 |

Dawn Matthews
Interviewee:
Dawn Matthews, born 1947
Interviewer: Frank Heimans,
for Baulkham Hills Shire Council
Date of Interview: 1 Aug 2001
Transcription: Catherine Sapir, May, 2006 |
History
of the Orange Blossom Festival
Founded
in 1959, the Orange Blossom Festival had its roots in a humble Footpath
and Garden Competition. The following year a one day festival was combined
with this competition. In September 1969 Council held a 10 day Orange
Blossom Festival in conjunction with the Footpath and Garden Competition
to “stimulate the social, cultural and sporting activities within the
Shire”. This then became an annual event. The festival name stemmed from
the beginnings of the Hills District and recognised the importance of
agriculture, particularly the citrus industry, to the region especially
in the 19th century. George Suttor of Baulkham Hills was the first person
to sell oranges commercially in Sydney in 1806. In the 1890s Bella Vista
Farm was one of the leading producers of citrus in NSW. In 1995 the Orange
Blossom Festival Board developed the concept of an awards program for
youth called the Excellence in Youth Awards. This represented a revision
of the Orange Blossom Festival Princess Quest which had run for 25 years
prior to 1995.
Another
volunteer, Dawn Matthews, was invited to join the Orange Blossom Festival
Quest and Ball committee. It was something that she had not envisaged
when she came to live in this Shire in 1980. What was it like living in
Baulkham Hills in say the early 1980’s?
It was lovely.
It was very much like living in the country, it didn’t take a lot of getting
used to compared with what I'd had. I was only here for a few months when
I was invited to join the Orange Blossom Princess Quest and Ball committees.
It was aimed at girls between the ages of 17 and 25 and they had to live
or work within a 5k radius of the borders of the Shire I think it was.
We used to teach the girls a lot of finishing. We taught them deportment,
we taught them how to sit and how to stand, what to do with their handbag
and so forth in a job interview. We also taught them public speaking and
self presentation. We taught them a lot about the Shire and the history
of the Shire, but ultimately they were judged on their presentation, their
social skills, their local knowledge and their public speaking ability
and the final object of the whole thing was to find an ambassador for
the Shire. At the end of the Quest, when the Princess was announced, it
was done at a Ball. It wasn’t a beauty pageant by any manner of means
but we did also run a charity side to it too. We had an Orange Blossom
Princess and we had an Orange Blossom Charity Princess.
What
was your role in all of this. I mean, you joined the committee. Firstly
were you a bit apprehensive about joining this committee?
Oh yes, absolutely.
I had never attended a formal meeting before and was quite nervous about
it. The girls gained a lot – a lot of self-confidence, a lot of poise
and they had to develop a sense of responsibility as well. And ultimately
most of them did conform very very well. We used to quite often laugh
at the cars that were following us with all their boyfriends in because
obviously we had to sort of keep the girls together so the boyfriends
would have this very hangdog look and follow around behind the bus in
their cars.
What
was the prize for the winner of the first Princess Quest or the early
ones?
That was
interesting. I did a lot of research but eventually I found the first
Princess. She remembers riding on the back of a truck in the parade, which
she found to be so exciting and her prize was a trip to the Grafton Jacaranda
Festival on a Greyhound bus and along with that she was given a beauty
case. So she said she just thought she was the bee’s knees and then when
she got to come home on the Greyhound bus she got to sit on the back seat.
When
did the Quest actually end. What brought about its end?
I think with
the change in society’s attitudes, we were told that it really wasn’t
politically correct to have a Princess Quest as such. People were becoming
aware of the need for some sort of recognition for the youth of the area
rather than just for the females of the area, so ultimately it gave way
(in 1995 after 25 years of the Princess Quest) to the Excellence
in Youth Awards which would encompass both males and females.
How
long were you actually associated with the actual Quests?
17 years.
So
what do you think it did for you personally?
| |
Pippa, the Orange Blossom mascot, and friends 2005
| It
broadened my outlook on life. It made me more aware of the youth of the
community. I met a lot of people and went to places that I normally wouldn’t
have been to.
With
the Princess Quest at an end, Dawn next volunteered as Festival Secretary
of the Shire’s Annual Orange Blossom Festival.
My role actually became
more than just a secretarial role. I had to organise a lot of things.
Council actually gave me an office and they were very supportive to me.
I used to have to do any banking and taking the minutes of the meetings
and printing up and sending out the copies and all that sort of secretarial
stuff but I also did a lot of the organisational stuff, for example all
the printing that was done, all the entry forms for different functions
of the festival had to be done through my office. I had to work a lot
with the media and organised a lot of sponsorship. I had to liaise with
umbrella groups.
Did
you pick up a lot of organisational skills as a result of doing this?
Oh yes, yes. I benefited
incredibly from it. I went into it not having any self-confidence or self-esteem
at all but ultimately I gained incredibly from it. I learnt to work as
part of a team. I learnt tolerance, patience, yes I learned a lot from
that. From being just a housewife and mother for so many years, it was
a great thing for my morale.
Did
it give you a sense of achievement?
Oh absolutely,
yes. I think the Festival is quite a valuable thing to the community.
It’s very big. The largest community run Festival outside of the Festival
of Sydney, but it gave all the people in the community a chance to come
out and show people what they were all about and say hey, here we are,
we’re part of this community, come and share with us what we have to show
you. People do say to you when you are a volunteer, people say to me you
must be a wonderful person – all these things you do and I say well no
there’s really not much wonderful about me at all. Volunteers only do
what they want to do and they do it when they want to do it. They get
a lot of fun out of doing it or a sense of achievement out of doing it,
so really I’m not wonderful, I’m quite selfish, I only do what I choose
to do. I meet people and I go places and I learn and I grow as a person,
so there’s a lot in it for me.
|