The history of a nation through the lives of ordinary Australians whose beginnings were in a penal colony. In 1901, the author’s great-grandparents, James Patrick and Mary Jane Wilson, moved from rural Tallawang near Gulgong to the fledgling suburb of Chatswood on Sydney’s North Shore. Accompanying them were Bert (the author’s grandfather), Bert’s sister Elizabeth and his younger brother Leo. Older brother Percy followed later. Bert, Percy and older brother Tom began a business, building houses from Chatswood through to Hornsby on Sydney’s northern border. The breakout of the First World War saw dramatic changes. Rowland Wilson, Bert’s nephew, enlisted only to be engaged shortly after his arrival in France in one of the bloodiest battles of the War – the battle over Pozieres. His remains are mingled with the mud and dirt of Pozieres’ farmlands. Leo, Rowland’s uncle, followed a year later. The author gives an account of their terrible experiences. On the author’s mother’s side, it was his grandfather Steele’s brother, Percy Steele, who endured the same frightening ordeal, carrying a lifelong war wound. Australians were hardly over the War when the Depression struck, causing many builders to lose their businesses. The Wilsons hung on by the skin of their teeth, improvising as best they could, while the Steeles, always with work with the New South Wales Railways in clerical positions, did much better. The author provides an engaging account of his parents’ upbringing before they met at Chatswood in 1938. They were from very different backgrounds. The class difference would cause them heartache. The Second World War intervened. His father was a leading sick berth attendant on HMAS SYDNEY during the great cruiser battles in the Mediterranean. It was a deadly period, but the SYDNEY survived and returned to Australia where his parents were married in 1941. Tension was never far away between his father and his mother’s parents. Among all these happenings were much drama and excitement. The book ends with the author’s father building their first house at Lane Cove, a suburb adjacent to Chatswood. Book 3, ME AND PETE, covering the author’s early childhood, was released in 2020.
This book will reach a similar audience of students, researchers, and educated lay people in political economy and economic history in particular, and in the social sciences in general.
A comprehensive account of American society in 1939, a year that saw both the suffering that characterized the end of the Great Depression as well as the welcome escapism of the era's music, art, and film.
This book answers these and other crucial questions by presenting new insights and analyses along with statistical evidence that defies mainstream interpretation of economic history.
The author traces the lives of his parents and grandparents from Federation through to the end of World War 2
The Great Depression and World War II, 1929-1945
First Published in 1990. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
This volume thus identifies the symptoms that eventually resulted into the eleven year reign and twenty year cult of Peronismo, symptoms which strongly influence the course of events in present-day Argentina.
In 1566 Matthew Parker, the Archbishop of Canterbury, issued a 'Book of Advertisements' which laid down rules for the conducting of services and the wearing of vestments, identifying the specific clothes to be worn by priests during ...
Betts, Raymond F. 1985. Uncertain Dimensions: Western Overseas Empires in the Twentieth Century. ... Essays on the Origins of the Second World War, edited by Robert Boyce and Esmonde M. Robertson, 55¥91. New York: St. Martin«s Press.
Looking back, this wide-ranging work chronicles a life?s outlines with care and dignity.Yesterday is the past. Today is the present. Tomorrow is a mystery.