1. Issue 28 of our newsletter has just been published
Featuring articles on our 50th anniversary celebration, artists Neil Douglas and Abbie Heathcote, The Steak Bank Restaurant in Ormond, Weights and Measures, Heritage Matters and more. Click Here
2. Talk at PMI Victorian History Library: It Was the Best of Times…
The PMI’s 2022 Bruce Turner Presentation proudly presented by a member of the Cinema and Theatre Historical Society of Australia (CATHS), Ross Campbell.
TUESDAY 9TH AUGUST, 7-8PM
PMI VICTORIAN HISTORY LIBRARY
39 ST EDMONDS RD PRAHRAN VIC 3181
Ross traces the story of his lifetime involvement in cinema that begins with his film-loving parents setting up home in South Caulfield, just two streets away from where massive foundations were being laid for an impressive art deco moderne picture theatre, The Camden. In 1936 The Camden screened Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s super production, A TALE OF TWO CITIES, starring Ronald Colman as Sidney Carton. It was the first of many memorable screenings Ross’s parents and siblings would encounter in that beautiful building over their lifetime.
3. Katharine Susannah Prichard (1883-1969)
In 2015 Nathan Hobby visited GEHS to talk about his PhD, a bio of the novelist Katharine Susannah Prichard (1883-1969). He wrote an article, Forgotten Roots: Katharine Susannah Prichard in Glen Eira for our newsletter in July of that year, reproduced below.
Katharine’s early years were spent in the Caulfield area but for most of her life she lived in Perth. Now in 2022 Nathan Hobby has written a book, The Red Witch: A biography of Katharine Susannah Prichard which we look forward to reading.
A recent review of The Red Witch by Ian Syson in The Age (23 July 2022) refers to a woman of contradictions “…the Communist from middle-class Caulfield, the skilled romantic novelist who crowbarred socialist realist dialogue into her work…the home builder who always needed to travel…”
Forgotten Roots: Katharine Susannah Prichard in Glen Eira
by Nathan Hobby
Prichard (Right) with Premier, Sir Alexander Peacock and Lady Peacock.
“An Australian Novelist Honoured” Punch, 9 March 1916. Retrieved May 15, 2015, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article130037837
The Glen Eira roots of the great Australian novelist, Katharine Susannah Prichard (1883–1969) are often overlooked because she was born in Fiji and lived the last fifty years of her life in Perth.
Yet most of her formative years were spent in Caulfield South, Ormond, and Brighton. These years are crucial to my PhD, a biography of Prichard’s early life, and I am grateful for the warm welcome from the Glen Eira Historical Society on my recent trip to Melbourne.
Prichard’s maternal grandparents, Simon and Susan Fraser, lived for many decades in a house called Clareville on the corner of North Rd and Booran Rd, the site of the present day Ormond Uniting Church. Fraser Street is named after them. It was this house Katharine came to live in 1887 with her mother and brothers. After a stint in Tasmania, the family lived in two other houses on North Rd from 1895 to 1907.
After years of job instability and depression, Katharine’s father, the journalist and writer Thomas Henry Prichard, hung himself in the back shed in 1907. Buried in Brighton General Cemetery, he is the author of one novel, Retaliation: A Tale of Early Melbourne.
Katharine was living next door to the girl who became her best friend, Hilda Bull, later a prominent doctor and theatre producer with her husband Louis Esson. Their remarkable circle of teenage friends also included Nettie Higgins (later Palmer) – a prominent literary identity – and the socialist lawyer Christian Jollie-Smith.
Prichard wrote about her Glen Eira [Caulfield] years in her autobiography, Child of the Hurricane (1963). She was to finally write her only novel set in Melbourne, Subtle Flame,in 1967 at the age of eighty-three, turning to the setting of her youth at the end of her life.