Showing posts with label Boarding houses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boarding houses. Show all posts

Sunday, November 8, 2020

Dandenong House boarding house

In April 1911 (1) James Fenton Andrews opened Dandenong House, his palatial edifice (2) in Foster Street, Dandenong, and which was situated on an eminence above the railway station (3). 


Dandenong House, c. 1911. Photographer: Albert Jones.

The building contained 40 rooms (4) which had been planned with regard to convenience and comfort, and the arrangement of smoking and ladies' rooms, as well as general conveniences, leaves nothing to be desired (5). The spacious dining room was 40 feet by 30 feet (6). The building was designed by local architect, W.H. Orgill (7). William Henry Orgill later became a District Inspector in the Public Works Department (8).  In 1951 the Loyal Dandenong Lodge of the Manchester Unity Independent Order of Oddfellows celebrated sixty years and an article in the Dandenong Journal listed their longest serving members, led by Mr Orgill who had joined July 4, 1895 (9)


The first advertisement in the South Bourke & Mornington Journal May 18, 1911.

The operation of Dandenong House got off to a dramatic start when on the night of June 21, 1911 the roof was blown off by a cyclonic wind. The Argus reported that the ornamental parapet was thrown over, in its descent tearing through the iron balcony roof and floor. A chimney stack was blown over, and it crashed into an unoccupied bedroom. Some of the bricks found their way to other apartments, but, strange to say, nobody was injured. The large plate-glass windows of the front shops escaped damage. There were over 20 lodgers in the house, including a newly-married couple on their honeymoon (10)The building was quickly repaired and no doubt the honeymooners had an exciting tale to tell when they returned home. 

James Fenton Andrews, the owner of Dandenong House was born in 1862 in Dandenong to James and Clearie (nee Maple) Andrews (11). His parents had taken up 95 acres in Keysborough in September 1871. In 1884, he married Edith Foster, the daughter of another early Keysborough family, Joseph and Martha (nee McConnell) Foster. Joseph had worked for William Keys after his arrival in Victoria in 1855 and saved enough money to buy a small farm (12)

The name for the part of Keysborough where the Andrew and Foster families lived was Elmsford. This was a 1852 sub-division of Crown Allotment 53, Parish of Dandenong by James Simpson. He created 63 small farms and township allotments and called the town Elmsford.  The town of Elmsford never eventuated, however many farmers established small market gardens. The locality of Elmsford is essentially south of Cheltenham Road, between Chapel Road to the west and Chandler Road to the east. Perry Road, part of the sub-division was named for auctioneer, Symons & Perry and Newson Road is named after the architect surveyor of the land, Albert Newson (13). Many of the early settlers were united by their Wesleyan (Methodist) faith. They built  a small wooden chapel (in Chapel Road) in 1861 and a brick chapel in 1877, using the wooden building for a Sunday School and Hall.  The church buildings are currently and disgracefully kept in a state of neglect by their owners, the Uniting Church, who should have more community spirit and responsibility and restore them or at the very least stop their 'demolition by neglect' path. Brothers Robert, John and Thomas Orgill were also Elmsford residents and Methodists, I have not worked out the connection to the architect of Dandenong House, W.H. Orgill, but they must be related (14)

Back to James and Edith. Edith gave birth to ten children between 1885 and 1900 and then sadly died in 1903, at the age of 38. As  a matter of interest Edith's birth place is listed as Elmsford (15). James then married Edith's first cousin, Maria, the daughter of  John and Ann (nee Martin) Foster in 1909 and they had two sons (16).  James and Maria retired to Cobram where he died in 1933, aged 70. Maria died  ten years later. James, Edith and Maria are all buried at the Dandenong Cemetery (17).

Around 1914 Dandenong House was taken over by Emma Esther Hubbard (nee Coventry). She was a widow, her husband Benjamin had died in 1903 at Yarra Glen (18).  In 1916, she married William Henry Gordon, who was a sawmmiller and she continued to operate Dandenong House until 1917 (19). Emma was apparently a very good cook as there are various reports about functions held at Dandenong House where her catering is praised - Mrs Hubbard had prepared an appetising repast (20)....The catering arrangements were ably carried out by the hostess, Mrs Hubbard, who provided a sumptuous spread of light refreshments which were duly appreciated (21)....After the ceremony the guests, between 60 and 70 in number, adjourned to Dandenong House, where the wedding tea was served, in Mrs Hubbard's most efficient style (22).

Emma did not retire after she left Dandenong House, she moved onto another guest house, Osborne House at 40 Nicholas Street in Fitzroy (23). This was a boarding house popular amongst actors, as the article in The Herald below, attests.  Emma died in 1938 at the age of 66, she is buried at Yarra Glen (24).


The short obituary of Emma Esther - she wasn't at Osborne house for more than 30 yeas as we can place her at Dandenong House until 1917, but that's a minor point. Of more importance is what a dynamic and interesting clientele Emma must have had at Osborne House.

The next proprietor of Dandenong House guesthouse was Charles Robert Jones, who was there from November 1917 until June 1920 when Evelyn Mary Matthews took over the establishment for the next thirty years.


Mr Jones takes over Dandenong House
South Bourke & Mornington Journal November 29, 1917  https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/66193134

Evelyn, born in Camperdon in 1890, was the daughter of Joseph and Esther (nee Skjellerup) Matthews (25). Evelyn operated the guest house with her mother and there are various newspaper accounts of wedding breakfasts, fundraisers for the Red Cross during the War  and other functions being held at Dandenong House under the supervision of the Matthews family (26).  As an example of the homely atmosphere Dandenong House provided, there was a report in the Dandenong Journal of July 1936 of Dandenong High School teacher, Harry Tonkin, leaving for a teaching position in Scotland. During, his residence here Mr. Tonkin has comfortably lived at Dandenong House, where Mrs. Matthews and her daughter (Miss Matthews) speak of him in the highest terms possible. Neither would permit of his departure without the presence of several of his friends - among whom were more than thirty - being invited to dinner on Wednesday night last, to wish him bon-voyage and a safe return.... a sumptuous meal was served in the spacious dining hall (27)


Miss Matthews' advertisment for Dandenong House
South Bourke & Mornington Journal June 17, 1920 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/66198270

Mrs Matthews died in March 1938 and the Dandenong Journal reported that it is with deep regret that we record the passing of a very old resident of Dandenong, in Mrs. Esther Anne Matthews. Mrs. Matthews was the mother of Miss E. M. Matthews, proprietor of “Dandenong House,” and Mrs. McAlpine. Many former guests of Dandenong House attended the funeral to the Springvale Crematorium (28). Miss Evelyn Matthews retired in October 1950 and she died in 1979 (29).


Miss Matthews retires
Dandenong Journal October 18, 1950 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/219304585

Dandenong House remained a boarding house, but like many of these establishments throughout Melbourne the demographic of the clientele changed. People like Mr Tonkin, the teacher had more housing options from the 1950s and 1960s with the large increase in the number of flats available for rent. Many of these old boarding houses were lacking the facilities such as private bathrooms that commercial travellers and others could expect to find in motels. Many boarding houses, like hotels,  were traditionally operated by women as they supplied her with a place to live and a source of income, but with the rise of other employment options, women no longer needed to operate boarding houses to survive. The boarding house became a place where people with limited housing options due to unemployment, psychiatric or addiction issues lived. 

On December 23, 1977 Dandenong House was condemned as a fire risk and its 48 inhabitants had to find somewhere else to live. On January 3, 1978 it burnt to the ground - the old boarding house went up like a pack of crackers at 4.35pm, it was gone in 3 minutes Dandenong Fire Brigade member, Max Owen is reported to have said (30).


The end of Dandenong House, January 1978.
The Age January 4, 1978 from Newspapers.com by Ancestry. 


Trove list
I have created a list of articles on Dandenong House and the people connected to it, access it here

Footnotes
(1) I don't have an exact date of the opening. There was an advertisement for a cook at Dandenong House in the South Bourke & Mornington Journal on April 13, 1911, see here, and the same paper on May 11 said that there were several boarders in residence, but it was still being completed, see here.
(2) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, May 11, 1911, see here.
(3) The Argus, June 22, 1911 see here.
(4) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, January 26, 1911, see here.
(5) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, May 11, 1911, see here.
(6) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, May 11, 1911, see here.
(7) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, September 29, 1910, see here.
(8) Gippsland Times, December 20 1937, see here.
(9) Dandenong Journal, July 11, 1951, see here.
(10) The Argus, June 22, 1911, see here. Other reports in The Age of the same date, see here and the South Bourke & Mornington Journal also on June 22, see here.
(11) Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages https://www.bdm.vic.gov.au/research-and-family-history/search-your-family-history
(12) Hibbins, G.M. A history of the City of Springvale: constellation of communities (City of Springvale/Lothian, 1984), p. 79. Marriage details to Edith Fisher is from the Victorian BDMs - see footnote 11. Information about the Foster family is from p. 52 of  Gillian Hibbins' book. 
(13) Hibbins, G.M., op. cit., p. 52 has the history of the Elmsford sub-division. There are maps on pages 51 and 58 of her book. I discovered that Ms Hibbins had written about Elmsford only because Graeme Butler quoted her in his City of Greater Dandenong Heritage Study Stage One 1998: V2, access it here 
(14) Information about the Methodist connection between the early Keysborough settlers is in chapter 3 of Gillian Hibbins' book.The date of the erection of the two churches comes from the City of Greater Dandenong Heritage Study from 2003,   https://cgdresources.mmgsolutions.net/Resources/Website/SiteDocuments/doc61313.pdf  The Orgill brothers are mentioned in Gillian Hibbins' book on pages 50 & 53.
(15)  Victorian BDMs - see footnote 11.
(16)  Victorian BDMs - see footnote 11. I suspected that John and Joseph Foster were brothers and this  confirmed on page 57 of Gillian Hibbins' book.
(17) Obituary of James Fenton Andrews in the Dandenong Journal of February 2, 1933, see here and Cobram Courier of the same date, see here.
(18) Evelyn Observer & Bourke East Record, March 6, 1903, see here.
(19) Emma Esther Hubbard is in the Electoral Rolls at Dandenong House in 1914 and 1915 and as Emma Esther Gordon in 1916 and 1917, along with William Henry Gordon, sawmiller. In the 1919 Electoral Roll they are both at 40 Nicholson Street, Fitzroy, her occupation is boarding house keeper.
(20) Dandenong Advertiser, September 2, 1915, see here.
(21) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, September 16, 1915, see here.
(22) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, November 4, 1915, see here.
(23) Electoral Roll for 1919, division of Batman, subdivision of Gertrude. Osborne House was built in 1850 and enlarged in 1887, see the Victorian Heritage Database citation, here.
(24) The Herald March 5, 1938, see here.
(25) Victorian BDMs - see footnote 11.
(26) See my Trove list, here.
(27) Dandenong Journal, July 16, 1936, see here.
(28) Dandenong Journal, March 9, 1938, see here.
(29) Dandenong Journal October 18, 1950, see here and death comes from the Victorian BDMs.
(30) The Age January 4, 1978 

Saturday, September 12, 2020

Kalara, Grey Street - St Kilda's birthplace of the Helena Rubinstein Beauty Empire

In 1901, Helena Juliet Rubinstein, moved into Mrs Isabella Stern's boarding house Kalara at 77-79 Grey Street, St Kilda (1).  A year or so later, Helena's cosmetics business was established, which by the time of her death in 1965 was worth 60 million dollars (2).  It is accepted that James Thompson, the Managing Director of the Robur Tea Company, was instrumental in the establishment of Helena's business by providing financial, business and marketing support and advice. It is said that they met while she was waitressing at the Winter Garden Tea Rooms in the basement of the Block Arcade or the Cafe Maison Doree in Swanston Street (3), but new evidence has come to light that they first met at Mrs Stern's boarding house, and thus 77-79 Grey Street, St Kilda can be considered to be the birthplace of the Helena Rubinstein's beauty empire.


Helena Rubinstein in 1904
Image: War Paint: Helena Rubinstein and Elizabeth Arden, their lives, their times, their rivalry 
by Lindy Woodhead (Virago, 2003) (4)

We know that Helena lived for  a time with Mrs Stern's but because of  a robbery at the boarding house we now know that James Thompson also lived there. Mrs Stern made a police report on December 2, 1904 that a  silver cigarette case and light-grey tweed coat, belonging to Morris Kozminsky and a flat top pearl shirt stud; a gold round knob scarf pin and a pair of boots with patent leather toes belonging to James H. Thompson were stolen from her premises.

Robbery Report at the boarding house
Victorian Police Gazette, No. 49. December 8, 1904

We will look at the main characters in this story starting with Isabella Stern, who owned the building where Helena first met James. Isabella Stern was the second child of nine of Rabbi Moses and Elvina Rintel. The Rabbi had arrived in Sydney in 1844 where he served the Sydney Congregation as  the Principal of the Hebrew School.  In January 1849, he was appointed as the Reader of the Melbourne Hebrew Congregation, and in 1857 he established the Mikveh Yisrael Melbourne Synagogue (5). Elvina's father, John Hart had served in the British Navy in the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, later migrated to America and then Australia. He died at his house, Trafalgar Cottage, Albert Street in Windsor in January 1864 (6).

Isabella, aged 24,  married Abraham Stern, aged 37, on September 15, 1875. Her father officiated at the wedding, held at the Synagogue in Lonsdale Street. Abraham was born in Schirwindt in Prussia and his father, Louis, was also a Rabbi. They had three daughters, Ruby, Eda and Rita. The family first lived in Victoria Street in Carlton, later moved to Dalgety Street in St Kilda and around 1895 they moved to 79 Grey Street (7). 77 and 79 Grey Street are two adjoining residences, made of brick, each of nine principal rooms which had been built three years earlier by Gavin Shaw, a wine merchant (8).  Shaw was also the Mayor of St Kilda for two years from 1881 (9).  After his death in June 1894, his widow Jane owned the property, and the Sterns leased it from her (10). We know that the Sterns later owned both 77 and 79 Grey Street and they possibly purchased it from Jane Shaw's estate, after she died in May 1900 (11).

I wonder if that is when the Sterns decided to operate a boarding house to help defray some of the cost of purchasing the properties. Abraham's occupation in the Rate books and Electoral roll was that of warehouseman. He was a wholesaler in the drapery business, and had retired selling his entire stock by tender in  April 1908 (12).


77-79 Grey Street, St Kilda, an imposing duplex built 1892.
Photo: Isaac Hermann

Grey Street at the time was highly regarded by the well-to-do citizens of Melbourne as a place to live (13) and it would not have been hard for Mrs Stern to attract boarders. Maurice Kozminsky, who was also a victim of the robbery, was the son of Abraham and Esther (nee Goldberg) Kozminsky. Abraham's occupation in the Electoral Roll was listed as an Investor and Maurice was a commercial traveller. In March 1906, the Kozminsky family held their son Clifford's Bar Mitzvah at Kalara, 77 Grey Street. In the 1903 Electoral Roll the family was at 32 Beaconsfield Parade but from the 1906 Electoral Rolls they were at 6 Burnett Street, St Kilda and it appears they were living with Mrs Stern for just a short time (14).  6 Burnett Street was for sale by auction in April 1905 (15), and though the Kozminsky's purchased it then, they looked to have been temporarily staying at Mrs Stern's boarding house, while it was being renovated.  Maurice enlisted in the A.I. F. in May 1915, with the rank of 2nd Lieutanant, and sadly died of wounds (gun shot wound - abdomen) in France in August 1916. His brother, Clifford, also served in the First World War (16). Abraham was the brother of Simon Kozminsky, the jeweller and antiques dealer, who started his business in Melbourne in the 1860s (17).

James Thompson, was a tea merchant, associated with the name of Robur Tea from 1893 when he and a Mr Bell produced a booklet for the tea Hawthorn, Rhodes & Co., called Tea, its origin, cultivation, manufacture, effects on the human system, and how to tell good tea. The authors looked at various brands of tea and said Robur Tea was prepared on scientific lines and would produce a perfect tea. This booklet was sent to newspaper offices in Victoria, who then gave column space to the ideas set forth in the booklet and thus Robur Tea gained some publicity and  brand recognition (18). By 1900, James was the President of the Robur Tea Company (19).  In 1903 his address in the  Electoral Rolls was 79 Grey Street, where, as we know, he was the victim of a robbery and where he also met Helena Rubinstein.

Accounts of Helena's life are many and varied, it's hard to pin down dates and Helena herself also gave different birth dates throughout her life and embellished her life story, so what follows is as accurate as can be surmised. Helena was born in the 1870s (20)  in Krakow in Poland and arrived on the Prince Regent Luitpold in September 1896 (21).  She then stayed with her uncles, Louis and Bernhard Silberfeld in Coleraine in western Victoria (22). They had a fancy-goods shop in town, though she found that many of the local women were keen to buy her face-cream that she had brought with her from Poland. This cream had been made by her mother's friend Jacob Lykulokis, a Hungarian chemist (23).  After three years in Coleraine, some sources say that she worked as governess for the Fairbairn family of Meltham of Geelong; this leading to a year's position as Governess to Lord Lamington, the Queensland Governor, in Toowomba (24).  After Helena returned to Melbourne around 1901, she became a nanny, at Linden, the Acland Street home of Moritz Michaelis and family (25).

Firstly to free herself from the stricture of living-in domestic work she took a room at Mrs Stern's boarding house in Grey Street, St Kilda (26) where she met James Thompson.  To support herself, she worked as a waitress at the Winter Garden Tea Rooms and the Cafe Maison Doree. James and Helena formed a friendship, but were they lovers?  Perhaps they consorted, though as both were single, their dalliance was not an adulterous one, as others have inferred. (27).

In 1902, the Winter Gardens Tea Room was the venue for their business meeting which Helena attended with her sister, Ceska, who had recently arrived from Krakow. At this meeting James introduced his artistic designer, who helped to create a label  for Helena's cream. James also introduced her to a printer, for the production of  labels, which James financed with a £100 loan or gift.  It is also said that she  borrowed £250 to establish a beauty salon at 138 Elizabeth Street, and most likely this money also came from Thompson (28).  In February 1903, Helena trade-marked, a toilet preparation known as skin food and at the same time trademarked the distinctive label, though not the name. The name Valaze was not trademarked until June 1905 (29).


The distinctive label, trademarked by Helena Rubinstein in February 1903.
The label is written in Polish an approximate translation of which is - removes wrinkles freckles impetigo, gives face delicate fair transparent.
National Archives of Australia  https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=5003647

I had a look at the newspapers on Trove to find the first time Valaze was mentioned as a product and came across this advertisement, below, which markets the preparation as Dr Lykulokis' product.


Early advertisement for Valaze.

On February 26, 1903 Table Talk had an advertorial on the product, extolling the virtues of Dr Lykulokis' Valase, imported by Helena Rubinstein & Co. of 138 Elizabeth Street. Helena had learnt from James Thompson the value of free publicity under the guise of editorial content.  Table Talk explains what Valaze was - Valaze is really a skin food, which is prepared by the most celebrated of all the European skin specialists, Dr. Lykuski (sic), from herbs which grow in the Carpathian Mountains, the dividing range between Galicia and Hungary. It is in no sense a "make-up" ; in fact, it is not visible upon the skin in any way. It is in the truest sense of the word a "skin food." When rubbed into the skin it is absorbed into the pores, and creates a perfectly healthy condition. By its aid all impurities are removed, and the skin becomes re-invigorated (30).

One month after the first advertisement appeared, and two days after the Table Talk promotion, another advertisement, below, appeared for Valaze and this time there was no mention of Dr Lykulokis at all.


Advertisement for Valaze Skin Food.
The Argus February 28, 1903 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9825760 

Australian women fell in love with the product and sales earnt Helena £12,000 in two years, enabling a move to 243 Collins Street (31). Initially the potion was imported from Europe, but it was soon made in her own laboratory with the ingredients coming from the firm of Felton, Grimwade & Co. They were a drug company, and later branched out into glass manufacturing (the Melbourne Glass Bottle Works (32)) and a chemical works. They most likely also supplied the glass containers for her potions as well. It is possible that Helena was introduced to one of the founders of the company, Frederick Grimwade, by Moritz Michaelis (33). 




Trademark application for name Valaze.
National Archives of Australia  https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=5027799

In 1905, the year she trade-marked the name Valase, Helena went to Europe to study skin treatments and upon her return opened the Valaze Institute at 274 Collins Street, which was a full service beauty parlour (34). On May 17, 1907, Helena applied for Australian citizenship and her referee was  Frederick Grimwade, of Felton, Grimwade & Co., who attested to her good character (35).


An original Helena Rubinstein & Co. of Melbourne bottle, likely to have been manufactured by the Felton, Grimwade & Co. subsidiary, Melbourne Glass Bottle Works. 



In 1908 Helena took her company overseas and it became successful on an international scale. Helena had drive, energy and highly developed business acumen. An acquaintance from the early days in Melbourne, Abel Isaacson, is quoted as saying  Without Mr Thompson - he was the manager of the Robur Tea Company - she wouldn't have done what she did. He helped her. He taught her. He made her. Mark my words, he was the brains behind the little lady' (36). Would Helena have had the success that she did,  had she has not met James Thompson in Mrs Stern's boarding house? We will never know, but Kalara, 77-79 Grey Street deserves its place in history as the birthplace of  a global cosmetic empire.

Acknowledgements
I first found out about Helena's connection to Isabella Stern's boarding house, from my research colleague, Isaac Hermann, who sent me the link to Cosmetics and Skin  http://cosmeticsandskin.org/companies/helena-rubinstein.php  I then found this report of the robbery at Mrs Sterns.



The Age December 3, 1904 

The report noted the date that the robbery took place and an address in Grey Street, though it wasn't until I found the original report in the Police Gazette on Ancestry that we had the correct address. Then Isaac realised that Mr James Thompson, was Helena's mentor and so we gathered that their first meeting was not a cafe in Melbourne but Mrs Stern's boarding house where they both lived. The research in this post is very much a collaboration between Isaac and myself. Isaac also supplied the photos of the cobalt blue Helena Rubinstein bottle.

Footnotes 
 (1) Woodhead, Lindy War Paint: Helena Rubinstein and Elizabeth Arden, their lives, their times, their rivalry (Virago, 2003), p. 44. Also quoted in the website Cosmetics and Skin: Stories from the history and science of cosmetics, skin-care and early Beauty Culture http://cosmeticsandskin.org/companies/helena-rubinstein.php 
(2) Poynter, J. R Helena Rubinstein - Australian Dictionary of Biography entry http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/rubinstein-helena-8293 
(3) Woodhead, op. cit. p. 47 implies she met Thompson at the Winter Garden Tea Rooms. The Cosmetics and Skin website says they met at the Cafe Maison Dore.
(4) This was Helena's press photo that she supplied to Table Talk in 1904. The image credit in Lindy Woodhead's book is the Helena Rubinstein Foundation.
(5)  I have written about Rabbi Rintel and the establishment of his Mikveh Yisrael Synagogue, here. I have also written about Henri Rintel, Isabella's brother, here.
(6)  John Hart's life is partly mentioned in his son, Henri's obituary in the Jewish Herald of May 2, 1884, see here. John's death notice, published in The Argus of January 25, 1864, tells us that he lived and died at Trafalgar Cottage in Windsor, see here.
(7) Isabella Rintel and Abraham Stern - information about their marriage, his birth place and parents come from their marriage certificate. They had three daughters - Ruby (1876-1945, married Edward Lazarus in 1909, they had no children; Eda (1878-1879) and Rita (1881-1960, never married). The birth notices of the daughters provided the Victoria Street address and the St Kilda Rate Books available on Ancestry provided the Dalgety Street address and the move to Grey Street.
(8) Victorian Heritage Database citation https://vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/places/1113
(9) Gavin Shaw died aged 64 on June 2, 1894. You can read his obituary in the Prahan Telegraph of June 9, 1894, here.
(10) St Kilda Rate books, available on Ancestry.
(11) Isabella died February 3, 1921. Her will (on-line at the Public Records Office of Victoria) lists all her property, including 77 and 79 Grey Street. Jane Shaw died May 18, 1900 Her death notice was in both the Argus and The Age the next day.
(12) Abraham Stern - you can read the list of his goods that were put to tender in April 1908 in The Age, April 1, 1908, see here (last column, under Tenders). Abraham died April 8, 1912. He had a short obituary in the Jewish Herald of April 12, 1912, see here. He and Isabella are buried at Brighton Cemetery.
(13) Victorian Heritage Database citation https://vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/places/1113
(14) Information about the Kozminsky family comes from the Electoral Rolls on Ancestry. The information about Clifford's Bar Mitvah was from a snippet in the Jewish Herald March 24, 1905, see here.
(15) I assume that they purchased 6 Burnett Street in April 1905, and that a renovation was the reason they were temporarily at Mrs Stern's boarding house.  6 Burnett Street was described as a semi-detached two-storied brick and cement residence, known containing drawing, dining, breakfast rooms, kitchen, scullery, wash house, 8 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms, spacious tiled verandahs and balconies. Attached to the house, on the south side, is a  large billiard room, of wood. The outbuildings and stables are also of wood. The Age, April 8, 1905, see here. See the Victorian Heritage Database citation for 6 Burnett Street, here.
(16) National Archives of Australia. Maurice's A.I.F record can be read here and Clifford's here.
(17)


An advertisement for Simon Kozmisky's business from Punch, November 21, 1907

(18) Thompson and Bell's booklet was reported on in The Launceston Examiner of July 15, 1893; The Herald, August 24, 1893 The Kyneton Observer, August 31, 1893, The Avoca Mail, September 5, 1893. 
(19) Letter to the Editor of The Age, November 29, 1900, see here.
(20) Her record on the passenger list for the Prince Regent Luitpold, the ship she arrived in Melbourne on in September 1896, says she was 20, thus born 1876; her Australian Naturalisation papers have her birth date as Christmas Day, 1897. She died April 1, 1065 and claimed to be 94, this born 1871.  
(21) Unassisted Passenger List at the Public Records Office of Victoria and Ancestry.


Helena's record from the Prince Regent Luitpold - she embarked from Genoa, her age was 20 and nationality listed as German.
(22) Louis and Bernhard were her mother's brothers. Louis Silberfeld, a bachelor, who died April 23, 1908 at the age of 54, had the store at Coleraine with his brother and then a grocery store at Merino. You can read a short obituary in the Hamilton Spectator of April 27, 1908, here. He was granted a Grocer's License for Merino in December 1905, see Hamilton Spectator, December 9, 1905, here. He is buried at the Melbourne General Cemetery.
Bernhard Silberfeld died June 25, 1923, aged 86. He had one daughter, Eva, who married Louis Levy (divorced in 1896). Eva had three sons, Reg, Fred and Theo. The three boys all enlisted in the First World War, Fred was discharged on medical grounds, but the other two served overseas. Bernhard is buried at Brighton Cemetery.
(23) Gardiner, Frank  The Fields of Coleraine (published by the Author, 2003), pp. 165-166.
(23) Woodhead, op. cit., pp 42-46; Poynter, op. cit -  ADB entry, see here. Helena's Naturalisation application  from May 1907, has this time-line: Arrived in Australia July 1897 on the Prince Regent Luitpold; three years in Coleraine, one year in Toowomba and five years in Melbourne.
(24) Woodhead, op. cit., p. 46.
(25) Lindy Woodhead, p. 46, says she was a nanny at Morty Michaelis. Moritz Michaelis  (1820 - 1902) -  the founder of the Michaelis, Hallenstein Tannery at Footscray, read about that here. Read his obituary in the Jewish Herald of December 2, 1902, here. Linden, is now owned by the City of Port Phillip and is an art gallery, see here and read the Victorian Heritage Database citation, here.
(26) Woodhead, op. cit., p. 46.
(27) Woodhead (p. 47) said they were lovers and that the relationship was doomed due to the inevitability there was a Mrs Thompson. The relationship may have been doomed but James Thompson did not get married until 1906. This was to Isabella Grist (nee Hutchings) and they had one daughter together, Thelma Belle, born on March 27, 1908.  Isabella died September 1918 at the age of 50. Thelma married Frank Hartley in May 1930, you can read a report and see a photo of the lovely bride, here in Table Talk, May 22, 1930. James died on August 23, 1933, aged 72. Helena married Edward William Titus in 1908 in London. They had two sons, Roy and Horace, read about the marriage in the Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here.
(28) Poynter, op. cit -  ADB entry, see here.
(29) The trade mark applications are digitsed at the National Archives - the 1903 application can be read here and the June 1905 application here.
(30) Table Talk, February 26, 1903, see here.
(31) Poynter, op. cit -  ADB entry, see here.
(32) Melbourne Glass Bottle Works established in 1872 and in the 1920s amalgamated with Australian Glass Manufacturers, and later became Australian Consolidated Industries. Source: Encyclopedia of Australian Science, see here.
(33) Woodhead, op. cit., p. 48; Cosmetics and Skin website, see here. Felton, Grimwade & Co - established by Alfred Felton (1831-1904), read his Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here and Frederick Shepphard Grimwade (1840-1910), read his Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here. It is Lindy Woodhouse (p. 48) who suggests that Helena was introduced to Frederick Grimwade by Moritz Michaelis.
(34) Poynter, op. cit -  ADB entry, see here.
(35) Citizenship application has been digitised and can be accessed on the National Archives of Australia, see here.
(36) Woodhead, op. cit., p. 46