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Glenorie
Part
Two
Interviewee:
Ray Whiteman, born 1933
Interviewer:
Frank Heimans,
for
Baulkham Hills Shire Council
Date of Interview:
7th June, 2006
Transcription:
Kevin Murray, Nov 2006
How
did it feel to be such a small community fairly isolated without all the
service that people take for granted today, in those days?
We never
missed it, it was a little bit harder if somebody did get sick because
there were no doctors, eventually there was a doctor started at Dural
and then with the doctor coming well then there was a chemist eventually
came and eventually there was a chemist in Glenorie and there still is
now. The old fashioned home remedies were very good, probably less worries
with the things that Mum had learned from her parents, lemon and honey
was great for a cold.
Right
and did she always have the Vicks ready for your chest?
Oh that was
still there, yes (laughs).
Any
old wives tales recipes that you remember any particular cures?
No, lemon
and honey was a beauty and I still use lemon and honey.
Well
it seems to work?
Yes it does.
Let’s
talk about your involvement with the scout movement because that was really
a big part of your life? So when did you first become involved ?
I was asked
if I would consider doing that in ’53 I did training and we opened a scout
troop in Glenorie in March ’54 and we started that in the local Memorial
Hall. Later on the committee found a property and we built a hall and
headquarters on that and that was a really good set up. We had nine acres,
there was a creek going through it and areas where the boys could camp,
it was a good spot.
You
built the scout hall didn’t you?
Yeah I was
involved.
Tell
me about your involvement in that and who built it and so on?
Well the
scouting started with a committee, Ted Saville and Reg Thomas who were
president and secretary and they looked around and found property that
we were able to acquire. It was Crown land and the association leased
that on that with the help of others particularly Ken Hitchcock and Dennis
Wilshire(?) and the Hughes family to build a hall and extend it and so
it went.
Was
it a volunteer effort for the community to build that?
Oh yes definitely
there was a certain amount that was paid but there was an awful lot that
was voluntary.
What
got you interested in the scout movement?
I was asked
if I would do it and I said “yes” and so I was bunged into it and I’ve
never regretted it because the Scout Association is a beaut organisation
for young people and it’s been an awful sad time when it’s now not functioning.
From
which areas did you draw your boys, scouts.
Glenorie.
Just
from Glenorie, there were enough kids there to make a sizeable group?
Yes, yes
there was over the years I shifted and so when I was down at Wisemans
Ferry I used to bring boys from there and from Maroota so that I would
have a station wagon full of boys by the time I got to Glenorie but it
was good, really good.
What
do you think the decline is due to?
Two reasons
the advent of television, computers these sort of things change young
people’s interests, hobbies that sort of thing and of course it’s harder
now to get people to take on the role of being a leader.
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Hills District Tennis Association courts at Glenorie 1956
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many other commitments I suppose they have like sporting commitments?
Well there
are far more sporting teams and activities these days than there was when
we set out in Glenorie there were two sporting groups that was cricket
and tennis and they were the only team games that were available at that
stage. Since then we’ve got new sporting ovals and lots of facilities,
we’re able to get to places easier and Mum’s taxi service to get the boys
to this particular venue for playing hockey or cricket or whatever, yes
it makes a big difference.
This
project is very interested in the change to the suburb as I’ve already
mentioned. What to you think have been the biggest changes to life in
Glenorie since you were young?
I think it’s
just been a gradual change and it’s probably been in most communities
that there’s a change because vehicles change, the economy of young people
had changed. They can buy a vehicle to get to work because it’s hard although
there’s a bus running, so that changes life and as I’ve mentioned the
sporting, the falling off of orchards generally from Glenorie they’ve
all had a changing effect.
You
think that Glenorie is now a better place than it used to be or not, what’s
your feeling on that?
I won’t say
it’s better but it is different, we’re no longer on the end of the electricity,
we’re no longer on the end of the phones and we’re no longer on the end
of the bitumen road, the roads are improving so that makes a big change
and then of course all the entertainment that comes with TV’s, computers,
mobile phones and all that sort of thing, they all have a change in community
life and whilst they may be handy I’m not sure that they’re all changes
for the better.
Ray
what have been some of the changes in shopping in the area?
Well one
of the early changes would be the starting of what was known as the Glenorie
Cooperative which was made up of people that farmed in the district and
they set up a store which would be where they could buy fertilisers, packing
cases and those sort of things and that’s over the time it’s developed
and became quite a large store. Also in that same building we got a grocery
store, later on there was another couple of shops and we got a chemist
and eventually we got a few more shops being built, we got a butcher,
a newsagent and hairdresser a real estate came into the area and more
recently we’ve had the Glenorie Mall set up where we had the other shops
such as, we’ve now got a pizza a new chemist a couple of beauticians.
A new newsagent increased in size and also the cake shop that used to
be on Post Office Road a small one there that’s increased in size. We
have a very good service with the bakery. At the moment we’re pretty well
served.
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Glenorie shops c1980
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sort of businesses have come to the area?
There has
been some that have come out to work with the building and maintenance
of tractors and that sort of thing. When we first are talking of what
was here in Glenorie, there was no actual or very, very small service
station and later on we got a good garage and service station with mechanics
and all that. We’ve had a vet move into the district and we’re very grateful
to have that facility, we’ve had other businesses come in that were factories
dealing with livestock needs, medications, the feeds and that sort of
thing were being made here in Glenorie. Over the years we’ve had a number
of nurseries that have started up all of those have added to the facilities
of the district giving work.
You’ve
even got a business haven’t you that specialises in providing details
of service personnel.
Yes medals
that started up to give families the opportunity to have a photographic
and other record for their parents or their Dad who may have been in any
of the wars and that’s a bonza little shop and very handy to have, they
do a very good job.
From
what you’ve just told me with all this extra activity in shops, when you
look at Glenorie of your youth which was a pretty rural community would
you say it’s still a rural community or has it changed?
No it still
has a rural aspect but percentage wise it’s very much smaller and they’ve
been subdivisions that have been made one on the Hornsby side and one
on the Baulkham Hills side and that’s brought a lot of straight residential
situation where people are just on a small house block and they are either
going to retire or have retired or they’re young families and they’ll
all be travelling away to work.
So
is it more like a suburban community now?
In those
two areas it’s quite suburbia but in the areas beyond that they then become
what we know as rural residential, which might be a five acres block or
sometimes a bit smaller which means that the owners have got somewhere
to run a horse or whatever.
Let’s
talk a bit about the Memorial Hall that’s at Glenorie on Old Northern
Road. What’s been your connection with that hall?
Initially
it was there just as a facility for the community but as time went by
I took an interest in it and found that the two people that were running
it needed a little extra support so I volunteered and out of that I’ve
become the president of the committee. I guess I’ve been instrumental
in making new moves that have happened with the hall in that I now have
a photographic history of Glenorie based on the 1940’s, 1950’s and we
have there over 160 photos that are all A4size framed and permanently
on the wall along with about six aerial photos showing what Glenorie did
look like from the air. Most of the photos were taken from the air in
about 1988 in that era.
What
made you decide to start collecting all those historical photographs Ray?
I can’t say
what actually started me thinking but I thought well this is a Memorial
Hall maybe it should be a memorial also to the history of Glenorie so
I asked what some of the people thought about it and from that I started
to borrow photos had them enlarged, framed them, hung them and gave the
originals back again. So we’ve got this history of Glenorie. I must admit
the first time we opened the hall I thought we’d be lucky to get anybody
there. We opened the doors at ten people came in soon after and started
to immediately look at the photos and suddenly it all became worthwhile
because they became totally involved “do you remember this, do you remember
that? Oh that’s that one. So it was all good.
Where
did you find all those photographs?
I’m still
finding them, I’m still asking for more and people will visit here and
realise that I think I’ve got some photos at home so they start to rummage
round and I get the use of those and give them back and so it grows.
Has
the hall also been used as a kindergarten in the past?
It has been
used as a kindergarten over the years as an adjunct to the school and
it was set up with the fences and that sort of thing to keep the movement
of the children limited. It’s been used as a classroom for the school
over the years until such time as another classroom was moved on site
or extra buildings were put up. Then more recently it’s been used as a
playgroup, as an area for that so yes it gets used.
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Glenorie ANZAC Day March 1964
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the Progress Association use that hall at all?
We did meet
there but they chose to move to the RSL Club. We still use it we had a
very beaut day on Australia Day this year but mainly because it’s the
centenary year for both Hornsby and Baulkham Hills. We were asked if we
would do something so we decided to put on a small sit down dinner and
we did that for about fifty odd guests and that was a very beaut time
and that was an activity that the Progress Association put on. We had
some members from the RSL Club particularly those who were members of
the Progress Association. We had a flag raising ceremony at the Memorial
and then they moved in and we had a sit down lunch.
What
position do you hold in the Progress Association, Ray?
At the moment
I’m president.
This
is your first term as president?
No, I’ve
been president for quite a while, I wasn’t the initial president but I’ve
been at it for quite a few years. There was a move by a group because
they didn’t want another phone tower down in the park, but they got their
way and then pulled out and I was voted back in and have been going since.
What
have been some of the threats that, have confronted the lifestyle of the
people around the district, any external influences?
Probably
the biggest one that I can think about was when there was talk of putting
an airport at Galston that brought in some protests, public meeting both
at Galston and Glenorie. Then there was another time when they wanted
to make a mausoleum on the Old Northern Road there was public outcry about
that. As I’ve mentioned the move to put the phone towers for the mobile
phones they’ve been time when people have rallied. Also when there was
a move by a developer to put in quite a large project of town houses and
the community felt that these were not in the interests of Glenorie as
it was at that stage and probably as it still is and so the Progress Association
was restarted again and it’s from then that it’s kept going and I’m still
president.
Is
it likely that a lot more development is going to take place at Glenorie?
At this stage
a developer, an owner has permission to go ahead and put in more shops
and flats and town houses but for private reasons he’s backed off at the
moment. Provided there isn’t a time limit that permissions has been given.
It was given on the understanding that sewerage would come to Glenorie.
There also was talk by one of the owners which we would certainly back
for a village situation to go in, but that hasn’t happened because of
no sewerage.
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Glenorie War Memorial south of Memorial Hall Old Northern Road 2009
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So
how do you see the future of Glenorie if you look ahead twenty years or
so what do you see?
Personally
I’d like to see it stay as it is perhaps with just a slow increase but
who knows what’s going to happen. The way things are moving out from Parramatta,
out from Castle Hill, out from Dural it would seem that there will be
a gradual development more need for subdivisions and it will become more
of a rural residential area than it is at the moment.
Would
you like to see Glenorie become a suburb like Cherrybrook with lots of
houses in it. Is that what the people want?
Is that a
personal question? No but there obviously are some that would like that
because that means that with more people in the district they’ve got a
chance of increasing their businesses and that covers all the businesses
when you’ve got more people here.
Then
there are other people who want to see it stay exactly as it is. Is that
right?
Yeah definitely.
Which
category do you fall into Ray?
As it is
I guess that’s because I’m probably the older generation but don’t call
me old.
Well
we’re coming to the end of our interview Ray, are there any other comments
that you want to make or anything else you want to put on record while
we’re talking?
Well since
we’ve talked about the hall I probably should mention that I’ve taken
pretty much of an interest in the park that is next to the hall and over
the years since 2002 we’ve made the park look something that people should
be proud of through the Progress Association. We’ve spoken to councils
on both sides and we’ve had them to plant the Eucalyptus “Summer Red”
which is a grafted tree from the West Australian Red Flowering Gum and
we’ve put quite a number of those along the roadside and that’s been greatly
accepted and appreciated by the community and it will in the years to
come provided we get the opportunity to do what we want to do and that’s
increase that we’ll really make quite a mark for Glenorie along the lines
that some of the towns have with the Jacarandas and the Tibouchinas so
I’m looking forward if I have the lifespan to see it. But one thing I’d
like to mention with the use of the hall was the 2002 bushfires. The hall
became a collection point for relief for clothing and furniture for all
the things that people lost because Glenorie particularly Forest Glen
were badly hit by it. Forest Glen we lost about sixteen or eighteen homes
and the whole of the Hills area lost about forty I believe. The hall was
where people responded and brought food and clothing and that was really
a credit to the community of Glenorie, it got to the stage where we had
to say no more. We ended up with so much that we had to have a garage
type sale and did some selling off and then took them to charity. But
that was a real good use of the hall.
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