Category: Newcastle


Names to faces

Names to Faces

Teacher trainees at The Junction Demonstration School

The Newcastle Herald has been of great assistance yet again by publishing one of our photos in its fascinating A moment in time series. On Saturday 14 January 2012, they published the above photo showing some teacher trainees, asking for people to identify the young faces, and, in the same column on Saturday 21 January, they reported the information kindly supplied by members of the public.

Trevor Fullerton emailed the Herald to say he was pictured on the far right of last week’s photo.

Mr Fullerton said it was taken at The Junction Demonstration School in 1956 when Newcastle Teachers’ College was located in Union Street, Newcastle.

“It was the first demonstration lesson observed by a group of students in their initial year of training, ” he said.

“The [standing] students are, from left to right, Jocelyn Driscoll, Brian Evans, Patricia Dark, Bill Fowles and Trevor Fullerton.”

David and Dale Dark of Clarence Town also sent an email, saying they had called David’s sister Patricia Dark, (now Menzies) who now lives at Dorrigo and remembers the photo being taken.

Many thanks to the Herald and to Mr Fullerton, Mr and Mrs Dark and Mrs Menzies!

If you wish to see the full-sized photo, click on the image on this page. Former Newcastle Teachers’ College students may also be interested to see the rest of the photos in the set, Newcastle Teachers’ College, on our Flickr site.

 Railways Seminar

Cultural Collections
Seminar

Cultural Collections Reading Room
Level 2, Auchmuty Library
The University of Newcastle

Friday 18 November 2011
10am- 11am (followed by morning tea)

Broadmeadow Roundhouse
Shane Blatchford

Shane has worked at both Broadmeadow and Cardiff Locomotive Depots. He will be sharing his experiences and stories of the people behind the railway that made it run. He will also cover the history of the Broadmeadow Locomotive Depot.

RSVP: Brenda.Sullivan@newcastle.edu.au or 02 49215824

 

 Railways Seminar

Plate 1 from the Australian Lepidoptera (1864)

To celebrate the recent purchases of three original Scott Sisters works through the University’s Reta Light Memorial Trust and Vera Deacon Regional History Fund Cultural Collections in the Auchuty Library is launching a Welcoming the Scott Sisters back to Newcastle Exhibition dedicated to their legacy in the service of science and art.

When: Tuesday 20 September 2011, 10am – 12pm
Where: Cultural Collections Auchmuty Library, University of Newcastle (Under the Mirror Ball)
Guest Speaker: Dr Anne Llewellyn
Cost: Free

The Exhibition will feature the three recently purchased Scott Sisters works, and printed illustrations from the books. In addition we will display the work of the University’s Nature Illustration students, along with life size models, and the ongoing restorative work of the Kooragang Wetland Rehabilitation Project that have been working on Ash Island, the original home of the Scott Sisters, over the past 18 years.

View the set of plates on Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/uon/sets/72157627585881887/

In so bringing the Scott Sisters back the Newcastle the University of Newcastle:

- brings into its custody the exceptional scientific achievements of the entomologist and entrepreneur Alexander Walker Scott (1800-1883), and his talented daughters Harriet (1830-1907) and Helena (1832-1910), artists and naturalists, who were educated and worked on Ash Island documenting Australian plants, animals and insects. This is of immense Local, National and International significance.

Scott's Australian Lepidoptera Plate 4

- actively supports the historical legacy of this environmental and scientific education in our students, especially those particularly enrolled in Dr Anne Llewellyn’s Natural History Illustration Course, the only course of its kind in an Australian University, and one of a handful worldwide, as well as those in environmental sciences and history. This interdisciplinary course is testament to the continuing legacy of the superb work of the Scott Sisters.

Plate 11 - Scott's Australian Lepidoptera (1864)

- promotes and supports the work of the Kooragang Wetland Rehabilitation Project and their University partners and volunteers, such as the Tom Farrell Institute for the Environment, that is actively rehabilitating natural landscapes and ecosystems that have been destroyed over the past 200 years of industrial development.

- promotes our Region’s story and place in the context of the ‘Beauty from Nature’ National Exhibition currently underway in the Australian Museum highlighting the work of the Scott Sisters, where all their original plates, archives, manuscripts and scientific and artistic tools and specimens are held. See http://australianmuseum.net.au/Scott-Sisters-Butterfly-and-Moth-Drawings

Plate 19 - Scott's Australian Lepidoptera (1864)

- promotes a greater respect and awareness for the pre-colonial, indigenous natural environment and the knowledge and sustainable practices of the Aboriginal people who lived on the Islands for thousands of years prior to the arrival of European peoples.

Frontispiece - Scott's Australian Lepidoptera Volume 2 showing the original pier and entrance to Scott's house and farm from the River

In addition copies of the (hot of the press) Butterflies and Bushland The illustrated guide to Ash Island Butterflies by Rosie Heritage and Julian Brougham will also be available for sale with a selection of twenty three (23) beautiful original paintings by Rosie Heritage, the illustrations used in the book ‘Butterflies and Bushland’, on display.

The book was made possible through a Department of Environment and Sustainability and Climate Change Caring for Our Country Grant, and continues the legacy of the work of Alexander Walker Scott and his two talented daughters Helena and Harriet, who, through their mastery of science and art, captured the flora and Lepidoptera of Ash Island, transforming it “into a place of scientific interest world wide.” Ash Island is gradually re-establishing its former splendor, after years of industrial degradation, through the work of the Hunter-Central Rivers Catchment Management Authority and the volunteers of the Kooragang Wetland Rehabilitation Project.  This book is the field guide to the environmental re-birth of this magical place and its butterflies.

I hope you can join us in welcoming the Scott Sisters back to Newcastle and celebrating their continuing legacy through the University and community.

Gionni Di Gravio
University Archivist

The Scott Sisters on Ash Island.

Text of the speech delivered by Dr Anne Llewellyn on the occasion of the Launch of the Exhibition

Harriet and Helena Scott are currently being celebrated in an exhibition at the Australian Museum.  Their work has remained largely unrecognized for 150 years since they lived and worked on Ash Island researching and illustrating the plants, insects and animals that inspired them.  Marion Ord’s 1988 publication that included reproductions of the plants and butterflies of the island reintroduced the world to the work of the Scott’s and reminded us of a world on Ash Island that has been largely lost as a result of heavy industry that used the Island as a dumping ground.

Tutored and guided by their father Alexander Walker Scott, a noted entrepreneur and entomologist, Harriet and Helena enjoyed the beautiful natural environment of Ash Island for a period of twenty years faithfully recording and documenting the wildlife around them.  The 2560 acres of land on the island was originally granted to AW Scott in 1829 but it wasn’t until 1846 after his marriage to Harriet Calcott that the family took up residency on Ash Island.  The home they moved into was modest described as being ‘ a simple house with a verandah, sheltered by pines and a huge Moreton Bay fig tree, with a plantation of orange trees behind a modest garden’.  The Scott’s oranges were reputed to be the best in the colony and were sent to the Sydney market.
Harriet and Helena then aged 16 and 14 mixed with prominent scientists and artists and the Island was often visited by memorable guests such as, Ludwig Leichhardt, the artist Conrad Martens and the ornithologist John Gould likely also visited.  Walker Scott is acknowledged by Gould in the 1865 publication of Birds of Australia as having shown him a brood of Grey Goshawks. The Scotts welcomed and entertained the colonies and visiting rich, famous and most interesting characters.

As a member of the Entomology Society of New South Wales and as a trustee of the Australian Museum, AW Scott was in a good position to introduce his talented daughters to the scientific elite. Harriet and Helena had some obvious advantages over their contemporaries in having this close contact with the scientific community that enabled them to seek advice and close scrutiny of their artwork.  As a result of their work on Lepidoptera, the sisters were made honorary members of the Entomological Society of NSW, a rare tribute for women of their day.

The Australian Museum collection of Scott papers, which largely covers the Lepidoptera, indicates that their research was meticulous and included written descriptions, notes and illustrations of each species.  Two notebooks contain numbered observations that align to numbers on the field sketches and when viewed together, each provides a comprehensive description of the colour, patterns and size of each specimen and their associated chrysalis. The notes also include descriptions of transparency and how the insect moves. The Scotts also collected and bred specimens to inform their work.  This collection, which includes a number of type specimens, has been dispersed across the Australian Museum collection but they remain excellent examples of scientifically significant colonial collecting.

Unfortunately the idyllic lifestyle on Ash Island did not last indefinitely and AW Scott was declared bankrupt in 1866. His wife died earlier in the same year and the remaining family moved back to Sydney.  Helena had married Edward Forde in 1864 but Edward also died in 1866 as a result of fever while conducting a survey of the Darling River.  Helena had planned a publication on Flora of the Darling based on specimens she had collected while accompanying her husband on the Darling trip.  His death saw the collection passed onto Rev William Woolls who included them in his 1867 publication Contribution to the flora of Australia.

The sisters continued to draw and paint commercially for the rest of their lives. Harriet drew botanical illustrations for the 1879, 1884 and 1886 editions of the Railway Guide to New South Wales, and they both executed designs for Australian Christmas cards. Her embarrassment at being forced into being paid for her illustration work led Helena to write in a letter to Edward Ramsay:

‘above all … let nobody know you are paying me for doing them for you … I should be sorry that anybody else should know and Papa would be mad’.

The illustrations of Harriet and Helena are represented in a number of notable publications including the landmark 1864 Australian Lepidoptera and Their Transformations,  J C Cox’s 1868 Monograph of Australian Land Shells, Gerard Kreft’s 1869 Snakes of Australia and 1871 Mammals of Australia.

The University of Newcastle has generously brought home to Newcastle some of this important cultural heritage in the books we see today.  As is the case with much of the natural and cultural history of Newcastle and the Hunter region, our ability to research and enjoy it is limited to museums and galleries out of the region.  Though some of this information is being reproduced electronically, the opportunities for Novocastrians to turn the pages and be delighted by the original published work of Harriet and Helena and the many other artists who have documented the rich history of the region has been limited to major national or international libraries or museums.  I am delighted that the University through funding from the Rita Light memorial trust and also the Vera Deacon regional history fund recognizes the important and significant contribution of the Scott family in recording the natural wealth of this area.

Over the last 20 years, the legacy of the Scott’s research and illustrations has informed the rehabilitation of Ash Island.  Peggy Svoboda and a team of volunteers have established thousands of plants including orchids catalogued in the Scott collection.  Hopefully it won’t be too long before the Island will again boast the sentiment expressed by Ludwig Leichhardt whilst a guest of AW Scott in 1842:

..it is a remarkably fine place, not only to enjoy the beauty of nature, a broad shining river, a luxuriant vegetation, a tasteful comfortable cottage with a plantation of orange trees, but to collect a great number of plants which I have never seen before.
(M. Aurousseau (ed. And translation) Letters of F.W. Leichhardt, Vol. 2, Cambridge 1968

The accompanying exhibition of Natural history illustration, is the work of current research higher degree students from the University’s school of Design Communication and Information Technology who are carrying on the tradition of Harriet and Helena.  As their work demonstrates, the Hunter remains a focal point for the observation and visual interpretation of nature some 145 years after the Scotts left Ash Island.  The physical natural environment of the area remains a rich resource for staff and students of the Natural History Illustration program unique in Australia to Newcastle. Through meticulous field observation, recording and research, this exhibition exemplifies the best practice established and executed by the Scotts on Ash Island and puts Newcastle and the University on the map internationally as a focus for excellence in this field of endeavour.  I thank the RHD candidates represented in this exhibition for contributing work for the exhibition and congratulate them on their commitment to the elucidation of science and contribution to knowledge. The world sorely needs such advocates at this time of global warming, habitat destruction and projected sea level change.

To read more on the work of the Scott family the following link to Beauty from Nature: art of the Scott Sisters exhibition currently on show at the Australian Museum
http://australianmuseum.net.au/Beauty-from-Nature-art-of-the-Scott-Sisters/

Media Links

Great Scott’s Ash Island home restored (Newcastle Star 21 September 2011)

Live: Talented Newcastle sisters celebrated (Newcastle Star 21 September 2011)

Sisters’ 1840s botanical paintings open gallery (Newcastle Herald 27 August 2011)

Butterflies of Ash Island (ABC 1233 Interview with Julia Brougham and Rosie Heritage)


No bar to time: the sequel
Ed Tonks

10:00 am, Thursday 29 September

Cultural Collections Reading Room
Level 2, Auchmuty Library

Ed Tonks
By popular demand, the well-known author and historian, Ed Tonks, will be presenting the sequel to his talk, No bar to time, in the Cultural Collections Reading Room.

If you have seen our wonderful photos by Ralph Snowball of hotels in Newcastle and Lake Macquarie, recognised your favourite pub and wanted to know more about it, now is your chance to hear about it from an expert. Ably guided by Ed Tonks, you will let the work of legendary photographer, Ralph Snowball, be your ticket to a journey through the  heart of old Newcastle and Lake Macquarie.

Everyone is welcome!

Toronto Hotel

Walter Donnelly's Toronto Hotel, 1900

No bar to time: a perspective of Snowball’s hotel photographs of Newcastle and Lake Macquarie.

Ed Tonks

Wednesday 24 August, 10.00 am

Cultural Collections Reading Room
Level 2, Auchmuty Library

Let the work of legendary photographer, Ralph Snowball, be the ticket to a journey through the suburbs and heart of old Newcastle and Lake Macquarie. Become acquainted with hotels such as the BONNIE DOON, HAND OF FRIENDSHIP, LOCOMOTIVE, GOLD MINERS HOME, HUNT CLUB and many more. Establish the link between a Mayfield hotel and The Junction. How many hotels were there once in Adamstown? What was the earlier name for the Lambton Park Hotel? What hotel licence was once held by Arthur North? Which hotel once promoted Marshall’s Ales? Name some hotels designed by Newcastle architect Wallace L. Porter? Which brewer once made SB branded beers? What is the connection between the Gateshead Tavern and Telford Street, Newcastle?

Come along and find out, as Ed Tonks, well-known local historian and author, shares his expertise.

Everyone welcome!

Bonnie Doon Hotel, 1911

Bonnie Doon Hotel, 1911

Hand of Friendship Hotel, 1903

Hand of Friendship Hotel, 1903

Friendly Trades Society of Ironmoulders Newcastle Branch

Day Shift – 19/04/2011 – 02:10 PM
Presenter: Carol Duncan
Interviewee: Gionni Di Gravio, Archivist, Newcastle University

University of Newcastle Archivist Gionni Di Gravio discusses the University of Newcastle’s recent inclusion into the UNESCO Memory of the World, which is the Minute Book of the Friendly Trades Society of Iron Moulders (Newcastle Branch) 1885-1886 and explores an exciting new project of the Humanities Research Institute called ‘Radical Newcastle’.

Broadcast Notes:

Back in March 2011 we received the great news that one of our Minute Books from the Friendly Trades Society of Iron Moulders (Newcastle Branch) had been successfuly inscribed on the Australian Memory of the World Register.

It formed part of a nomination prepared by the Noel Butlin Archives Centre at the Australian National University in Canberra to acknowledge the Minute books of pre-federation Australian trade unions. An official ceremony was held in Hobart on April 1.

Memory of the World Invite (front)

Memory of the World invite (back)

University of Newcastle UNESCO Certificate

The pre-Federation minute books document the formation and decision-making of early Australian trade unions, as workers came together to achieve better working conditions through collective action.

The beginnings of the campaign for the 8-hour day and early strikes by stonemasons, shearers and others are documented in these records.

Unions were locally-based in capital cities and regional centres and later amalgamated to form state and then federal unions, the first federal registrations occurring from 1904.

Current trade unions, who have a key role in our workplace relations system, all trace their origins to pre-Federation unions.

Our contribution is the minute book of the  Friendly Trades Society of Iron Moulders (Newcastle Branch) that records the formation of the Branch at the Glascow Arms in Bullock Island (now Carrington).

Glasgow Arms Hotel, Carrington

The photograph taken above by Ralph Snowball  shows the Hotel as it looked at the time.

The title reads “Minutes of Meetings of Friendly Trades Society of Ironmoulders Newcastle Branch”
The official stamp reads “Friendly Trade Society Iron Moulders New South Wales Newcastle Branch”

First Meeting of Ironmoulders Newcastle Branch, Glascow Arms, Bullock Island, August 6, 1885

First Meeting of Ironmoulders Newcastle Branch
Glascow Arms
Bullock Island
August 6/ 1885

Messrs Talbot and Shinnick the Delegates from Sydney being present, the delegates explained the reason for which they were called together. The Delegates then proceeded to the election of members into the Friendly Trades Society of Ironmoulders Newcastle Branch the following gentlemen were duly elected members

David Scott
John Ford
Thomas Roony
William Miller
James Atchinson
Thomas Taylor
George Asquith
John Patmore
James Elliot
Barthomlew FitzPatrick
George Tomlingson
Joseph Tomlingson
William Morgan
Thomas Morgan
Joseph Barclay

The Branch was then declared duly opened by the delegates: the members then proceeded to the election of Officers the following were appointed

President Mr D Scott
Vice-President Mr James Doran
Treasurer Mr J Ford
Secretary Mr G Asquith

The officers being duly installed the Meeting then proceeded to the consideration of By Laws when the following were adopted subject to the Approval of the Executive.

Moved and Seconded By Messrs Talbot and Shinnick that the Treasurer have the power to have in hand the sum of (10) ten pounds for the purpose of Defraying incidental expenses all monies over and above the said (10) ten pounds

verso 1

shall be forwarded to the parent Branch Sydney.

Moved and Seconded that this branch receives contributions from August 11th

Moved by Mr Miller Seconded by Mr Shinnick that all necessary stationery required for the good of this Branch be purchased by the said Branch

Moved by Mr Talbot Seconded by Mr Shinnick that the secretary shall prepare and forward a balance sheet at least once every quarter in time to be inserted in the general balance Sheet of the parent Branch Sydney

Moved by Mr Shinnick seconded by Mr Doran that the President shall receive as payment for services the sum of 2/6 two shillings and sixpence per quarter

Moved by Mr Talbot seconded by Mr Shinnick that the treasurer shall receive for services the sum of 2/6 two shillings and sixpence per quarter

Moved by Mr Talbot seconded by Mr Shinnick that the secretary shall receive for services the sum of (10) ten shillings per quarter

Moved and seconded that for the present the place of meeting shall be the Glascow Arms Hotel Bullock Island the time of meeting shall be from 7/30 till 9 oclock ordinary meeting order of business as per rule adopted

Moved by Mr Ford seconded by Mr Doran that Mr D Scott be appointed as Delegate on the Eight hours Demonstration committee

Recto 2

Moved by Mr Patmore seconded by Mr Taylor that all expenses incurred by the Delegates in Newcastle re formation of the said Newcastle Branch be deducted from the funds of the said Branch

Moved and seconded that the Secretary communicate with the parent Branch about the Society Branch

Moved By Mr Asquith Seconded by Mr Tomlingson that we accord Messrs Talbot and Shinnick a Hearty vote of thanks for their kind services in Helping us along with the Branch

The President Mr Scott put the motion to the meeting and it was carried unanimously by acclamation

Mr talbot then addressed the meeting giving them good advce and thanking them for their vote of thanks Mr Shinnick also responded in an elaborate address calling on all members to work in Harmony togather and in concluding called on a vote of thanks to the president this Being done by acclamation after the President returned thanks this Being the only Business the meeting closed

George Asquith
Secretary

Friendly Trades Society of Iron
moulders
Newcastle Branch

Download the Complete Minute Book here [36.6MB PDF File] Digitised by Melanie Patfield:
Minutes of Meetings of Friendly Trades Society of Ironmoulders Newcastle Branch 1885-1886

Such records relating to labour history, environmental activism, human rights and the fight for better services and infrastructure are currently being researched as part of the Radical Newcastle Project. (http://radicalnewcastle.wordpress.com/)

The Project is an initiative of the University’s Humanities Research Institute and aim to unearth and document Newcastle and the Region’s radical past. Two public meetings have been held and a concept map of potential topic has been drafted. (see it here: http://radicalnewcastle.wordpress.com/concept-map/) The ideas range from Aboriginal Reconciliation initiatives, the Rothbery Riots, the push for a University of Newcastle, the formation of Blackbutt Reserve, the Star Hotel riot in the 1970s and onto local environmental campaigns by Rising Tide and Climate Action Newcastle.

People who are interested in the Project, and wish to contribute are welcome to contact its convenor Dr James Bennett j.bennett@newcastle.edu.au

Sample page from 'Tit-Bits' manuscript a coal trimmer's diary (IMG_1951)

Day Shift – 16/11/2010 – 02:10 PM
Presenter: Carol Duncan
Interviewee: Gionni Di Gravio, Archivist, Newcastle University

University of Newcastle Archivist Gionni Di Gravio brings in an authentic coal trimmer’s diary from Carrington.

Broadcast Notes:
Tit-bits [manuscript] : [a Newcastle coal trimmer's diary] by Frederick (Fred.) Roberts of Carrington New South Wales is an authentic handwritten, leather bound diary written by coal trimmer, later crane driver, Frederick Roberts.

It spans the years 1901-1915 and describes his family life in Carrington, N.S.W.

It also provides a brief historical record of the activities of the Carrington Fire Brigade.

Read the whole manuscript online here:
Tit-bits [manuscript] : [a Newcastle coal trimmer's diary] by Frederick Roberts (20MB PDF)
Also see our Ralph Snowball – Maritime Newcastle set on Flickr

History Seminar Series

School of Humanities and Social Science,
The University of Newcastle

2010, Semester 2

 

Held in the Cultural Collections (near the Information Desk)
Level 2, Auchmuty Library, Callaghan Campus
10am- 11am, followed by morning tea

29th October: Troy Duncan, University of Newcastle

“Francis de Witt Batty: advocate of the Middle Way and custodian of Empire”

Bishop Francis de Witt Batty

This paper examines the contribution made to national political debates by Francis de Witt Batty during the twenty-seven years he served as Bishop of Newcastle from 1931. A graduate of Balliol College Oxford and a convinced imperialist connected to the Round Table Movement, Batty used his position as bishop of one of the more important non-metropolitan dioceses to strengthen ties between Australia and the empire both before and after World War Two. While Batty had deep reservations about the political activism of Bishop Burgmann and argued that it was not the church’s duty to devise specific programs of social reform, he nevertheless came during the Depression of the 1930s to accept certain elements of the Social Gospel. In the 1940s, Batty hosted a series of interdenominational “Religion and Life” conferences in Newcastle which encouraged debate among church members about such issues as the creation of the Welfare State.

Nature Illustration

Day Shift – 18/05/2010 – 02:10 PM
Presenter: Carol Duncan
Interviewee: Gionni Di Gravio, Archivist, Newcastle University

University of Newcastle Archivist Gionni Di Gravio discusses the new forthcoming exhibition of Natural History Illustration works, surveying reports and early Newcastle Panoramas on display at the University of Newcastle’s Cultural Collections in the Auchmuty Library. This is a rich physical and online display of the University’s engaged interdisciplinary research highlighting the historic natural beauty of the Novocastrian landscape.

Broadcast Notes:

Back in September 2008 a manuscript came to light in the State Library of New South Wales containing the first recorded mention of the Aboriginal name of Nobbys as  ‘Whibayganba’. In addition, the 1828 field book of Sir Thomas Mitchell, Surveyor General, contained three sketches of Newcastle drawn from the top of Fort Scratchley looking towards Nobbys, then looking towards Prospect Hill (Now Obelisk Hill), then another taken from the top of the Windmill (now Obelisk Hill) looking back towards Newcastle. These three important sketches are reproduced here:

http://coalriver.wordpress.com/2008/10/23/mitchells-1828-field-book/

The full Field book can be seen here:

1828. Mitchell, Sir Thomas Livingstone (1792-1855) Field Book – Port Jackson and Newcastle, 1828 (C 40) 55MB PDF (Courtesy of the State Library of New South Wales)

At the time, the Coal River Working Party immediately enlisted the assistance of  Emeritus Professor John Fryer in Surveying to ask whether he could examine the survey readings and compare them with those of Australian Agricultural Company surveyor John Armstrong Survey in 1830.

We believed that this Field book would also be of interest to art historians wanting to compare the actual perspective readings with the colonial art portrayals of the township. So we also asked Dr Anne Llewellyn whether her Natural History Illustration students would be interested in ‘colouring’ Mitchell’s sketches and bring them to life.

This was a perfect opportunity to spark an interdisciplinary ‘science meets the arts’ research approach to these important historical works.

Professor Fryer asked two final Surveying Students to examine Sir Thomas Mitchell’s sketches and survey readings in order to decipher them into lay person’s terms. After a year’s work those two final year students, Mr Chris Towers and Troy Sumner, prepared a report on their findings which they presented at two seminars held on Friday 6 November 2009 (to their Surveying Colleagues), (see the following three You Tube videos from the Presentation – unfortunately we did not capture the whole seminar):

and then at a meeting of the Coal River Working Party on the 7 December 2009. (This is an edited version with the second half of the Presentation and Questions):

Dr Anne Llewellyn’s 2nd Year Natural History Illustration students researched the content of Mitchell’s sketches and together with field observations, developed a ‘reconstruction’ of Mitchell’s drawings based on the ‘now known’ plants and animals of the region. Here is a video from their Presentation before the Coal River Working Party on the 7 December 2009, and a selection of their beautiful art works with some details.

The students whose work is on display are:
Angela Armstrong
Kimberley Swan
Karen McDonald
Susan Sparks
Helen Adamski
Teresa Purnell
Amy Hands
Katherine Pearce
Phoebe Ritchie
Morgan Laudine

To view all the student’s artworks please see our Flickr page here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/uon/sets/72157624027355103/ and slideshow here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/uon/sets/72157624027355103/show/

The Work of Sir Thomas Mitchell examined and analysed by University of Newcastle Surveying Students Chris Towers and Troy Sumner

The Full Report and Summary prepared by Chris Towers and Troy Sumner of the University of Newcastle’ Discipline of Civil, Surveying & Environmental Engineering for the Coal River Working Party was placed on the Coal River blog here:

[Sir Thomas Mitchell 1828 Newcastle Survey Report - Full Report and Summary]
Towers, Chris and Sumner, Troy.
Sir Thomas Mitchell’s Angular Observations and Field-Note Sketches of Newcastle. [12.6 MB PDF file] 
Towers, Chris.
Summary of Report: Sir Thomas Mitchell’s Angular Observations and Field-Note Sketches of Newcastle [896KB PDF File]

THEN AND NOW

1828

Then; Newcastle in 1828 from Signal Hill (now Fort Scratchley) by Sir Thomas Mitchell

2009

Fort Scratchley Panorama by Chris Towers

1828

Then: Newcastle from the Windmill (now Obelisk Hill) (1828) by Sir Thomas Mitchell

2009

Obelisk Panorama by Chris Towers

NEWCASTLE’S BEAUTIFUL ARTISTIC LEGACY

To celebrate the achievements of this work, the  University of Newcastle’s Cultural Collections in the Auchmuty Library has prepared an exhibition of the student’s artworks, as well as a collection of reproductions of Newcastle painted panoramas from various stages in its history, including the Mitchell 1828 sketches, to be displayed. Some of the Panoramas below have never been seen before.

T.R. Browne (1812)

T.R. Browne (1812)

Browne, T.R. (1776 – 1824). Newcastle, in New South Wales, with a distant view of Point Stephen,1812 and
View of Hunters River, near Newcastle, New South Wales, 1812. Copper Engraving.
Photographer: Bruce Turnbull. Courtesy Newcastle Region Art Gallery.

Sophia Campbell/Edward Charles Close – Newcastle 1818

Sophia Campbell/Edward Charles Close (1818)

Campbell, Sophia, 1777-1833. Sophia Campbell Sketchbook 1818
Currently attributed to Edward Charles Close. Courtesy National Library of Australia.

Sophia Campbell / Edward Charles Close (1821)

Sophia Campbell/Edward Charles Close (1821)

Panorama of Newcastle 1821. Panorama of Newcastle : watercolour drawings by Edward Close – Sophia Campbell.
Courtesy State Library of New South Wales.

Sophia Campbell/Edward Charles Close (c1825)

Sophia Campbell/Edward Charles Close (c1825)

The Panorama above is constituted of the following paintings in Sketchbook of scenes of Sydney, Broken Bay, Newcastle and region, New South Wales, 1817-1840, (Courtesy of the National Library of Australia) once attributed to Sophia Campbell, now Edward Charles Close, 1790-1866 (Thanks to Mark Metrikas for identifying this find) The individual paintings that make up this Panorama from the Sketchbook are listed in order from left to right: (1) Commandant’s house from in front of the old gaol, Newcastle, New South Wales, ca. 1828 [picture] (2) Dwellings, fenced land and the windmill on the hill, Newcastle, New South Wales, ca. 1820 [picture] (3) Barracks with Christ Church in the distance, Newcastle, New South Wales, ca. 1820 [picture] (4) Dwellings and buildings in Newcastle, New South Wales, ca. 1820 (5) View over buildings towards the signal mast and Nobby Head, Newcastle, New South Wales, ca. 1820.

John Rae (1849)

John Rae (1849)

Rae, John, 1813-1900. Newcastle in 1849.
Courtesy State Library of New South Wales.

William Keene (1854)

William Keene (1854)

William Keene (Examiner of Coal Mines)
Copy of Stratigraphic sketch from Nobby’s Island Newcastle to Burwood, showing coal seams and their Order of Superposition. 31 May 1854.
Photographed by Bruce Turnbull. Archives Authority Map No. SZ325 (Courtesy State Archives of NSW)

John Rae – Photograph (c1880)

John Rae (c.1880)

Rae, John, 1813-1900. [Panoramic photograph of Newcastle, 1878-1882, possibly taken from Jesmond House] — 4 albumen photoprints
from Sketches in New South Wales in the olden time 1842 – 1859 by John Rae, M.A. / album of watercolour panoramas and photographs of watercolour sketches.
Courtesy State Library of New South Wales.

On behalf of the University’s Cultural Collections (Auchmuty Library) and the Coal River Working Party we congratulate Emeritus Professor John Fryer, Dr Anne Llewellyn and their students for their work, and the wonderful new insights it has brought to the study of our history and artistic legacy.

Gionni Di Gravio
May 2010

Student research papers in Australian history

The University of Newcastle History Club, Department of History

This serial was published during the late 1970s and early 1980s by the University of Newcastle’s History Club, Department of History, and featured some of the best papers on Australian history by undergraduate history students. Many of the topics relate to local and regional history and will be of considerable interest to scholars of Newcastle and Hunter history. Each article is reproduced separately as a PDF file, and the entire volume is also available as a single PDF file.

Number 1 – 1976

NB During its first year, the serial was called Student research papers in early Australian history and was published by the University of Newcastle’s Department of History.

Number 2 – 1977

Number 3 – 1978

Number 4 – 1979

Number 5 – 1980

Number 6 – 1981

Number 7 – 1982

Number 8 – 1983

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