Glorious Days: Australia 1913 was an exhibition at the National Museum of Australia that contributed to the Centenary of Canberra celebrations and explored life in 1913. It used contemporary objects, photos, advertisements, paintings and toys; cars and trams vied for space in the exhibition, with figures dressed in the fashions of the period. And visitors had a chance to visit the 1913 cinema.
Two shipping events were highlighted. Firstly items from the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, which set out from Hobart in 1911 under Douglas Mawson, were on display and revealed the terrible conditions endured by Mawson and six of his men in 1913. More positively, ships like the eagerly-awaited Aurora arrived to huge rejoicing. The passage of Australia’s naval fleet through Sydney Heads was greeted as the highlight of the year: a sign of national maturity and of the capacity to fight a feared invasion from the north.
The year 1913 has been described as hinge-year, a year in which people embraced the modern world of automobiles, airplanes, gramophones, car assembly lines, simple cameras and cinema, even as attitudes from the past persisted. It was a year in which American audiences were first exposed to cubism and fauvism at The Armoury show in New York, and Parisian audiences were initially outraged and then won over by Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring.
On the verge of cataclysmic descent into total war, the Western world experienced a huge outpouring of energy, hopefulness and creativity. And Australia, a white outpost on the edge of Asia linked by blood and loyalty to the British Empire, experienced it too. The new Federal Capital City was named Canberra in 1913, realising Australia’s confident expectation of a glorious future.
Australia gloried in a marvellous climate and outdoor leisure activities and sports. Despite a small population, Australia enjoyed great success in the world’s sporting arena, and our sporting prowess enhanced our national prestige. Everyone on the planet knew the achievements of well-known sports people like Annette Kellerman, Fanny Durack (both in swimming) and Victor Trumper (cricket).
Australia’s many innovations in the areas of human rights, health and social responsibility made it a leader of the Western world. Universal suffrage had been in place for years, although mandatory voting by every adult citizen did not start until the state of Queensland brought in legislation in 1915. Educational standards were improving with the creation of universal & free high schools, and the creation of the country’s first free university in Western Australia. But for all its revolutionary advances, Australia in 1913 enthusiastically embraced the White Australia policy and many people had negative attitudes to anyone who was not of British extraction, including to Indigenous Australians.
The exhibition Glorious Days: Australia 1913 ended in October 2013. Achievements and ambitions that have been overshadowed for nearly a century by the outbreak of the Great War can be rediscovered in the truly beautiful book by the same name, edited by Michelle Hetherington. I had to put my young grandchildren onto the labour market to pay for it, but it was worth every penny.
**
I thought the book Glorious Days: Australia 1913 was published just for me! The Edwardian era is my all-time favourite era in history and the first wave of feminists are my heroes. But the women’s movement only gets a couple of pages in the book and Vida Goldstein gets only four microscopic mentions. So I had to rely on the Australian Dictionary of Biography instead.
Vida Goldstein (1869-1949) was born in rural Victoria to parents who were involved in political movements and social justice. Her mother was a suffragist, a religious teetotaller and worked for social reform. The Goldsteins moved to Melbourne in 1877 for the four daughters’ education. When The Depression hit during the early 1890s, Vida and her sisters ran a prep school to help the family’s finances.
Vida’s main interest throughout the 1890s was her school and urban social causes, work that gave her first-hand experience of women's social and economic disadvantages. It wasn’t until the turn of the century that Vida Goldstein took on a much greater organising and lobbying role in the women’s movement.
The year after Australian Federation in 1901, the government of the newly formed Commonwealth of Australia allowed women to vote in all national elections (although not yet in three of the state elections). From this position of strength, Goldstein travelled to the USA in 1902, speaking at an international suffrage conference and giving evidence before the still rather anti-woman USA Congress.
With the support of the newly formed Women's Federal Political Association, Vida stood for Parliament in 1903, becoming the first woman in the entire British Empire to do so. She failed, so she instead concentrated on a] female education and political organisation and b] her monthly journal the Australian Women's Sphere. In 1911 Goldstein visited the UK on behalf of the Women's Social and Political Union. Her speeches around the mother country, a place where women did not have the vote, drew huge crowds.
In the pre-war years, the recurrent themes in her writings were her visionary suggestions for a new social order; it was to have a spiritual foundation and be based on the brotherhood-of-man concept of true socialism and on Christian ethics. Vida sympathised deeply with labour and the cause of working peoples.
Vida formed the Women's Peace Army in 1915. Then she recruited Emmeline Pankhurst's daughter Adela Pankhurst, who had recently emigrated to Australia, as an organiser throughout World War One. Vida stood for parliament many times (1903, 1910, 1913, 1914 and 1917) until the middle of the war, the last time on the principle of international and individual pacifism.
Long after Federation and universal suffrage had been won in Australia, Goldstein actively lobbied parliament and wrote journal articles on women’s most pressing issues such as equality of property rights, birth control and the creation of a system of children's courts. What a woman!
Two shipping events were highlighted. Firstly items from the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, which set out from Hobart in 1911 under Douglas Mawson, were on display and revealed the terrible conditions endured by Mawson and six of his men in 1913. More positively, ships like the eagerly-awaited Aurora arrived to huge rejoicing. The passage of Australia’s naval fleet through Sydney Heads was greeted as the highlight of the year: a sign of national maturity and of the capacity to fight a feared invasion from the north.
The year 1913 has been described as hinge-year, a year in which people embraced the modern world of automobiles, airplanes, gramophones, car assembly lines, simple cameras and cinema, even as attitudes from the past persisted. It was a year in which American audiences were first exposed to cubism and fauvism at The Armoury show in New York, and Parisian audiences were initially outraged and then won over by Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring.
On the verge of cataclysmic descent into total war, the Western world experienced a huge outpouring of energy, hopefulness and creativity. And Australia, a white outpost on the edge of Asia linked by blood and loyalty to the British Empire, experienced it too. The new Federal Capital City was named Canberra in 1913, realising Australia’s confident expectation of a glorious future.
Australia gloried in a marvellous climate and outdoor leisure activities and sports. Despite a small population, Australia enjoyed great success in the world’s sporting arena, and our sporting prowess enhanced our national prestige. Everyone on the planet knew the achievements of well-known sports people like Annette Kellerman, Fanny Durack (both in swimming) and Victor Trumper (cricket).
Huge suffragette demonstration
London, pre-WW1
Australians offering support to their sisters in the mother land.
In addition to the inauguration of Canberra, 1913 also saw the final section of the Trans-Australian Railway built, early plans to harness and protect the water resources of the Murray River Basin and the printing of the Commonwealth of Australia’s first stamps and bank notes.
Australia’s many innovations in the areas of human rights, health and social responsibility made it a leader of the Western world. Universal suffrage had been in place for years, although mandatory voting by every adult citizen did not start until the state of Queensland brought in legislation in 1915. Educational standards were improving with the creation of universal & free high schools, and the creation of the country’s first free university in Western Australia. But for all its revolutionary advances, Australia in 1913 enthusiastically embraced the White Australia policy and many people had negative attitudes to anyone who was not of British extraction, including to Indigenous Australians.
The exhibition Glorious Days: Australia 1913 ended in October 2013. Achievements and ambitions that have been overshadowed for nearly a century by the outbreak of the Great War can be rediscovered in the truly beautiful book by the same name, edited by Michelle Hetherington. I had to put my young grandchildren onto the labour market to pay for it, but it was worth every penny.
**
I thought the book Glorious Days: Australia 1913 was published just for me! The Edwardian era is my all-time favourite era in history and the first wave of feminists are my heroes. But the women’s movement only gets a couple of pages in the book and Vida Goldstein gets only four microscopic mentions. So I had to rely on the Australian Dictionary of Biography instead.
Vida Goldstein (1869-1949) was born in rural Victoria to parents who were involved in political movements and social justice. Her mother was a suffragist, a religious teetotaller and worked for social reform. The Goldsteins moved to Melbourne in 1877 for the four daughters’ education. When The Depression hit during the early 1890s, Vida and her sisters ran a prep school to help the family’s finances.
Vida’s main interest throughout the 1890s was her school and urban social causes, work that gave her first-hand experience of women's social and economic disadvantages. It wasn’t until the turn of the century that Vida Goldstein took on a much greater organising and lobbying role in the women’s movement.
The year after Australian Federation in 1901, the government of the newly formed Commonwealth of Australia allowed women to vote in all national elections (although not yet in three of the state elections). From this position of strength, Goldstein travelled to the USA in 1902, speaking at an international suffrage conference and giving evidence before the still rather anti-woman USA Congress.
With the support of the newly formed Women's Federal Political Association, Vida stood for Parliament in 1903, becoming the first woman in the entire British Empire to do so. She failed, so she instead concentrated on a] female education and political organisation and b] her monthly journal the Australian Women's Sphere. In 1911 Goldstein visited the UK on behalf of the Women's Social and Political Union. Her speeches around the mother country, a place where women did not have the vote, drew huge crowds.
In the pre-war years, the recurrent themes in her writings were her visionary suggestions for a new social order; it was to have a spiritual foundation and be based on the brotherhood-of-man concept of true socialism and on Christian ethics. Vida sympathised deeply with labour and the cause of working peoples.
Vida formed the Women's Peace Army in 1915. Then she recruited Emmeline Pankhurst's daughter Adela Pankhurst, who had recently emigrated to Australia, as an organiser throughout World War One. Vida stood for parliament many times (1903, 1910, 1913, 1914 and 1917) until the middle of the war, the last time on the principle of international and individual pacifism.
Vida Goldstein standing for a senate seat
The poster does not say which year, so probably 1910
Long after Federation and universal suffrage had been won in Australia, Goldstein actively lobbied parliament and wrote journal articles on women’s most pressing issues such as equality of property rights, birth control and the creation of a system of children's courts. What a woman!