"I have another duty, equally sacred, a duty to myself " Dora: A Doll's House, Henrik Ibsen,1879 1. Welcome to Our Foremothers - "Here is one story ..." 2. First Owners 3. Sara and Sheyda Rimmer 4. Smythesdale Goldfields 5. The Egalitarian Idea 6. A Fair Go 7. Going Backwards 8. Running Free 9. Women Were Not Quiet 10. Building Peace at Home WW1 11. A World Not Fit For Heroes 12. Another War - WW2 13. Howard's Way - the 1950's 14. A Life Well Spent Our Foremothers is published by |
4. SMYTHESDALE GOLDFIELDS On this page: SOCIAL STORY – Sarah’s birthplace Smythesdale grew out of, and existed, to service the goldfields. For women and children life could be both exciting and very, very, hard. Three years before Sarah was born the ratio of females to males in Victoria was 64% - there were just over 6 women where there were 10 men. The ratio at goldfields was even lower, so women could be quite isolated. They usually lost contact with their extended families by coming here. There was mail, of course, but if you are worried about your baby you don’t want to wait for many months for a reply. Also, nearly everyone at the goldfields was young, so women not only had few women and no family to help them when they were giving birth and rearing their children, they often had no older people to turn to for advice. Women and children were often left alone with their children in the towns and cities while their men were off at the diggings. Sometimes they made the best of the situation by refusing to marry and by joining the men. Mrs Edward Lacy Evans, called ‘The Sandhurst Impersonator’, was reported as working as a man for nearly 20 years on the goldfields. This sketch (probably a lino cut) was in the Age.
A WOMAN?
Men kept on disappearing. They went away to look for gold or other work and lost touch. It even happened they simply fell down mine shafts and that was the end of them. Sometimes they went away to earn a living and it didn’t work out - the gold wasn’t there, or the investment collapsed. There were many ways things might not work out. |