Monday, 27 March 2017

Dorothy Dempster - a brilliant light who loved the arts

Dorothy Dempster (black dress) in a Green Room Production (photo from Maryborough Players Our Story)

Our Local History Theme is Having a Voice. Dorothy Ada Nilsina Dempster was a local Maryborough girl who grew up to help many people have a voice through Speech and Drama Lessons, Eisteddfods, and as a founding member of the Maryborough Players and earlier the Green Room Players. She was born on 14th May 1922, the second child of Walter and Dorothy Rex.

"Her passion in life revolved around the artist’s sense and sensibility" her family starts. "She could draw and paint. She loved to perform in dramas and plays. She built a professional career through speaking well. She took her first speech lesson at the age of seven". "Mum remembered the weekly pilgrimage to her speech lessons as a child. She rose at 6 am to make the trip on her bicycle to her teacher's home" reflects her daughter Julie.

After going to primary school in Maryborough, she attended boarding school in Wynnum. Whilst in Brisbane she had speech lessons with Miss Rhoda Felgate - a distinguished teacher and a founder of Brisbane's Twelfth Night Theatre.
"Mum was the youngest in Australia at that time to receive her A.M.E. B (Australian Music Examination Board) Certificate at 16 years of age. She was qualified to teach speech and drama and she returned to Maryborough and began teaching students in the back room of her family home" her family explained. An advertisement for these classes can be found here 

“During the war she worked as a Kindergarten Teacher in Atherton where she met her future husband Ron Dempster” her family remember.
Dorothy as a young woman

During the early years of marriage with a husband away at war, Dorothy formed the Green Room Players. Information about their performances can be found here:
Shakespearian recital was Fine Entertainment
Green Room Players get Instructions
Theatre Gossip

They were the forerunner to the present-day Maryborough Players, who recently celebrated over 65 years on stage. Celebrated here
Dorothy Dempster produced many Maryborough plays in the 1950s- a total of thirty in the first year of production. Some of the Maryborough Chronicle Information  regarding these can be found here
Drama was Enjoyable
Two Mrs Carrolls
Victorian Eeriness
Supper after Final Act
The Dumb Wife of Cheapside
Maryborough Players
Tonights the Night

She established a Children's Theatre on July 4th 1953. Details found here 

She worked with her husband Ron Dempster, who had a love of music, on the Choral Society’s annual Gilbert and Sullivan production.
“Mum convinced Dad to help resurrect the Maryborough Eisteddfod Society after the war” her children remember. “She also performed in, and produced a number of ABC radio plays”.  An article referring to this can be found here 

Neil recalls “For years she rode her bike down to the ABC studios and read the seven minutes to seven evening regional news on ABC radio. She was one of the first women to do so”.
She taught many people who became prominent in broadcast radio and television, including her own son Quentin. She also coached several politicians in the delivery of their speeches” the family remember.

In 1962 at the age of 40, she suffered a cerebral haemorrhage. She remained in a coma for many months. “Eventually she regained consciousness but to everyone’s horror she was paralysed down the right side and had lost the ability to speak” her children reveal. She began rehabilitation and learnt to walk again with the aid of a stick and a steel calliper. Her speech returned slowly and she returned home. She resumed speech and drama lessons before and after school and on Saturdays.
She would hold recital nights in her lounge room once a month, where her students could perform. Despite her difficulty with mobility, she would travel to eisteddfods to see her students perform and her children recall she would attend the hairdresser regularly.
Dorothy in her studio

“Dorothy was a courageous woman” her family assert. She is also fondly remembered by many students for her incredible width and breadth of literary knowledge, her tenacity of spirit, her generosity and her gift for helping them reach their potential.  “She was a brilliant light in Maryborough, who encouraged the arts in all who fell under her influence” a former student asserts. She is very deserving of a place in local history for allowing so many to have a voice.

Do you have a story about Dorothy?

Published with consent from Dorothy's family.

Tags #greenroomplayers #maryboroughplayers #theatre  #arts #gilbertandsullivan #choralsociety #eisteddfod

Wednesday, 22 March 2017

Dundathu


Mr and Mrs Tomson started Cotton Plantation Sundon Dundathu. 1863-64 

According to Wilson (1963) Dundathu is an Aboriginal word meaning place of timber. Originally it only applied to the sawmill on the left bank of the Mary River but the whole locality became known by this name.

The sawmill was established in 1863 by Mr Pettigrew and Mr William Sim and families. This information is found in the Maryborough Chronicle here .Mr William Sim and their two sons came from Scotland to Brisbane in 1854 and settled at Dundathu nine years later. Mr Pettigrew was a timber mill man from Brisbane. They established a direct timber trade between Sydney and North Queensland. Mr Sim supervised the building of the mill. However, he was crushed to death by a log ten years later. It appears that this was also the fate of others, a description of which is found here .

The Sim family remained living in the area and Mrs Sim died at the age of 95 in Brisbane. The Sim sons continued running the mill for twenty years before moving to Maryborough. The mill was one of the largest in Queensland. Timber from Fraser Island, Tin Can Bay and the Valleys of the Mary, Burrum and Isis Rivers were a source of hoop and kauri, with reports of some logs being two metres in width. Soft woods were grown by the mill. The Mary Ann was the first locomotive built by Walkers and hauled logs over 12 kilometres of tram line that weaved through the plantations.
Over thirty pine shingled buildings sprung up around the mill. There were batchelor quarters as advertised here .The Village School was on the hill. Mr Charles Johnson was the school teacher for many years. Mr Cooke was the last school master. The school also hosted Sunday School and Church Services. A butchers shop was owned by Mr W.H. White. 

Wilson states, (1963) there was a big Aboriginal Settlement in the area. Many members of this community were known to do odd jobs at the mill. 
A paddle-wheel steamer called Hercules towed rafts of logs from Tin Can Bay to Dundathu. It was also used to take mill families to picnics at White Cliffs.

People would row their boats to town to get food and other necessities from the shops. The Miller family delivered milk by rowing over from Walkers Point to make deliveries. 

Other industries such as the Cotton Plantation Sundon were established at the same time as the mill by Mrs and Mr Tomson mentioned in the Chronicle here . The reason cotton was grown in Dundathu can be found here .
A lovely description of Dundathu can be found here

Rowing was a popular sport on the Mary River at the time found here .Teams were entered in the four oared Champion of Queensland and included the Sim brothers.
In 1893 the mill was devastated by a flood and totally destroyed by a fire on Christmas Day of that year. The mill was not insured so was never rebuilt.

References:
Wilson, A (1963) An address delivered by Miss Alice Wilson at the Basket Picnic at Dundathu on Sunday, 9th March, 1963.

Tags #Dundathu #timbermill #pettigrew #sim #Maryriver

Sunday, 12 March 2017

Australian South Sea Island Planning Meeting

George Seymour, Ali Bates and Joe Eggmolesse
The 150th Anniversary of first ship to bring South Sea Islanders to Queensland occurs this year. A meeting was held at Hervey Bay Library on the 11th of March, 2017. The event that was facilitated by George Seymour and Joe Eggmolesse. Ali Bates attended to provide events organisation support. Lots of participation occurred with 32 people attending the event.


The ideas generated from this meeting will be further developed at the next meeting at the Hervey Bay creative space on the 8th April from 10am to 12noon, 2017.




Do you have any ideas for the event?

Come along to the next meeting and have your say.

A meeting will also be planned for Maryborough Library.

Tags: #ASSI #Maryborough #kanakas #port #Frasercoastlibraries

Wednesday, 8 March 2017

Dorothy and Lex - two women who got involved and continue to lead the way

Dorothy Ratnarajah

We have been celebrating local women through our local history project Having a Voice. Dorothy Ratnarajah and Lex Tudman are two more women who have got involved and continue to lead the way on the Fraser Coast. Dorothy has spent over twenty years as the treasurer for the Hervey Bay Neighbourhood Centre. She did her PHD in her seventies and is now supervising several PHD students.
Lex Tudman
Lex Tudman has given to the community all her life as a Maryborough Hospital nursing sister, community nurse, deputy Mayor and now as a mother and grandmother.

These brave, resilient women have ovecome great adversity in their lives to tenaciously give back to the local community. Their fascinating stories will soon be available on Fraser Coast Libraries YouTube Channel found here 

Tags: #Maryborough #Frasercoastlibraries #oralhistory #herveybay #hospital #nursing

Monday, 6 March 2017

Women's Week Oral History Launch



Lillian Coyne, Phyllis Klupp and Barb Hovard 
Fraser Coast Libraries launched the Oral History Project Having a Voice on Monday at the Maryborough Library.
Lots of shared memories

Lillian Coyne and Library Technician Deb McCall share a joke
To honour Women's Week we presented two mini-documentaries about the lives of Phyllis Klupp and Lillian Coyne. These women have been involved and lead the way in the Fraser Coast community. Barb Hovard introduced the event on behalf of the Maryborough, Wide Bay and Burnett Historical Society Inc.
Lots of stories were shared at the event

If you missed the launch you can view these stories on the Fraser Coast Libraries Youtube account found here  

Lillian Coyne is here 
and Phyllis Klupp is here

Gail Nancarrow, Philomena Grimwade and Lillian Coyne
Keep an eye out on this YouTube account as the next oral histories recorded will be uploaded soon.

Do you know anyone that we should interview? Let us know!

Tags: #Bauple #Maryborough #Frasercoastlibraries #oralhistory