| Historical notes: | History
Pre- and Post-Contact Aboriginal Custodianship
The Awabakal people are the traditional custodians of the site of Newcastle (Muloobinba). It has been claimed that Hamilton was called Nickimble, meaning ‘place of coal’. (Gloucester Advocate, 9 October 1931, p.3) Cameron’s Hill, as dry ground rising above surrounding swampland, may have been a ceremonial site. It is said to have been intermittently visited as late as the 1890s by Awabakal people, who, walking in from Swansea, some 25km to the south, would throw boomerangs down to what is now Gregson Park. (Newcastle Sun, 28 March 1975)
European
The Australian Agricultural Company (universally known as the A.A. Company) was established in London in 1824 for ‘the cultivation and improvement of waste lands in the Colony of New South Wales and for other purposes relating thereto’. The Court of Directors included Members of Parliament, directors of the Bank of England and of the East India Company, and other prominent bankers and merchants. (Bairstow, pp.5-7)
The Company soon became interested in the coal resources of the Newcastle area, at that time being exploited by convict labour under government control. Here the A.A. Company selected 1,920 acres of coal-bearing land and obtained privileges amounting to a fixed-term privatisation of most NSW coal mining. (Turner, pp.27-32) In opening its ‘A’ Pit of 1831, and importing plant, miners and colliery officials from Scotland and the North of England, the A.A. Company’s Colliery Department imposed the Industrial Revolution on a henceforth primitive coal industry. (Campbell, p.15)
In 1848 an A.A. Company exploring party boring for coal discovered a superior seam beneath the remote western part of the Company’s Newcastle estate. To this ‘Borehole Seam’ a shaft was sunk which in 1850 came into full production as the ‘D’ Pit (or Borehole colliery), the colony’s most technologically advanced coal mine. The colliery was opened just in time to support a new export trade with the west coast of North and South America. This trade, initially associated with the Californian gold rush, was to underwrite the prosperity of the Northern coal industry, uniquely linking the Newcastle district with the United States in terms of economics and culture until the collapse of the market with the opening in 1914 of the Panama Canal. Around the colliery grew up a miners’ settlement, called ‘The Borehole’ or ‘The Coal Pits’, of earth-floored slab huts of one or two rooms. As coal production increased, the colliers built additional huts on Borehole Hill, addressing Pit Row (now Denison Street) and others at Happy Flat (now Turner Street). In the mid-1850s the A.A. Company subdivided and sold nearby land to create the village of Pit Town. (L.E. Fredman, pp. 441-447; W.J. Goold, p.55; Campbell, pp.16-22)
Immediately responsible for the operation of the ‘D’ Pit was its Overman, a colliery official. In accordance with corporate hierarchy, the Overman’s house was built on the highest point of Borehole Hill, overlooking both the settlement and the colliery. Extensive grounds allowed a degree of self-sufficiency, while an underground tank provided a source of water independent of the wells used by the miners and their families. The northern boundary, addressing Pit Row, was protected by a six-foot picket fence with double gates. (Goold, p.164; Campbell, pp.29-30)
The first Overman was James (‘Jimmy’) Lindsay. In 1854 Scots-born Lindsay proved his worth in helping to save The Borehole from a bushfire. He also extended the working life of the previously-mismanaged ‘C’ Pit in inner Newcastle, and in 1857 helped convert the A.A. Company’s horse tramways to locomotive traction. Lindsay chaired the Borehole Co-operative Society and store; recruited volunteers to the NSW Military Forces; and helped found the Pit Town Presbyterian Church and the Borehole Temperance Society. (Campbell, pp.30-31)
When in 1860 the A.A. Company dismissed Robert Whyte, its Superintendent of Collieries (also described as Manager of Collieries), Lindsay temporarily assumed the position. He was succeeded by James Barron Winship, who arrived from the UK in early 1861 determined to reduce the pitmens’ wages and to break their union, the Coal Miners’ Mutual Protective Association of the Hunter District. (Pemberton, pp.35-37; Gollan, p.40; Murray, p.33)
Winship, derided as a ‘psalm-singing Wesleyan’ for his strong belief in social hierarchy, was at first unsuccessful, but his importation of 300 contract strikebreakers from Victoria and South Australia soon turned the tables. Many of them, called ‘blacklegs’ (scabs) by the miners and ‘free labourers’ by the Company, were quartered in houses from which Winship’s agents had unhesitatingly evicted the striking pitmen and their families. When many labourers, on becoming aware of real reason for their recruitment, broke their contracts and fled, Winship set off after them, on one occasion ranging as far as railway construction works at Picton. Here he arrested a worker under the Masters and Servants Act 1857 (NSW) and sent him, with 20 others, to Sydney in chains. Bitterness against Winship was to last into the 1930s, when a veteran miner claimed, probably mistakenly, that Winship had promised the miners ‘I will make you eat grass’. (Gollan, pp.40-43; Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 13 September 1935, p.11)
James Lindsay, sympathising with the miners, clashed with Winship and left both the Company’s service and the Overman’s house. (Newcastle Chronicle, 7 September 1861, p.2) Winship and his wife who moved in, with Pit Row becoming Winship Street and Borehole Hill becoming Winship’s Hill. As the Overman’s-cum-Manager’s house remained a modest one, the Winships later found more suitable accommodation. (Campbell, p.34)
The house appears thereafter to have been leased to a doctor, although details are lacking. In 1869 it was occupied by Dixon Little, his wife Mary and their children. Little, a North of England-born colliery engineer, was mainly concerned with the nearby Borehole No. 2 colliery, established by Winship. In 1871, Pit Town, The Borehole and Happy Flat were incorporated as the municipality of Hamilton, named after Edward Terrick Hamilton, Governor of the A.A. Company. In the mid-1870s a new mine, the ‘H’ Pit, was opened some distance to the south. Here Dixon Little superintended underground engineering operations and, having been promoted Chief Engineer, was also responsible for the New Winning colliery (in inner Newcastle, and called the Sea Pit as its workings extended beneath the ocean). When, in June 1889, 11 men and boys were entombed in the ‘H’ Pit disaster, Little assisted in the recovery of the bodies, the provision of the coffins and the re-opening of the mine. Dixon Street, Hamilton, appears to have been named after him. Little retired in May 1899, by which time Winship’s Hill had become better known as Cameron’s Hill after the former proprietor of a nearby inn. (NMH, 22 May 1899, p.8)
Little’s son, William Richard Little, now succeeded his father, and with his wife Alice and their children moved into the former Manager’s house. The A.A. Company, vexed by the Land Tax Act 1910 (Cth) and the collapse of the American export market, afterwards subdivided and sold much of Cameron’s Hill. The site of the Manager’s house was itself subdivided into three lots, but was retained unsold. The Colliery Department afterwards decided to dispose of its remaining Newcastle assets, including the Manager’s house, which William Little purchased in July 1914. While the central lot was occupied by the Manager’s house, those remaining were occupied by two homes built by the Little family. These are now 193 Denison Street (c.1920) and 197 Denison Street (1937). Both were designed by Dixon Allan Little, son of William and Alice, who, despite having trained as an architect, became a railway surveyor and engineer. (Docherty, p.84; Conveyance of Town Allotment to Wm R. Little, 1914; Campbell, p.68)
William Little, who retired in 1933 and died in 1945, served the A.A. Company for 50 years. The Manager’s house was inherited by Dixon Allan Little and his brother Charles Millican Little as tenants in common. It was around this time that Winship Street was renamed Denison Street, removing the obvious link between the Manager’s house and James Barron Winship. The Manager’s house, formerly 29 Winship Street, became 195 Denison Street. Here Charles Little continued to live until his accidental death in 1963. He left his share in the house to his niece, Mrs Naomi McCourt, daughter of Dixon Allan Little, who soon afterwards secured her father’s half share but continued to live with him at 197 Denison Street.
The Manager’s house, for decades concealed by plantings and surrounding dwellings, faded from public knowledge until in the early 1990s it was identified by history student David Campbell. In 1995 State funding was secured for the transfer of the property to Newcastle City Council, the lot being subdivided to allow Mrs McCourt to build a new dwelling, 195A Denison Street, which was ultimately intended as a caretaker’s cottage. (Campbell, pp.57-64)
State-funded conservation and restoration works enabled the opening of the house to the public, attracting in excess of 200 visitors per day. The house was also used for architectural short courses, photography exhibitions and the like. 195A Denison Street was acquired by Council in 2004, but after policy changes it was on-sold four years later. In 2016, Council sought to sell the Manager’s house by expressions of interest. (Campbell, pp.12, 59, 65) |