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Kellyville
Part
Two
Interviewees:
Flo Willcox, born 1920
and Dennis Willcox,
born 1951
Interviewer:
Frank Heimans,
for
Baulkham Hills Shire Council
Date
of Interview: 30 June 2006
Transcription:
Glenys Murray, Nov 2006
Dennis
can you describe the Comito shop for us and what they sold?
Comito’s was a general store just about any item that
you wanted within reason. If you wanted something special you had to most
people went to Baulkham Hills, Parramatta or Castle Hill not so much Castle
Hill because the public transport used to go to Baulkham Hills and then
Parramatta. Comito’s was just a general store but it used to have this
beautiful old fuel bowser out the front I don’t know what age it was but
it was one of those ones that you had the handle on the front and you
pumped it up to two three gallons whatever you want and then it was gravity
fed into whatever container you had Was not electric.
Dennis
or Flo who were your neighbours and the rest of the population of Kellyville
who were they? Can you remember where they lived and what their names
were?
You mean when I first came here?
Yeah
in those early years?
Mr Smith up the top here, had an orchard.
He’s a cousin
of Pearce’s used to be just up here, he had an orchard like you say.
Who were
the Dutch people that you bought the eight acres off what was their name?
Bakker.
Tom Bakker
he used to grow flowers I think, did he not?
Yes or he tried wasn’t very successful because it was
very cold, we used to get big frost. Sometimes the frosts were so good
that we had to pour boiling water over the lines in the dairy to get the
machines started.
Next one
up from that was Jack Hailes with his poultry farm. Mrs Clarke the topside
of Kellyville Park.
Mrs Berry
Thompsons used to live up there on the corner.
I’m just trying to think if Thompsons were there when
I first come in but I don’t think they were long after us.
They were our immediate neighbours anyway, Frank.
There weren’t too many, there was a captain.
The old sea captain across the road here, but I never
knew him.
Were
all the people that you talked about were they also dairy farmers like
yourselves
No, none
of them we were the only dairy farmers Smith was an orchardist, Hailes
was poultry farmer, Bakker had left the area when Mum purchased the land
off them, we just used that for the farm then.
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Comito's Store 1960s
| So
what was actually here when you first came Flo, in 1949 to Kellyville,
what did Kellyville consist of then, did it have a bank, a post office,
shops, what was it?
Dairy I think, I’m being facetious but I didn’t get off
the dairy too often except when the children went to school and I took
an interest in the school then.
It had Comito’s
store, had the old post office, had Kellyville Primary School, it would
have had the old BP garage as well as Rayer’s Golden Fleece, the Shell
garage up here came along many years later the Esso garage opposite Wright’s
Road would have been there it’s now a Mobil and there was the old Soldier’s
Memorial Hall on the corner of Windsor and Memorial Avenues.
That
was about the extent is it?
Dennis
you were born in 1951 so when you were say five you went to school to
the Kellyville Public School what was it like then?
Kellyville Public School consisted of possibly three buildings
the old building which fronts Windsor Road is still there today that was
our classrooms there was a little old building beside yet behind that
and then there was a newer building I don’t know what year it was built
but there were two or three classrooms in that. Kellyville Primary very
few buildings, big rooms, large rooms, the ceiling in the main room up
there was very high, all the grounds of the school was just open paddock
there was probably a run down fence on what would be the northern end
of the school between Kellyville Primary and Herbert’s property if you
went down the back of the school it was just scrub we used to play in
the long grass and I think it was African Boxthorn was the scrub.
Can
you remember any names of teachers at school?
John Howard if you got something wrong he used to get
a ruler and just tap it across your knuckles until it really hurt you.
He was a bit sadistic I thought but that’s the way it was and you didn’t
dare challenge him. We used to have old Mr Henderson was my first headmaster
and then when he left there was a bloke by the name of Stapleton all he
ever had us doing was cleaning the rubbish or we used to get milk delivered
to school in little bottles I wouldn’t know the quantity of them but we
used to have to unload those and clean the bottles and distribute them
to all the children and you’d be burning the rubbish in the incinerator,
otherwise if he didn’t have you doing that we didn’t learn a lot. Had
a good time he’d have us going up to Comito’s store to get his Butter
Menthols for him.
You
must have been drinking your own milk at school?
Possibly
were yeah, cause the milk bottles used to have different coloured foil
bottle tops, gold ones and silver ones.
Dennis where did the school master live?
There was a headmaster’s residence within the school grounds,
his actual house was there used to be supplied by the Education Department
and the headmaster lived there.
So
everything was very local?
He was the security person too.
Any
school mates that you remember? Are you still friends with anyone that
went to school with you?
Yes one of
my very good friends is Robert Dickinson he’s the fellow that lived on
Green’s Road down near Glenhaven Road and we’re still very, very friendly
with a girl by the name of Melanie, Knight was her maiden name Melanie
Lapham now and we see them regularly. Don’t see Bob as much as I’d like
to but there’s a lot of old Kellyville identities that don’t live in the
village anymore they’ve moved far and wide but if they’re ever down here
they call in and say g’day because you just don’t forget. They were good
times and you had close bonding relationships. I find it amazing the number
of Kellyville people that still keep in touch I think it’s unique.
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Kellyville Public School 1989
| Did
you join any youth groups in the area Dennis?
I was in
Kellyville Cubs I can remember getting reprimanded by my mother when I
became a sixer because we were supposed to be going on a camp and I told
her the wrong time that we had to be there and “hell hath no fury like
a woman scorned” so I didn’t forget it. Then I joined the Boy Scouts later
on and we were also involved with Church of England Boys Society. But
as we became teenagers there used to be this youth group that was run
down it was near St Michaels Church opposite The Hills Private Hospital
now. What were they called? Community House and all the young teenagers
used to come from far and wide to congregate there. It was church based
activities, place was packed but that was the only real youth thing that
they had going in those days unless you were involved heavily with Guides,
Scouts etc.
Dennis
I believe you used to skateboard down Windsor Road, tell me about that
horrifying prospect?
Well it wasn’t so horrifying Frank because there wasn’t
very much traffic about at the time and there was a nice long straight
heading down from Acres Road passed Poole Road as you headed towards Windsor.
You could get on your skateboard and you could skate for the best part
of 500 metres I suppose, it was down hill, it was beautiful smooth tar
and you’d have somebody out the back saying “car coming” and you’d just
jump off and get off the road, good times.
Just another
time the mother didn’t know anything about.
I don’t think you’d try that today right?
You’d get run over.
When
you finished your high school Dennis where did you go then? What further
education did you try to find?
I left school in 1967 I only did fourth form at the time,
School Certificate it was Castle Hill High School. Well I worked on the
dairy farm through 1968 then in 1969 I went to Yanco Agricultural College
and Research Station down in the Riverina that was a twelve month farm
management course I learnt a lot. It was the first time I’d ever been
away from home and mother’s apron and it was one hell of a good time.
Didn’t pass the course but had a great time.
Did
you pick up some valuable tips about how to run a farm?
Oh yes I did we had to do a major project for the actual
certificate. We’d bought a farm up at a place called Willow Tree in 1967
five hundred and seven acre property and everything fell into place really
because we used to send young heifers up there to Willow Tree cause they
grew better up there than they did in Kellyville and we also used to grow
oats, wheat, sunflower didn’t do sorghum up there, but that was all an
eye opener and I learnt lot through the college in that twelve months
that assisted Dad. You meet this resistance, you’re a young whippersnapper
and you don’t know much and new technology I’ll do it the old way. I can
recall that vividly they didn’t want to know about it.
Now
looking at Kellyville today there’s a lot of trees around were there so
many trees in the 50’s and 60’s or was it more barren.
Gum trees
the natives, Eucalypts I don’t think there’s anymore today than there
was then, well we’ve had a couple lopped down here recently since Sydney
Waters’ been doing this trunk drainage down here beside Kellyville Park,
they knocked down the trees down here that I was quite attached to, I
felt quite sad when they knocked the trees down. I said to my wife “I
can identify with the aboriginals how
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Looking East from Willcox property, 2005
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their love
of the land” and I was quite upset about that. They were an old dead tree
mind you but that’s the way it was.
What
sort of trees were they?
They were old gum trees.
Why
did they have to go?
Well Sydney
Water is in the process of resuming the land down here. They’ve done all
the trunk drainage works but they still haven’t purchased the property
yet but the tree had to go for this trunk drainage works because they
excavated about two metres below the land.
In terms of nature are there more animals or birds now than they used
to be?
Less.
You’ve
noticed the decrease then?
Oh definitely less, less birds definitely.
We used to
have a lot of foxes, quite often especially in winter you could hear the
foxes going along the creek between the dairy farm and Kellyville Park
you could hear the vixens crying out at night in the cold still air their
voices carried, used to have a lot of rabbits.
We had a fox whelp over there in the paddock once.
Used to get a lot of mice in the paddock with our old
faithful dog we used to go digging up looking for the mice it was one
of the pastimes. Always had rabbits cause over there where Fairway Drive
is used to be all scrub. That’s where we used to have our cattle roam
when they were pregnant they used to calve over there and once a week
we’d have to go over there looking for them. It was about one hundred
and sixty acres I think, we’d have to go through all this scrub looking
for these cows with their calves. The cow would hide her calf so no harm
came to it we’d have to find it, she wasn’t going to tell you where it
was, she put it there for a reason so you didn’t know.
Did
you have also town water supplied or did you have tanks?
No as long as I can recall we’ve had town water.
No, no, no, no.
As long as you can recall, yes, but in 1949 when we went
there we had tanks, the support for the tanks was built of convict bricks
which Dennis eventually got.
Yeah I’ve still got them.
We had a tank out the back and we also had a tank at the
side of the house.
Was
water a problem in terms of running a dairy?
Yes it was for a while, town water was actually connected
to the portion of the property on Memorial Avenue but we weren’t allowed
to use it, so we had to have a tank for the dairy as well.
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John Stranger's House, Windsor Road between Acres and President
Roads 1989
| Dennis
or Flo, who owned most of the land in Kellyville?
I don’t know
the time frame that we are talking about here but I do know that at one
stage all the land on the Eastern side of Windsor Road was owned by Stringers
and what was on the Western side was owned by Strangers, the only difference
in the spelling was the A and the I. All those large blocks of land have
been subdivided over the years and more and more people came you might
have had a hundred acres, then it was cut down to fifty and later on to
twenty and now five acre lots. So they’ve been a lot of changes over all
these years I can remember old Jimmy Everston up here he must have had
thirty or forty acres it was horse paddocks before. It’s all into five
acre lots now.
Is
that the trend at the moment?
As we’re speaking all this land has been rezoned for residential
purposes where we can look out our kitchen window now and only see two
or three houses it’s going to be vastly different in the future. Where
we are right here now is zoned for high density residential which will
be four to six storey buildings. The mind boggles it’s just unheard of.
So
what do you think the future of Kellyville is going to be like when we
look forward ten or twenty years?
We won’t
know it even Balmoral Road here a section of it is going to be closed.
I think if you came back here in twenty or thirty years you’d be searching
for the old roads that won’t be in existence and there will be houses
where the roads are now. Just completely different I mean right now I
said before Frank once upon a time we used to know everybody in Kellyville,
you wouldn’t have a hope now of knowing everybody in Kellyville there
are just so many residents. Kellyville is a big area it stretches from
basically the edge of Castle Hill, the edge of Baulkham Hills right out
to Rouse Hill over towards Stanhope Park Gardens on the west. I mean Kellyville
Ridge is a new suburb that came into being in the last couple of years
because they’re trying to identify certain parts of this large area known
as Kellyville, it’s just too big.
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Suspension Bridge Acres Road early 1950s |
Talking
about changes, I believe there used to be a suspension bridge at Kellyville
tell me about that?
Acres Road
used to be cut in two by a creek, I don’t know the name of the creek (Smalls
Creek) , I should do after living here all these years. To traverse
that creek you used to have this pedestrian suspension bridge I know all
the scouts and guides we used to go down there and have good fun just
crossing the bridge. As kids anything that moved we’d get it swinging.
But that’s not there anymore that’s been one of the things that’s gone
as the result of progress.
So
what have been the biggest changes in Kellyville since your youth?
Definitely the increase in housing, I can turn around
and behind me now look out this window three years ago all I would have
seen was vacant paddock and the other side of Windsor Road up there near
Acres Road it’s just all houses all roofs, all buildings, that’s the way
it’s going.
So
what does it mean to you to be living at Kellyville today?
I’m quite emotional about it in actual fact I know that
some time or other I’ve got to face the fact that I’ve got to move from
here. I’ve lived in Kellyville all my life as has my wife and I’ve just
got to come to terms with moving out from a place that I’ve grown up,
known, loved and I’ve got to move on.
What
about you Flo how do you feel about it?
I guess I won’t go very far if I do leave Kellyville,
I haven’t got too many years left so I can’t look forward too much but
it certainly holds most of my life in Kellyville.
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Italian market gardeners Antonietta and Roberto Cigolini with grandaughter
Anna on their Acres Rd property 1982
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What
are your best memories of having lived at Kellyville?
I don’t know how to put it, it’s just Kellyville everybody’s
been just so friendly, not that I got out much but we were quite a significant
community I would think. We all pulled together even though we were quite
diverse as far as people from other lands are concerned quite a lot of
Maltese and Italians and all sorts around here we all got along very well
together and I think that’s wonderful. I think it’s a way of life that’s
gone now.
The big difference is you used to know everybody now you
know very few. You still know the old ones every polling day you get to
the Kellyville School to cast your ballot and that was just like a gathering
of the Kellyville clan. You saw people that you hadn’t seen for twelve
months or five years or whatever and you just caught up with old times
and that was it. You won’t know them today.
So how do you think Dennis, living at Kellyville has shaped you as a person?
That’s a
hard question Frank, I’m just pleased to have had the life that I’ve had,
I’m grateful for that. That community spirit does hold a lot of value
for me and I just hope that people that live in Kellyville in the future
get that same spirit and feeling, it’s just been a top place to live.
People used to refer to it as “the sticks” when I was a kid. Kellyville
where’s that you know but now everybody knows where Kellyville is because
there’s advertisements on television and in the papers because here is
where all the new houses are being built.
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