Trevor Wholohan

AUSTRALIA


Joined August 12th 2008

Number of Posts:
6

Number of Comments:
0

Karma:
7



Blogs

Trevor Wholohan's Blogs

14805 Vote(s)
31 Comment(s)
428 Post(s)
0 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
0 Post(s)

I mentor these bloggers

Learn more about the Orble Mentoring Program.


I do not mentor any bloggers.

Friends

I have no friends :(

Recent Posts

Louisa Lawson

October 28th 2008 21:25
Louisa Lawson was born on 17th February, 1848 to Henry and Harriet Albury, the second of 12 children. Harry Albury worked as a shearer, timber carter, builder, and later on the discovery of gold, converted his shack into a shop to supply the diggers. Later he extended the shop and obtained a liquor license converting the shop to a shanty to supply the diggers with a watering hole. The gold petered out in the nearby diggings, and the business went downhill. Harry tried a number of ventures, none of which were successful, and spent much of his time away from home, leaving Harriet to care for the children. Harriet struggled to support and provide for the family. Being one of the two eldest children, Louisa was expected to help care for her younger siblings. Harry’s absence left Harriet to struggle with the 12 children, and he life was one of hardship and despair.
At eighteen, Louisa married Norwegian born seaman Peter Larsen. They anglicised the surname to Lawson. She bore 5 children, the eldest being Henry who was to become Australia’s most gifted yet flawed writer of short stories.
Peter was away much of the time, doing building work with Harry Albury, and later fossicking on the goldfields. He became obsessed with the search for gold, and like gamblers before and after him, was always about to make the next big strike. Louisa was left to support and provide for the children alone, and this must have brought back memories of her own childhood.
Louisa moved to Sydney with the children in 1883, and the marriage was effectively over. To survive, she took up the work common to sole women of the time, sewing, washing and taking in borders. She was able to buy the near defunct paper The Republican, and with Henry was able to keep it going.
In 1888 she started The Dawn, a newspaper specifically aimed at addressing issues of concern to women, most notably the campaign for the right to vote, but also issues of divorce, property rights and custody of children. The laws of the 19th century excluded women from having any say, or any rights, in these matters. She was confronted with opposition, ridicule and hostility, as were the other women who campaigned for women’s rights.
Louisa replaced her male employees with females, and began operating with a complete staff of female workers. This drew the ire of the Typographers Union, who complained that she was using non-union labour. Of course at this time women could not join the union. Such was the catch-22 that women who wanted to work faced at the time. Louisa fought back and won. She was a supporter of the union movement, and wanted to see women enjoy the protection of union representation, and this gave her credibility. She also urged her readers to tell the businesses they dealt with that they did so as a result of the business advertising in the Dawn.
The Dawn was an outstanding success, and continued publication for 17 years, longer than many modern publications. It was a commercially viable operation, attracting sufficient advertising revenue to sustain its publication. In this venture, Louisa showed a rare combination of skill, courage, determination and sound business acumen.
The campaign for the right to vote for women was ultimately successful, Australia being second only to New Zealand in this regard. The sustained campaign by the Dawn was surely a big part of this success. It is possible that Louisa’s efforts in running the Dawn for 17 years are unique in the history of the campaign for women’s rights. She is entitled to greater recognition for her achievements.
Louisa Lawson died in the Gladesville mental hospital on 12thAugust 1920.

28
Vote
Shared on
   


The Adventures of Burglar Bill

August 31st 2008 06:35
James Francis Dwyer was an Australian writer who spent most of his career working outside of Australia. He nevertheless remained proudly Australian.
Dwyer was born on 22nd April 1874 of Irish immigrant parents at Camden Park, 60 kilometres (about 40 miles) south-west of Sydney. The area was originally settled as a farming district, but is now being swallowed up by the inexorable suburban sprawl of Sydney. He was one of 11 children. His early life in the farming community provided the background for some of his written articles.
He left the farm at about age 14 and went to find work in Sydney. Some years later, in 1899, while working for the post office, he and an associate lost money at the horse races. They thought up a scheme to help themselves to some of the money passing through their hands as part of their daily work. His associate talked of the scheme to a third party, who informed the police. Dwyer was arrested charged and convicted, and sentenced to 7 years gaol. He served a little less than three years of the sentence in Goulburn gaol. Dwyer wrote under a number of pen names and his stories about life in gaol were written under the pseudonym ‘Burglar Bill’. He had a number of articles published in the Bulletin; He was a yarn spinner in the best Australian tradition. One article, fairly short, and published in July 1903 was called “The Horse-Breaking Electrician”. This is a delightful bushies’s yarn in the style of Lawson’s “The Loaded Dog”, and is well worth a read.
Another article, published in September of that year, was called “The Pig”, and told of the trouble a couple of farm hands had in returning a difficult pig they had bought to their farm. The animal died on the way, but not to be wasted, “His hide was so thick on the side that Dad cut a cricket ball out of it for young Pat”. Now that was some thick hide.
He did achieve some success in Australia, particularly when he was hired by John Norton to write for the Truth and Sydney Sportsman. The memory of his time spent in gaol remained with him for the rest of his life, and was part of his reasons for leaving Australia with his first wife in 1906. He initially travelled to London, but was unable to sell sufficient stories to make a reasonable living. He moved to the United States a year later. He relates a story, while in San Francisco, of knocking out a person attempting to blackmail him by threatening to reveal his criminal conviction.
In all he wrote ten novels, and had more than 1000 articles published. He had his greatest early success in the United States, having articles published in the most popular magazines, such as Harper’s Bazaar and Collier’s. His autobiography “Leg-irons on Wings” reads a little like one of his stories and I suspect the yarn spinner occasionally took over from the straight narrator.
He divorced his first wife in 1919, and married his agent, Galbraith Welch. He moved to France in the 1920s, where he spent most of his life. He tells of escaping from France just ahead of the invading Germans in 1940. He spent the war years in the United States and returned to his home in France in 1945. He and his second wife travelled extensively in North Africa, and he published a travellers’ newsletter describing his experiences.
He had a feeling for lyrical expression, as when he wrote of an old tale “tongue-polished by a thousand liars”. Stories certainly do grow with the telling. Thinking about the struggle of the writer, he wrote: “Words are hard. They are finger-marked by the millions who have used them before me and they have lost their value”. This thought brings to mind a writers’ need to avoid the bland, the banal, and the cliché, but the language we share carries all of this baggage.
One of his short stories, “A Jungle Graduate” was published in a collection by Alfred Hitchcock sub-titled “Stories TheyWouldn’t Let Me Do on TV”. The problem apparently was that Hitchcock could not do justice to the story with the techniques available at the time.
In the last sentence of his autobiography, he wrote of Australia: “But some day I’m going back...someday.” He never made it back. Jimmy Dwyer died at his home in Pau, in France, on November 11, 1952.
38
Vote
Shared on
   


Australian Political Quiz
1. Who was the Australia’s first Prime Minister?
2. Who was Australia’s longest serving PM?
3. Who was the first female to be elected to ANY Australian parliament?
4. Which Australian Prime Minister served the shortest term in office?
5. How many Australian Prime Ministers lost an election AND lost their own seat?
6. Who was the first female to be elected to the House of Representatives in the Federal Parliament?
7. Who was the first female to be elected to the Senate in the Federal Parliament?
8. How many Australian Prime Ministers died in office?
9. Who was the first Labor Prime Minister?
10. Who was the first Labor Prime Minister to win two consecutive elections?
11. Who was elected as Prime Minister for The Labor Party, and subsequently crossed the floor with some colleagues to join a coalition and become Prime Minister for the conservative side of politics?
12. Which leader of the ALP used the metaphor about “the light on the hill” to describe his party’s pursuit of its policy goals?
13. Who was Australia’s first Governor-General?
14. True or false? Lord Tennyson was Governor-General of Australia?
15. True of False? An Australian Prime Minister was born in Chile?
16. Which Prime ministers served three separate terms in office?
17. How many times has the Federal Parliament had a double dissolution?
18. With all places filled, there are 76 Senators in the Federal Parliament. How many face the electors at a half Senate election?
19. Who was the first Australian born Governor-General?
20. In the first Australian Parliament, elected in 1901, how many senators and how many members of the House of Representatives were elected?













1. Edmund Barton. 2. Sir Robert Menzies. 3. Edith Cowan, elected to the WA parliament in 1921.
4. Frank Forde, 8 days, in 1945. 5. There were two. S. M. Bruce, in 1929 and J. W. Howard in 2007.
6. Enid Lyons, in 1943. 7. Dorothy Tangney, in 1943.
8. There were 3. Joe Lyons in 1939, John Curtin in 1945, and Harold Holt in 1967.
9. J. C. “Chris” Watson in 1904. 10. Bob Hawke. 11. W. M. “Billy” Hughes. 12. Ben Chifley.
13. The Earl of Hopetoun. 14. True, Hallam, 2nd Baron Tennyson in 1903-04. 15. True, it was Chris Watson.
16. Alfred Deakin and Andrew Fisher. 17. There were five, in 1914, 1951, 1974, 1975 and 1987.
18. Of the 76, 40 Senators face the electorate at a half Senate election. 19. Sir Isaac Isaacs, from 1931 to 1936.
20. 36 Senators and 75 Representatives.
36
Vote
Shared on
   


The Poet Laureate and The Don

August 12th 2008 10:35
Did you know Lord Tennyson was Governor-General of Australia?

In1837, Victoria 1 became Queen of England. Some years later, in 1850, she appointed Alfred Tennyson to be her poet laureate. He was created Baron Tennyson in 1884. He was one of the great poets of the nineteenth century. Among his poetry, and towards the end of his life, he wrote a work entitled ‘Crossing the Bar’. The first four lines were


[ Click here to read more ]
42
Vote
Shared on
   


The Australian Republic

August 12th 2008 10:31
Kevin Rudd has said that the new Labor government will revisit the issue of the Australian republic. with a possible plebiscite, followed by a referendum. The proposed plebiscite can only be an indicative process, since it will have no constitutional standing. Typically, the strongest support for the republic has come from the Labor side of the political spectrum, although we do have republicans on the conservative side as well.

The arguments for and against have rarely been expressed in concrete terms, such as bringing greater prosperity or greater political freedom to the country. We are told of the need to “cut the apron strings” or “cut the painter” suggesting we in some way remain subordinate to Great Britain. Perhaps we would “come of age” as a country if we were to assert our independence by abandoning the monarchy. Another argument is that we would somehow have more respect in our region if we became a republic. The counter arguments include the notion that we have a system that has served us well and we ought not to change it. Another suggestion is that there are many republics which have had oppressive and totalitarian governments, and we don’t want that for Australia


[ Click here to read more ]
22
Vote
Shared on
   


Six-guns in Sunny Adelaide

August 12th 2008 09:00
As a rule, Australian politicians have not taken to settling their differences by shooting one another, but it once might well have happened in Adelaide.
In December, 1892 one member of the South Australian Colonial Parliament, the Honourable Charles Cameron Kingston Q.C. M.P. challenged another, the Honourable Richard Chaffey Baker M.L.C., to a duel. The two were at the time quite hostile opponents, although they had both served in the same ministry in the 1870s when John Colton was Colonial Premier.

[ Click here to read more ]
40
Vote
Shared on
   


 

Recent Comments

I've not commented on anything yet :(