#Gates of Westmeath
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Since we're on the epilogue (!?!!!?!) of our book (co-writing with my husband @ericdesmarais ), I can consider it a WIP.
Title: Fanatics! Inevitable Honeymoon Crashers
Definitely not changing it!
The Luck of Superheroes and Lovers (idk, that seems less generic than I thought it would be)
Okay now I am curious. 👀
How does everyone come up with titles for their work?
Do you have a go-to style, or is it more "vibes based" depending on the work?
this question is prompted by me wondering where the new publishing trend of what seems like a lot of unrelated book series having titles along the lines of
"The [blank] of [blank] and [blank]"
with me wondering where it came from, and if it is based off of one book series that everyone else is trying to copy, if its something publishers are pushing, or a mix of both.
so, as a fun little interactive post:
What's your current WIP document title,
Are you planning on changing the title after editing
what would the title be if you formatted it in "The [blank] of [blank] and [blank]" style?
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Not Very Gay
In the mid-1780s, Ralph Smyth purchased the Gaybrook estate in County Westmeath from one John Gay (reputedly related to the earlier John Gay, whose 1728 ballad drama The Beggar’s Opera, produced by John Rich, was famously said to have made ‘Rich gay and Gay rich’). Advised by amateur architect, the Rev Daniel Beaufort, Smyth embarked on building a new residence for himself on the property, but…
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Hey Netflix Canada and Disney+ Canada,
In light of Bill C11 (https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/bill-c-11-explained-1.6759878), may I suggest a brand new series or movie set in Canada with Canadian actors based on our book series The Gates of Westmeath? First book: "Assassins! Accidental Matchmakers".
The second book is written, along with a bunch of short stories, and 3rd and 4th book are plotted out. Also, a YA spin-off is being released this fall (again, second book is written in that series too).
Cover art by @pinkpiggy93
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A small magnet has been making a big impact on its community after it recently saved a dog's life.
The incident happened when the pet was out for a walk with its owner in a park in County Westmeath, Ireland. The dog's collar got stuck on a metal gate and, not wanting to leave the pet behind, the owner tried to free it. However, the owner was unable to move the gate, no matter how hard they tried.
Luckily, a passerby happened to have a small magnet in their pocket. The magnet was just the right size to fit into the gap between the gate and the collar, allowing the owner to free the pet.
The owner was incredibly relieved and, after thanking the passerby, the two went on their way.
The incident has since gone viral online, with the magnet becoming an unlikely hero. The magnet's owner was surprised by the attention, but happy that it was able to help out.
"I never expected a small magnet to be so helpful," the passerby said. "It's nice to know that something so simple can make a difference."
The incident has been a reminder for pet owners to always be prepared and carry a magnet in case of an emergency.
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I wrote a song about this.
“After all, what is a shadow if there is no light”, it spoke softly. A little something I’ve done between work.
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A Winter's Sunset by mauraseabrooke
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Winter in Scotland & Ireland
Part 19 - Christmas Day in Mullingar Christmas Day, December 2016
Its Christmas! It was a relatively quiet affair, since we were away from our families this year. A lazy start since we didn’t have many plans, we slept in and later made our way to Mullingar, co Westmeath, to attend Christmas Day Mass at Cathedral of Christ the King (Mullingar Cathedral) – a stunning place! I will admit, our ulterior motive for doing that was to meet up with someone we know who performs there every year, Emmet.
We headed inside and were in awe of the building. We didn’t have any idea what we were doing during the service, but it was enjoyable none the less. Once the service was over, we were able to catch up with Emmet and his sister.
Afterwards, we did some exploring on our way back to Ballycommon, stopping at Daingean when we found on old ruined church.
...to be continued...
#ireland#mullingar#tullamore#westmeath#offaly#daingean#church of ireland#ruins#church ruins#history#bell tower#bridge#stone bridge#gate#macro#christmas#christmas day#emmet cahill#celtic thunder#Cathedral of Christ the King#mullingar cathedral#travel#travel blog#road trip#photoblog#photo blog#photography#mass#christmas mass#daingean church
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Mrs. William Rice (Margaret Norton) was born on Glasses Lane in Athlone, Co Westmeath, Ireland on October 5, 1872.
Coming from a Roman Catholic family, she was the daughter of James Norton (b. 1819), a railway official, and Mary Carty (b. 1848). They had married around 1869.
Her known siblings were: Michael (b. circa 1871), Patrick (b. circa 1873), James (b. 3 Feb 1877) and George (b. 3 Oct 1879).
From at least the early 1870s, the Norton family lived at Glasses Lane in Athlone; her mother died there on January 13, 1885 as a result of tuberculosis.
Margaret was married in St Mary's Church, Athlone on June 18, 1898 to an Englishman from Surrey, William Rice (b. circa 1876), a soldier and the son of a fishmonger; his address was stated as the military barracks in Athlone whilst Margaret was described as a "factory girl" whose address was Glasses Lane.
The couple made their home at North Gate Street, Athlone and whilst there welcomed their first child, William James who arrived on April 13, 1899. The child lived less than two months and died on May 31, 1899; he had swallowed his pacifier four days previous and never recovered, dying after a series of convulsions.
The sorrowing couple made their first leap and made their home in London and whilst there, in 1902, another son arrived, Albert. Their stay in Britain proved short-lived and at the beginning of 1903 they made plans to cross the Atlantic. In March (?) 1903 the family of three arrived in Montréal, Québec and were to become four later in the year when another child arrived on 30 November 1903, George. They made their way west and settled in Ontario where William Rice worked as a clerk, first at Carleton Place and later in Toronto. Whilst there another two sons were born, Eric (b. August 24, 1905) and Arthur (b. August 18, 1907).
The entire family crossed into the USA from Canada in January, 1909 and Margaret gave her contact as her brother Michael Norton in Athlone.
She was described as standing at 5' 5" and with brown hair and eyes. Her husband William was described as a steam fitter standing at 5' 9" and with a light complexion and fair hair and blue eyes. They made their home in Spokane, Washington and whilst there their youngest child was born, Francis (b. 13 September 1909).
Her husband worked at the Great Northern tracks at Hillyard; he was crushed by an engine on January 24, 1910 and later died at the Sacred Heart Hospital.
Margaret and her children appear on the 1910 US census living at 435 Sheridan Street, Hillyard, Spokane; with a payout she received from the railroad company as recompense for her husband's death Margaret and her sons soon returned to Ireland where they still had relatives and they appear on the 1911 census living at Castle Street in Athlone with her young niece, Sligo-born Kathleen Norton, the daughter of her brother Michael.
With perhaps the stay in Ireland not intended to be permanent the family soon made plans to return to Spokane, possibly convinced to do so by several others from their locality who would be making a crossing of the Atlantic aboard the Titanic.
Other people from in or around Athlone that Margaret and her sons would be travelling with included: former Glasses Lane neighbour Eugene Daly, Bridget Mulvihill, Margaret Daly and Bridget Henry. She and her sons travelled under ticket number 382652 which had cost £29, 2s, 6d and they boarded Titanic at Queenstown as third class passengers.
On the night of the sinking, Bridget Mulvihill reported that she saw Mrs. Rice stood on either the boat deck or A-deck, clutching her youngest son to her breast and with the other boys holding on to her skirts. The entire family was lost in the sinking and only Mrs Rice's body (#12) was recovered by the Mackay Bennett and identified:
NO. 12. - FEMALE. - ESTIMATED AGE 40. - HAIR. DARK.
CLOTHING - Black velvet coat; jacket and skirt; blue cardigan; black apron; black boots and stockings.
EFFECTS - Wedding ring; keeper, and another gold; locket and photo; one jet one bead Necklace; gold brooch in bag; £3 in gold; £4 in Irish notes; gold broach; plain gold wag earrings; charm round neck; B. V. M. ; false teeth in upper jaw; £10 note; box pills.
PROBABLY THIRD CLASS
No. 12 Female - Height, 5 ft. 5 in.; Weight, 140 lbs.
Age, about 40
Hair, black, turning grey
Marks, False Upper Teeth
Buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Halifax, N.S.
Shoes marked "Parsons Sons, Athlone"; medallion round neck marked "B.V.M."; wore wedding ring, keeper and another gold ring; locket and photo; one jet and one bead necklace.
She was identified as Roman Catholic by her rosary and as Margaret Rice by her box of pills prescribed on April 9, 1912. She was buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Halifax, Nova Scotia. (x)
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Yessssssssss always add mycelium. We have alien slavers that are mycelial in our The Gates of Westmeath series. They're horrible.
Situation:
You and a colleague made out, then had a big fight. You cannot tell if he likes you or not or if he's attracted to you or not or whatever combination of the two he may be.
He has also just risked his life fairly unnecessarily and seems to think it's fine and normal (maybe it is? You're new) and now he's only wearing a wet singlet and laughing (god why is he wet, he has muscles 🥲) and you're alone and you're both breathless from the, again, unnecessary life risking.
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Royal Irish Regiment soldiers who died on 19th October
1914
2nd Bn
10766 Private Dempsey. Interred Rue-Petillon Military Cemetery, Fleurbaix, France.
10824 Private John O'Neill, New Ross, Co. Wexford. Interred Vieille-Chapelle New Military Cemetery, Lacouture, France.
6999 Bandsman David Kelly, Kirkbride, Cumberland. Commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial, Belgium. An unusual commemoration this, as Kelly’s date of death seems to be uncertain. 19 October 1914 appears to be the last date on which he was known to be alive. Quite why he is commemorated on the Menin Gate rather than Le Touret Memorial is a mystery.
Interred Bailleul Road East Cemetery, St. Laurent-Blangy, France.
6645 Private Patrick Sweeney, Lismore, Co. Waterford.
10896 Private Edward Byrne, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary.
10888 Private Daniel Cronin, Cullen, Co. Cork.
8804 Private John Murphy, Birkenhead, Cheshire.
Interred Cabaret-Rouge British Cemetery, Souchez, France.
10941 Private William Roberts, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary.
6388 Private Robert Morrissey, Freshford, Co. Kilkenny.
5938 Private Doyle, Thomastown, Co. Kilkenny.
Interred Caudry Old Communal Cemetery, France.
7412 Private Edward Rielly, Thomastown, Co. Kilkenny.
8121 Private Thomas O'Neill, Kilmanagh, Co. Kilkenny.
Commemorated on Le Touret Memorial, France.
Captain Alexander Knox
Second Lieutenant Alan Anderson, Dublin.
Second Lieutenant Henry Moore, Delgany, Co. Wicklow.
Second Lieutenant Donald Smyth, Blackrock, Co. Dublin.
Second Lieutenant John Smyth, Ardmore, Derry.
2523 Sergeant William Barry, Kilkenny.
6570 Sergeant Charles Beatty, Gosport, Hampshire.
5493 Sergeant Andrew Brien, Kilmore, Co. Wexford.
9270 Sergeant Michael Forkin, Hull, Yorkshire.
9724 Sergeant Frederick Hill, Woodford Green, Essex.
6833 Sergeant William Turnbull, Newcastle On Tyne.
3990 Lance Sergeant William Grace , Kilkenny.
9301 Corporal Jeremiah Dowd , Wexford.
5981 Corporal Stephen Horrigan, Dungarvan, Co. Waterford.
10745 Corporal Edmund Ryan, Knocklong, Co. Limerick.
9870 Corporal Edward Ryan, London.
6952 Lance Corporal John Brien, Wexford.
9363 Lance Corporal Michael Denny, Fethard, Co. Tipperary.
10815 Lance Corporal James Duggan , Midleton, Co. Cork.
5917 Lance Corporal Patrick Fahey, Carrick On Suir, Co. Tipperary.
10518 Lance Corporal Robert Fernie , Tramore, Co. Waterford.
4463 Lance Corporal Charles Hale, Fermoy, Co. Cork.
6186 Private William Aylward, Knocktopher, Co. Kilkenny.
6017 Private Daniel Barrett, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary.
7253 Private Thomas Berry, Tullow, Co. Carlow.
6237 Private James Biggane, Mitchelstown, Co. Cork.
6615 Private David Brien, Waterford.
6599 Private John Brooks , Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford.
4574 Private John Burke, Urlingford, Co. Kilkenny.
6266 Private John Burke , Clonmel, Co. Tipperary.
6536 Private Cornelius Burke , Cork.
4391 Private Philip Butler, Newtownbarry, Co. Kilkenny.
5723 Private James Cahill, Waterford.
7667 Private Matthew Canavan, Ballon, Co. Carlow.
6690 Private Michael Carberry, Waterford.
4380 Private Patrick Cardiff, Taghmon, Co. Wexford.
6767 Private John Carey, Cashel, Co. Tipperary.
10641 Private Richard Carroll, Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford.
6123 Private Christopher Casey, Tipperary.
4376 Private Patrick Casey, Nenagh, Co. Tipperary.
6616 Private Charles Churchill, Dublin.
10831 Private John Clifford, Limerick.
8761 Private Joseph Climpson, Chesham, Buckinghamshire.
6347 Private Stephen Collins, age 16. From Waterford. One of six brothers who served, four of whom were killed.
4711 Private Thomas Condon , Doneraile, Co. Cork.
7755 Private William Connolly, Waterford.
6341 Private Michael Connors, Waterford.
5432 Private James Copeland, Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford.
4803 Private John Coughlan, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary.
5775 Private James Cullen, Nenagh, Co. Tipperary.
4347 Private James Dempsey, Ballycogley, Wexford.
6622 Private William Dillon, Waterford.
5928 Private Thomas Donovan, Golden, Co. Tipperary
3965 Private Patrick Doyle , Ferns, Co. Wexford.
7471 Private John Dunne, Tyrone.
10864 Private Denis Dwyer, Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford.
4555 Private Richard Fahey, Carrick-on-Suir, Co. Tipperary.
6712 Private Peter Farrell, Ferns, Co. Wexford.
5917 Private John Fitzgerald, Limerick.
8535 Private Patrick Fitzpatrick, Ballacolla, Co. Laois
6543 Private James Fleming, Dublin.
6524 Private James Flynn, Waterford.
6870 Private Thomas Flynn, Galway.
6130 Private Patrick Flynn, Dungarvan, Co. Waterford.
7067 Private Harry Foat , Liverpool.
5612 Private Frederick Forsey, Waterford.
6775 Private Thomas Furlong , Waterford.
7455 Private William Gagan, London.
4072 Private James Green, Waterford.
4853 Private James Griffin, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary.
6212 Private Michael Griffin, Tramore, Co. Waterford.
6682 Private Michael Halley, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary.
5079 Private William Halloran, Galbally, Co. Tipperary.
8237 Private Thomas Halpin, Liverpool.
6637 Private James Hayden, Ferns, Co. Wexford.
8054 Private David Higgins, Cork.
4158 Private Patrick Higgins, Kilkenny.
7395 Private Thomas Holton, Dublin.
10643 Private John Humphreys, Gorey, Co. Wexford.
10750 Private William Hunt, Waterford.
3489 Private Thomas Kavanagh, Kilkenny. His brothers Edward and James also died in the war.
10711 Private Michael Kelly, Dublin.
5870 Private Mark Kelly, Tagoat, Co. Wexford.
5177 Private Michael Kelly, Carrick-on-Suir, Co. Tipperary.
5532 Private Patrick Kelly, Athlone, Co. Westmeath. Served in the Tirah Campaign, 1897-8.
3880 Private Edward Kennedy, Gorey, Co. Wexford.
4120 Private William Keogh, Callan, Co. Kilkenny.
8186 Private James Kiely, Waterford.
6073 Private James Kinsella , Waterford.
6533 Private John Lacey, Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford.
6396 Private Thomas Lawless, Tramore, Co. Waterford.
4551 Private John Lawlor, Killinick, Co. Wexford.
9079 Private William Love, Canterbury.
5940 Private Michael Lukeman, Cashel, Co. Tipperary.
10692 Private Patrick Maddock, Portlaw, Co. Waterford.
7643 Private Martin Maher, Two Mile Borris, Co. Tipperary.
10589 Private Patrick Mahoney, Youghal, Co. Cork.
5993 Private Michael Malone, Waterford.
6286 Private John Manning, Charleville, Co. Cork.
10599 Private John Martin, Dublin.
4226 Private Peter McCarthy, Carrick-on-Suir, Co. Tipperary.
5925 Private John McGrath, Waterford.
4381 Private William Mernagh, New Ross, Co. Wexford
4174 Private Patrick Minihan, Carrick-on-Suir, Co. Tipperary.
7555 Private Matthew Moore, Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford
6486 Private James Moran, Kilkenny.
5873 Private Michael Moran, Waterford.
4706 Private William Morrissey, Carrick-on-Suir, Co. Tipperary.
8191 Private Martin Morrissey, Dungarvan, Co. Waterford.
5089 Private Cornelius Moynihan, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary.
8156 Private James Murphy, Bagenalstown, Co. Carlow.
4068 Private Matthew Murphy, Wexford.
4316 Private Patrick Murphy, New Ross, Co. Wexford.
5406 Private Richard Nolan
4438 Private John O'Brien, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary.
8490 Private John O'Brien, Limerick.
9316 Private Thomas O'Brien
4931 Private William O'Grady
8059 Private Timothy O'Leary, Cork.
8410 Private Patrick Phelan, Kilmacthomas, Co. Waterford.
6463 Private William Power
6061 Private Edward Power
6573 Private Maurice Power
6291 Private Michael Power
2796 Private Andrew Reeves, Mallow, Co. Cork.
6493 Private John Rochford
5972 Private John Ryan, Thurles, Co. Tipperary
6674 Private John Shaw
6259 Private Stephen Sinnott
8299 Private John Slavin
6679 Private Thomas Spillard
4906 Private John Stephens
5971 Private James Swift, Waterford.
6579 Private William Toole, Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford.
267 Private William Treacy, Naas, Co. Kildare
6156 Private Edward Wall
4693 Private Joseph Walsh
5427 Private Patrick Walsh
3093 Private Patrick Walshe, Kilkenny.
7389 Private Michael Whelan, New Ross, Co. Wexford.
8917 Private Michael Whelan
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A Winter's Sunset by mauraseabrooke
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A Survivor
Set into a wall to the immediate west of the main entrance into Mearescourt, County Westmeath is this pedestrian gateway. It appears to be a survivor from the main house at the end of the drive: this was developed over the 17th and 18th century around an earlier tower house and the building’s present front dates from c.1760. Probably when this work was completed and a classic Paladian doorcase…
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#Architectural History#County Westmeath#Gate Lodge#Georgian Architecture#Heritage at Risk#Mearescourt
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I posted 1,447 times in 2022
That's 468 more posts than 2021!
255 posts created (18%)
1,192 posts reblogged (82%)
Blogs I reblogged the most:
@spoonyglitteraunt
@sleepymccoy
@bixbythemartian
@holycatsandrabbits
@cassieoh
I tagged 1,377 of my posts in 2022
Only 5% of my posts had no tags
#art - 293 posts
#literally me - 289 posts
#guitar - 197 posts
#update - 196 posts
#learning - 193 posts
#my songs - 187 posts
#assassins! accidental matchmakers - 135 posts
#comic - 72 posts
#good omens - 58 posts
#pinkpiggy93 - 58 posts
Longest Tag: 131 characters
#he likes to hang out with siobhan and mei because they will each talk about their interests and never stop the others from doing it
My Top Posts in 2022:
#5
Guitar update: in a groove
I played my songs today. I really love them.
I also tried to play the last book I was given for Christmas; Songs of the 2000s. This book is MASSIVE. Like... My music stand cannot handle its size. (Insert innuendo?) So I decided that I would not play it today.
I just didn't have the spoons.
I'll try again tomorrow.
I played more songs from my app.
I really need to learn how to do a bar. My fingers just don't want to, and so many chords require it.
Oh, I thought you might like to see my capo.
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32 notes - Posted January 5, 2022
#4
Book Cover Reveal!
I am beyond thrilled to introduce you to the book that my husband @ericdesmarais and I wrote last year (2021). Assassins! Accidental Matchmakers is an urban fantasy romance, and it will be available in bookstores (and e-bookstores) September 15, 2022!! You can pre-order it now. Here’s the link to its Goodreads page, in case that helps.
When we got the contract for the book, there was only one artist that I wanted for the cover. I was extremely nervous asking, but gathered my courage and I’m so glad I did.
We asked the incredible artist @pinkpiggy93 to draw the cover for us, and we were absolutely blown away by her work. So much so that I’ve asked her to do the cover for the spin-off that I wrote that will be coming out in spring 2023.
Without further ado, here is the cover:
Summary:
Kennedy Fairfield just graduated in the class of 2002, and is now trying to find her purpose in life, or at least a job in her field. When she saves Jason Johnson, the leader of a secret Community of supernatural people called Aetherborn, from an attempted assassination, they embark on a whirlwind epic romance and adventure.
For Kennedy and Jason to discover why people are disappearing in time to save her friends, they'll have to face teleporting assassins, grumpy wizards, gossiping hags, mafia robots, and secret military groups, all in the city of Westmeath, Ontario, which has more secrets than residents.
The first book of four in The Gates of Westmeath series.
I hope you’re as excited as I am about the upcoming release of this book! If you are, please share this post, pre-order it from your local bookstore, tell your libraries, and vote for it on the Goodreads lists!
Here are the links to pinkpiggy93's socials and Patreon:
- Instagram link: http://www.instagram.com/pinkpiggy93
- Tumblr link: https://pinkpiggy93.tumblr.com
- Patreon link: http://www.Patreon.com/pinkpiggy93
You can follow our blog JenEric Designs for further updates, and scroll through the tags for more information on the book. Feel free to AMA!
42 notes - Posted May 15, 2022
#3
Hello, my name is...
And I'm addicted to Heartstopper.
No, I don't want to be cured, thank you very much.
I made these hair clips.
Heartstopper leaves with Nick and Charlie's greeting.
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91 notes - Posted August 7, 2022
#2
Most meet-cutes don't include assassins. Most love stories don't involve becoming a superhero. Then again, Westmeath isn't like most cities.
Kennedy Fairfield just graduated in the class of 2002, and is now trying to find her purpose in life, or at least a job in her field. When she saves Jason Johnson, the leader of a secret Community of supernatural people called Aetherborn, from an attempted assassination, they embark on a whirlwind epic romance and adventure.
For Kennedy and Jason to discover why people are disappearing in time to save her friends, they'll have to face teleporting assassins, grumpy wizards, gossiping hags, mafia robots, and secret military groups, all in the city of Westmeath, Ontario, which has more secrets than residents.
The first book of four in The Gates of Westmeath series.
Physical copy: https://49thshelf.com/Books/A/Assassins!-Accidental-Matchmakers
Ebook: https://books2read.com/u/mv1e0z
Cover art by @pinkpiggy93
192 notes - Posted September 14, 2022
My #1 post of 2022
What's that book, next to The Love Hypothesis by Ali Hazelwood in Chapters, Indigo?
Oh, just the book Assassins! Accidental Matchmakers by me and my husband @ericdesmarais !!
You can get your copy here!! https://49thshelf.com/Books/A/Assassins!-Accidental-Matchmakers
Cover by @pinkpiggy93
197 notes - Posted September 17, 2022
Get your Tumblr 2022 Year in Review →
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Salisbury. Early view of stone gates and Gate Houe for Paralowie House which was built in 1894. Paralowie gate house how I remember it.
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Salisbury. Early view of stone gates and Gate Houe for Paralowie House which was built in 1894. Paralowie gate house how I remember it.
Check out these china milling parts suppliers images:
Salisbury. Early view of stone gates and Gate Houe for Paralowie House which was built in 1894. Paralowie gate house how I remember it.
Image by denisbin Oranges along the Para. The orange tree is botanically known as citrus sinensis which comes from China but is grown in tropical and subtropical areas of the world. The fruit of this tree gave us the name for one of our primary colours. This colour was first recoded in the English language in 1512. Orange is a Sanskrit Indian word. In Europe oranges have been grown in Italy and Spain since they were brought there by the Crusaders in 1100s from the Middle East. The first mention of commercial orange growing along the Para was in 1870 when Mr Urlwin exhibited Salisbury oranges at the Adelaide Royal Show. Then Mr F Fendon was described in newspapers in 1876 as a pioneer of commercial orange growing at Salisbury as he had been experimenting with orange trees since 1850. He hoped his display at the Salisbury Show of 1876 would encourage others to turn to orange growing. He had 20 varieties growing along Para when he exhibited them at the Salisbury Annual Show in 1876. More oranges were grown in the 1880s and by the 1890s hundreds of cases a year were being exported by P & O steamers to London. Thus the big expansion of commercial orange growing was in the 1880s. The oranges grown were Navel, Valencias, Washingtons and Lisbons( lemon) and these were the four” houses” in the Salisbury Primary School in the 1950s. Other earlier varieties grown included Sabina (a sour Italian orange), Rio (a red grapefruit), Seville oranges etc. Navel orange is a variety that was developed in Brazil in the 1820s, Washingtons were also from Brazil but Navels were developed for commercial orchards in California. Mr Russsell of Paralowie House is a good example of what Salisbury farmers did. He converted from growing oats and wheat to oranges in 1890. He planted 82 acres of his 122 acres in citrus trees 21 feet apart giving him over 1,000 trees. The annual floods of the Little Para were the secret of providing the rich alluvial soils in the Para valley. Other early citrus growers in Salisbury were the Kuhlmann, Moss, Tate, Jenkins, Harvey, Ponton and Sayer families. In the 1970s as the citrus industry died the flood plains of the Little Para were converted to parklands if they flooded or to housing if they were not flood prone. But once the Little Para Reservoir was completed the annual floods stopped anyway. Oranges were also extensively grown at Golden Grove. During the dry of summer water was taken from the Little Para to irrigate the oranges and one old stone waterwheel used for this purpose has been restored in Salisbury. That waterwheel was built for orange grower Frederick Kuhlmann of the Old Spot Hotel in 1899 and used until the 1940s.
Salisbury. Sir Montague( or Montagu) Chapman, Third Baronet of Westmeath near Dublin Ireland, used a loop hole in the Special Survey regulations of 1839 and selected his 4,000 acres for £4,000 in different areas. He took 800 acres at Koonunga near Kapunda; 500 acres at Kapunda (a friend of his Bagot also got land there); 500 acres near Waterloo and Marrabel; and later in 1842 he selected a further 2,200 acres between the Little Para River and Dry Creek at what is now Mawson Lakes, Salisbury and Cross Keys. At Killua Castle in Ireland he had 9,000 acres and hundreds of tenant farmers. He wanted to do the same in SA. In 1840 he sent out Captain Charles Bagot from Ireland with 224 Irish immigrants to settle his, and Bagot’s lands, at Kapunda with Irish labourers and tenants. Then in 1842 he sailed out to SA himself with 120 Irish tenant farmers whom he installed on his lands at Cross Keys. Sir Montague Chapman returned to Ireland the next year. Then in 1847 he sent out a further 214 Irish immigrants to be tenant farmers on his Cross Key to Salisbury lands. They came out on the ships named Trafalgar and Aboukir. Sir Montague Chapman lived in Ireland not SA but returned to his SA estates in 1852 and drowned at sea in 1853 off Portland when returning to SA from Melbourne. His brother inherited the SA lands and estates. The lasting effect of Sir Montague Chapmans tenant farming ideas was a large number of Irish Catholics around the Salisbury and Kapunda districts. Many of these immigrants soon became independent landowners themselves rather than Montague’s tenants.
Daniel Brady, another Irishman was a self-made Irish immigrant to the area. He purchased 100 acres, now the Parafield Airport in 1845. He then got the license to the Cross Keys hotel. Much later Brady laid out the town of Virginia in 1858.But there were other Catholic influences in Salisbury too. William Leigh of Staffordshire (and of Leigh Street Adelaide) was a great land investor and speculator in SA and donated lands early to the Anglican Church ( in Leigh St.) then he converted to Catholicism and donated lands to the SA Catholic Church for the first church and bishop’s palace on West Terrace etc. At Salisbury he donated 500 acres to the local Catholic Church along the Little Para where the reservoir is now situated. The local church rented that farm out as income until it was sold in 1896. Thus because of two major Catholic British aristocrats Salisbury thrived as a centre of Catholicism and had one of the largest Catholic Churches in SA in the mid-19th century. The church itself was set up when the state Government was offering glebe lands for churches to get established. The Catholics of Salisbury received 20 acres of land under this system through Bishop Murphy in 1850. The foundations of St Augustine’s Church were laid in 1851 with the church being used before its final official opening in 1857. This grand stone church replaced an earlier pug and pine church which had opened in 1847 on the site. The tower was added in 1926.
But the main story of Salisbury is centred on Scottish born John Harvey of Wick. But who was John Harvey? Is his main claim to fame that he brought out from South Africa soursob bulbs? He was a man of ideas wanting to make money. He came out to SA alone when he was 16 years old arriving in 1839 on the ship named Superb. By 1843 Harvey had moved to Gawler where he drove mails between Adelaide and Gawler. This gave him the idea of grazing cattle on the unoccupied plains between the two settlements. He started squatting. He let overlanders from NSW depasture their flocks on these lands, for a fee, although he had no legal right to do so. He accepted cattle for fees and soon had stock of his own. To this he added some horses which he bred for sale (or export to India) and once he had fattened the cattle he sold them for meat for the Adelaide market or through his butcher shop in growing Gawler. He became a major meat supplier for Adelaide and Gawler. He also experimented with cereal growing on the Salisbury plains and claims to be have been the first to do so. Within a few years he had amassed a sizeable amount of money from almost nothing and he purchased his first land at Gawler, where he built his first stone house, and at Salisbury when the Hundred of Yatala was declared in 1846. He was temporarily forced off the land he was squatting upon until he purchased 147 acres in 1847. He subdivided a small part of it to create the town of Salisbury with the main street named after himself and the street parallel to it named Wiltshire where his wife Ann Pitman (cousin of Sir Isaac Pitman of shorthand fame) was born. His town plans were submitted in 1848 as he hoped to make money from this action. Harvey continued living in Salisbury and went into building houses for people, breeding race horses and encouraging agriculture. He was elected to parliament in 1857 for one term and served on the Yatala District Council. His land deals included selling the area of Gawler that became Bassett Town by the old Gawler railway station. He was a mainstay of the Royal Horticultural Society and the Adelaide Racing Club. He was a local Justice of the Peace. John Harvey died in Salisbury in 1899, aged 78 years but his descendants stayed on in the town to be orange growers. John and his wife Ann are buried in St John’s Anglican cemetery. He left three sons and daughter.
By 1854 there were churches being erected in Salisbury; a flour mill; a hotel; and many houses for residents. The earliest SA settlers has eschewed the Adelaide Plains as they were hot and dry and they preferred the wetter, cooler Adelaide Hills. By 1845 less hills land was available and some saw the potential of this fertile little river valley close to the Adelaide and on the main copper mine routes from Adelaide to Kapunda and Burra. Apart from the Catholics the town attracted Anglicans, who were to construct their first church in 1849 or 1850 although the date on the building says 1846 which was before the land was even surveyed. John Harvey is known to have sold two lots to the Anglican Bishop Short for a nominal amount for an Anglican Church in 1850. It is therefore unlikely that the Anglicans built anything before 1850 but John Harvey might have allowed a building on his land before it was officially handed over to Bishop Short. A number of Primitive Methodists were also drawn to Salisbury and they who formed their congregation in 1849 with services on the banks of the Little Para. In 1851 they opened their Primitive Methodist Church called Hephzibah which was replaced with a second solid stone church in 1858. The Primitive Methodists purchased their land from John Harvey. They then established satellite Primitive Methodist churches at Burton, Sturton, Greenwith and other further out districts like Carclew, Two Wells etc. The Wesleyan Methodists had a church at the Old Spot (1857) but they too constructed a Wesleyan church in Salisbury West in 1858 after the arrival of the railway to the town. It has been a residence since 1904 but is defaced with ugly 1950s additions.
Salisbury grew quite quickly because it was only a few years before the town was connected with Adelaide by the Gawler train line. North of the Para River John Porter purchased land at the same time as John Harvey in 1847 and he too create a small private town with Porter, Gawler and Commercial streets etc. His town merged with Harvey’s as did the later 1856 subdivision of Salisbury West by William Trevaskis. No cathedral emerged but the town had its churches, hotels, a flour mill and industry. It soon had a private school too. Charles James Blatche Taplin, my great great grandfather had a licensed school in Salisbury from 1855 until his death in 1867. His wife Eliza Taplin had a separate school for girls which she continued after his death. After the Education Act of 1875 the government built the old Salisbury School in 1876. Charles Taplin was also the treasurer of the St Johns Anglican Church for many years and was present at the laying of its foundation stone with architect Daniel Garlick in 1858. The town remained a local service centre until World War Two when the government purchased land at Edinburgh for an ammunitions works and secure storage area and a further 58 acres of land, mainly from descendants of John Harvey, along Park Terrace in Salisbury for emergency war housing. It was required to house all the workers required for the war time industry at Penfield. Some 284 fibro “cabin homes” were erected in Salisbury on vacant land and the population grew rapidly. After the war the town grew further with the establishment of Salisbury North in 1949 as a Housing Trust suburb with over 500 new homes. Shortly after this in 1954 the new satellite city of Elizabeth and its associated industries was created in the Salisbury Council area abutting on to the Para River. In the 1950s most of the pioneering families from the late 1840s were still living in Salisbury as it was just a small rural town with a water trough for horses in the main street and a hitching post! By the 1970s the town had become a city and changed dramatically for ever.
Some Historic Salisbury Properties. •Anglian Church and cemetery. See details above. Early building 1849 or 1846? The Garlick designed church opened 1865 but the foundation stone was laid in 1858. In 1989 a fire destroyed the interior and the roof of the church was rebuilt. •Former Primitive Methodist Hephzibah Church and cemetery. After open air services the first Primitive Methodist church was built on this site in 1851. In 1858 a new grand church called Hephzibah was erected here to replace it. The land for the church was purchased from John Harvey for £10. The church name means “in her delight”. The church was restored in 1904 and then became the only Methodist church in Salisbury. In 1960 the church was sold to Coles who replaced it with a supermarket and a new Methodist Church was built on Park Terrace. That new church is now the Uniting Church. •Salisbury Institute. This important building for social events also providing the original reading room and library which opened in 1884.The land was donated by William Kelly of One Tree Hill and the architect was Frederick Dancker originally from Macclesfield where he designed their institute too. Like many institutes it became a community hall run by the Council in 1939 who started showing movies in it. •Salisbury Schools. The northern wing of Salisbury School was built in 1876 with pointed gothic windows in the west gable. The southern wing was added in 1879. Notice the slightly different windows etc. The first school operated in the 1846/49 Anglican Church for many years. A High School opened in Salisbury in 1959. •Salisbury Police Station and Courthouse now the town museum. This police station with cells and outbuildings and Courthouse was opened in 1859 after a request by MP John Harvey to the Commissioner of Public Works. E.A Hamilton was the architect for the government. The station cost £730. It is now a museum.
Salisbury West, the Gawler railway and Shirley Hall. The first major railway line in South Australia was from Adelaide to Gawler and it reached Salisbury in 1857. A local land owner then subdivided some of his land to create Salisbury West which was west of the new railway line. William Trevaskis did this in 1856 before the railway came when he divided off a few acres from his original 1846 freehold estate of 82 acres (one section). As a land speculator he created 61 town blocks which he advertised as “adjoining Salisbury Station of the Adelaide Gawler Town Railway.” This worked well. This area just west of the railway station soon had residences, a hotel, and a Wesleyan Church. When Trevaskis subdivided this estate he named one street East Terrace facing the railway line. This is where Edmund Paternoster later established his windmill, pumps and engineering works in 1878. His Little Gem windmills were sold in all colonies. East Tce was later changed to Paternoster Street to commemorate this important local industrialist of the 19th century. The Assistant Engineer for the construction of the railway Adelaide-Gawler railway, W Coulls purchased three blocks and built the Australian Heritage Listed Shirley Hall is on one of them with outbuildings, coach house and stables on the others. Shirley Hall was built just behind the old Wesleyan Church of 1858 with cellars and 7 main rooms and a separate kitchen in the outbuildings. The original brick and cast iron fence (made at James Martin foundry Gawler) still survives as does the original slate tiles. Coulls died in 1861 and the house had several owners before it was purchased by James Thompson in 1898. He renamed it Chelsea. Sir Jenkin Coles, Speaker of the South Australian parliament for the lower Mid North was a friend of James Thompson and often held political meetings at Chelsea House. The house was only sold out of the Thompson family in 1975. The nearby Wesleyan Methodist Church was built in Romanesque style in 1858. With the three Methodist churches union in 1900 all services were conducted in the former Wesleyan Church between 1900 and 1904 when repairs to Hephzibah were completed and Hebzibah then became the one and only Methodist church in Salisbury. Not long after 1904 this Wesleyan church was sold as a residence.
Paralowie. Paralowie House overlooks the Little Para River and the owner in 1894 had a fine stone Gate House and stone pillar gates built right on the edge of the river on Waterloo Corner Road. Paralowie House and this gate house was built in 1894 for Frank Russell an investor and farmer. His story is related above how he changed from dairying and cereal growing to orange and lemon orchards in 1890. The land on which Paralowie now stands was earlier owned by the Bagster family who sold it on in 1883. The Russells liked to host functions at their residence and it was reported in the press that the whole town attended celebrations here when Mafeking was successfully relived by the British forces in 1900 during the Boer War. Russells sold their Paralowie estate in 1917. A later resident of Paralowie House for many years was the state Coroner lawyer T.E.Cleland. Cleland lived at Salisbury and travelled to the Coroner’s Court by train daily rom Salisbury. Cleland served as Coroner from 1947 into the 1960s. Cleland was a pig breeder.
Salisbury. Southern wall of the old Wesleyan Methodist Church. Built in the new Salisbury west subdivision of 1858 when the church was built. It closed around 1904 when the Primitive Methodist church became the main Methodist church of the town. .
Image by denisbin The first major railway line in South Australia from Adelaide to Gawler reached Salisbury in 1857. A local land owner then subdivided some of his land to create Salisbury West which was west of the new railway line. Trevaskis did this in 1856 before the railway came. he created 61 town blocks.
Oranges along the Para. The orange tree is botanically known as citrus sinensis which comes from China but is grown in tropical and subtropical areas of the world. The fruit of this tree gave us the name for one of our primary colours. This colour was first recoded in the English language in 1512. Orange is a Sanskrit Indian word. In Europe oranges have been grown in Italy and Spain since they were brought there by the Crusaders in 1100s from the Middle East. The first mention of commercial orange growing along the Para was in 1870 when Mr Urlwin exhibited Salisbury oranges at the Adelaide Royal Show. Then Mr F Fendon was described in newspapers in 1876 as a pioneer of commercial orange growing at Salisbury as he had been experimenting with orange trees since 1850. He hoped his display at the Salisbury Show of 1876 would encourage others to turn to orange growing. He had 20 varieties growing along Para when he exhibited them at the Salisbury Annual Show in 1876. More oranges were grown in the 1880s and by the 1890s hundreds of cases a year were being exported by P & O steamers to London. Thus the big expansion of commercial orange growing was in the 1880s. The oranges grown were Navel, Valencias, Washingtons and Lisbons( lemon) and these were the four” houses” in the Salisbury Primary School in the 1950s. Other earlier varieties grown included Sabina (a sour Italian orange), Rio (a red grapefruit), Seville oranges etc. Navel orange is a variety that was developed in Brazil in the 1820s, Washingtons were also from Brazil but Navels were developed for commercial orchards in California. Mr Russsell of Paralowie House is a good example of what Salisbury farmers did. He converted from growing oats and wheat to oranges in 1890. He planted 82 acres of his 122 acres in citrus trees 21 feet apart giving him over 1,000 trees. The annual floods of the Little Para were the secret of providing the rich alluvial soils in the Para valley. Other early citrus growers in Salisbury were the Kuhlmann, Moss, Tate, Jenkins, Harvey, Ponton and Sayer families. In the 1970s as the citrus industry died the flood plains of the Little Para were converted to parklands if they flooded or to housing if they were not flood prone. But once the Little Para Reservoir was completed the annual floods stopped anyway. Oranges were also extensively grown at Golden Grove. During the dry of summer water was taken from the Little Para to irrigate the oranges and one old stone waterwheel used for this purpose has been restored in Salisbury. That waterwheel was built for orange grower Frederick Kuhlmann of the Old Spot Hotel in 1899 and used until the 1940s.
Salisbury. Sir Montague( or Montagu) Chapman, Third Baronet of Westmeath near Dublin Ireland, used a loop hole in the Special Survey regulations of 1839 and selected his 4,000 acres for £4,000 in different areas. He took 800 acres at Koonunga near Kapunda; 500 acres at Kapunda (a friend of his Bagot also got land there); 500 acres near Waterloo and Marrabel; and later in 1842 he selected a further 2,200 acres between the Little Para River and Dry Creek at what is now Mawson Lakes, Salisbury and Cross Keys. At Killua Castle in Ireland he had 9,000 acres and hundreds of tenant farmers. He wanted to do the same in SA. In 1840 he sent out Captain Charles Bagot from Ireland with 224 Irish immigrants to settle his, and Bagot’s lands, at Kapunda with Irish labourers and tenants. Then in 1842 he sailed out to SA himself with 120 Irish tenant farmers whom he installed on his lands at Cross Keys. Sir Montague Chapman returned to Ireland the next year. Then in 1847 he sent out a further 214 Irish immigrants to be tenant farmers on his Cross Key to Salisbury lands. They came out on the ships named Trafalgar and Aboukir. Sir Montague Chapman lived in Ireland not SA but returned to his SA estates in 1852 and drowned at sea in 1853 off Portland when returning to SA from Melbourne. His brother inherited the SA lands and estates. The lasting effect of Sir Montague Chapmans tenant farming ideas was a large number of Irish Catholics around the Salisbury and Kapunda districts. Many of these immigrants soon became independent landowners themselves rather than Montague’s tenants.
Daniel Brady, another Irishman was a self-made Irish immigrant to the area. He purchased 100 acres, now the Parafield Airport in 1845. He then got the license to the Cross Keys hotel. Much later Brady laid out the town of Virginia in 1858.But there were other Catholic influences in Salisbury too. William Leigh of Staffordshire (and of Leigh Street Adelaide) was a great land investor and speculator in SA and donated lands early to the Anglican Church ( in Leigh St.) then he converted to Catholicism and donated lands to the SA Catholic Church for the first church and bishop’s palace on West Terrace etc. At Salisbury he donated 500 acres to the local Catholic Church along the Little Para where the reservoir is now situated. The local church rented that farm out as income until it was sold in 1896. Thus because of two major Catholic British aristocrats Salisbury thrived as a centre of Catholicism and had one of the largest Catholic Churches in SA in the mid-19th century. The church itself was set up when the state Government was offering glebe lands for churches to get established. The Catholics of Salisbury received 20 acres of land under this system through Bishop Murphy in 1850. The foundations of St Augustine’s Church were laid in 1851 with the church being used before its final official opening in 1857. This grand stone church replaced an earlier pug and pine church which had opened in 1847 on the site. The tower was added in 1926.
But the main story of Salisbury is centred on Scottish born John Harvey of Wick. But who was John Harvey? Is his main claim to fame that he brought out from South Africa soursob bulbs? He was a man of ideas wanting to make money. He came out to SA alone when he was 16 years old arriving in 1839 on the ship named Superb. By 1843 Harvey had moved to Gawler where he drove mails between Adelaide and Gawler. This gave him the idea of grazing cattle on the unoccupied plains between the two settlements. He started squatting. He let overlanders from NSW depasture their flocks on these lands, for a fee, although he had no legal right to do so. He accepted cattle for fees and soon had stock of his own. To this he added some horses which he bred for sale (or export to India) and once he had fattened the cattle he sold them for meat for the Adelaide market or through his butcher shop in growing Gawler. He became a major meat supplier for Adelaide and Gawler. He also experimented with cereal growing on the Salisbury plains and claims to be have been the first to do so. Within a few years he had amassed a sizeable amount of money from almost nothing and he purchased his first land at Gawler, where he built his first stone house, and at Salisbury when the Hundred of Yatala was declared in 1846. He was temporarily forced off the land he was squatting upon until he purchased 147 acres in 1847. He subdivided a small part of it to create the town of Salisbury with the main street named after himself and the street parallel to it named Wiltshire where his wife Ann Pitman (cousin of Sir Isaac Pitman of shorthand fame) was born. His town plans were submitted in 1848 as he hoped to make money from this action. Harvey continued living in Salisbury and went into building houses for people, breeding race horses and encouraging agriculture. He was elected to parliament in 1857 for one term and served on the Yatala District Council. His land deals included selling the area of Gawler that became Bassett Town by the old Gawler railway station. He was a mainstay of the Royal Horticultural Society and the Adelaide Racing Club. He was a local Justice of the Peace. John Harvey died in Salisbury in 1899, aged 78 years but his descendants stayed on in the town to be orange growers. John and his wife Ann are buried in St John’s Anglican cemetery. He left three sons and daughter.
By 1854 there were churches being erected in Salisbury; a flour mill; a hotel; and many houses for residents. The earliest SA settlers has eschewed the Adelaide Plains as they were hot and dry and they preferred the wetter, cooler Adelaide Hills. By 1845 less hills land was available and some saw the potential of this fertile little river valley close to the Adelaide and on the main copper mine routes from Adelaide to Kapunda and Burra. Apart from the Catholics the town attracted Anglicans, who were to construct their first church in 1849 or 1850 although the date on the building says 1846 which was before the land was even surveyed. John Harvey is known to have sold two lots to the Anglican Bishop Short for a nominal amount for an Anglican Church in 1850. It is therefore unlikely that the Anglicans built anything before 1850 but John Harvey might have allowed a building on his land before it was officially handed over to Bishop Short. A number of Primitive Methodists were also drawn to Salisbury and they who formed their congregation in 1849 with services on the banks of the Little Para. In 1851 they opened their Primitive Methodist Church called Hephzibah which was replaced with a second solid stone church in 1858. The Primitive Methodists purchased their land from John Harvey. They then established satellite Primitive Methodist churches at Burton, Sturton, Greenwith and other further out districts like Carclew, Two Wells etc. The Wesleyan Methodists had a church at the Old Spot (1857) but they too constructed a Wesleyan church in Salisbury West in 1858 after the arrival of the railway to the town. It has been a residence since 1904 but is defaced with ugly 1950s additions.
Salisbury grew quite quickly because it was only a few years before the town was connected with Adelaide by the Gawler train line. North of the Para River John Porter purchased land at the same time as John Harvey in 1847 and he too create a small private town with Porter, Gawler and Commercial streets etc. His town merged with Harvey’s as did the later 1856 subdivision of Salisbury West by William Trevaskis. No cathedral emerged but the town had its churches, hotels, a flour mill and industry. It soon had a private school too. Charles James Blatche Taplin, my great great grandfather had a licensed school in Salisbury from 1855 until his death in 1867. His wife Eliza Taplin had a separate school for girls which she continued after his death. After the Education Act of 1875 the government built the old Salisbury School in 1876. Charles Taplin was also the treasurer of the St Johns Anglican Church for many years and was present at the laying of its foundation stone with architect Daniel Garlick in 1858. The town remained a local service centre until World War Two when the government purchased land at Edinburgh for an ammunitions works and secure storage area and a further 58 acres of land, mainly from descendants of John Harvey, along Park Terrace in Salisbury for emergency war housing. It was required to house all the workers required for the war time industry at Penfield. Some 284 fibro “cabin homes” were erected in Salisbury on vacant land and the population grew rapidly. After the war the town grew further with the establishment of Salisbury North in 1949 as a Housing Trust suburb with over 500 new homes. Shortly after this in 1954 the new satellite city of Elizabeth and its associated industries was created in the Salisbury Council area abutting on to the Para River. In the 1950s most of the pioneering families from the late 1840s were still living in Salisbury as it was just a small rural town with a water trough for horses in the main street and a hitching post! By the 1970s the town had become a city and changed dramatically for ever.
Some Historic Salisbury Properties. •Anglian Church and cemetery. See details above. Early building 1849 or 1846? The Garlick designed church opened 1865 but the foundation stone was laid in 1858. In 1989 a fire destroyed the interior and the roof of the church was rebuilt. •Former Primitive Methodist Hephzibah Church and cemetery. After open air services the first Primitive Methodist church was built on this site in 1851. In 1858 a new grand church called Hephzibah was erected here to replace it. The land for the church was purchased from John Harvey for £10. The church name means “in her delight”. The church was restored in 1904 and then became the only Methodist church in Salisbury. In 1960 the church was sold to Coles who replaced it with a supermarket and a new Methodist Church was built on Park Terrace. That new church is now the Uniting Church. •Salisbury Institute. This important building for social events also providing the original reading room and library which opened in 1884.The land was donated by William Kelly of One Tree Hill and the architect was Frederick Dancker originally from Macclesfield where he designed their institute too. Like many institutes it became a community hall run by the Council in 1939 who started showing movies in it. •Salisbury Schools. The northern wing of Salisbury School was built in 1876 with pointed gothic windows in the west gable. The southern wing was added in 1879. Notice the slightly different windows etc. The first school operated in the 1846/49 Anglican Church for many years. A High School opened in Salisbury in 1959. •Salisbury Police Station and Courthouse now the town museum. This police station with cells and outbuildings and Courthouse was opened in 1859 after a request by MP John Harvey to the Commissioner of Public Works. E.A Hamilton was the architect for the government. The station cost £730. It is now a museum.
Salisbury West, the Gawler railway and Shirley Hall. The first major railway line in South Australia was from Adelaide to Gawler and it reached Salisbury in 1857. A local land owner then subdivided some of his land to create Salisbury West which was west of the new railway line. William Trevaskis did this in 1856 before the railway came when he divided off a few acres from his original 1846 freehold estate of 82 acres (one section). As a land speculator he created 61 town blocks which he advertised as “adjoining Salisbury Station of the Adelaide Gawler Town Railway.” This worked well. This area just west of the railway station soon had residences, a hotel, and a Wesleyan Church. When Trevaskis subdivided this estate he named one street East Terrace facing the railway line. This is where Edmund Paternoster later established his windmill, pumps and engineering works in 1878. His Little Gem windmills were sold in all colonies. East Tce was later changed to Paternoster Street to commemorate this important local industrialist of the 19th century. The Assistant Engineer for the construction of the railway Adelaide-Gawler railway, W Coulls purchased three blocks and built the Australian Heritage Listed Shirley Hall is on one of them with outbuildings, coach house and stables on the others. Shirley Hall was built just behind the old Wesleyan Church of 1858 with cellars and 7 main rooms and a separate kitchen in the outbuildings. The original brick and cast iron fence (made at James Martin foundry Gawler) still survives as does the original slate tiles. Coulls died in 1861 and the house had several owners before it was purchased by James Thompson in 1898. He renamed it Chelsea. Sir Jenkin Coles, Speaker of the South Australian parliament for the lower Mid North was a friend of James Thompson and often held political meetings at Chelsea House. The house was only sold out of the Thompson family in 1975. The nearby Wesleyan Methodist Church was built in Romanesque style in 1858. With the three Methodist churches union in 1900 all services were conducted in the former Wesleyan Church between 1900 and 1904 when repairs to Hephzibah were completed and Hebzibah then became the one and only Methodist church in Salisbury. Not long after 1904 this Wesleyan church was sold as a residence.
Paralowie. Paralowie House overlooks the Little Para River and the owner in 1894 had a fine stone Gate House and stone pillar gates built right on the edge of the river on Waterloo Corner Road. Paralowie House and this gate house was built in 1894 for Frank Russell an investor and farmer. His story is related above how he changed from dairying and cereal growing to orange and lemon orchards in 1890. The land on which Paralowie now stands was earlier owned by the Bagster family who sold it on in 1883. The Russells liked to host functions at their residence and it was reported in the press that the whole town attended celebrations here when Mafeking was successfully relived by the British forces in 1900 during the Boer War. Russells sold their Paralowie estate in 1917. A later resident of Paralowie House for many years was the state Coroner lawyer T.E.Cleland. Cleland lived at Salisbury and travelled to the Coroner’s Court by train daily rom Salisbury. Cleland served as Coroner from 1947 into the 1960s. Cleland was a pig breeder.
Paralowie House 1894 overlooking the Little Para River.
Image by denisbin Paralowie House overlooks the Little Para River and the owner in 1894 had a fine stone Gate House and stone pillar gates built right on the edge of the river on Waterloo Corner Road.
Oranges along the Para. The orange tree is botanically known as citrus sinensis which comes from China but is grown in tropical and subtropical areas of the world. The fruit of this tree gave us the name for one of our primary colours. This colour was first recoded in the English language in 1512. Orange is a Sanskrit Indian word. In Europe oranges have been grown in Italy and Spain since they were brought there by the Crusaders in 1100s from the Middle East. The first mention of commercial orange growing along the Para was in 1870 when Mr Urlwin exhibited Salisbury oranges at the Adelaide Royal Show. Then Mr F Fendon was described in newspapers in 1876 as a pioneer of commercial orange growing at Salisbury as he had been experimenting with orange trees since 1850. He hoped his display at the Salisbury Show of 1876 would encourage others to turn to orange growing. He had 20 varieties growing along Para when he exhibited them at the Salisbury Annual Show in 1876. More oranges were grown in the 1880s and by the 1890s hundreds of cases a year were being exported by P & O steamers to London. Thus the big expansion of commercial orange growing was in the 1880s. The oranges grown were Navel, Valencias, Washingtons and Lisbons( lemon) and these were the four” houses” in the Salisbury Primary School in the 1950s. Other earlier varieties grown included Sabina (a sour Italian orange), Rio (a red grapefruit), Seville oranges etc. Navel orange is a variety that was developed in Brazil in the 1820s, Washingtons were also from Brazil but Navels were developed for commercial orchards in California. Mr Russsell of Paralowie House is a good example of what Salisbury farmers did. He converted from growing oats and wheat to oranges in 1890. He planted 82 acres of his 122 acres in citrus trees 21 feet apart giving him over 1,000 trees. The annual floods of the Little Para were the secret of providing the rich alluvial soils in the Para valley. Other early citrus growers in Salisbury were the Kuhlmann, Moss, Tate, Jenkins, Harvey, Ponton and Sayer families. In the 1970s as the citrus industry died the flood plains of the Little Para were converted to parklands if they flooded or to housing if they were not flood prone. But once the Little Para Reservoir was completed the annual floods stopped anyway. Oranges were also extensively grown at Golden Grove. During the dry of summer water was taken from the Little Para to irrigate the oranges and one old stone waterwheel used for this purpose has been restored in Salisbury. That waterwheel was built for orange grower Frederick Kuhlmann of the Old Spot Hotel in 1899 and used until the 1940s.
Salisbury. Sir Montague( or Montagu) Chapman, Third Baronet of Westmeath near Dublin Ireland, used a loop hole in the Special Survey regulations of 1839 and selected his 4,000 acres for £4,000 in different areas. He took 800 acres at Koonunga near Kapunda; 500 acres at Kapunda (a friend of his Bagot also got land there); 500 acres near Waterloo and Marrabel; and later in 1842 he selected a further 2,200 acres between the Little Para River and Dry Creek at what is now Mawson Lakes, Salisbury and Cross Keys. At Killua Castle in Ireland he had 9,000 acres and hundreds of tenant farmers. He wanted to do the same in SA. In 1840 he sent out Captain Charles Bagot from Ireland with 224 Irish immigrants to settle his, and Bagot’s lands, at Kapunda with Irish labourers and tenants. Then in 1842 he sailed out to SA himself with 120 Irish tenant farmers whom he installed on his lands at Cross Keys. Sir Montague Chapman returned to Ireland the next year. Then in 1847 he sent out a further 214 Irish immigrants to be tenant farmers on his Cross Key to Salisbury lands. They came out on the ships named Trafalgar and Aboukir. Sir Montague Chapman lived in Ireland not SA but returned to his SA estates in 1852 and drowned at sea in 1853 off Portland when returning to SA from Melbourne. His brother inherited the SA lands and estates. The lasting effect of Sir Montague Chapmans tenant farming ideas was a large number of Irish Catholics around the Salisbury and Kapunda districts. Many of these immigrants soon became independent landowners themselves rather than Montague’s tenants.
Daniel Brady, another Irishman was a self-made Irish immigrant to the area. He purchased 100 acres, now the Parafield Airport in 1845. He then got the license to the Cross Keys hotel. Much later Brady laid out the town of Virginia in 1858.But there were other Catholic influences in Salisbury too. William Leigh of Staffordshire (and of Leigh Street Adelaide) was a great land investor and speculator in SA and donated lands early to the Anglican Church ( in Leigh St.) then he converted to Catholicism and donated lands to the SA Catholic Church for the first church and bishop’s palace on West Terrace etc. At Salisbury he donated 500 acres to the local Catholic Church along the Little Para where the reservoir is now situated. The local church rented that farm out as income until it was sold in 1896. Thus because of two major Catholic British aristocrats Salisbury thrived as a centre of Catholicism and had one of the largest Catholic Churches in SA in the mid-19th century. The church itself was set up when the state Government was offering glebe lands for churches to get established. The Catholics of Salisbury received 20 acres of land under this system through Bishop Murphy in 1850. The foundations of St Augustine’s Church were laid in 1851 with the church being used before its final official opening in 1857. This grand stone church replaced an earlier pug and pine church which had opened in 1847 on the site. The tower was added in 1926.
But the main story of Salisbury is centred on Scottish born John Harvey of Wick. But who was John Harvey? Is his main claim to fame that he brought out from South Africa soursob bulbs? He was a man of ideas wanting to make money. He came out to SA alone when he was 16 years old arriving in 1839 on the ship named Superb. By 1843 Harvey had moved to Gawler where he drove mails between Adelaide and Gawler. This gave him the idea of grazing cattle on the unoccupied plains between the two settlements. He started squatting. He let overlanders from NSW depasture their flocks on these lands, for a fee, although he had no legal right to do so. He accepted cattle for fees and soon had stock of his own. To this he added some horses which he bred for sale (or export to India) and once he had fattened the cattle he sold them for meat for the Adelaide market or through his butcher shop in growing Gawler. He became a major meat supplier for Adelaide and Gawler. He also experimented with cereal growing on the Salisbury plains and claims to be have been the first to do so. Within a few years he had amassed a sizeable amount of money from almost nothing and he purchased his first land at Gawler, where he built his first stone house, and at Salisbury when the Hundred of Yatala was declared in 1846. He was temporarily forced off the land he was squatting upon until he purchased 147 acres in 1847. He subdivided a small part of it to create the town of Salisbury with the main street named after himself and the street parallel to it named Wiltshire where his wife Ann Pitman (cousin of Sir Isaac Pitman of shorthand fame) was born. His town plans were submitted in 1848 as he hoped to make money from this action. Harvey continued living in Salisbury and went into building houses for people, breeding race horses and encouraging agriculture. He was elected to parliament in 1857 for one term and served on the Yatala District Council. His land deals included selling the area of Gawler that became Bassett Town by the old Gawler railway station. He was a mainstay of the Royal Horticultural Society and the Adelaide Racing Club. He was a local Justice of the Peace. John Harvey died in Salisbury in 1899, aged 78 years but his descendants stayed on in the town to be orange growers. John and his wife Ann are buried in St John’s Anglican cemetery. He left three sons and daughter.
By 1854 there were churches being erected in Salisbury; a flour mill; a hotel; and many houses for residents. The earliest SA settlers has eschewed the Adelaide Plains as they were hot and dry and they preferred the wetter, cooler Adelaide Hills. By 1845 less hills land was available and some saw the potential of this fertile little river valley close to the Adelaide and on the main copper mine routes from Adelaide to Kapunda and Burra. Apart from the Catholics the town attracted Anglicans, who were to construct their first church in 1849 or 1850 although the date on the building says 1846 which was before the land was even surveyed. John Harvey is known to have sold two lots to the Anglican Bishop Short for a nominal amount for an Anglican Church in 1850. It is therefore unlikely that the Anglicans built anything before 1850 but John Harvey might have allowed a building on his land before it was officially handed over to Bishop Short. A number of Primitive Methodists were also drawn to Salisbury and they who formed their congregation in 1849 with services on the banks of the Little Para. In 1851 they opened their Primitive Methodist Church called Hephzibah which was replaced with a second solid stone church in 1858. The Primitive Methodists purchased their land from John Harvey. They then established satellite Primitive Methodist churches at Burton, Sturton, Greenwith and other further out districts like Carclew, Two Wells etc. The Wesleyan Methodists had a church at the Old Spot (1857) but they too constructed a Wesleyan church in Salisbury West in 1858 after the arrival of the railway to the town. It has been a residence since 1904 but is defaced with ugly 1950s additions.
Salisbury grew quite quickly because it was only a few years before the town was connected with Adelaide by the Gawler train line. North of the Para River John Porter purchased land at the same time as John Harvey in 1847 and he too create a small private town with Porter, Gawler and Commercial streets etc. His town merged with Harvey’s as did the later 1856 subdivision of Salisbury West by William Trevaskis. No cathedral emerged but the town had its churches, hotels, a flour mill and industry. It soon had a private school too. Charles James Blatche Taplin, my great great grandfather had a licensed school in Salisbury from 1855 until his death in 1867. His wife Eliza Taplin had a separate school for girls which she continued after his death. After the Education Act of 1875 the government built the old Salisbury School in 1876. Charles Taplin was also the treasurer of the St Johns Anglican Church for many years and was present at the laying of its foundation stone with architect Daniel Garlick in 1858. The town remained a local service centre until World War Two when the government purchased land at Edinburgh for an ammunitions works and secure storage area and a further 58 acres of land, mainly from descendants of John Harvey, along Park Terrace in Salisbury for emergency war housing. It was required to house all the workers required for the war time industry at Penfield. Some 284 fibro “cabin homes” were erected in Salisbury on vacant land and the population grew rapidly. After the war the town grew further with the establishment of Salisbury North in 1949 as a Housing Trust suburb with over 500 new homes. Shortly after this in 1954 the new satellite city of Elizabeth and its associated industries was created in the Salisbury Council area abutting on to the Para River. In the 1950s most of the pioneering families from the late 1840s were still living in Salisbury as it was just a small rural town with a water trough for horses in the main street and a hitching post! By the 1970s the town had become a city and changed dramatically for ever.
Some Historic Salisbury Properties. •Anglian Church and cemetery. See details above. Early building 1849 or 1846? The Garlick designed church opened 1865 but the foundation stone was laid in 1858. In 1989 a fire destroyed the interior and the roof of the church was rebuilt. •Former Primitive Methodist Hephzibah Church and cemetery. After open air services the first Primitive Methodist church was built on this site in 1851. In 1858 a new grand church called Hephzibah was erected here to replace it. The land for the church was purchased from John Harvey for £10. The church name means “in her delight”. The church was restored in 1904 and then became the only Methodist church in Salisbury. In 1960 the church was sold to Coles who replaced it with a supermarket and a new Methodist Church was built on Park Terrace. That new church is now the Uniting Church. •Salisbury Institute. This important building for social events also providing the original reading room and library which opened in 1884.The land was donated by William Kelly of One Tree Hill and the architect was Frederick Dancker originally from Macclesfield where he designed their institute too. Like many institutes it became a community hall run by the Council in 1939 who started showing movies in it. •Salisbury Schools. The northern wing of Salisbury School was built in 1876 with pointed gothic windows in the west gable. The southern wing was added in 1879. Notice the slightly different windows etc. The first school operated in the 1846/49 Anglican Church for many years. A High School opened in Salisbury in 1959. •Salisbury Police Station and Courthouse now the town museum. This police station with cells and outbuildings and Courthouse was opened in 1859 after a request by MP John Harvey to the Commissioner of Public Works. E.A Hamilton was the architect for the government. The station cost £730. It is now a museum.
Salisbury West, the Gawler railway and Shirley Hall. The first major railway line in South Australia was from Adelaide to Gawler and it reached Salisbury in 1857. A local land owner then subdivided some of his land to create Salisbury West which was west of the new railway line. William Trevaskis did this in 1856 before the railway came when he divided off a few acres from his original 1846 freehold estate of 82 acres (one section). As a land speculator he created 61 town blocks which he advertised as “adjoining Salisbury Station of the Adelaide Gawler Town Railway.” This worked well. This area just west of the railway station soon had residences, a hotel, and a Wesleyan Church. When Trevaskis subdivided this estate he named one street East Terrace facing the railway line. This is where Edmund Paternoster later established his windmill, pumps and engineering works in 1878. His Little Gem windmills were sold in all colonies. East Tce was later changed to Paternoster Street to commemorate this important local industrialist of the 19th century. The Assistant Engineer for the construction of the railway Adelaide-Gawler railway, W Coulls purchased three blocks and built the Australian Heritage Listed Shirley Hall is on one of them with outbuildings, coach house and stables on the others. Shirley Hall was built just behind the old Wesleyan Church of 1858 with cellars and 7 main rooms and a separate kitchen in the outbuildings. The original brick and cast iron fence (made at James Martin foundry Gawler) still survives as does the original slate tiles. Coulls died in 1861 and the house had several owners before it was purchased by James Thompson in 1898. He renamed it Chelsea. Sir Jenkin Coles, Speaker of the South Australian parliament for the lower Mid North was a friend of James Thompson and often held political meetings at Chelsea House. The house was only sold out of the Thompson family in 1975. The nearby Wesleyan Methodist Church was built in Romanesque style in 1858. With the three Methodist churches union in 1900 all services were conducted in the former Wesleyan Church between 1900 and 1904 when repairs to Hephzibah were completed and Hebzibah then became the one and only Methodist church in Salisbury. Not long after 1904 this Wesleyan church was sold as a residence.
Paralowie. Paralowie House overlooks the Little Para River and the owner in 1894 had a fine stone Gate House and stone pillar gates built right on the edge of the river on Waterloo Corner Road. Paralowie House and this gate house was built in 1894 for Frank Russell an investor and farmer. His story is related above how he changed from dairying and cereal growing to orange and lemon orchards in 1890. The land on which Paralowie now stands was earlier owned by the Bagster family who sold it on in 1883. The Russells liked to host functions at their residence and it was reported in the press that the whole town attended celebrations here when Mafeking was successfully relived by the British forces in 1900 during the Boer War. Russells sold their Paralowie estate in 1917. A later resident of Paralowie House for many years was the state Coroner lawyer T.E.Cleland. Cleland lived at Salisbury and travelled to the Coroner’s Court by train daily rom Salisbury. Cleland served as Coroner from 1947 into the 1960s. Cleland was a pig breeder.
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Sunday, 25th June, 2017- Welcome Home
Wow. It is amazing to see how much was covered in one of the longest days of my life. Although I lost five hours due to the time change, today’s itinerary never ended. Exhausted, our adrenaline pushed us throughout the day, for I was SO EXCITED to be back visiting my favorite city in the entire world.
The day began by waking up to the stewards and stewardess waking everyone up from their bundled blankets and neck pillows as the sun rose at 4:59am in the Western European Time Zone (WET). As I am writing this blog, the sun is STILL up at 10:05pm, considering how far north I am currently situated. Making for long days, my friends and I want to take advantage of all of the daylight to explore the nook and crannies of Dublin that I have yet to explore.
Arriving into Dublin International Airport at 8:15am WET time, we taxied to the gate and disembarked. As soon as I entered the jetbridge, the cool, wet air of Ireland filled my lungs and immediately brought back nostalgia. I was so excited to be returning to my favorite country in the whole world. My friend Andrew, whom had flown on an earlier flight, was waiting at the terminal with ‘THE MACKELVEY CLAN’ written on a quarter sheet of paper as Alyssa, Zach, Kelly, Shaina, and I gathered our luggage. Leaving the airport, Zach, Kelly and I caught a cab to take us to Knocklyon while Alyssa, Andrew, and Shaina caught the 747 Bus into City Centre to their hostel.
As Zach, Kelly, and I entered the Taxi Queue, we met Shamus, our taxi driver. Driving taxis for over forty years and being born and raised in Dublin, Shamus was quite the character at 9:00am. He was surprised at how well Zach and I knew of the Emerald Isle as we explained our previous student teaching experience from a year and a half ago. As we discussed Ireland’s capital and largest city, I asked Shamus if he had any recommendations for pubs to visit. He responded, “No recommendations. If you can have two drinks, it’ll be a good pub.” Hahaha. We found that quite humorous.
30 minutes later, Zach, Kelly, and I arrived in Knocklyon thanks to Shamus. I was surprised how well I remembered exactly where to tell Shamus to go. I told him to go to the house with the navy blue Passat, but to our surprise there was no such vehicle-my host mum traded her vehicle in for a new black peugeot! Kay came running to the door as she saw Zach and I approach the door. It was a great reunion and I immediately loved hearing her accent again. She welcomed us inside to a homemade Irish Breakfast--complete with beans, bangers, tomatoes, toast and jam, and egg. It was absolutely delicious as we conversed with her and her daughter, Michelle, with her husband Adam. Buster, the family dog was also very eager to see us and he was barking up a storm and wagging his tail.
Kay showed us our rooms and then she left for a golf tournament as Zach, Kelly, and I took Buster around the estate and through Knocklyon on his lead. We made it back to the house in time to shower from the cool, damp weather before boarding the 15 Dublin Bus to City Centre--what memories we relived today. We disembarked on Anguier Street as we walked through the Temple Bar District and crossed the Ha’ Penny Bridge as we made our was to the Arlington Hotel to meet up with John and his wife Lidija, with grandson Padraig. John was the travel agent whom took Slippery Rock students on our adventure two years ago and we had a grand time catching up over braised beef and mash. It was absolutely delicious! John, being the kind Irishman he is, has such a big heart, he even paid for our entire meal. WHAT. A. GUY. We could not thank him enough. People in Ireland are so down to Earth and welcoming.
Next, the six of us departed the Arlington Hotel and walked 30 minutes up O’Connell Street to Parnell Street to go to Croke Park to watch Dublin Vs. Westmeath (pronounced Westmead) in the semi-finals of gaelic football. Being at Croke Park two years ago for an International Rules match between Ireland and Australia, it brought back great memories. We were a mere five rows from the field and loved the atmosphere with 33,000 Irish cheering on their cities.
Leaving Croke Park, we walked down to Henry Street, where we stopped at Penny’s (similar to J.C. Pennies) to begin our shopping. We then made our way to Parnell Street again, where we stopped at King Fisher for their famous Fish and Chips. Yes, believe it or not, I even had the fish and chips to try something new this evening. After dinner, we made our way back down Henry Street for some much needed Nino’s Gelato. It was a savory dish to conclude an exhausting day. We finished up by walking to South Side Dublin to see the Molly Malone statue, where Zach, Kelly, and I then caught the 15 bus back to Knocklyon to catch some shut eye.
Tomorrow is a HUGE day, for I am surprising my students with the help of my Principal to conclude their graduation from Primary School on their final day of school tomorrow. I am SO EAGER to see their reaction when I jump out from behind the bushes while they are playing football during yard. It is going to be priceless!
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A Tale of Two Lodges
A Tale of Two Lodges
Killua, County Westmeath was originally built in c.1780 as a regular three-storey classical house, before being transformed into a gothic castle fifty years later to the designs of James Pain. Two of its lodges represent these different periods and styles. That above is the Temple Lodge with its Ionic portico and high gabled pediment. Further along the former estate walls stands the Castle Gate…
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