Friday, April 28, 2023

Anzac Soccer Ashes Trophy rediscovered

Some good news, as reported by the Guardian newspaper in April 2023 -
After vanishing 69 years ago an Australian sporting treasure has been discovered in mint condition in a suburban garage.

The small wooden trophy – housing a silver-plated razor case carried at Gallipoli – was contested by the Socceroos and New Zealand’s All Whites until it mysteriously disappeared in 1954. Inside it are ashes of cigars smoked by the Socceroos captain Alex Gibb and the All Whites skipper George Campbell after the first trans-Tasman match on Australian soil in June 1923.


The Soccer 'Ashes' Trophy
Image: Football Australia 

The razor case belonged to Private William Fisher, who later became the Secretary of the Queensland Football Association. The trophy was discovered when family members were sorting through the belongings of the late Sydney Storey, who was involved as an administrator in Australian Soccer at a national level from 1922 until 1966.The trophy, made of New Zealand Honeysuckle and Australian Maple, is in perfect condition. 

This good news story gives hope that other important and interesting items that vanished  years ago may one day be rediscovered. 

References
ANZAC Soccer Ashes Trophy recovered. Football Australia, 24 April, 2023, read.
Anzac ‘Soccer Ashes’ trophy found after vanishing for 69 years. The Guardian, 25 April 2023, read.
‘Soccer’s Ashes’: How a suburban garage clean-out solved a 69-year Anzac mystery by Vince Rugari. The Age, April 25, 2023, read. (may be behind a pay-wall)
ANZAC Soccer Ashes trophy rediscovered in suburban garage after almost 70 years by Samantha Lewis. ABC News 25 April, 2023, read

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Boer War Soldiers plaque, Peace Memorial Library, Colac

On September 12, 1901 the Peace Memorial Library was opened in Colac, as a permanent memorial when peace is declared in South Africa (1). The War, known as the Second Boer War or the South African War, ended on May 31, 1902.

In June 1902, a brass plaque was installed in the front porch of the Library. It had the following inscription This tablet commemorates the death, in the cause of the Empire, of four young men of this district - Edgar Quartus Robertson, Noel Leonard Calvert and Arthur Edward Murphy, who were killed whilst lighting in South Africa, and of Thomas Yates, who died immediately upon his return to Victoria, 1901 (2). The plaque was 27 inches by 21 inches.

The plaque was stolen at the end of July in 1953 (3). The stealing of the plaque commemorating local soldiers is bad enough and shows a lack of respect to the men and their families, but this act contributed to the demolition of the Peace Memorial Library in 1970.  Members of the Colac and District Historical Society petitioned the Council to save the building and although the building was known to be a Peace Memorial, documentation to substantiate this was incomplete. The details of its true identity were preserved in a large brass plaque which, complete with the names of Boer War veterans, was attached to the south wall. Without this evidence the Shire of Colac committed an act of official vandalism and demolished the Peace Memorial Library. (4).


The Peace Memorial Library, Colac, c. 1908.
Photographer: T.R.G. Williams.
State Library of Victoria Image H96.200/1533

Should you have any information about the plaque's history or location,  please leave a comment below or see 'Contact us' tab for anonymous emailing.
Should you actually possess the item and wish to return it its rightful owners or custodians, please contact us.

Footnotes
(1) The Age, 13 September 1901, read.
(2) The Age, 17 June, 1902, read.
(3) The Argus, 3 August, 1953, read.
(4) Mcintosh, Ida Forest, Lake and Plain: the history of Colac 1888-1988. City of Colac, 1988, p. 35.

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Theft of the Besharin Boy Bronze

On the 29th of May in 1945 The Argus published this report under the headline - Besharin Boy Bronze Stolen from Gallery.
Police are inquiring into the theft of the bronze head of a Besharin Boy,  taken from the textiles room of the National Gallery on Sunday afternoon. The head, which is about 7in high and weighs approximately 8lb, was purchased early last year by the Felton Bequest at a good price for a statuette of this size. The thief could easily have slipped the bronze under his coat while the attendant was out of the room temporarily accommodating the smaller exhibits, said Mr E. N. Dewar, acting secretary, National Gallery, last night...The Besharin Boy bronze (described by Mr G. Allen, head of the sculpture school, Melbourne Technical College, as "a sensitive work of excellent form, showing a deep sculptural sense and a keen appreciation of the East") is the work of Mrs Tina Wentscher, of Milfay av, Kew. Mrs Wentscher, who has been in Australia for five years, studied in Paris, Athens, and Berlin, and spent 10 years in the Far East - in Malaya, China, Indo-China, and Java. She was responsible for the Keith Truscott plaque at the Children's Hospital, and is at present working on a bronze plaque of the late Miss Jessie Webb for the library at the University of Melbourne.


The Besharin Boy
Image: Adelaide News, 7 June 1945

Tina Wentscher (also spelt as Wentcher) was born in Constantinople in 1887 to David and Rebecca Haim. The family later moved to Vienna and later still to Berlin, where in 1914 she married Julius Wentscher. As the article notes, the Wentschers travelled widely and from 1936 until 1940 they lived in Malaya. It was from there that they were sent to Australia as enemy aliens and interned at Tatura from 1940 until 1942. After their release, they settled in Melbourne. 

Mrs Wentcher died in 1974 and her work is represented in the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra, the McClelland Gallery in  Langwarrin and other major collections. 

Ken Scarlett records in his book Australian Sculptors that Tina Wentscher replaced the work at her cost with a pewter version in 1946. Where is the original Besharin Boy Bronze, which was stolen nearly 80 years ago?

Should you have any information about the Besharin Boy Bronze, please leave a comment below or see 'Contact us' tab for anonymous emailing.
Should you actually possess the item and wish to return it its rightful owners or custodians, please contact us.

References
  • Art Success in Many Lands. The Herald, 7 March 1944, read.
  • Besharin Boy Bronze Stolen from Gallery. The Argus, 29 May 1945, read
  • S.A.Hunt for Stauette: Stolen in Victoria. Adelaide News, 7 June 1945, read.
  • Scarlett, Ken Australian Sculptors. Nelson, 1980.
  • Peers Juliet, Wentcher, Tina (1887–1974), Australian Dictionary of Biography. First published in 2002, on-line https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/wentcher-tina-11998

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

Rosemary Statue Victory Park Ascot Vale

On 28 August 2015 a life-sized bronze statue of a woman  was unveiled in Victory Park, Ascot Vale, in honour of the enduring sacrifice made by women who cared for veterans of World War I.  She was named Rosemary, after the traditional emblem of remembrance, the rosemary plant. The statue was commissioned by the group Women Caring for Veterans of War and funded by a Commonwealth Government ANZAC Centenary grant and the Moonee Valley Council.


The original Rosemary statue.
Image: City of Moonee Valley

Over night on 19 January 2016, Rosemary was stolen, cut off at the ankles, leaving only the feet on the stone plinth. The Moneee Valley Council worked quickly to replace the statue with one made of thicker more robust material and new Rosemary was unveiled 14 March 2017.

All that remained of the Rosemary statute.  
Image: 3AW Breakfast Twitter account


The replacement Rosemary.
Image: City of Moonee Valley

Rosemary is an exquisite statue and stands as a memorial to women everywhere, who cared and still care for service men and women who have been injured both physically and psychologically through war service. It was a callous and disrespectful act to destroy the original. 

Should you have any information about the original Rosemary statute, please leave a comment below or see 'Contact us' tab for anonymous emailing.
Should you actually possess the item and wish to return it its rightful owners or custodians, please contact us.


References
  • 3AW Rumour File: Heartless thieves cut Ascot Vale tribute at the ankles, 20 January 2016, read 
  • Memorial to Women War carers stolen from Ascot Vale Park by Craig Butt. The Age 21 January 2016, read 
  • ‘Despicable’ thieves steal tribute statue from Ascot Vale park by Kara Irving. The Herald Sun 21 January 2016, read  
  • Replica statue on its way to replace stole Ascot Vale War memorial by Linh Ly. Moonee Valley Leader 25 May, 2016, read 
  • Essendon Historical Society newsletter April-May 2018, page 10 read 
  • Monument Australia Women Carers of World War One Veterans, read 
  • Moonee Valley Family and Local History Blog: Where did Rosemary go? read  
Interestingly, in all the information on the Rosemary statue, the sculptor is not mentioned. We would be interested to know who it was to give them their rightful credit.