Sandra Hargreaves is a Novocastrian
who lives and works in London. She is the granddaughter of Charlie Reilly Deitz,
who began working in the hardware store at 88 Beaumont Street, Hamilton [1] after
World War 1. Reilly (as he was known) purchased the business in 1932 and after
World War II, his son Charles Douglas Reilly (Doug, Sandra’s father) joined
him.
The Deitz family business was a Hamilton fixture for 42 years, from 1932
until 1974. Although the shop was always part of Sandra’s life growing up, her
vocation has taken her far from hardware. Sandra specialises in the diagnosis
of dyslexia, supporting dyslexic adults both in education and the workplace.
Deitz Hamilton Hardware, 88 Beaumont Street, Hamilton c.1930
Photograph from the collection of the Deitz family
SANDRA HARGREAVES WRITES -
My grandfather, Reilly Deitz, had
worked in hardware in the Hunter Valley from about the age of fourteen to help
support his family after his father died. He had been accepted into Fort Street
High, but could not go due to family circumstances. Instead, he delivered
hardware from a Maitland store, pedalling his pushbike around the Hunter
Valley. Then, after World War I and fighting in the third battle of the Somme,
Reilly went into the hardware store at 88 Beaumont Street to help an ill war comrade,
Frank Newey. Gradually my grandfather paid off the shop, enabling Frank, and
later his widow, to have an income.
My grandfather was a very generous
man and we found out after he died that he had helped many families in Hamilton
during the Great Depression. He also bought houses for family members,
including his mother, in his home town of Kurri Kurri.
Reilly Deitz was well known in
Hamilton, as a member and grand master of the Masonic Lodge and also a member
of Hamilton Bowling Club. He died at the age of 65 of a cerebral haemorrhage.
There were so many mourners at Hamilton Wesley Church that they spilled out onto
the pavement and street. A police escort accompanied the funeral procession down
Beaumont Street and past the hardware store to Maitland Road, before proceeding
to the Crematorium.
My father, Doug Deitz, joined my
grandfather in the shop after returning from overseas service in the AIF in World
War II. Da (as we called my grandfather) told him he had been waiting for him
to come back so they could share the load. I remember my grandfather working
part-time in the shop, doing the accounts, until a short time before his death
in June, 1960.
Reilly Deitz and Doug Deitz at Doug’s inauguration as
President of Hamilton Rotary, 1957
President of Hamilton Rotary, 1957
Photograph from the collection of the Deitz family
The shop was always part of my life
and I can remember being lifted onto the counter by my father or grandfather if
ever I went in with my mother. When I was eight I attended RAYS, a Girls
Fellowship at Hamilton Wesley Church after school, one day a week. After the
meeting, I would walk down Beaumont Street by myself, meeting up with my father
as he closed the shop and continuing home together. I remember an incident
which really shocked me as I passed the Northern Star Hotel alone, late one
afternoon. Two women were fighting outside the hotel, pulling each others’ hair
and scratching each others’ faces. I saw beads scattered on the pavement where
a necklace had been broken. I had never seen anything like this in my life and
it had a deep impact on me.
I started doing small jobs in the
shop in my last years at primary school, filling bottles with methylated
spirits, turpentine and linseed oil for pocket money. Later I worked in the
shop occasionally before Christmas and at busy times, but it was hard work for
a young woman. At that time nails and screws were weighed on the scales and
wrapped in newspaper, before being put into brown paper bags. I complained
about what the nails and screws did to my hands. After completing my Leaving
Certificate and while attending the University of Newcastle I worked first at
Wynns, and then the Cooperative Store during my holidays.
I felt something of a traitor to the family
business, but hardware wasn't my milieu. I was lucky enough to read the poetry which
my father would have loved to have studied, while doing my Bachelor of Arts
degree.
My most embarrassing incident in the
shop occurred one day when I was helping out because a staff member was sick. I
was at university and my boyfriend came in with a friend and asked for a can of
'Black and White' paint. I thought it was a brand so went to ask Dad. Everyone
in the shop roared with laughter! I wasn't suited to the hardware business. I
am often reminded of this incident, by my husband Alan, who was the offending
boyfriend!
My father Doug Deitz was also well
known in Hamilton and was active in Hamilton Rotary for as long as I can
remember. He became president in 1957. Dad, like his father, was always willing
to help people and I remember him going in to open the shop on Sundays to
provide something for a tradesman, even though it was his only day off. He also
worked long hours after closing at night and on weekends.
Doug Deitz c.1970s
Photograph from the collection of the Deitz family
My father was an unlikely recruit into the world of hardware. His passions were music and poetry; nevertheless he was the proprietor from 1954 to 1974, including 14 years after Reilly’s death.
My father’s great love was music and
he sang as much as his work in the shop allowed him. He had inherited this gift
from his mother's family, the Pryors, and indeed his mother's brother, Jo
Pryor, was known in the Hunter Valley as ‘the singing policeman’. There was
nothing Dad loved more than singing, with his family and friends. My father and
his closest friend, bank manager Geoff Collins, loved singing on Saturday
nights accompanied by a former neighbour Melva Burns.
‘My operatic father’ – a youthful Doug Deitz, undated
Conspirator in Verdi’s opera 'The Masked Ball'
Photograph from the collection of the Deitz family
The hardware store entered a new phase when Dad became a founding member of Mitre-10. This enabled the participating hardware stores much greater buying power at a time when competition was increasing and affecting sales. Dad received an award from the group for his work, and was very proud of what had been achieved.
Mitre-10 In the Beginning: Interview with Douglas Deitz, Newcastle Region
Australian Hardware Journal, March 1984
Clipping from the collection of the Deitz family
Finally, in 1974, the time came when Dad needed to retire. Both daughters had trained as teachers and there was no family member to help him as he had helped his father. The business was bought by long-term employee Noel Herbert, who changed its name to Hamilton Hardware. Noel greatly modernised the shop, introducing self service and check outs. Pre-packaged items had become the way forward. The days of weighing nails were past!
I have another connection with
Beaumont Street. My maternal grandparents Stan and Levina Brownsmith ran a Cafe
Milk Bar at 12 Beaumont Street from 1935 to 1939, just as Australia was coming
out of the Great Depression. The whole family worked in this business and lived
in the adjoining residence. With its proximity to Hamilton Station, the Cafe
was a favoured breakfast haunt for the local taxi drivers as well as a supper
venue for the patrons of the Regent Picture Theatre on the corner of Maitland
Road. I can remember my father reminiscing about courting my mother in the Cafe
over milkshakes! They were married at the Hamilton Wesley Church on 2nd
September 1939, the day before war was declared. After the marriages of my
mother Joyce and her sister Jean, the Café was sold in late 1939.
The cafe milk bar in which Doug Deitz courted Joyce
Brownsmith, his wife-to-be,
has been replaced by this building (2014)
And as the memories keep coming, I
think of the last line in The Great Gatsby –
‘So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back
ceaselessly into the past.’ [2]
The retail genes seem to have disappeared
in the generations that followed. However, Dad's great love of music has been
born again in his grandsons. Alexander Hargreaves is an opera singer and
director, currently working in Sydney, while Stefan Hargreaves is an academic
music master and assistant house master at Tonbridge School in the UK.
It is a blessing of our times that these young men have been able to follow their passions.
It is a blessing of our times that these young men have been able to follow their passions.
The 1989 earthquake
damaged the Mitre-10 hardware store
The Deitz business had
been sold in 1974. Doug Deitz died in March 1990,
not long after the earthquake
not long after the earthquake
Photograph by Clarice
Eyre, from the collection of Lorraine Castle
Acknowledgements
Thanks
to Sandra Hargreaves for writing this guest post, to the Deitz family for
photographs, and to Bob Donaldson, who connected Sandra to Hidden Hamilton. Unattributed photographs by Ruth Cotton.
Related
posts which mention Deitz hardware:
[1] Corner of Lindsay and Beaumont
Streets, present site of Priceline Chemist.
[2] F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great
Gatsby.
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