henry handel richardson
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- 1.Maldon, October 2009
Henry Handel Richardson Celebration Weekend
With thanks to the organisers, Sally Morris, Marg Taylor and JaneyRunci, and also to their army of volunteers
2. Ethel Florence Lindesay Richardson
Ethel (Ettie) Richardson, better known by her nom-de-plume Henry
Handel Richardson, was born in Victoria Parade, Fitzroy on 3
January 1870.She wrote the novels Maurice Guest (1908); The Getting
of Wisdom (1910); Australia Felix (1917); TheWay Home (1925) and
Ultima Thule (1929) published as the trilogy The Fortunes of
Richard Mahoney in 1930.
3. From prosperity ...
The Fortunes of Richard Mahoney is based on Ettie Richardsons
childhood experiences.
The Richardson family migrated to Australia during the Gold Rush,
and Walter Richardson became a respected doctor in Ballarat.From
there they went to Melbourne where he was a notable
progressive.
4. to hard times...
Successful investments enabled him to take his family home to
England but he was restless and unsettled and brought his family
back to Melbourne in the 1870s.There he lived the life of a
gentleman but his investments failed and he had to set up in
practice again.
As his health began to fail, he then tried practice in Chiltern and
Queenscliff but became seriously ill and died in August 1879.
5. A determined woman...
So in 1878, Mary Richardson learned the skills needed to be
postmistress from friends Henry Dod and his sister Bessie in
Queenscliff. Another friend, Henry Cuthbert, got her the job of
postmistress in Koroit, and Walter died there inAugust1879.From
there they moved to Chiltern.
The Richardsons home:
Lake View House in Chiltern
6. The Maldon Post Office.
From Chiltern Mary Richardson took up the position of postmistress
in Maldon, with daughters Ethel (Ettie) and Lil.The family lived at
the Maldon Post Office from 1880 to1886.Mary Richardson was paid
less than half the male wage, and suffered the derision of the
local paper, the Tarrengower Times,because it was unthinkable for a
lady to work and be in charge of male employeers.
7. Commemorative Plaque on the Maldon Post Office
8. Calder House
At Calder House, Ettie Richardson and her sister Lil enjoyed the
friendship and lively company of Thomas Calder and his family.They
enjoyed card nights and musical evenings.
Its now a lovingly restored B&B.
9. The Maldon AthenaeumLibrary
This building dates from 1934, but the site was used for a
Mechanics Institute from about 1863 until it burned down in
1933.
It has a wonderful collection of classics!
10. Tressiders Cottage (1859) and John Robinsons Gothic Revival
house (1866)
These houses were already built when the Richardson Family arrived
in Maldon in 1890.
11. Holy Trinity Church (1861)and Vicarage (1868)
Ettie Richardson was tutored by the handsome young Reverend Jack
Stretch in the vicarage but her youthful infatuation was not
reciprocated.
12. Maldon and the novels...
In The Getting of Wisdom, Laura, aged 12, leaves her home in the
fictional town of Warrenega, which Henry Handel Richardson based on
Maldon.Laura travels by Cobb & Co coach to Castlemaine, and
then catches the train to Melbourne, where she goes to school at
PLC.
13. The driver had mounted to his seat, he unwound the reins, cried
Get up! to the two burly horses, the vehicle was set in motion and
trundled down the main street.Until it turned the corner by the
Shire Gardens, Laura let her handkerchief fly from the window. (The
Getting of Wisdom)
Cobb and Co Coach
14. Kangaroo Hotel, Maldon
After passing the Shire Gardens, Lauras coach would have passed the
Kangaroo Hotel, which still stands.
A collection of wooden buildings was replaced by this brick
building on Fountain Street in 1866.
15. The Commercial Hotel (now Lavender, Lace and Living)
As long as the coach rolled down the main street Laura sat bolt
upright at the window.In fancy she heard people telling one another
that this was little Miss Rambotham going to school.She was
particularly glad that just as they went past the Commercial Hotel,
Miss Perrotet, the landlords red-haired daughter, should put her
fuzzy head out of the window; for Miss Perrotet had also been to
boarding school and thought very highly of herself in consequence,
though it had only been a year, to finish.(The Getting of
Wisdom)
16. Maldon Railway Station
Ettie Richardson travelled by coach to Castlemaine, but today you
can take the lovingly restored Victorian Goldfields Railway.
17. This historic steam train offers all the luxury of first class
rail travel.
18. Its staffed by friendly volunteers, who do things just the way
they used to in the good old days.
19. Laura certainly wouldnt have enjoyed champagne and nibbles, nor
would she have sat in cane chairs, because this carriage, the Tambo
wasnt built till 1919.
20. Sources:
Text from notes taken
at the lecture by Peter Cuffley and Clive Probyn
from brochures and posters on display in the Maldon Community
Centre at the Celebration weekend
Photos by Lisa Hill, except for
the interior of the Athenaeum Library postcard, see also
http://maldonlibrary.org.au/gallery.html
The Richardson home in Chiltern, and Henry Handel Richardson, see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Handel_Richardson
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