Wednesday, March 12, 2014

IF THESE WALLS COULD TALK

Stories from 14 MacMahon Street – Dr Crakanthorp’s home & practice




14 MacMahon Street, now known as Hurstville Museum & Gallery, was built in 1929 by Dr John Crakanthorp, as his family home and doctor’s practice. Together with his wife Valerie, two daughters Rosemary and Philippa and his dog Thrifty, he lived and worked in the house for over 30 years.

Courtesy of Philippa Williams.
At the front of the house on the right, as you enter the property was the Crakanthorp’s lounge room, with a cosy fireplace and double-doors which led out onto a side garden. The gardens were well known in the area and people would travel just to see the magnificent azaleas in bloom. Dr Crakanthorp's healing hands also had a green thumb, growing orchids in orchid houses he built on the property and selling them overseas.

Courtesy of the Crakanthorp family. 
The dining room led off the lounge room, featuring a sunroom and Valerie’s writing desk, where Philippa remembers her mother sitting on many occasions. Upstairs were the bedrooms and main bathrooms and a balcony which overlooked the side garden.

However these areas were never seen by the patients of Dr Crakanthorp. The surgery had its own separate side entrance which led into a small waiting room. In those days, doctors did everything – they delivered babies, fixed broken arms and removed infected tonsils. Several people recall having a tonsillectomy done by Dr Crakanthorp, however they didn’t always go according to plan. Pam Taylor remembers the doctor visiting her at home as she began haemorrhaging after the operation.

Some antique tonsillectomy equipment is on currently on display at the Museum & Gallery as part of the exhibition. It is truly scary stuff!

But one of the most harrowing things to happen to 14 MacMahon Street was a lightning strike. On 12 February 1949 the roof gable at the back of the house, above Philippa’s bedroom, was sheared off by a bolt of lightning. A newspaper article reporting the “violent thunderstorms” stated that “tiles were hurled from the roof” and Philippa remembers tiles littering the lawn of their neighbours yard and debris from the strike which had fallen onto her bed.
Courtesy of the Crakanthorp family. 
These are just some of the stories of 14 MacMahon Street. Come and visit the multisensory exhibition IF THESE WALLS COULD TALK to find out more about the building’s past.


Exhibition proudly sponsored by


Monday, March 10, 2014

WOMADELAIDE 7 to 10 March 2014





There were so many amazing artists who performed at Womadelaide 2014. Did you want to be a part of the festival but couldn't get there or did you go and would like to relive some of the amazing music? 

Take a look at the following list of albums and talented performers who where performing at Womadelaide this year. These titles are in the library music CD collection and are free for library members to borrow.  On order titles are expected to land on our shelves in a matter of weeks so get in early and place a reservation on your favourite album.  Reservations are also free for library members.

WOMADELAIDE: Sound s ofthe Planet 2011
Tooth and Nail by BillyBragg
Carried In Mind by JeffLang
Half Seas Over – JeffLang
Middle Cyclone – Neko Case
Tumbling Into The Dawn –Lior
Tekitoi  by Rachid Taha
Insomnia – MeganWashington
Long Gone Whistle –compilation including Megan Washington
Time of Our Lives - ABC Music
Songs 2003-2013 by Ane Brun   on order
Compassion by Lior on order
Armchair Education byLiving Room on order
The Worse Things Get, TheHarder I Fight, The Harder I Fight, The More I love you – Neko Case on order
Since The Last Time by Arrested Development on order
Life’s A Riot With Spy vsSpy by Billy Bragg on order
In My Skin by Buika on order
Alma by Carminho on order
JonCleary and The Absolute Monster Gentlemen by Jon Cleary on order
He Who Travels Far by Hanggai  on order
Blak and Blue by KutchaEdwards on order
Moving On by Loren Kate on order
Pokey Lafarge – PokeyLafarge on order
Leave It All Behind –Saskwatch on order

 

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Late Bloomers


A late bloomer is defined as one whose talents are not visible to others until later in life. So in honour of Seniors Week, let's consider some well known literary late bloomers.

  • Laure Ingalls Wilder became a newspaper columnist in her forties but did not publish the first book in the Little House series until her sixties.
  • The first volume of Flora Thompson's Lark Rise to Candleford trilogy was published when she was 63.
  • The Pulitzer Prize winning Angela's Ashes was published when Frank McCourt was in his 66th year.
  • Mary Wesley's writing career didn't take off until after her first novel was published at age 70 (but she had written two children's books in her late fifties).
  • Jean Rhys' best known work Wild Sargasso Sea was first published in 1976 when she was 76.
So celebrate Seniors Week by trying these and other "late bloomers" available from Hurstville Library.

Friday, February 21, 2014

IF THESE WALLS COULD TALK

Stories from 14 MacMahon Street – How it all began


The land where our Museum & Gallery is located today was part of a large block of land, owned by the MacMahon family. Irish migrant Patrick MacMahon and his wife Dora McDonough purchased it in the 1880s, with the boundaries being today MacMahon, Dora and Patrick Streets and Stoney Creek Road. The estate was gradually subdivided between the late 19th century and 1939.

In the late 1920s, young doctor John Saxon Crakanthorp, residing at 1 Butler Street in Hurstville, was looking for a place to build his new family home and doctor’s practice. He bought parts of the MacMahon’s estate. The doctor chose the location well to establish a doctor’s practice – just across the road of Hurstville and District United Friendly Society Pharmacy. The dispensary has been located at 17 MacMahon Street since 1915.

The image below was taken in 1923, depicting the candidates for the Hospital and Ambulance Queen Competition parading through MacMahon Street. The background reveals the pharmacy building.

Courtesy of Hurstville City Library Museum & Gallery collection

These are just some of the stories of 14 MacMahon Street. Come and visit the multisensory exhibition IF THESE WALLS COULD TALK to find out more about the building’s past.



Exhibition is proudly sponsored by


Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Valentines and Library Lovers Day

"Today is Valentine's Day - or, as men like to call it, Extortion Day!"
Jay Leno
Valentines Day; a celebration of all things romantic. But what form can romance take? Traditional? Or something more, shall we say, adventurous?  Mr Darcy? Or Christian Grey? Fifty Shades of Grey was our most popular romance title in the last twelve months followed by the venerable Pride and Prejudice so maybe we prefer a bit of both.
In any event the 14th of February is also Library Lovers Day, a day for celebrating all things that we love about libraries. And we even have a book on that subject too, appropriately called The Library Book. So whatever takes your fancy, come to Hurstville Library and you may find a new reading partner to celebrate the day with.
 

Friday, February 07, 2014

AACTA Awards - Free Movies

The 3rd AACTA Awards were held on Thursday 30 January in Sydney. The awards recognise the best Australian movies and television programs of the previous year.

If you missed any of these great Aussie films on the big or small screen, check out Hurstville City Library's DVD collection and borrow a copy. It's free to join and borrow from the library.

The big winner for 2014 was The Great Gatsby winning for Best Film; Best Direction; Best Original Screenplay; Best Adapted Screenplay; Best Cinematography; Best Editing and Best Sound.

Dead Europe - nominated for Best Film and Best Adapted Screenplay
Mystery Road - nominated for Best Film; Best Direction; Best Original Screenplay; Best Editing and  Best Sound - this item is on order
The Rocket - winner of Best Original Screenplay; nominated for Best Film;Best Direction; Best Cinematography; Best Editing and Best Sound this item is on order
Satellite Boy - nominated for Best Film and Best Sound
Tim Winton's The Turning - nominated for Best Film; Best Direction; Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Editing - this item is on order
Top of the Lake won Best Television Feature/Mini Series
Please Like Me won Best Comedy or Light Entertainment -this item is on order 
Mrs Biggs won Best Editing in Television
Lachy Hulme won Best Lead Actor and Luke Ford for Best Guest or Supporting Actor in a Television Drama in Power Games: the Packer-Murdoch Story
Shaun Micallef won Best Performance in a Television Comedy for Mad As Hell - this item is on order
Redfern Now series 2 won Best Television Drama this item is on order
Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries series 2 episode 1 won Best Costume Design in Television
Resdesign My Brain won Best Documentary Television Program and nominated for Best Direction in a Documentary
Kakadu episode 4 won Best Cinematography in A Documentary - this item is on order
Red Obsession won Best Feature Length Documentary and Best Direction in a Documentary
100 Bloody Acres nominated for Best Original Screenplay - this item is on order
Drift nominated for Best Original Screenplay and Best Cinematography
I Am A Girl nominated for Best Feature Length Documentary; Best Direction in a Documentary and Best Cinematography in a Documentary - this item is on order
Accidental Soldier nominated for Best Television Feature or Mini Series
Adoration nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay - this item is on order
Goddess nominated for Best Cinematography
Jabbed - Love, Fear and Vaccines - nominated for Best Documentary Television Program
First Footprints nominated for Best Documentary Television Program
Aim High In Creation  nominated for Best Direction in a Documentary
Wentworth series 1 nominated for Best Television Drama Series this item is on order