Tuesday, August 11, 2015

My heritage of Cockatoo Island.

I was reading a very interesting book named 'Escape from Cockatoo Island'.

Set in the year of 1879, it is the secret journal of a young orphan girl Olivia, sent to the harsh confines of Biloela, an Industrial school on Cockatoo Island in the heart of Sydney Harbour.


Life was harsh for the girls at Biloela, put to labour all day long, sewing and washing, with no belongings, not even shoes and made to sleep on the cold stone floors at night.

Olivia dreamt of escaping the horrible island and having a family of her own, It felt like she has been sent to a prison even though she did nothing wrong and there was a very good reason she felt that way...


Cockatoo Island was established as a convict settlement in 1839, The convicts were set to hard labour, quarrying stone to build the very prison they were confined in, The accommodation was appalling, crammed into small overcrowded cells, the stench of human waste and sickness overcame them.


There was little hope of escape. Even though they could see the shores of Sydney cove within reach none of the Englishmen could swim and feared the shark infested waters that surrounded the island.

There was only one man; Fred Britten, who did escape in 1863. With the help of his part-aboriginal wife he had the tools to break free, survived the swim across the treacherous waters and went on to became the famous bush ranger Thunderbolt until police shot him in 1870.

The convict prison was closed in 1869 and became the Industrial school for orphan girls, they worked and slept in the very cells where the convicts had been, so it was little surprise why Olivia had felt she was in prison.


But it was the following chapter in the history of Cockatoo island that is of important significance to me.

I had mentioned the book I was reading to my mother when she said to me "Do you know if it wasn't for Cockatoo Island you wouldn't be here today?" I was surprised and intrigued because I had never heard of the island before, so she explained the story to me...

In 1888 the Industrial school closed and prisoners returned to the island, this time to build docks for the repair of Naval ships and the maritime history of Cockatoo Island began.

Construction continued and the island became the official dockyard of the Royal Australian Navy in 1913. With the approach of WW11 the need for naval ships heightened and ship building increased tenfold. Many immigrants came from England to work on the island and one of these men was my Grandfather.


My Grandfather was born in 1912 in England. In his adult life he became a Draftsman (a ship architect who creates technical drawings). In 1938  he immigrated to Australia to become a Naval Architect on Cockatoo Island.


The island became Australia's leading ship building industry. The men were skilled and worked hard and over 290 ships were built. They had a reputation for outstanding workmanship which was well deserved.

But my Grandfather was lonely, as he had come out on his own and had no family here in Sydney. His overseer at the time felt a little sorry for him so invited him home for dinner. That was the night he met this man's daughter, he immediately fell for this dashing young woman, they were married in 1940 and history was made! My mother was born and grew up in Sydney as my Grandfather continued to work on Cockatoo Island.

I have now returned to Sydney and to Cockatoo Island where I traced the steps of my heritage.



I wandered around the ship drawing offices where he would have worked and scoured the old fading photographs on the wall, looking for him, marvelling at the thought of it all.
 
 
My Grandfather, 1938

 
Grandparents wedding day, 1940

 

By Bronzebrew, August, 2015.

References; Escape from Cockatoo Island, Yvette Poshoglian; http://www.booktopia.com.au/escape-from-cockatoo-island-yvette-poshoglian/prod9781742832456.html
Cockatoo Island history; http://www.cockatooisland.gov.au/about/history

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Photography exhibition "The Melting Pot of Asia"



For those of us with a taste for adventure, Asia is a melting pot of culture, food and art.

In this exhibition ‘The melting pot of Asia’ Bronzebrew brings together a selection of original works, using a unique framing method, perhaps the first of its kind!

Documenting travels through Korea, Japan, Borneo, Cambodia & Vietnam, these images and textures will inspire, drawing curiosity to these exotic lands.


Exhibition; ‘The melting pot of Asia’
Dates; Fri 19 Dec 2014– Fri16 Jan 2015
Venue; Palookaville, 416 Brunswick Street, Fitzroy, Victoria 3065.

Check out the collection and try some Asian inspired street food at Palookaville!

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Models food fight in graffiti alley

It’s not every day you get to photograph gorgeous, exceptional and unique models being showered in popcorn, smeared with cupcakes, splattered with noodles & squirted with sauce….. but well, on this particular day that’s exactly what happened! Down a non-descript graffiti alley in the backstreets of St Kilda a photography group gathered together to direct and photograph 3 brazen models having a food fight, all in the name of art, creativity and a passion for all things photography… ;)

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Holiday in Cambodia, the memories and the movie...



Sun sdae from one of the 7 wonders of the world Angkor Watt, the temple of Ta prohm! It truly is an awe inspiring ancient beauty, built in the 12th century the city was once abandoned after the death of the king for years it lay undiscovered hidden in the jungle covered in strangler fig trees, such a beautiful place...





Introducing selfies to the children during a 10km bike ride through a rural village of Kampong Cham, Cambodia! What an amazing experience!







Last night we had a home cooked meal and tarantula rice wine with the locals in kampong cham province and today i ate a tarantula leg! Quite crispy and tasty who would have thought! mmm thats it for spider cuisine






 

We stayed in a village homestay in Champong province, we bought the children gifts and made friends through broken English, and they are always smiling and are redeveloping a tourist industry with the help of NGOs.

Its my last night in Cambodia, its been a fun, fascinating and hectic trip! We have travelled by public bus over bumpy dirt roads, drunk far too strong vodka buckets and danced the night away in seedy beach bars on the coast, we’ve bartered at central market and got saturated by monsoon rains, and here pictured is a gasoline station Cambodian style for when tuks tuks need a top up! ;)