This blog provides information, stories, links and events relating to and promoting the history of the Wimmera district.
Any additional information, via Comments, is welcomed.



Showing posts with label Ballarat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ballarat. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 July 2015

Battling on the land

Victoria sent about 90,000 men and women to serve overseas in the First World War, about 70,000 of whom survived to return home. As the war continued, the issue of repatriating returning soldiers became increasingly urgent.  As well as providing War pensions and other financial assistance, State governments of the time set up ‘settlement’ schemes to support returning soldiers with work. These schemes involved subdividing large rural estates into smaller farming blocks and leasing them back to discharged service-people. In Victoria around 11,000 farms were created.
The Public Record Office Victoria have digitised selected documents from Victorian Government files kept on returned World War One soldiers who were approved to lease a block of farming land in Victoria. They are presented online as “Battle to farm : World War One Soldier Settlement records in Victoria”. These government records will help family and Australian history researchers understand the individual experience of a soldier settler, as well as the historical context of the Victorian Soldier Settlement Scheme.

There are also 6 "Soldiers' Stories" with photos and video, in addition to the paper files.
William & Rebecca
One of these is William Edward Bradshaw, who was born at Clarendon near Ballarat on 5th  June 1888. In his teen he worked as a telegram boy in Ballarat.
William married Rebecca Ralston on 21st April 1917. Their children were Edward, Shirley, Evelyn, Alfred, Dorothy (died at birth), William (died at 6 months), and William.
William enlisted with the Australian infantry in 1917 and fought in the battle of the Somme in France from 1917 until 1918. A qualified engineer before the war, he was recruited to work as a signaller or ‘sapper’ on the battlefields. Signallers were required to be proficient in morse-code signalling on flag, lamp and heliograph, as well as in map reading (note the flag patch on his right forearm). 
William had ambitions to be a farmer on his return to Australia and leased a soldier settler block at Wallaloo on the Avon Plains near St Arnaud in 1920. 
Things didn’t go as planned, despite working on a pretty good block he sold his lease. On a good year he harvested 930 bags of wheat and 800 bags of oats. Working two teams of eight horses left him physically incapacitated, and as a sufferer of acute neuritis by 1924 he had to abandon the land, and sell in November 1924.
The farmhouse at Wallaloo
William might have held onto the farm if he could have afforded to hire labour during his recovery. The costs and the poor timing of this farming scheme meant many farmers couldn’t make it work. The government’s large-scale purchase of land had inflated prices, which inflated the repayments on the leases soldier settlers signed. As the war ended the world-wide supply of agricultural goods and labour increased and therefore the value of the soldier’s investment in land and stock started to fall. Soldier settlers frequently became deeply in debt to stores and suppliers as well as to the government. William’s wheat, which in 1919 would have sold for 7.5 shillings, by 1929 was selling for 3.17 shillings. As the Great Depression set in, the value of all agricultural capital acquired by soldier-settlers was greatly diminished, and was often worth less than half its purchase value in 1929.
William’s story is one of thousands of cases whereby the blocks were transferred to other leaseholders due to either ill health or poor financial returns.
William died of pneumonia in Queensland on 7th August 1935.
William’s story is just one from the PROV site.
You can access the individual records of thousands of  World War One returned soldiers who leased farming land across Victoria between 1919 and 1935. Enter a settler’s name in the search box or search by geographic location through the digital map, to zoom to parts of Victoria and click on a name to access their digitised official settlement record files.
The Bradshaws on the verandah

Monday, 20 April 2015

Orphans in the family

The Ballarat Orphanage has been in the news recently, with concerns that some children may have been buried in unmarked graves on the former site. Authorities investigated, and reported there were no human remains.
 However the story brings the issue of orphans and wards of the state to the fore. If you are interested in learning more about the plight of children ‘put up for adoption’, then you can attend -
Adoption and Wardship: Using Ballarat's information resources to trace family
The session run by the Public Record Office Victoria is aimed at people interested in learning more about records and resources that are available to help you research adoption and wardship in Ballarat. Join Sebastian Gurciullo from PROV who is hosting a panel of speakers who will share their knowledge on how to research family and personal history, as well as resources, support programs and services that are available.
Information about a range of support organisations that can help you with your research will also be provided and their representatives will be available after the presentations for consultation.
Panel members include:
  • Charlie Farrugia, Public Record Office Victoria
  • Grace Baliviera, Koorie Records Unit, National Archives of Australia and Public Record Office Victoria
  • Sharon Guy, Child and Family Services Ballarat
  • Edith Fry,Central Highlands Library Ballarat
  • Kathleen Anderson, Forced Adoption History Project, National Archives of Australia
  • The session will be held at the Museum of Australian Democracy at Eureka (M.A.D.E.), 102 Stawell St South in Ballarat, from 10am, to 2pm on Wednesday 22 April. The session is free, but you do need to book online via PROV
    The Ballarat District Orphan Asylum was built in the mid-1860s it changed to the Ballarat Orphanage in 1909, then to the Ballarat Children’s Homes and was home to more than 4,000 children during its time. It closed in 1968 when the grand original orphanage building was demolished and replaced with smaller cottages. The land fronting Victoria Street was sold to a developer in 2013. There were petitions to save some of the former buildings as a heritage site.

    Thursday, 6 June 2013

    Stately homes

    Researching the stately homes in this half of the state led to a couple of homes which could be yours, firstly - The Bishop's Palace, an important heritage listed landmark property of Australia's past, is currently for sale.
    Situated in a beautiful botanical like garden setting of 3.6 acres (14,500m approx), this historic palace is uniquely placed in the heart of Ballarat's prime residential area. This property has only had 2 owners since it was constructed in 1876. Meticulously maintained with outstanding original decorative features. This stately residence offers grandeur, comfort and an enviable living environment.
    It boasts a Reception hall, grand formal dining room, formal sitting room, family living room, 6 bedrooms, parents retreat, 6 bathrooms, 2 studies, kitchen, breakfast room, wine cellar, spa pavilion, and 3 garage spaces.
    Making a grand entrance
    The Bishops Palace was constructed in 1876-77 to designs by Melbourne architect Joseph Reed (1823 - 1890). Reed's buildings include the classical State Library of Victoria (1856), Collins Street Independent Church (1867), Frederick Sargood's Rippon Lea Estate (1868) and Melbourne Trades Hall (1873). 
    It was built as the residence of Bishop Michael O’Connor – the first bishop of the Diocese of Ballarat – and to provide space for the diocesan headquarters. The Ballarat Diocese was the first Victorian diocese outside of Melbourne and had opened the St Patrick’s Cathedral down the street  just six years earlier.
    The 2-storey Gothic bluestone mansion was built at a cost of £6,000. It was constructed by George Broom with internal plasterwork by William Taylor. It featured cast iron verandahs with ecclesiastical designs, a dining room that could seat fifty guests, and a private chapel with an Italian marble altar. The altar is inlaid in marble with the arms of the then Pope on one side and those of the Bishop on the other. The palace still bears the original stencilling across its walls, mahogany balustrades on staircases and even the original dining table.
    The dining table which stays with the building
    Grand entrance gates open to a winding driveway which leads through a formally landscaped area with mature trees and shrubs to the house. The land was originally on a larger 11 acre block which sloped down towards Lake Wendouree. Consequent subdividing over the years has whittled the block down to a still impressive 3.6 acres.
    The six-bedroom home is no longer in the Church, who sold it to current owners Robert and Vikki Smith 20 years ago. The asking price is $6,500,000 so if you’re interested tenders close on the 14th June.

    Information and photos from PRD RealEstate