To the rescue: Sir Frank Beaurepaire.Credit: The Age
7. The first brewery in Australia was established in Parramatta on September 16, 1804. The funds were provided by the colonial administration with the aim of reducing drunkenness. The idea was to wean people off βrumβ, their name for all spirits. This breakthrough notion β providing alcohol to reduce drinking β did not prove a success.
8. Ditto the early planting of vineyards with the same lofty aim.
9. The first British monarch to eat Australian meat was Queen Victoria, who tucked into Queensland lamb in February 1880 β the result of the new science of refrigeration.
10. Australiaβs first St Vincent de Paul was established in Newtown in 1922 by Reg Cahill, who β alongside his sister, Teresa β went on to create Cahillβs restaurants, those icons of β60βs Sydney. Who made the greater contribution: Reg, kicking off Australiaβs best charity store, or Teresa, with Cahillβs caramel sauce?
11. Frank Beaurepaire, Olympian and tyre retailer, was able to set up his business only because he jumped into the ocean at Coogee to save a man being attacked by a shark. How Australian is that? The money came from a cash reward given by the Royal Humane Society.
12. On the subject of swimming, Captain Cook couldnβt do it. Itβs why he was unable to escape when set upon in shallow waters off Hawaii in 1779. Few sailors of the time could swim. An inability to do so was considered a positive. It lessened the chances of desertion.
Swimming at Manly was once confined to nocturnal hours. Credit: Dion Georgopoulos
13. The 1967 film Journey Out of the Darkness was one of the first films since Jedda in 1955 to feature Indigenous protagonists. Alas, this time around, the filmmakers didnβt cast Indigenous actors, instead choosing Ed Devereaux of Skippy fame, wearing blackface, playing opposite his βIndigenous co-leadβ β Malaysian-born singer Kamahl.
14. The night before he died, Harold Holt, then prime minister, attended the launch of the above-mentioned film. Was he picked up by Chinese submarines, as some have suggested, or was it just an attempt to escape further screenings of Journey Out of Darkness?
15. Lewis Bandt, the Australian who, in 1934, designed the worldβs first ute, died in 1987 while driving a restored version of his original vehicle. He was on his way back from a television interview about the impact of his creation.
16. Jules Francois Archibald, editor of The Bulletin and founder of the Archibald Prize, was born into an Irish Catholic family in regional Victoria and baptised John Feltham. He adopted the βJules Francoisβ later in life. Why? He loved all things French.
Canberra, AKA Shakespeare.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen
17. In the run-up to decimalisation, Robert Menzies proposed that our new unit of currency should be called βa royalβ, as in the phrase βCould you lend a couple of royals β I need to buy a beer?β The Reserve Bank produced designs, the proposal abandoned after months of ridicule.
18. Until November 1903, swimming at Manly was allowed only at night. Keith Dunstan, in his book Wowsers, says a large dinner bell was sounded at 7am to remind swimmers to leave the water. After 1903, you could swim in daylight but only clad in βneck-to-kneesβ.
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19. While βCanberraβ was eventually chosen as the nationβs capital, the minister in charge wanted it to be βShakespeareβ. Fine idea, but one which would have forced many Australians to utter the phrase: βFancy a dirty weekend in Shakespeare?β
20. And, slight drum roll, after he developed the Hills Hoist, Lance Hill was in the market for cheap wire to produce them in bulk. His solution was to purchase the now-surplus metal mesh that had been stretched across Sydney Harbour to deter Japanese submarines during WW2. The British had a wartime song called Weβre Going to Hang Out the Washing on the Siegfried Line, but it was the Australians who really did dry their laundry on defence infrastructure.
Happy Australia Day!