© 2018 Greg & Sylvia RAY
Read more about the article A pencil flashlight on the past
created by Microsoft Bing Image Creator

A pencil flashlight on the past

Shining a pencil flashlight into an enormous dark barn. That's how I once heard searching the internet described. It's also how I feel when I think about historical blog posts for this website. The past is vast and poorly illuminated, and writing about bits and pieces of it - chosen near-randomly - makes me feel like I'm just flashing a pencil torch into the darkness, hoping to see something interesting to describe. Author L.P. Hartley famously observed in the 1953 book, The Go-Between, that "the past is a foreign country: they do things differently there". And…

Continue ReadingA pencil flashlight on the past
Read more about the article All those jobs I couldn’t cope with
Psst. Wanna buy a kitchen sink?

All those jobs I couldn’t cope with

My wife and I were talking the other day about our patchwork employment histories. I'm lucky I wound up, eventually, with a job I loved. I sure had a lot of jobs I didn't love. The first “job” I ever had was selling programmes at Newcastle Rugby League matches. I think I was still in primary school, and I got the job because a classmate’s father produced the programmes and maybe had something to do with the league competition. The idea was to earn some pocket money, since my official family pocket money had been indefinitely…

Continue ReadingAll those jobs I couldn’t cope with
Read more about the article Newcastle in the 1960s
Ron and Liz Morrison at Woodville, NSW, in 2017

Newcastle in the 1960s

BETWEEN the two of them, Ron and Elizabeth Morrison took more photographs of Newcastle and surrounds than they could possibly have counted. Working at times as photographers on the staff of Hunter newspapers including The Newcastle Herald and the Maitland Mercury, and then running their own press agency in the city, the duo shot portraits by the score, covered news and sports events and worked for commercial clients. Later, they both worked in academia and dabbled in artistic pursuits, as well as publishing a string of successful books. Among their highly regarded volumes of photographs are Newcastle Seen (1989)…

Continue ReadingNewcastle in the 1960s
×
×

Cart