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Did you know
that in the middle of Foley Park, at the
corner of Bridge and Glebe Point Roads, there still stands a brick
"radio shack" where residents once regularly gathered
to listen to the radio!
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The Butcher, the Baker, et al
.....
Butcher's and baker's shops were generally located
along the suburb's main arteries. In 1901 each of the 16 Glebe butchers
serviced an average of 1200 residents (in contrast to the lone butcher
now at Glebe Point and Glenmore Meats in Wentworth Park Road); and the
7 bakers served about 2750 people each.
Many were family businesses operating in Glebe for decades -- bakers
John Heil, William Hammett, Berthold Stehr, Thomas Martin, John Purves,
Martin Wengert, August Heinrich, Charles Vass, Joseph Wrobel and Christian
Raith were local identities. They worked an 80-hour week but, with increasing
mechanisation, Purves Bakery, established in 1871 at 93 St.John's Road
(now producing muffins etc.at the rear of those premises on the corner
of Purves and Reuss Streets) and Raith's Bishopthorpe Bakery at 62 Glebe
Road emerged as the suburb's largest.
Forest Lodge people bought their meat from William Alleyn (176 St. Johns
Road) and William Tumeth (271 Bridge Rd). Other well-known Glebe butchers
were:
Andrew Knox, 56 Cowper Street
Edward Miller, 36 Bay Street
James Cochran, 176 St. John's Road
Albert Goose, 116 Bridge Road
Richard Briant, 123 Glebe Road
Henry McMahon, 142 Glebe Road
J.R. Wood, 329 Glebe Road and, in more recent years,
Stan Hayes at 329 Glebe Road.
Just as Germans were prominent as bakers,
from 1894, Italians began operating as fruiterers in Glebe - the Arena
family (Sebastian, Nicola, Stephen, Pasquale and Vincenzo), Antoni Caleo,
Filippo Cascio, Giovanni Cincotta, Giacomo Costa, Frank Dalbora, Giovanni
Divola, Joseph Licciardi, Antoni Piconi and Tauro and Ristuccia.
--Max Solling
Today F. Galluzzo & Sons are most prominent as greengrocers and
fruiterers at 191 Glebe Point Road and have recently celebrated 70 years
in business at the same site.
-- Ed.
How times have changed in a century!
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Is this for Real?
-- a cat's tale!
This real-life adventure story becomes
even more curious as it progresses. A member's family feline has had
some adventures in his life, right from kittenhood. These adventures
range from retrieval by the Police Rescue Squad from a lofty palm tree
in Foley Park in the middle of the night (when else?), to going AWOL
for a number of days to join a film crew on location in St. James Park.
Physical relocation had to be applied!
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The smug
feline
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For about two years now, he
has sorely tested the curiosity of his owners by appearing before
6am, every couple of weeks, with a large piece of prime steak, fresh
and cold from the refrigerator, firmly clutched in his mouth (of
course he must wake his owners to show them his prize!).
At first his family felt guilt that their
cat had stolen someone's next meal, but the regularity of this
event has led them to believe that "theft" is unlikely.
But where does this juicy steak come from? The owners have asked
nearby restaurants if they use such meat, to no avail. If the
meat comes from other restaurants, then this requires the cat
to cross either Bridge, St. Johns or Glebe Point Roads, an unpalatable
thought for his owners, but worth the risk to the cat!
It must be pointed out that the cat is totally exhausted for a
whole day after the consumption of such a large piece of meat.
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Can anyone shed light on this curious behaviour
pattern?
This same cat is a regular recipient
of emails, cat stories and jokes from the US, Canada and within Australia!
His popularity never ceases to amaze his family! At the end of June
2001, circumstances forced his family to seek international veterinary
advice from a US-based professor (a Glebe Society member) and his colleague,
both of whose expertise is valued world-wide. The cat must
have been a celebrity in another life!
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Did you know that horses still are stabled
in Glebe?
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Above:
A trotter in its stall in the back garden of a house in Victoria
Street.
Right:
racing sulky ready
to head for Harold Park.
Left:
and we still have a horse trough in St John's Road, although horses
would find it difficult to slake their thirst.
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Queries, tales or info?
email: webmaster@glebesociety.org.au