Saturday 24 February 2018

Donald Stuart Bain, founder of Merlynston


Donald Stuart Bain, c1935. Courtesy Coburg Historical Society.



Donald Stuart Bain was born at Berwick in 1880 and his early military training was undertaken as a member of the Berwick Cadet Corps. As a 20 year old he enlisted in the Boer War and served as a Trooper in the Kaffrarian Rifles then as a Lieutenant in Kitchener’s Fighting Scouts (2nd Battalion).


Members of the 2nd Kitchener's Fighting Scouts, from the Anglo Boer War website but taken from the supplement to the Auckland Weekly News, 13 February 1902, p2.


In 1910 Bain married Lillian Nathan, daughter of Simeon Nathan, furniture merchant and local government councillor. The Nathans were a well connected family. Lillian’s brother Harold was the managing director of Patersons Pty Ltd. (and his son Sir Maurice Nathan served as Lord Mayor of Melbourne from 1961 to 1963.) So his marriage into the Nathan family brought with it links to the business world, to local government and to a world of privilege.

In 1911, the Bain’s only child Merlyn was born at Malvern. Three years later, 34 year old Donald Bain, veteran of the Boer War then working as a stock and station agent based in Collins Street, enlisted in the 5th Battalian AIF. He embarked as part of the first convoy on 21 October 1914 on board its flagship, HMAT A3 Orvieto.




Orvieto at Alexandria, courtesy Australian War Memorial. Image PS0368.


You can read about some of the others who were on board the Orvieto here. 

Bain served briefly on the Gallipoli Peninsula, but by October 1915 he was in hospital in Egypt suffering from nervous debility. He was there for two months, by which time the Anzacs had withdrawn from the Peninsula. He made his way to France with the Australian troops in March 1916 but by June he was in hospital in Belgium with shell shock and neurasthenia after being blown up by a shell. A month later he was moved to London and then sent home to Australia where he was admitted to the 11th Australian General Hospital (Caulfield Military Hospital) for further treatment. Later still he was a resident of what the newspapers of 1923 referred to as a ‘mental home’ in Burwood. It is likely that this was ‘Hethersett’ Convalescent Hospital, run by Dr Ramsay Mailer, another man with connections to Coburg. You can read more about ‘Hethersett’ here.

You might also be interested to read Marina Larsson’s excellent book, Shattered Anzacs and Janet Lynch’s interesting article ‘The families of World War I veterans, mental illness and the campaigns for admission to Mont Park Military Hospital’ in Provenance: The Journal of Public Record Office Victoria, issue no. 14, 2015. You can read it online here.

By October 1917, Bain had recovered sufficiently to begin work at the Domain Camp in St Kilda Road, where we are told he was appointed to the command of the Guard.

By July 1919 it was clear that his marriage was in trouble. His wife left him, taking their 8 year old daughter with her. In the same year he bought the 80 acre Station Heights Estate in what was then called North Coburg. He subdivided it into 200  blocks and began to sell land and build ‘spec’ houses, firstly from his home in Boundary Road and then from his newly built residence in Orvieto Street. 

Age, 8 May 1920

Herald, 8 October 1920


Herald, 13 October 1920



Argus, 23 November 1920


He called the area Merlynston after his daughter.



Argus, 29 November 1920



Merlyn Stuart Bain, aged 12, in her aunt’s wedding party. Table Talk, 31 May 1923. 




Merlyn Stuart Bain, aged 18 years, about to go on an extended trip abroad with her mother. During this trip to England, she was presented at Court. Table Talk, 28 March 1929.



Merlynston Estate looking south, c1925. Courtesy Coburg Historical Society.


From 1921 to 1924 Bain served as a Coburg Councillor. Protracted divorce proceedings began in June 1923 and the Bain’s private lives hit the news stands. Both parties aired their grievances. He wrote to his father-in-law: ‘Give her plenty of money, take her to the races, allow her to gamble until the early hours of the morning, give her no housework to do, let her have breakfast in bed, and let her rise at 10 or 11 o’clock, then she may be a fairly contended woman.’ His wife accused him of drunkenness and ‘brutal conduct towards her’. Both claimed they had been deserted. He wanted to reconcile. She wouldn’t take the risk. Their petition was denied and they went to the High Court where their petition was denied again. They remained married but lived separately.

Bain moved to 21 Orvieto Street, Merlynston in the mid-1920s. He had named the street after the ship he sailed in in 1914. Despite his unhappy war experience, he called the house ‘The Dug Out’ and some of the streets in the area bear the names of ships or places that featured in his WW1 experience, for example, Marama Street, after the hospital ship in which he returned to Australia.

On the last day of the year in 1924, Bain returned home to find his housekeeper had set herself alight, presumably accidentally with a cigarette. The housekeeper, 62 year old widow Mary Wight, died in the Melbourne Hospital. No more is known of Mrs Wight or how long she had worked for Bain, just what is told in the newspapers.



Age, 15 January 1925


Now a major investor in the area, a valuer of war service homes and a Justice of the Peace, Bain served again on the Coburg Council in 1932-33. Around this time, his daughter Merlyn married John Osboldstone at St John’s, Toorak but it appears that neither her father, who had named an entire suburb in her name, nor members of his family, attended.

His estranged wife Lillian died in March 1935 and was buried at Brighton Cemetery.


Lillian Bain, from Who’s Who in the World of Women, Vol 2., 1934, reproduced on the People Australia website.


Bain died in January 1937 aged 57 and his cremation took place at Fawkner Memorial Park on 25 January. Members of the 5th Battalion Association attended and Coburg Councillor Stnaley Cole read ‘The Soldiers’ Ritual’. The chief mourner was his son-in-law John Osboldstone, so perhaps he and his daughter were in contact after all.

Eighteen months later, Bain’s ‘Dug Out’ in Orvieto Street had transformed into the ‘Strathaven’ Private Hospital. But more of this in a later blog entry.

Sources
Victorian electoral rolls (accessed via Ancestry)
Victorian Birth, Death, Marriage indexes
National Archives of Australia (WW1 attestation papers)
Australian War Memorial
Richard Broome, Coburg between two creeks
Argus, 5 Nov 1901
South Bourke and Mornington Journal, 22 Jan 1902
Punch, 24 Feb 1910
Table Talk, 31 May 1923
West Australian, 29 June 1923
Age, 29 June 1923
Age, 3 July 1923
Argus, 1 August 1923
Argus, 10 Nov 1923
Age, 30 Nov 1928
Table Talk, 28 March 1929
Argus, 18 March 1935
Argus, 16 March 1936
Argus, 17 Aug 1936
Argus, 25 Jan 1937
Age, 25 Jan 1937
Argus, 26 Jan 1937
Coburg Courier, 6 July 1938
Argus, 17 July 1943
Anglo Boer War website https://www.angloboerwar.com/

Monday 19 February 2018

Damaged lives – the story of Alethea and Patrick Costello

In March 1922 Mr H. Oliver of 103 Munro Street, Coburg wrote to the head teacher of Coburg State School, William Dixon, complaining about the treatment of his sister’s child Mary (Madge) Costello:


‘This child is one whose father is an invalid through the Great War and I felt it my duty to notify the Secretary of the Returned Soldier’s League and ask them is this the proper treatment for their children who fought so bravely for King and Country.’ He claims that she was ‘dragged by the hair between the VII and VIII grade rooms. She is in VII class and her teacher is Miss McNally. The child is known in the family as Madge and she is 12 years old.’




A group of schoolboys playing in the grounds of Coburg State School, December 1923. Courtesy Coburg Historical Society.



Whatever the truth concerning Harold Oliver’s allegation of mistreatment by a teacher at Coburg State School, there is much to be told about Mary Costello’s ‘invalid’ father, who we are told fought ‘bravely for King and Country.’

Harold Oliver chose to shape the facts to suit his purpose. His brother-in-law Patrick John Costello was a violent bully whose wife Alethea (Harold’s sister) had lived in fear of her husband from the early days of their marriage, so much so that by the time Harold wrote his letter in March 1922, Madge and her brother John Oliver (Jack) had been living with Harold’s family in Coburg for at least six years – well away from their violent father.

Alethea Oliver married Patrick Joseph Costello, a New Zealand farmer, in 1907 and they settled at Ermedale, Fairfax on the South Island. Their three children were born there. Alethea took Jack and Madge to her family in Coburg in 1916 and on her return found that her husband was living with a young school teacher in Central Otago. She took out a maintenance and separation order, testifying that ‘he had thrashed her several times, and two months prior to her going to Australia had left her insensible for two hours.’  She was successful. He was ordered to pay her 30 shillings a week.

Costello found a way to avoid his responsibilities – he joined up. On 4 October 1916, around the same time as the court’s decision, he became 39175 Lance Coroporal Patrick John Costello, 9th Company, 2nd Battalion, Wellington Infantry Regiment. He served in France until 4 October 1917 when he was received a severe gunshot wound to his left knee and was hospitalised in England. He returned to New Zealand in February 1918 on account of that wounded knee. 



Details from Patrick Costello's Attestation Papers, courtesy Discovering Anzacs website.


So, in one sense Harold Oliver was right. His brother-in-law did serve in the war and he did return an invalid. Was he deserving of our sympathy, though? His behaviour after the war continued in the same vein as before he went away – he was a drunk, he was cruel and he continued to intimidate and abuse his wife (who was separated from him).

In July 1920, the New Zealand Truth delighted in exposing the Costellos’ story. The paper described her as a ‘demure, petite, much-bespectacled lady’ then told the rest, as they saw it:

‘Since he returned from the war he had been working in the country, while his wife continued to board in Christchurch. Frequently he came in to see her, and on such occasions he made himself a perfect nuisance at the boarding-house. His visits were often prolonged. He would arrive drunk; the next day he would be nearly full; on the succeeding days he would be absolutely full. Two years ago he got up at some unearthly hour in the morning sober, but in a fearful rage. He rampaged through the house like a madman and threatened to sever the gullets of Alethea and her little girl with a razor. On another occasion he boiled the “kittle” – as Alethea termed it – with a Bible that had been presented to her in her days of happy childhood, following this up, a few days afterwards, by beating her, knocking off her glasses and knocking her about generally.’

Then

‘He got really annoyed… when Alethea added that a prohibition order had proved ineffective in keeping him on sobriety’s path… After the orders asked for had been made, and maintenance fixed at 30s a week, Patrick Joseph [sic] followed Alethea out of court, making tearful protestations to her to give him another chance. All his blubbering promises to be a good boy and not to do it again were of no avail; Alethea shook him from her and went on her emancipated way.’

Emancipated or not, from this point until 1928 Alethea seems to have gone underground. She is not listed in the New Zealand electoral rolls and does not appear in the Victorian rolls, either. Perhaps she assumed another name to hide from him? In 1928 she was living in Christchurch as Alethea Costello then moved from place to place around the South Island until her death in October 1960 aged 84.

He, too, disappeared from sight. At the time of the 1916 court case he was living under the assumed name of John Patrick, so perhaps he kept this name. His World War One papers reveal that he died in February 1964 in Auckland, so Alethea never did escape his shadow. For all her adult life she was described as married in the electoral rolls, so it seems they did not divorce, perhaps  because they were Catholics. Yet they had not lived together since 1916. She was bound to him legally until her death 46 years later.

Of one of their children, nothing has been found. But Madge, the girl who lived in fear of her violent father and who was spirited away to the safety of her mother’s family in Coburg and was ‘dragged by the hair’ between classrooms at Coburg State School, married in 1934. I can only hope that hers was a secure, happy married life.

Their son John Oliver (Jack) Costello lived in Munro Street, Coburg with his uncle Harold Oliver and his wife Margueretta (Rita). He remained there with Rita after Harold’s death in 1932. A mechanic by trade, he married Pearlie May Butler in 1941. They later lived at Clifton Hill, Montmorency and Reservoir. He died in 1986 aged 74.


Sources:
Public Record Office of Victoria, VPRS 640/P1/1612, Central Inwards Correspondence, Primary Schools. Date range: 1921-23. Coburg State School, letter 1922/2615.
Victorian Birth, Death, Marriage Indexes
Victorian electoral rolls
Argus, 1 May 1915
Age, 6 Dec 1932
New Zealand Birth, Death, Marriage Indexes
New Zealand World War One Army Papers available online through the Discovering Anzacs website  https://discoveringanzacs.naa.gov.au/browse/records/588106
New Zealand electoral rolls
Southland Times, 11 October 1916
Star, 22 June 1920
New Zealand Truth, 3 July 1920





Friday 9 February 2018

Peg Maltby’s connection to Coburg (and the First World War)

Agnes Newberry (Peg) Orchard married George Bradley Maltby in Nottingham, England in 1917. She was the daughter of a doctor. His father owned a lace warehouse.

Maltby served with the Nottingham and Derby (Sherwood Foresters) Regiment from October 1912 until he took up a commission with the 152nd Brigade, Royal Field Artillery in March 1915.



Part of George Maltby’s Attestation Papers for the Sherwood Foresters, accessed on Findmypast.


Lieutenant Maltby served in France for a year, then shortly after his marriage was sent to India where he remained until 1919. In early 1924 George emigrated to Western Australia where he took up 2,000 acres of land in Western Australia. Peg and their three year old daughter Dorothy followed in October 1924, but went on to Melbourne, following an onboard romance that did not last. In early 1926 George arrived in Melbourne and attempted to take custody of his daughter.


After this shaky start to their marriage the couple reconciled and from 1928 until 1937 (and maybe later) they lived in Coburg where George worked as a hosiery worker/foreman (at Lincoln Mills, perhaps?). For most of that time they lived at 3 Merribell Avenue, very close to the Merri Creek and the Harding Street Bridge.


Harding Street Bridge, c1924, only a few years before the Maltby family arrived in Coburg. Image courtesy Coburg Historical Society.


During the 1930s, while she was living in Coburg, Peg, a member of the Victorian Artists' Society, exhibited her work and helped support her family of four children by painting chocolate box lids, birthday cards and the like. 



Peg Maltby in 1937, during the period she was living in Coburg. Women’s Weekly, 15 May 1937.


George Maltby served in the Australian Army during World War Two and it was around this time, in the early 1940s, that they moved away from Coburg – to Mentone. In 1947 the Maltbys moved to Olinda in the Dandeong Ranges. From this point, Peg described herself as an artist in the electoral rolls and her husband as an author or art dealer. They had built a studio and gallery in Olinda and made a good living from her artwork, until the federal government opened the floodgates to book imports, according to their daughter Cheryl.

Over the years Peg Maltby painted many, many pixies and fairies and romanticised portraits of aboriginal people, most of which made their way into children’s books. She also painted Australian wildflowers and native birds. A good representation of her work can be seen on the Dandenong Ranges Scrapbook website.

Examples of Peg Maltby’s work, courtesy Dandenong Ranges Scrapbook website:




Publicity for Peg Maltby’s Fairyland, the ‘Highlight of the Dandenongs’.



Christmas Bells, Geraldton Wax Flower, Hare Bells.


In a 2010 newspaper article, George and Peg’s daughter Cheryl (known as Roo) wrote of her childhood: ‘I had a wonderful early childhood with both my parents filling my head with their incredible stories about the fantasy world they created for children in their books.’ She went on to say that ‘my mother, who eventually became a Hyacinth Bucket sort of person, was absolutely adored by my protective military father, George.’

George Maltby died in 1972, Peg in 1984. Towards the end of her life her work enjoyed a resurgence in popularity. Her Peg’s Fairy Book was reissued with new drawings (by her) and Myer Melbourne chose her characters for their famous window display.



An example of Peg’s 1970s illustrations reproduced in the Women’s Weekly, 27 October 1976.




Peg Maltby in 1976, Women’s Weekly, 27 October 1976.



Unfortunately, I have been unable to discover any photographs of George Maltby.



It’s pure coincidence, but in May last year I wrote about another Sherwood Forester, James Atkin of Willow Grove, Coburg. You can read about him here and here. It is highly unlikely that the two men ever met in the UK as George Maltby joined a few months after James Atkin and his wife Gertrude left for Australia. However, from 1927 until 1932 when James Atkin died, the two men lived in the same Melbourne suburb, not all that far away from each other. Did they ever meet, I wonder?


Sources:




National Archives of Australia (World War Two details)

UK military records for Nottingham and Derby (Sherwood Foresters) Regiment, accessed via Findmypast

UK Outward Shipping records, accessed via Ancestry

Fremantle, WA Passengers, Inward, accessed via Ancestry

Victorian electoral rolls, accessed via Ancestry

1911 English census records, accessed via Ancestry

Geelong Advertiser, 31 March 1926

Age, 8 May 1926

Women’s Weekly, 15 May 1937

Women’s Weekly, 27 October 1976

‘Roo’s back with the fairies’, Fraser Coast Chronicle, 4 September 2010










Thursday 1 February 2018

Adela Pankhurst revisited

I have written about Adela Pankhurst before and I hope by now you have heard of the recent street opera project, Serenading Adela. The performance has been and gone now, but it’s been an amazing community project, commissioned by the Brunswick Coburg Anti-Conscription Centenary Group and funded by Creative Victoria with support from the City of Moreland, the Victorian Trades Hall Council, the CPSU (Victoria Branch) and a number of individual donors.







Its world premiere was held in the Pentridge courtyard on 7 January 2018, exactly one hundred years after the events it depicts. Jeannie Marsh was the artistic director and Lisa-Marie Parker played the part of Adela. You can see images of the performances at Pentridge and elsewhere here and read more about the project and the activities of the Brunswick Coburg Anti-Conscription Centenary Group here.