This page is a record of a journal volume relating to Fremantle.

Volumes: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14.

Fremantle Studies No. 10, 2019

To buy a copy of this number, write to the Secretary Fremantle History Society.

Barteaux, Jillian 2019, '"Bright breezy bracing South Beach": the history of a seaside playground', Fremantle Studies, 10: 1-17. [presented Fremantle Studies Day 2015]

Bizzaca, Kris 2019, 'Exit stage right: looking at the [[../../../clubs/deckchair.html|Deckchair Theatre]] collection', Fremantle Studies, 10: 18-30. [presented Fremantle Studies Day 2015]

Campbell, Robin McK. 2019, 'The prehistory of conservation in Fremantle, revisited', Fremantle Studies, 10: 31-44. [presented Fremantle Studies Day 2015]

Goodlich, Mary-Ann 2019, 'Houses of Hilton', Fremantle Studies, 10: 45-58. [presented Fremantle Studies Day 2015]

Harris, Pam 2019, 'From card catalogue to ebooks', Fremantle Studies, 10: 59-70. [presented Fremantle Studies Day 2016]

Lawrence, Carmen 2019, 'Is increasing density a threat to Fremantle's heritage?' Fremantle Studies, 10: 71-80. [presented Fremantle Studies Day 2016]

Lipscombe, Andre 2019, 'Revealing the City of Fremantle Art Collection', Fremantle Studies, 10: 81-92. [presented Fremantle Studies Day 2016]


This volume was launched 27 October 2019 at the Fremantle Studies Day at the Maritime Union offices, 2-4 Kwong Alley North Fremantle, when the theme was labour history. It contained most of the eight papers from the Fremantle [[../fsday/index.html|Studies Days]] of [[../fsday/fsday2015.html|2015]], [[../fsday/fsday2016.html|2016]], leaving those from [[../fsday/fsday2017.html|2017]] and [[../fsday/fsday2018.html|2018]] yet to be published.

Also available on this site:

Diane Oldman, 'Fremantle's link to the Crimean War', a 2016 presentation.


Other papers published were drawn from these Studies Days papers:

[[../fsday/fsday2015.html|2015]]

Mary Ann Goodlich, ‘Houses of Hilton’


Jillian Barteaux, ‘Bright, breezy, bracing South Beach: the history of a seaside Playground’


Robin McKellar Campbell, ‘The prehistory of conservation in Fremantle, revisited’


Kristy Bizzaca, ‘Exit stage right: looking at the Deckchair Theatre collection’

[[../fsday/fsday2016.html|2016]]

Harris, Pam 2019, 'From card catalogue to ebooks'

Carmen Lawrence, 'Is increasing density a threat to Fremantle’s heritage?'

André Lipscombe, 'Revealing the City of Fremantle Art Collection'

... but not these, which appeared in vol. 11 in 2022:

[[../fsday/fsday2017.html|2017]]

Bob Reece, 'Cultural organisations in late 19th Century Fremantle'

Sheridan Coleman, 'Fremantle Arts Centre: contemporary programming in a historical site'

Jane Fraser, 'Four decades of Fremantle Press'

Natasha Milosevic Meston, 'The City of Fremantle Symphony Orchestra: a history'

[[../fsday/fsday2018.html|2018]]

Leigh Straw, 'The suffering begins: returned soldiers, families and the aftermath of World War 1 in Western Australia'

Allen Graham, 'The Fremantle hotel trade during World War 1'

Baden Pratt, 'Hell for leather: North Fremantle Football Club and the Great War'

Michelle McKeough, 'Repatriation: a debt of gratitude'

Contributors

Jillian Barteaux

Jillian Barteaux is an archaeologist at the University ofWestern Australia. She completed a Masters of Historical Archaeology at the University of Leicester, where she studied the relationship between urban planning and social relationships in colonial Fremantle. Her recent studies and interest in Fremantle s social history sparked her curiosity in learning more about one of Australia’s most famous landscapes - the beach. This interest inspired a research project, awarded the first Fremantle History Society scholarship in 2015.

Kris Bizzaca

Kris Bizzaca has worked as a heritage consultant and professional historian for almost twenty years, with qualifications in English, History and Public History, Fremantle's heritage movement being the subject of her Master of Arts thesis which was completed in 1997. Kris has a particular passion for archives and collections and has been actively involved in a number of community-based projects, including acting as Chair of a multi-million dollar project that resulted in the digitisation of all of the cassette tapes and consequent saving of over 6,000 oral histories held in the J. S. Battye Library of Western Australian History. She was the City of Fremantle's representative on the Library Board of Western Australia from 2007 to 2013 and President of the Professional Historians Association (WA Branch) for over six years.

Robin McKellar Campbell

In 1966, Rob Campbell established his architectural practice in Fremantle specialising in restoration work, adapting the old Lunatic Asylum for the Fremantle Museum and Arts Centre, writing reports for FCC on historic buildings and townscape, and managing projects on the Round House, Fremantle Markets and verandahs, St John's Church Fremantle, the Old Courthouse, and the first detailed report on the Fremantle Prison. Work in Claremont included the Railway Station and Christ Church in the 1970s.

In the 1980s and 1990s, major projects included Guildford Grammar School Chapel, the Perth Mint Factory Buildings, the Perth Police Courts and the Hackett Memorial Buildings at UWA. He was also consultant architect to the Benedictine Community of New Norcia, providing conservation advice on some 24 significant buildings from 1986 to 2012.

Rob was an active member of ICOMOS Australia, the RAIA and the National Trust (WA), and a long term lecturer in conservation architecture at UWA. His interest in the Convict Establishment in Fremantle led to a PhD on the subject in 2011, and a book Henderson & Coy was completed just before his unexpected passing 20 October 2017. He was a passionate advocate for conservation in Fremantle right up to that last day.

Mary-Ann Goodlich

Mary-Ann Goodlich is currently a teacher and has an interest in design and the built environment and has completed a Degree in Architecture at the University of Western Australia in addition to a Bachelor of Education. She has maintained an interest in local planning and architectural issues while living in Fremantle and undertook a Graduate Diploma in Applied Heritage Studies at Curtin University of Technology to better engage in heritage issues. Mary-Ann has been living in Hilton for several years where she has been involved in local planning and heritage issues taken up by the community.

Pam Harris

Pam Harris has a degree in Social Sciences (with Distinction) majoring in Australian History and Politics and a Graduate Diploma in Information and Library Studies. Pam has worked in libraries for over twenty four years, most recently as a librarian with the Heritage Council and the Supreme Court Law Library. Pam retired in 2018 having worked for eleven years as the History Librarian at the Fremantle City Library. Pam has also been involved in various roles in the Fremantle History Society for a period of twelve years.

Carmen Lawrence

After training as a research psychologist at the University of Western Australia and lecturing in a number of Australian universities, Dr Lawrence entered politics in 1986, serving at both State and Federal levels. For 21 years, she was W.A Minister for Education and Aboriginal affairs and then the first woman Premier and Treasurer of a State government. Shifting to Federal politics in 1994, Carmen was elected as the Member for Fremantle, becoming Minister for Health and Human Services and Minister assisting the Prime Minister on the Status of Women. She then held various portfolios in Opposition, including Indigenous Affairs, Environment, Industry and Innovation, and was elected national President of the Labor Party in 2004. Retiring from politics in 2007, she re-entered academia and is now Professor Emerita in the School of Psychology at the University of Western Australia and President of the Conservation Council of WA.

References and Links

Fremantle Press

City of Fremantle Symphony Orchestra

Crimean War Veterans in Western Australia site

Fremantle Art Collection

Freotopia

This page incorporates material from Garry Gillard's Freotopia website, that he started in 2014 and the contents of which he donated to Wikimedia Australia in 2024. The content was originally created on 8 May, 2018 and hosted at freotopia.org/fhs/fs/10/index.html (it was last updated on 30 October, 2023), and has been edited since it was imported here (see page history). The donated data is also preserved in the Internet Archive's collection.

Freotopia

This page incorporates material from Garry Gillard's Freotopia website, that he started in 2014 and the contents of which he donated to Wikimedia Australia in 2024. The content was originally created on 5 December, 2019 and hosted at freotopia.org/fhs/fs/10/contributors.html (it was last updated on 5 December, 2019), and has been edited since it was imported here (see page history). The donated data is also preserved in the Internet Archive's collection.