The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
A moment of mass defiance and 36 years of celebration


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A hidden Valentines Day story

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Chinatown

"Slippers made of plaited straw, slippers made of felt, high slippers, low slippers, slippers old and new - so Chinatown shuffles. Life moves leisurely here - nods behind dark counters, glides like shadows in a phantom show in still darker and more remote interiors...Orientals, old, young, middle-aged, mysteriously come and go, out of everywhere into nowhere. Up and down passages that are labyrinthian they appear and fade with a facility that baffles the Western mind.”It wasn’t until the 1940s that Sydneysiders decided to be adventurous and sample some of the food offerings that Chinatown had to offer. Which is amusing considering how fundamental Chinese cuisine is to life in Sydney today. An article in the Sunday Herald from 1949 noted the importance of this cultural centre in Sydney as a marker of the city’s sophistication, saying the Chinese are "a quiet-living, hard-working people, but in Chinatown they meet to dine and dance and play."

- Sydney Silhouettes, 24 November, 1923, The Brisbane Courier (Qld, 1864-1933), p 18
- SYDNEY'S CHINATOWN, 20 February 1923, Western Argus (Kalgoorlie, WA, 1916-1938), p 9
- SYDNEY CHINATOWN, 11 August 1930, Townsville Daily Bulletin (Qld, 1885- 954), p 6
- CHINATOWN, 29 May, 1949, The Sunday Herald Supplement (Sydney, NSW, 1949-1953), p 1
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Sydney welcomes the Year of the Horse

Celebrations often made it into mainstream press. The opening of the Chinese temples in Alexandria and Glebe were reported and older residents in Botony recalled lion dances up Botany Road until the 1930s.
The refurbishment of Chinatown as a tourist destination in the 1980s made the Chinese New Year a Sydney-wide event with festivities spreading to suburbs including Cabramatta, Parramatta and Hurstville. You can read Terri McCormack's article on Chinese New Year here in the Dictionary. Next week the Dictionary welcomes historian Nicole Cama to the chair, joining Tim for a slice of Sydney history on Breakfast with Tim Higgins on 2SER. Don't forget to tune in to 107.9 at 8:20am.Categories
Snow in Sydney?!



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Anniversary day

Most countries and colonies have their peculiar annual rejoicings, but we know of none where a greater abandonment to pleasure and diversion is evinced than in Sydney on the 26th of January.OK so this might be an exaggeration. But it does capture the spirit of how Sydneysiders celebrated Anniversary Day throughout the 19th century. The celebration has always been a bit fraught with evocations of the penal colony, convict origins, invasion. For the other Australian colonies, it was just the birthday of New South Wales, not the celebration of a nation. Despite these debates in the papers throughout the nineteenth century, the majority of Sydneysiders just enjoyed a public holiday in the summer. A day of relaxation and good times. The first regular official event was the Anniversary sailing regatta on Sydney Harbour. This started in 1837, and continues today. In time, enterprising publicans and pleasure ground proprietors provided a wide range of Anniversary entertainment, incidental to the regatta. Picnics around the harbour at pleasure grounds were popular, particularly group excursions. Anniversary Day horse races were held at Homebush in the 1840s. Interclub cricket matches and organised athletic sports were popular too. Thousands watched the hammer-throwing, and the foot, pony and velocipede [bicycle] races at the Albert Ground, Redfern, in January 1869. In the 1880s and 1890s Moore Park's Zoological Gardens also drew large Anniversary crowds. Federation in 1901 brought a more profound sense of nationhood, but it wasn't until 1935 that all the Australian states and territories use the name 'Australia Day' to mark the 26th January. And it was not until extremely recently, 1994, that the states and territories began to celebrate Australia Day consistently as a public holiday on that date. What are you doing on Anniversary Day? Lisa is going along to Yabun, or Survival Day celebrations in Victoria Park with the Aboriginal community. We all love a public holiday but this one has lots historical and cultural baggage. Whatever you do on the 26th January, spare a moment for the history of the day. Abandon yourself to "pleasure and diversion" but enjoy responsibly.
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Thomas Gale, aeronaut extraordinaire

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A cracker of a night

Shops generally stayed open, with their shop fronts and verandah posts still decorated, from Christmas, with bushes and lit with Chinese lanterns. King Street held the biggest crowd on the first New Year's Eve. This was due to its proximity to the arcades, such as the Strand Arcade and the Sydney Arcade, which were full to overflowing with straw-hatted office workers. At the Haymarket end of George Street were the working people.

On the eve of 1940 the site of the celebrations shifted. On 31 December 1939, authorities were completely taken by surprise when the New Year's Eve crowd suddenly appeared in Kings Cross. It rapidly gained a sense of tradition and remained the festival's centre until the introduction of fireworks at Circular Quay.
The eve of 1977 saw the first fireworks at Circular Quay. Throughout the 1980s there was problems with violence, and there were no fireworks to herald in 1988. From 1989 onwards, fireworks became a family affair and were embedded as the traditional way for Sydney to celebrate New Year's Eve.
To find out more about the crazy antics of Sydneysiders on New Year's Eve, take a look at Hannah Forsyth's article in the Dictionary.
I'll be talking about Sydney summer traditions and celebrations all through January. So tune in to 2SER at 8.20am each Wednesday to get your history fix.
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Thank you and happy holiday reading

- Anna Clark and Paul Ashton (eds), Australian History Now, NewSouth Publishing
- Rennie Ellis, Decade: 1970-1980, Hardie Grant Books & State Library of Victoria
- Ian Hoskins, Coast: A History of the New South Wales Edge, Angus & Robertson
- Meredith Lake, Faith in Action: Hammondcare, NewSouth Publishing
- Iain McCalman, The Reef – Passionate History, Penguin Australia
- Garry Wotherspoon, The Sydney Mechanics School of Arts: A History, SMSA

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The little Sydney rock


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