xenith: (Fairy Tree)
Two lovely ladies, or the death masks of, from Old Melbourne Gaol



Frances Knorr (left)

People like Frances and Rudolph Knorr found life desperately hard in Melbourne during the 1890s Depression. Jobs were scarce, there was no state welfare and it was difficult to avoid becoming involved in petty crime.

When Rudolph Knorr was sent to prison in February 1892 for selling furniture being bought on hire purchase, his wife was left pregnant and penniless. She managed by 'baby farming' - looking after children whose mothers could not care for them.

In September the bodies of three babies were discovered in Brunswick. They were buried in the gardens of two houses Frances Knorr had rented. She was arrested and sent for trial in December.
The Weekly Times described the 23 year-old woman as "white and careworn".

The public was deeply divided when Knorr was sentenced to be executed. The hangman, Thomas Jones, committed suicide two days before the event. His wife had threatened to leave him if he hanged Mrs Knorr.


Australian Dictionary of Biography
Newspaper accounts, via Trove
Wikipedia


Martha Needle (right)

Martha Needle was an attractive woman with a kindly disposition. Her friends were shocked when it was discovered she had poisoned her husband, daughters and prospective brother-in-law.

Needle was bornin Port Adelaiode in 1864 and grew up in a violent and abusive household. She showed signs of mental instability as an adolescent, but grew into a beautiful young woman and married Henry Needle when she was seventeen.

The Needles and their first child Mabel moved to Melbourne in 1885. They settled in Cubitt Street, Richmond where May and Elsie were born. By 1891 Henry Needle and the girls were dead.


Newspaper accounts, via Trove
Wikipedia



(Text in italics is from information panels at Melbourne Gaol.)
xenith: (Fairy Tree)
These are from a display of women's stuff at a gun show. Taken through glass, with lights above that reflected off the glass, so not very good photos.

I'll let the labels provide the descriptions (and assume their owner has the details right). I can read the labels all right but at a different resolution they might be a bit harder. I'll transcribe them if they're too hard to read.



I like the little pistol on the right.


Read more... )
xenith: (Fairy Tree)
Here's one I haven't used before :)



Sherwood Hall at Latrobe, home to "Thomas Johnson, a pioneer and settler who began life in Van Dieman's Land as a convict and his wife Dolly Dalrymple Briggs, the first part aboriginal".

Australian Dictionary of Biography

Bridging the cultural divide with Dolly Dalrymple
xenith: (Fairy Tree)
It's late and I should be in bed, so I'm cheating.



Photos of outside
Photos of inside (plus a squirrel)
Information on site from Parks & Wildlife
More information from the Female Factory website

It was that or nothing. But in return, later in the month I shall write up something about the Cascades site, which I have somehow managed to avoid doing a post on at all. Huh.
xenith: (Fairy Tree)
Not a very good photo, but it's an exhibit from the Victoria Police Museum



From the panel below:

Cap
When Alma Aldersea joined the Police Force in March 1945 women were issued special 'PW' badge numbers rather than the unique individual numbers given to male officers. These numbers could be re-issued to other females when the original owner left the Force as was routinely expected. Alma's badge, PW9, can be seen on this cap. After Alma married and resigned her badge was issued to three more policewomen - the last in 1975.

Instructions to Police Reservists and Police Auxiliary Force Official Pocket Book
Victoria Police Women's Auxiliary members were issued with these documents during World War II. During World War II, due to the shortage of men who were away on war duties, women were enrolled in the Victoria Police Woman's Auxiliary and carried out supporting administrative duties. They were not full members of the Police Force and most left at the end of the war.

Photo
I can't read all of the caption, but Madge O'Conner was one of Victoria's first police woman, appointed as a 'police agent' in 1917.

Some quick links:

The Journal for Women and Policing (PDF) Issue 11 has a section "Australian and New Zealand History of Women in Policing", a state by state account.

South Australia Police Historical Society: Women Police and Women Police in South Australia Celebrating 90 years
xenith: (Fairy Tree)
Home Hill in Devonport is known as the home of former Prime Minister, Joseph Lyons, but his wife Enid lived there for another forty years after he died.


In 1943, Enid was the first woman elected to the House of Represaenatives making her, along with Dorothy Tangney (elected to the Senate), the first woman elected to the Australian parliament.

Now there's a lot I could write (and I have done a little before) but there's also a lot already written by people who've done it better so I'll pick out some of the more interesting links for you to read instead.

More )

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