Inside The Mining Family. The Nineteenth Century
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 3
 - File Size:
 - 78 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1988
 
Abstract
Life inside the mining family was regulated by the mine. The  whistle shrieked the change of shift to the Cornish, Welsh and  German miners digging the alien soil for copper at Burra in the  1840s and the deep quartz gold mines at Bendigo in the  1880s.During the golden years of alluvial mining in the 1850s,  and later out on the frontier fields of Kalgoorlie and Jarrahdale  in Western Australia, the lure of the mine dominated family life.  How could it do anything else? The canvas tent, bark hut or  weatherboard cottage in which the mining family lived close by  the mine facilitated prompt access. The working man of the family  attended to the demands of the mine first, and those of his family  afterward. Who then organized and nurtured the mining family? The role  of the mining wife was multi-fold. She played the traditional roles  of home-maker and comforter, raising her children, tending her  house and vegetable garden and supporting those friends and  acquaintances who had lost children to disease, or menfolk to  the mine. Epidemics of measles, the whooping cough or influenza  carried away children in infancy or at too young an age. The death  of a husband through accident or disease (pthisis was a likely  killer) forced upon the mining wife another role, that of provider.  When Elizabeth Vigus' husband died in a Bendigo mine accident  in March 1880 Elizabeth set up a grocery business to support her  young children.' But in other cases the mining wife supplemented  the family earnings by part time work, not in the mines for the  Mines Act legislation of 1842 forbade the working of women  underground, but in auxilfiary occupations which were in  demand.2 Ann Mitchell, a herbalist ,found plenty of work in the  goldfield towns of Daylesford and Maldon in the 1860s and  1870s.3 So too did Susan Rule and her daughter Catherine who  conducted a sewing and millinery establishment in Beechworth  in the 1870s.4 The making of the family's clothes was another task of the  mining wife and mother.Until the wonderful invention of the  sewing machine, this was a tedious and time-consuming task.  James Slater Edmonson bought his wife a Wertheim for the sum  of 12 pounds in June 1886, just before leaving her and his chil- dren in the Adelaide suburb of Goodwood whilst he went alone  to the goldfields of the West. In October of that year he wrote  to Louise telling her how he missed the childrens' wondering  "whether Slater wore my old shirt now. I always think of him  as he sat on my knee at breakfast in that old shirt; and how  pleasant it would be if I could rock both of them and sing as  I used to do".5
Citation
APA: (1988) Inside The Mining Family. The Nineteenth Century
MLA: Inside The Mining Family. The Nineteenth Century. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1988.