Pat's story: Love Life and Work in Middle Park
About
What are our sources for understanding the past? This presentation describes the early life and times of a local girl, Pat Hawthorne - great-granddaughter of the adventurous Farrell family who reached Port Melbourne in 1841, but experienced downward mobility. Its primary source is Pat’s extensive and incident-filled childhood narrative, written 40 years back at my request. In it she describes her life in the Depression and WW2 as the eldest of five and sole supporter of her family from the age of 14, when her father was too ill to work on the wharves as a casual labourer. This presentation focuses on Pat’s childhood before the war years that decimated her family – exploring the impact of her parents, her Middle Park schooling, her job trajectory and her local love life. Despite the toughness of Pat’s start, including the abject poverty and housing precarity she experienced, what factors led to post-war mobility becoming possible?Presenter:
After reaching Port Melbourne in 1841, Lesleyanne Hawthorne’s family settled in Albert Park and Middle Park. They were employed in local industries ranging from licensee of the Pier Hotel in the 1840s (after Liardet), to wharf labouring and factory work in Dunlop Rubber. In sharp contrast to her parents’ generation, Lesleyanne had the opportunity of a good education. She is an Emeritus Professor at the University of Melbourne, and a widely published global migration expert. This presentation focuses on the personal and the formative: her mother Pat’s story.
Date
Tuesday 10 March 2026 6:00 PM - 7:00 PM (UTC+11)Location
Emerald Hill Library
195 Bank Street, South Melbourne Victoria 3205