So wrote Margaret Colditz, in May 1990. The earthquake in December, 1989 had changed Hamilton’s main street irrevocably. People who had lived there all their lives told her they felt that with the terrible carnage to the street, 'part of them had died.'
When I moved to Hamilton in 2012 and began delving in the Local Studies Section of the Newcastle Region Library, I found a 21 page manuscript,[1] written in Margaret’s exquisitely clear handwriting. Captivated, I read it all at once. I knew it was a treasure.
Several months later, I obtained a photocopy of 'My Beloved Beaumont Street' and brought it home to read again at leisure. By now I had already researched and written many blog posts on Hamilton, so I quickly recognised where Margaret’s memories were adding fresh new material.
The manuscript is written like a letter, to Beaumont Street. There is even an address at the top. I checked the phone book, and was surprised to find an entry under that address. I had a vague memory someone had told me Margaret had passed away. Thinking that perhaps a relative might still be living in the family home, I telephoned. Margaret answered the call, very much alive!
Within a few days, we visited this intelligent, articulate woman who was 87 years old at the time we met.
Margaret Colditz (2013)
For at least the first 43 years of her life, Margaret
Colditz lived in Beaumont Street –
....and have done so,
in memory, for the whole of my life.
She uses the word 'in' deliberately –
My home was 'in' the
street, literally, but apart from that fact, I am sure that most people of
Hamilton felt part of that interesting, bustling street that runs north to
south.
Everyone knew each
other, and it was Hello! Hello! Hello! all along the way.
There was a 'family
feeling'. Everyone was interested in each other and proud of each others’
achievements and skills.
Life was interesting
because of the cosmopolitan nature of the street. I don’t think we were aware
that it was so. As children, we were not. All of the people were always there,
and each was a part of the whole. For sure, the buildings were there, but it
was the friendliness and sense of belonging, the sense of family that produced
the atmosphere.
Margaret’s letter is a homage to her beloved Beaumont Street
as she remembers it over four decades, from the mid 1920s to the 1960s.
I asked Margaret if anyone had ever contacted her about her
manuscript.
'No', she replied. 'You are the first.'
It was her friend Norm Barney who ensured Margaret’s letter
to Beaumont Street was placed in the Newcastle Library.
Thirteen years later, I want to bring her memories to light
and share them with my readers.
This will happen over forthcoming posts, but first I would
like you to know something about the remarkable woman behind the writing. This
is why I wanted so much to meet her.
Margaret’s mother, Isabella, had been 'a lady bookbinder' in
Glasgow. At Scots Kirk, Hamilton Isabella married Sam Primrose, also from
Glasgow – a marine engineer – who found a position at Honeysuckle Railway
Workshops.
Honeysuckle Workshops NSW (n.d.)
Photograph by Ralph Snowball, part of the Norm Barney Photographic Collection, Cultural Collections, University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia
Sam Primrose bought a home for his new wife at 161 Beaumont Street.
Present day, 161 Beaumont Street, Hamilton (2013)
They had a son, Thomas. Sadly, Sam succumbed to cancer and
died. The house at 161 Beaumont Street had been paid for, but Isabella was without
any means of ongoing financial support. Since there was no bookbinding work in
Newcastle, she found a cleaning job at the Hamilton Municipal Chambers.
Margaret recalls Isabella telling her how she scrubbed the floors of that large
building, upstairs and downstairs, on her hands and knees.
Hamilton Municipal Building and Clock Tower in Beaumont Street,
February 12, 1936
Photograph courtesy Greg and Sylvia Ray
One day Edward Camfield, a railway engineer who also worked
at Honeysuckle, was passing the entrance to the Council building. Isabella was scrubbing
the marble steps. He couldn’t believe Sam’s widow was “reduced to this,” as he
put it.
I’m not sure how long it took for the romance to flourish,
but Edward and Isabella married. They lived at 161 Beaumont Street.
Margaret was born at Fettercairn Private Hospital, Hamilton in 1926. Read the story of Fettercairn here.
'Fettercairn' at Lindsay Street, Hamilton
22 April 1904
Courtesy Newcastle Region Library
Thomas, then aged 11, was delighted with his new baby
sister. Over their lifetimes, he was a loving and protective brother to
Margaret.
Margaret walked to school (Hamilton Infants and Hamilton
Public), and describes how it was then –
Naturally, everybody
else’s mother knew us because of knowing our mothers. Mothers didn’t make
friends at school or because of school. (They met at social, church or sporting
activities, often in homes). Mothers were not involved in the school! True!
They didn’t walk us to
school, in our case, by order. Our headmistress informed the mothers, who were
waiting at the gate (they were not allowed in) on our second day of school,
that we were 'big children and didn’t need our mothers to walk us home!' Few
mothers dared to defy Miss Lambert. Furthermore, the girls were not allowed to
talk to the boys on the way home.
Miss Francis Lambert, Headmistress, Hamilton Infants
Photograph from Dr Bob James, 'A History of Hamilton Public School',
1858-1997
We didn’t wear school
uniforms. Pretty 'Dimity’ floral material (a sheer cotton fabric ) was bought
by our mothers at Gow's and
dresses were (hand)made. Being post-Depression, this must have been affordable.
A sample of floral Dimity
In 4th Class, Margaret remembers bringing home a
textbook called “Mastering the Mother Tongue.” Her father laughed and laughed
when she showed him the book, saying –
'I don’t think you
will ever master your Mother’s
tongue!'
This was a reference to her mother’s strong Scottish brogue.
Margaret attended elocution lessons for 5 years to ensure she
did not replicate her mother’s accent. The first thing I noticed about Margaret
was her well modulated voice and fine articulation. Those lessons clearly
worked!
Margaret went on to attend the selective girls school, Newcastle
Girls High, where she was school captain.
Margaret Colditz (nee Camfield) second from left, Captain Elect Newcastle Girls High,
being congratulated by the then Headmistress
Photograph courtesy of Margaret Colditz
Margaret trained as a nurse at The Royal Newcastle Hospital.
Royal Newcastle Hospital - North Wing (left) and York Wing (right) (n.d.)
Photograph courtesy of Hospital Archives, held by University Archives in Cultural Collections,
University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia
She attended one of the earliest university nursing courses,
winning a Florence Nightingale scholarship to undertake a postgraduate nurse tutor
assistant course at Melbourne University.
'It was a great honour', Margaret explains. 'On the first
day, we walked past these grand stately buildings – only to find we were being
taken right down the back – to an ex - army hut! It was as cold as charity! So
much for the honour!'
Eventually, back at the Royal, Margaret became Tutor in Charge
at the School of Nursing. Thus she combined her love of both nursing and
teaching.
At the age of 27, Margaret married Harry Colditz, the son of
watchmaker and jeweller Henry Colditz whose shop was at 45 Beaumont Street. Harry
learned his skills from his father, who had left Australia to train as a
journeyman watchmaker in Belgium and Switzerland.
Present day 45 Beaumont Street, Hamilton (2014)
Photograph by Craig Smith
Hundreds of bicycles, ridden by men going to work at BHP
steel works, surged along Beaumont Street – 'so close a pin couldn’t fit between
them,' Margaret tells me. Because of the shift work, alarm clocks were
absolutely essential, and keeping these in working order was bread and butter
business for the watch maker. Margaret remembers a large shelf being
built in the shop at No. 45 to accommodate all the alarm clocks. Men would drop
them off on the way to work, and collect them, expertly repaired, on the way
home.
Alarm clock circa 1930s
Harry and his father had bought land for a weekend retreat
on the shores of Lake Macquarie. In time, Margaret and Harry moved to live there
permanently with their young family, and care for Mr Colditz senior.
In that tranquil, bushland setting, Margaret has never
forgotten Beaumont Street. She specially loves its sounds, and I imagine that in
the twenty years since Harry passed away, there are many quiet days on Lake
Macquarie when birdsong mingles with her recollections of those sounds –
If one lived towards
the southern end, there was no need for an alarm clock. 'Ting, ting, ting' from
the blacksmith's shop as he
struck the large anvil, was a melodious way of being awakened. .... St Peter’s church
bell on Wednesdays and on Sundays....the paper boys wheeling their often home
made billy carts, usually with iron wheels which made quite a noise on the bitumen
surface – also ensured we woke up early on Sunday mornings. The milk man, with
his horse and cart...used to run down the long side lands to the back
verandahs, measure out a quart of milk into the billy can, replace the lid and
then run back up to the horse and cart.
At night, a Steel
Works Bus would take men to 'Dog Watch' (the late night shift) and return them
in the morning, We all used to listen for that bus. Tucked up in bed asleep,
early, we still seemed to sense that bus about 10.15 pm.
I wonder if even now, Margaret sometimes hears the Dog Watch bus as she drifts off to sleep?
4 comments:
Thank you so much Ruth, I have thoroughly enjoyed this story.
I also live in Hamilton.
Judy
Glad you enjoyed it Judy. Thanks for commenting!
I lived in Hamilton in the mid to late 1970s and even then I was surprised at the wonderful friendly carnival atmosphere it had on Saturday mornings. There are chocolate wheels and music, it was very friendly. Vicki
Yes, Unknown, there is a Saturday market, and an upcoming Carnivale in March - and the China Festival is becoming a fixture, in October each year.
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