The Erbacher's were business people in Maryborough. John
Erbacher, born in 1941, was the first of
two children to Albert and Sylvia Erbacher. He and Sue Erbacher conducted the April local history
talk based on their book Days of my Youth.
168 Sussex Street, Maryborough, Qld. |
John states “Dad was a baker and a pastry cook who owned a shop in Adelaide Street, while at the
same time operating a plant nursery from our Maryborough home of 168 Sussex
Street.”
Albert Erbacher’s shop in Adelaide Street, Maryborough, Qld. |
John has an amazing memory. He recalls “preserved eggs in
waterglass in two 1000 gallon tanks in the backyard” used in the bakery for
making cakes and biscuits. Fresh eggs were in short supply during the war and he
can remember “ration tickets used for buying butter”. He also reminisces
about “a large ice chest measuring seven
by five feet by four and half feet deep used for storing butter” and “two very
large wood fired ovens 24 by 25 feet, a steel churn seven feet in diameter and
nine feet long."
The Baker Cart and Staff. |
Staff picnics at Hervey Bay were attended by the staff. “On
Saturday afternoons and after work and on public holidays, the staff of about
seven people would sit in and on top of the baker cart while dad drove them.”
Corner of Esplanade and Pier Street Urangan, Qld. |
The Erbacher’s were very industrious and also had a nursery
in the backyard of their house. “The
nursery covered an area of two acres, with large ferneries covering a quarter
of an acre, one partly covered by glass”. The nursery was planted with gladioli
and dahlias "with about one acre of double gerberas."
Double gerberas & sweet pea trellises 18 feet high |
Raised Seed Beds 168 Sussex Street, Maryborough, Qld. |
Part of Erbacher's Nursery 168 Sussex Street, Maryborough, Qld.
|
John recalls that “Dad began
gradually converting the baker shop into a fruit shop, and for some years he
ran both businesses together.” When the bakery was completely converted to a
fruit shop John recalls in the busy
Christmas period that up to seventeen staff were employed.
Erbacher's remodeled fruitshop. |
The Staff with Rodney Spies and Albert Erbacher at far right. |
John also told us some tales about Joe the pig man who collected fruit scraps from the store with his old draught horse and wagon.
Another fond memory was the
Marykhana “Each year Dad entered a float in the Marykhana procession when the
staff, elaborately dressed, boarded the decorated truck and threw out fruit
samples to the crowds.”
Making a Float for the Marykhana |
Erbachers' fruit shop float in Marykhana |
Lots more stories can be found in this or the many other books
written by the Erbacher’s and found in the library. They are all interwoven
with their formidable zest for life and humour.
Albert Erbacher with 4 hp Rip Tide outboard and the Urangan Pier in the background. |
Images taken by John
Erbacher will be catalogued.
Published with consent from John and Sue
Erbacher
Source Erbacher, J., & Erbacher, S.
(2005).Days of my Youth.S Urangan: Erbachers
Tags #Maryborough #fruitshop #bakery #Erbacher #Worldwar2
.
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