Notes
from our Files of 1905 16
January 1941 Catholic Freeman's Journal (Sydney) |
Wine Industry The establishment of the wine industry
in New South Wales was sketched in the 'Freeman' of June, 1905, and
the part taken by the Fallon family in the business is described in
the article. It appears that the founder of
the firm, Mr. J. T. Fallon, came to Australia in the late '40's of
last century, and after carrying on business in Victoria for some years
invited his brother, Mr. P. E. Fallon, who was then in America, to
join him in the enterprise. Eventually attention was given to
wine growing and a property was secured at Albury, N.S.W. in 1865. Here work was commenced, and the
deep ploughing necessary for grape cultivation was commenced. The vine trenches had to be 24 inches
in depth, and this was made possible by the employment of a special
plough some 12 feet long drawn by a team of 30 bullocks. The old
firm is still a familiar name in the Australian wine trade. Mr.
James Gormly In an early issue of June the old
paper gives the life story of one of the State's sturdy pioneers. It tells how Mr. James Gormly, M.L.C.,
coming from Ireland in1840, had a long and varied career in Australia. Hardships and many vicissitudes
contributed towards the development of an unusual character. With his parents, he settled at
Nangus, near Gundagai in '44, and it was only natural that with the discovery
of gold in '51 he should follow the rush. In 1852 with two of his brothers
he returned to Gundagai in order to take a draft of their father's stock
to the Victorian gold fields. Just as they were about to start on
the droving expedition a great flood swept down the Murrumbidgee. A trail of death and desolation was
left behind and more than 100 of the inhabitants were drowned. Of the Gormly family of seven,
only James and an elder brother escaped. These two swam a long distance, and then,
climbed into the branches of a tree, where they had to remain a night
and tho best part of a day before being rescued. Mr. Gormly's
interests were many and wide; he was successful in business, where his activities
ranked from mail contracting to grazing on a large scale. Sport, too, claimed his attention,
and he had the credit of riding winners in several amateur events. As an owner he won twenty-two
events with his horse, Camel. In the sphere of politics he was
a member of the Legislative Assembly for twenty years, and on his
retirement from that chamber he was appointed to the Upper House,
retaining the position until his death. Throughout his life he was a sterling Catholic and was one of the first to
subscribe towards the erection of a church in Wagga fifty years ago
(that would be 86 years from now). Foundation
Stones Foundation Stones of Early Catholic
Churches. .... Coming to N.S.W. we see the foundation
stone of a Catholic Church laid at Goulburn by Father Therry in 1841 but never built on. This foundation was there as late as
1848 and formed one of the police boundaries of the township in that
year. This locality was described by
Surveyor R. Govett some years previous to
1841. Another foundation stone that was never
built on was that laid at Mumell, near
Goulburn, in 1834. Now within the tower of the four
walls of Mary's Mount Monastery, Goulburn, hangs the first peal of bells
ever erected over a monastery in the Southern Hemisphere, or what C. Harpur termed 'our matchless Southern Heavens.' Those old Southern Districts remind
one of some of the earliest Inns that stood on the Great South Road
in the days of Archbishop Polding. Notable among these were the old
Woolpack Inn, West Bargo; the old Harrows Inn, 6 miles the Sydney side
of Goulburn on the Great South Road, erected in 1837. Another early foundation of a
Catholic Church was the one that was there at Cowra in1839. A traveller recorded Cowra in
1859: 'Twelve miles further, passing a solitary shepherd's hut brings
you to the village of Cowra on the green banks of the Lachlan,
where the foundation stone of a Catholic Church has been laid.' |