Showing posts with label Waminda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waminda. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 May 2016

Taken too soon



The baby in the photograph above, taken in 1922, is Alan Ernest Ross, the eldest of four children born to Arthur and Beatrice Ross (nee Longhurst). The Ross family lived at "Noreuil" on Waminda Avenue which was, at the time, part of the Soldier's Settlement, featured in our previous History Buff article. The old cottage, now extended, still stands and is located at 151 Waminda Avenue.

Born in 1921 at Nurse Newbury's private hospital at Campbelltown, Alan was a bright and happy boy that everyone loved. He attended the local public school and was in the Boy Scouts. No doubt he would've loved exploring the country surrounding the Ross' six acre block of land on their poultry farm.

Resources at the library claim that Alan developed an illness that baffled the medical profession. He was only 10 years old and spent many weeks receiving treatment at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, including blood transfusions from his father. His condition deteriorated and he was brought back home. He passed away at the family home some two weeks later on 25 July, 1932.

I received a visit last week from Alan's great nephew's wife Bronwyn Ross. She explained that Alan died from leukemia. Bronwyn generously donated a copy of the photograph above as well as Alan's brother Philip Harcourt Ross and his wife Beatrice.

Alan Ernest Ross was included in my tour of the Methodist Congregational Cemetery earlier this month. I believed that Alan and his parent's grave were always unmarked, however Bronwyn informed me there was a headstone for all of them, until they were vandalized. The location of the graves are known to the family and it is hoped that one day a marker will again be placed on their graves.

Beatrice Ross died in 1942. Her husband Arthur died on 25 July, 1952, coincidentally 20 years to the day after his son Alan.


Written by Andrew Allen


Sources:

VINCENT, Liz 1998
Tales of Old Campbelltown







Friday, 20 May 2016

Waminda - The Soldiers' Settlement

The rehabilitation of returned servicemen posed enormous problems. Many returned servicemen required medical attention, others could not follow their pre-war occupations due to health issues, and many had had no training in skilled work before they enlisted. Many returned with the strong hope of settling on the land.
The States and Commonwealth combined in a land settlement scheme financed by the Commonwealth and controlled by the States, who were to obtain the necessary land. The settler was given money for equipment, but had to pay back this sum plus the purchase price of the land, plus interest. Although the scheme was launched with enthusiasm, it was to prove disastrous for many settlers.
At Campbelltown, the dairy farming estate known as “Cransley”, owned by Mr Thomas Houghton, was purchased by the government, and was cut into 36 poultry farms and two administration blocks. Each farm was of an average area of 7 acres, and included a three bedroom weatherboard house, feed shed, egg packing and incubator shed, and brooder. A basic flock of laying hens and fertile eggs was provided. The principal thoroughfare was appropriately named Waminda Avenue – ‘Waminda’ meaning comrade.


View of Soldiers' Settlement, Waminda Avenue, Campbelltown


Soldiers desiring priority in the selection of the blocks had to apply in writing to the Director of Soldiers’ Settlement Lands. The soldiers and their families began to move into their farms in about June 1919, but through bad organisation, many did not receive their breeding stock until after the end of the breeding season. Another setback was a defect in the design of one of the incubators. The initial years were hard and although the farmers got over the worst part of the season in September 1921, the winter of 1922 brought them down so much that they had to ask for assistance, which although it was given, was not sufficient. The inexperienced farmers were not prepared for the setback.  In 1922 an enquiry was held into the Settlement, which found that Government mismanagement had not helped, nor the fact that this class of farming did not suit this part of the country. Although the men were “triers” their initiative was not encouraged, and during the Depression years, many farmers were forced to give up their holdings, and have their places taken by more returned men, or take up other jobs and run their farms as a sideline.
A few were successful despite the odds, (see blog about Cransley and Bill Price), and in fact continued to flourish as poultry farms up until the land was released for residential development in 1959.
In 1960, the Campbelltown Ingleburn News headlined “The end of an era”, with the closing down of the last poultry farm in the Soldiers’ Settlement.


Written by Claire Lynch
Sources: Local History Pamphlet Files, Campbelltown Library