|
Nelson
Part
One
Interviewee:
Norm Hession, born 1933
Interviewer:
Frank Heimans,
for
Baulkham Hills Shire Council
Date of Interview:
10 Nov 2006
Transcription:
Glenys Murray, Jan 2007
Now
we usually start these interviews with a little bit of detail about you
so can you tell me first what is your full name?
Norman Joseph
Hession.
When
were you born?
1933.
Where
was that Norm?
In the house
that’s still standing corner of Nelson Road and Blind Road, it’s now 61
Nelson Road.
What
does it look like today, the house does it look different from what it
used to look like?
When I was
a boy it was weather board up about 4 feet and then fibro up and then
when Dad died in 1969 it was covered with imitation brick work.
What
sort of memories do you have of growing up in that house?
Pleasant
memories lovely Mum and Dad.
Tell
me a little bit about your Dad, what sort of father was he to you?
A very good
father, helped whenever he could took a great interest in everything that
I did.
What was his occupation?
Poultry farmer
all his life.
Did
you help with the chickens when you were a young boy?
Sometimes,
but not very willingly I didn’t like chickens.
Didn’t
like them?
No.
 |
|
Hession poultry sheds at Nelson 2001
| So
what sort of chickens did he have? Was there a particular breed of chickens
that he cultivated?
Well when
we were young it was always White Leghorns, but later on they used to
have crossbreeds for laying eggs. They seemed to think they laid better.
Had roosters as well did he or not?
No didn’t
have roosters, you only need roosters for fertile eggs.
That’s
right, how did they breed the chickens then?
They came
from hatcheries they of course, had to have roosters. He bought all his
chickens from Leach’s hatchery at Baulkham Hills and that’s long gone.
How
many people were doing similar work that he was doing as a poultry farmer
in the area?
Dad had the
biggest farm in Nelson but there was probably eight or nine others doing
the same thing, but the others had their fowl sheds in amongst orange
orchards.
So
these had both orchards and chickens?
Yes the others
did but Dad only had the chickens.
Anybody
in the area breed ducks at all?
Can’t remember
no, no.
Now
I believe that your family goes back in this area to quite a long way.
Can you tell me something about the earliest date of settlement of your
family in the Nelson area?
Well a couple
came out from Ireland in 1841 Thomas and Bridget Hession.
What
do you know about them?
They were
sent out here I think they stole a loaf of bread and a tea towel or something
similar to that, but they were sent to Australia for it.
That’s
not much to be sent to Australia for?
No very little.
Where
did they live when they first settled here?
From what
I can remember me mother telling me they first went to somewhere out near
Maroota, then moved to Pebbly Hill Road Maraylya and then came to Nelson.
Which
year do you think that was?
Well when
they came out here was 1841. I don’t know when they came to Nelson but
some years after I’d imagine. Dad told me that they had a house that I
never saw, never knew anything about it. But he said they had a house
in Blind Road but soon after built the slab house that is still stands
in Nelson Road.
What
number Nelson Road is it now?
I wouldn’t
know the name of the property is Rosedale.
So
would that be the earliest house in the Nelson area then?
One of the
earliest ones.
| |
Hession slab home, Nelson
| On
what land is the house built? Was it a land grant like they used to do
in those days?
Well the
property we’ve got was an original grant from Governor Denistone, I would
imagine all the others around would be similar.
Who
was it granted to do you know?
Man called
C C Forbes and later on the Hession family bought it.
I
see from Forbes?
Yes.
Now you had a lot of family around Nelson didn’t you? Aunts and uncles
tell me a little bit about where they lived and what they were doing?
Mainly orchards,
Uncle Mick, his property had peaches and mandarins and oranges but that
was all burnt out in the big fire in 1939.
The
uncles and where did your aunties live?
Some married
and moved away but there was three or four who didn’t marry and still
lived in the Hession home. But not the original slab one, in the one next
door to it, that’s still standing too.
On
which road is that, Nelson Road?
Nelson Road.
Did
your father build any house himself or any sheds for his poultry?
He built
all the sheds himself him and his brother in law Uncle Hughie Mason built
the house that they lived in. Mum and Dad got married in 1922 so the house
would have been built in the early twenties.
That house is still standing too, is it?
Yes it is.
Do
you remember him telling you much about it? Is that the house that you
actually grew up in is it?
It is yeah.
So
can you describe it to me, what it was like, how many rooms it had and
the layout of the place?
Simple place,
three bedrooms, front verandah, side verandah, back verandah that was
later closed in, kitchen, dining room, bathroom, that’s about it.
Was
it weatherboard did you say?
Weatherboard
almost half way up and then fibro up to the eaves.
So two materials it was built from, why was that do you think?
I don’t know,
most of the old places were like that I think.
Do
you think it could have been because they couldn’t afford to have a full
weatherboard house?
I wouldn’t
really know.
| |
Hession 1922 fibro and weatherboard home in 2001
| Now
can you describe the life of a typical small farmer like your father in
Nelson, what it was in those days when you were growing up, which would
have been around the thirties and forties, what was life like for them?
Hard work,
not many luxuries, got up in the morning fairly early fed the fowls, early
on with wet mash which was a lot of work and green feed when it rained.
Dad grew lucerne that was mixed in with the wet mash of a morning. Later
on he changed over to the dry mash that cut down on the work a lot. Then
he’d pick up the eggs around the sheds three times a day pack the eggs
when they cooled down a bit. Read his paper during the afternoon and have
a sleep, have tea and listen to the radio at night.
That
was his life huh?
Something
like that, no petrol about during the war, went shopping once a week,
had one of the very few cars in the district so he used to take neighbours
wives shopping every Friday morning.
Do you remember what kind of car it was?
The first
car he had was round about a 1928 model an Erskine. He bought that in
1932. Then in 1940 he bought a 1936 Buick, then in 1956 he bought a 1952
Chev fully imported with a Fisher body, beautiful car.
Must
have been the envy of the district was it?
I don’t know
by that time there was a few cars around.
Now
how many small farmers were there in the Nelson district in those days?
How many farms would you say you could count in Nelson?
Probably
ten or twelve.
What
was the size of their acreage?
Varied Dad
had fifteen, some had forty, I’d say in between most of them.
How
did your father get his goods to market, did he take them in his own car,
did he deliver his eggs or did he have a truck pick them up?
No there
was always carriers came around, various people, I even did it myself
in a few of his latter years before he gave up poultry farming.
So
there used to be regular carriers would come?
Once a week
during winter twice a week during summer.
Now
for the people who had poultry farms and orchards or just the people that
had orchards what kind of fruits were they growing in this area?
Mainly oranges
very little stone fruit.
So
the soil was suited for the citrus fruit was it?
Oh it seemed
to be Uncle Jack had a fair sized orchard in Hession Road, never irrigated
but he made a good living out of it.
Did
they have any problem with fruit fly and pests and other things and diseases?
Can’t remember
it no, don’t think so.
Right
they were lucky. Now talking about the values that your parents taught
you as a child what would you say those values were?
Honesty’s
the best policy I still try to carry it out, always tell the truth, work
hard and you’ll do well, but you’ve got to work sensibly as well as hard
I think.
So
what sort of a person was your mother tell me a little bit about your
Mum how would you describe her?
Probably
the only living saint that I never knew and that’s not just biased that’s
true never thought of herself always worried about her children and other
people.
Did
they have a tough time during the Depression here?
A lot of
people did but we were alright Dad had the poultry farm so there was always
an odd chicken to eat and plenty of eggs. We didn’t have any luxuries
but we had what we needed.
 |
|
Trouville property Blind Road owned by Lester family late 1920s
| Did
she make her own dresses, your mother?
Yes she was
a good dressmaker, made her own jams, made her own tea towels always trying
to save money because they didn’t have a lot of money.
What
did she make the tea towels out of?
Dad used
to buy meat meal from the MIB (Meat Industry Board at Homebush) and it
was delivered by the produce merchants of course and she’d boil the trade
mark, boil it and boil it until the trademark went out of the white bags
and she made them into tea towels.
How
did she make her dresses, did she have a sewing machine?
Yes she had
an old treadle sewing machine with a long circular belt on it and she
reared a calf up when she was in her teens and sold the calf and that’s
what the money went on. A White sewing machine White being an American
make of a sewing machine very similar to a Singer.
So
did you often see her making dresses for the family?
Oh yes a
lot of times. Of course when she had grandchildren she started making
things for them too.
What
sort of facilities and amenities were there in the house you grew up in
Norm? Describe the laundry for me and the kitchen. What was in the kitchen
for instance?
A fuel stove,
there was a water tank outside and it was piped into the kitchen, a kerosene
heater for the winter nights. I think the make of them was a "Valor"
ran on kerosene.
Bit
dangerous wasn’t it?
Oh not really
you were careful with things.
What
about lighting, what sort of lighting was there in the house?
In the kitchen
Dad had a very good light it was equal to an electric light. In the kitchen
another one in the lounge room, it ran on Shellite fed from a tank on
the back verandah and every night he used to pump it up before he turned
the lights on and it ran through a tiny little pipe across the ceiling
to the lights and they had a mantle in it and you had to light them up
with a match.
What
about at bedtime what sort of light was in the room was there anything
at all?
You’d have
to take a hurricane lamp and sit on the dressing table when I was quite
small used to get ghosts running around in the bedroom and all that sort
of thing. I remember one time a hand came up between the edge of the bed
and the wall, that was quite frightening but when I went to sleep the
hurricane lamp was taken out again.
When
you say a hand do you mean a ghost or is this a practical joke by someone?
No just imagined
it used to get the horrors a bit when I was a child.
Yes
we all do. Where was the outhouse, the toilet?
Out in the
backyard first years it was an old fashioned one with just a pan, then
Dad got a septic tank in later on never inside it was always in the backyard.
The
laundry. What was in the laundry how did your mother do the washing? Can
you describe washing day for me?
Early on
before electricity, there was a copper in the corner of the shed, a bricked
in copper, Jack Peterson from Rouse Hill was my first cousin, he built
it and bricked it in for Mum and she’d boil the water up in that, I remember
poking it with a stick in the copper. Then there was a washing machine
the make of it was a Lehmann, she christened it “Dolly” I don’t know why
but I read in a book later on that they were referred to as dolly and
that was one of my jobs, you lifted it up and down and plunged it down
into the bottom of it where the water and the clothes were in it and plunged
this like an upturned funnel it had holes in it and you pushed it down
into the water and I can remember “Oh you’ve got to give them a hundred”
or something else might need a hundred and twenty and that was one of
my jobs to do that.
| |
Wooden clothes line and outside toilet at Hessions - Nelson 2001
| A
hundred or a hundred and twenty what?
Oh up and
down into the water with this big funnel type thing.
Must
have been quite a strange washing machine was it?
Oh it seemed
to work.
Interesting,
so had did she dry her washing on the line.
Yes had a
clothes line the old fashioned one with a forked stick to hold it up and
the upright with a cross piece at each end went right across the backyard.
Pretty
basic huh?
Oh yeah,
later on Dad got a Hill’s Hoist when they became popular and it’s still
down in the backyard of the old place.
So
what are your memories of Jack Peterson, you said he built the fuel stove,
what other sort of associations did your family have with the Petersons
and who were the Petersons.
Well Mrs
Peterson and Mum were sisters, Jack’s Mother Mrs Peterson, Auntie Rachel.
Uncle Tom and Auntie Rachel owned what is now the Mean Fiddler and he
had a poultry farm on it when I was only a child. Jack Peterson always
had a truck as long as I could remember started off with Rio back in the
thirties then he got a second hand Albion and like it that much that he
bought a new one in 1938 and he was my first cousin, had a carrying business
at Rouse Hill corner of Commercial Road and Windsor Road and then went
into produce and I worked for him for the best part of twelve years had
a few disagreements with him and I’d leave for a while and then he’d ask
me to go back again but most of the first twelve years of my working life
I worked for him.
What
sort of a character was he can you describe him?
A big man
six foot two or three very, very strong I remember getting into trucks
with bagged wheat at Mulgrave and they were one hundred and eighty or
more pounds each and he’d throw them out onto the truck. He’d say “stack
them on the truck Norm” and he’d bury me with them and when I couldn’t
handle it all as fast as he could throw them out he’d say “ what’s wrong
with you today Norm are you a bit crook or something?”
Sounds
like an interesting character was he?
Real character
of a fellow.
What
business interests did he have around the town?
Just his
one business of carrying and then moved into produce and then I bought
the egg run off him at the end of 1960 and left and went out on my own.
Let’s talk a little bit about childhood pursuits that you did and childhood
play, where did you play around the place?
Mostly out
in the bush around Cattai Creek.
Could
you swim there as well?
No I could
never swim still can’t but the water was never deep enough in Cattai Creek
unless it was in flood and you didn’t go near it then.
You
used to slide down a tin didn’t you into Cattai Creek?
Yes used
to turn sheets of iron up so they’d slide down into the creek down the
sandy banks, used to climb a few trees now and then and fall out of them
never told Mum.
Better
not too, what were your chores or duties as a child what were you told
to do?
Remember
pushing the old hand lawn mower was one of my jobs to keep the grass cut
around the place and there was a fair area considering it was just a hand
lawn mower, no motors.
Just
push it?
Yes.
 |
|
Box Hill-Nelson Bushfire Brigade's first water tanker
| The
1939 bushfires were a very major event in this area and I believe you
have some personal experience of it can you tell me about that fire? What
happened on that day?
It was a
terrible westerly wind it was one hundred and seventeen degrees in the
old scale very, very hot. I forget the time of day that it came through
Mum sent myself and my sister across to a Mr and Mrs Bill's place they
were on the opposite side of Blind Road to Dad’s place. I don’t know why
Mum sent us there but she did and we finished up in one of their old disused
fowl pens and I still remember Mr Bill coming down and lifting up the
wire netting to let us out of it. The fire went through Mum was carrying
out buckets of water for Dad to water the place down around the house
and that night what used to be known as and still is to some people as
Bullock’s Bush was all lit up everything was alight.
Was
there any fire brigade then?
No, no organised
fire brigade at all, you just did what you could yourself. I was only
six years old at the time so the memories of it are a bit hazy.
Anyone
got injured in that fire?
I don’t remember
any injuries. I suppose deaths are injuries. Two fellows got burnt to
death up at the top of the hill corner of Old Pitt Town Road and Nelson
Road and Mason Road in that corner. People seemed to think that they were
shift workers and they’d been asleep but they apparently tried to escape
and got caught in the barbed wire fence and that’s where they were found.
It’s
tragic isn’t it?
Yes.
What
was done after that to try and minimise the bushfires? What did the people
do of Nelson?
I don’t know
much what other people did, but every year in the spring time Dad would
burn around the house a strip probably forty, fifty feet wide around the
house and around all his fowl sheds burnt the grass off so there was nothing
left to burn during the summer.
| |
Historic fire fighting tools at Kenthurst Fire Brigade. L to R:
knapsack, foam making branch, branch, 2 stirrup pumps and bucket,
3 breeching pieces, canvas water bag
|
What
other momentous events happened in your childhood. There was some pretty
traumatic things that happened with your brother for instance, can you
tell me about that?
I can remember
Laurie getting sun stroke went in and saw the doctor at Riverstone he
didn’t seem to be very worried about it. I thought he’d rush out 'cause
I thought Laurie was dying, but he said “oh no he’ll be right just go
home and don’t worry about it”. He got all right.
Was
Laurie older or younger than you?
Nine and
a half years older than me.
Talk
a little bit about the food that you ate at home. Where did it come from
and what kind of food did you eat normally at home?
Mum and Dad
went in every Friday morning bought groceries at Riverstone that was after
Bussell Brothers at Windsor stopped delivering. Early on groceries were
delivered from Windsor and of course eggs, the occasional chicken.
Did
you eat any meat, any lamb?
Oh yes always
ate meat but the interesting thing Bussells used to deliver groceries
once every fortnight and on the Saturday afternoon before Dennis Mason
from Riverstone would ride his bike around to all the customers and pick
up the orders for the following Tuesday.
What
was the sort of community spirit like among the few families, there weren’t
that many families in Nelson. Did you each other well?
Oh yes every
Sunday morning Dad would walk away somewhere and have a yarn with some
of the neighbours.
Let’s
talk a bit about the form of transport that your family used before you
had the car. What would it have been before your father got his first
car?
He had a
horse and sulky. Jack was the name of the horse I think. He was a grey
horse but I can’t remember him, only what they used to talk about it.
Did
you ever see the horse?
No.
Talk
about your school years a bit, primary school years which school did you
go to?
Rouse Hill.
How
did you get there, someone deliver you or did you walk to school tell
me?
Brother and
sister walked approximately five k’s then when I started school my brother
had a Royal Enfield push bike and he put a luggage carrier on the back
of it and he used to double me to school. Then when I got big enough I
used to ride a bike to school myself. I had a bike of my own.
How
big was the school that you went to the Rouse Hill Public School?
Number of
pupils got down to thirteen at one stage and they were thinking of closing
it and then another family moved in with a few kids and they kept it going.
What
were your favourite subjects at school?
None wasn’t
interested in school at all. All I wanted to do was leave school and go
driving trucks which I did.
But
you had to learn to read and write?
I seemed
to manage that without any trouble. I sort of learnt that without much
effort at all.
Do
you recall the name of your teacher at the school?
Yes Mr Harris,
Albert Edward Harris.
What
was he like?
Did his
block fairly often but he was a good teacher.
You
walked five kilometre each day each way to school did you?
No I didn’t
I rode my bike, me brother and sister walked.
Any
school mates that you can recall that are still around in the district
were there any?
Very few
left in the district Jack Iori from Rouse Hill went to school with me,
Peter Brocklebank went - he’s up the central coast. Can’t think of anymore
lot of them is dead now of course.
Go
To Part Two
|