsequently slight opening with the contraction in the cool of the evening. Slacking of the cables was continued without intermission, and the final closure was made at 10pm the same day. Next morning the Union Jack was flown from the jib of one creeper crane, and the Australian Ensign from the other, to signify to the City that the arch had successfully closed. We felt that the arch had become not only a link between the two shores of a beautiful Harbour, but a further bond of Empire. Quoted in Peter Spearritt, The Sydney Harbour Bridge: A Life, UNSW Press, 2007, p 65The two half arches were gradually fabricated from steel in workshops before being loaded onto barges and towed into position. The bits of the arches were then lifted up by two 580 tonne electrically operated creeper cranes. As the part-arches reached over the harbour, cables were continually re-tensioned to allow for the increasing weight of the structure they were holding, until the arches met. Steel decking was then hung from the arches over the next nine months. State Records have two terrific photos of the joining of the bridge here and here. The progress of building the harbour bridge was something few Sydneysiders could ignore. The technical details of how it was being built was explained and illustrated in all the newspapers and magazines of the day. In fact, the Sydney Harbour Bridge is probably one of the most documented pieces of public infrastructure built in Sydney in the twentieth century. State Records has about 2,000 photographs related to the building of the Sydney Harbour Bridge digitised and catalogued. They have created a photo montage of the building of the bridge and they also have a stunning selection of photographs on flickr. The Reverend Frank Cash, rector of Christ Church Lavender Bay, North Sydney, was a keen photographer and in the perfect position to document the bridge. He took hundreds of photographs and self-published Parables of the Sydney Harbour Bridge in 1930. And I'm sure you've got a photograph of the bridge somewhere in your family albums too. Bridge facts:
- The arch spans 503m
- The top of the arch is 134m above sea level
- Clearance for shipping 49 metres
- Height of the pylons 89 metres about mean sea level
- number of rivets approx 6,000,000
- weight of the arch 39,000 tonnes