HuffPost Australia By Bella Westaway
Images and oral histories chronicling Sydney’s historic Millers Point have been released for the first time, providing us with a fascinating look into the lives of local residents born as far back as 1915.
Hidden history in Sydney's Millers Point | The Saturday Paper
Millers Point Oral History Project Summary Report - Housing NSW
#Savemillerspoint
RESOURCED: http://www.huffingtonpost.com.au/2015/09/19/millers-point-history_n_8161594.html
View along Argyle St, Millers Point, 1955 | City of Sydney Archives |
The histories come as Millers Point residents are being forced to vacate their homes due to NSW Government plans to redevelop the area, where former public housing terraces are worth a small fortune.
Lord Mayor Clover Moore said the interviews paint a vivid picture of of life on Sydney’s working harbour.
“This is the community that built much of Sydney -- Millers Point is more than just a collection of old terraces with good views, it’s a strong, proud community, and their stories and their history matters,” the Lord Mayor said.
“These voices are an important part of the City’s oral history collection, which can now be accessed online so more people can learn about one of Sydney’s most resilient and historic precincts”.
Harry Lapham, a Millers Point resident born in 1915 recounts the stories of his childhood where you knew the names of the shopkeepers and tobacco wasn’t sold on Sundays.
“They were the days when they had used to have to measure the butter out, had the box of butter, wooden paddles, scoop it out and weigh it out on the scales, a half a pound or a pound of butter, whatever you wanted,” he said.
Under the state government's sell-off plan, more than 460 Millers Point residents will be relocated from 206 properties.
With the eviction date looming in March 2016, residents are standing strong, saying they will fight until the end to live in the homes many of their families have occupied for generations.
"It’s the only place I’ve ever known, this is where I grew up, this is my life. It will be a fight [to evict us] because we will have many many supporters. We don’t want violence, but we are prepared to go to jail," life long resident Barney Gardner told The Sydney Morning Herald.
Community Services Minister Gabrielle Upton said the sell-off is required to fund the construction of more public housing.
"This is a fair outcome. The proceeds from the sale … can make sure that we provide more homes for more tenants [and] invest in the upgrade of other public housing stock," she told The Sydney Morning Herald.
And because pictures tell a thousand words, here are some incredible images depicting life in Millers Point throughout the twentieth century.
More:
Lord Mayor Clover Moore said the interviews paint a vivid picture of of life on Sydney’s working harbour.
“This is the community that built much of Sydney -- Millers Point is more than just a collection of old terraces with good views, it’s a strong, proud community, and their stories and their history matters,” the Lord Mayor said.
“These voices are an important part of the City’s oral history collection, which can now be accessed online so more people can learn about one of Sydney’s most resilient and historic precincts”.
Harry Lapham, a Millers Point resident born in 1915 recounts the stories of his childhood where you knew the names of the shopkeepers and tobacco wasn’t sold on Sundays.
“They were the days when they had used to have to measure the butter out, had the box of butter, wooden paddles, scoop it out and weigh it out on the scales, a half a pound or a pound of butter, whatever you wanted,” he said.
Under the state government's sell-off plan, more than 460 Millers Point residents will be relocated from 206 properties.
With the eviction date looming in March 2016, residents are standing strong, saying they will fight until the end to live in the homes many of their families have occupied for generations.
"It’s the only place I’ve ever known, this is where I grew up, this is my life. It will be a fight [to evict us] because we will have many many supporters. We don’t want violence, but we are prepared to go to jail," life long resident Barney Gardner told The Sydney Morning Herald.
Community Services Minister Gabrielle Upton said the sell-off is required to fund the construction of more public housing.
"This is a fair outcome. The proceeds from the sale … can make sure that we provide more homes for more tenants [and] invest in the upgrade of other public housing stock," she told The Sydney Morning Herald.
And because pictures tell a thousand words, here are some incredible images depicting life in Millers Point throughout the twentieth century.
More:
Millers Point Oral History Project Summary Report - Housing NSW
#Savemillerspoint
RESOURCED: http://www.huffingtonpost.com.au/2015/09/19/millers-point-history_n_8161594.html
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