This blog provides information, stories, links and events relating to and promoting the history of the Wimmera district.
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Showing posts with label Libraries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Libraries. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 October 2018

'Our Free Library"

Neilson biography by Hugh Anderson & Les Blake
The Minimay Hall Committee is organising John Shaw Neilson commemorative events for the 19th October. There will be poetry readings by school children and members of the John Shaw Neilson Society, and an official dinner in the Soldiers Memorial Hall, with the unveiling of a Neilson portrait by Ron Penrose.
John Shaw Neilson was born on 22 February 1872 at Penola, South Australia, eldest son of Scottish-born John Neilson bush-worker and selector, and his wife Margaret, née McKinnon. Known as Jock, he attended the local school for less than two years and as a small child worked as a farm labourer for his father.
The Neilson's cottage originally at Penola, now re-constructed at Nhill

In 1881 John Neilson senior and his half-brother Dave Shaw joined the South Australian farmers making the long trek by wagon over the border to take up selections under the Victorian Land Act and were each allotted 320 acres north of Lake Minimay.
In the first year on their Minimay selection, the Neilsons cleared 6 acres and ploughed, sowed and harvested by hand, but after deducting the money owed to the storekeeper found they had made £7 from the crop. Impoverished and bankrupt, they were forced to seek station work to exist, and only devoted their spare time to the selection where the family lived in a crude mud-plastered house for eight years. Neilson Senior asked for extensions to pay the annual rent year after year, until in 1888 the storekeeper foreclosed.
The John Shaw Neilson monument at Dow Well

By June 1889 they had shifted to Dow Well, a few miles west of Nhill. Although he did his share of clearing and working the land, Neilson found time to wander the swamps and woodlands as a keen observer of nature, gathering eggs and listening to birdsongs, foraging for mushrooms, and tracking wild bees, and for some months went to school at Dow Well/Tarranginnie East State School in 1885-86, leaving when he turned 14.
Neilson and his father generally worked as farm-hands, timber-cutters, or roadmaking workers for the Lowan Shire council, but were also staunch unionists when shearing. Both belonged to the local literary society, and both won prizes for verse in the Australian Natives' Association competitions in 1893. Neilson Senior was a published bush poet, who appears to have started writing verse when he was about 30, and contributed to local newspapers and Adelaide Punch. He won another prize for verse in 1897, but achieved his widest popularity in outback shearing sheds with a song, 'Waiting for the Rain'. Although he lacked 'the outstanding poetical genius of his son', he was a writer of some achievement in the face of a lifelong bitter struggle for existence and little schooling; his verse was issued in book form, The Men of the Fifties, in 1938.
John Shaw Neilson wrote the poem 'Our fee library' about the Nhill Library.
Frank Shann, editor of the Nhill Mail, printed verse by Neilson for some years. Most was conventional and undistinguished. The family moved into Nhill in mid-1893, still deep in poverty and existing on municipal contracts and farm work, but by May 1895 they were on the road again travelling north to take up a scrub-covered Mallee selection near Lake Tyrrell, which had to be rolled and burned and grubbed before ploughing and sowing.
With poor health from heavy labouring work and failing eyesight Neilson moved to Melbourne, where he was employed by the CRB (Country Roads Board) in 1928.
John Shaw Neilson died on 12th May 1942 in Melbourne.

The Minimay Hall Committee is encouraging former school students to attend the celebrations. For more information and/or to book contact members: Geoff Carracher (53866261), Jenny Chenhall (0416264113) or Dick Smith (53866241).

Wednesday, 8 May 2013

Community milestones

We have been researching local Community Milestones for the National Trust's Heritage Festival, and almost reached another.
It was in December 1963 that the Nhill Library opened in the Lowan Shire Offices. Unfortunately the building was recently gutted as part of the new Hindmarsh Shire office development, however there is still the photo evidence.

The library in residence in 1960s

Going - March 2013
Gone...just a shell - April 2013
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The Kaniva and Lowan Shires both joined the then Horsham and Dunmunkle Library in 1962. The Lowan Shire incorporated the library area into their new Shire offices, which opened on 20th December 1963.
The 606 square foot library had a bookstock of 2,500 volumes, and was open for 16 hours a week.
 The Library Assistant was Mrs Rita Oehm, at the loans desk above.

The shelving was mainly Tebrax with some wooden units. The vinyl flooring was in natural tonings with a black and blue pattern set into it. The chairs were a brown vinyl.
The childrens' section had stools of natural coloured vinyl and a wooden picture book unit with a padded seat.

The Library moved out of the Shire Offices into a shopfront location in Nelson Street.
Then in 1997, the Hindmarsh Shire purchased the old Manchester Unity Lodge Hall in Clarence Street, and the Library moved back into the building which had previously been home to the Nhill Free Library Reading Room.

- Stage One of the new two-storey Hindmarsh Shire Offices behind the old Lowan Shire Offices building. There will be an Open Day for the new offices on Monday 13th May from 10am to 4pm.

Tuesday, 10 April 2012

The 'Times' hits the headlines

I spoke earlier about the added value of the Australian Historical Newspapers project, now that they have added the Horsham Times, well I'm not the only one.
This email message was broadcast recently by the Collaborative Services Director at the National Library -
"It has been wonderful to see how Trove has raised the profile of heritage and contemporary collections held in Australia's cultural agencies and educational institutions.  Just last week, this blog http://mywdfamilies.wordpress.com/2012/03/19/alfred-winslow-harman-stepping-out-of-the-shadows/ shared a moving story about the value of Trove." 
On checking the blog post it refers to 'The Horsham Times', Warracknabeal, Murtoa, Rupanyup, and Hopetoun.

Thursday, 22 December 2011

Up with The Times

A great Christmas present for the local community.
After anticipating this milestone for a couple of years, the time has finally come -
The Horsham Times newspaper is now on the historic Australian Digitised Newspapers site.
More than six million historical Australian newspaper pages have been digitised, indexed and are now fully searchable on the National Library of Australia's TROVE site.
The aim of the Australian Newspaper Digitisation Program is to provide a range of metropolitan and regional newspapers from across Australia. The newspapers have to have been microfilmed, as it is the film which is digitised, and to have been originally published prior to 1955 (copyright provisions still exist for material published from 1955 onwards).
The 'Ararat Advertiser' undergoing quality assurance

The process uses a master copy of the microfilm which is scanned by a contracting firm. Each newspaper page image is then quality assured by real humans (a time consuming and repetitive operation) and then sent to an OCR Optical Character Recognition contractor, this is the action which makes the image content searchable, and truly useful.

Major newspapers have been available for some time, and checking The Argus has found a whole range of local information which made the national news, but now with The Times so much more is available. The digitised copies cover the period from  Tuesday 17th January 1882 to Wednesday 30th December 1953.

The first digitised issue - Tuesday 17 January 1882

The front page on Friday 13th in 1950 has the library article - "Free Library To Open Soon The City Council hopes to be able to open the Horsham Free Library soon. At the council meeting on Tuesday night, Cr. T. Conroy reported that good progress was being made with the work at the library. It was hoped to have the library open soon. When asked by the Mayor (Cr. Bennett) for an opening date, Cr. Conroy said that he was unable to set a date." 
This relates when the City Council took over the existing subscription library (free being the costs were to be financed from rate revenue and all residents could use the library), and closed the Mechanics Institute building for extensions and renovations.
This new resource is going to be a great boon to both family researchers and local historians. The Horsham Times section is at http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/title/225 
Check it out for yourself
Front page, Friday 13 October 1950