Tuesday, 26 April 2022
Changing the name of our suburbs
Thursday, 21 April 2022
Sarah Sands corner, orange meets green – with unhappy results
When Protestant William of Orange sent his men to fight off the Catholic forces of James the Second, he hoped to get rid of James forever. And he did. The Battle of the Boyne took place on 1 July 1690 on the banks of the River Boyne not far north of Dublin. William was triumphant. James was driven out and the Irish ‘troubles’ became entrenched in Ireland’s history – and the history of the Irish diaspora.
Just over three hundred
years after the Battle of the Boyne, the tensions created by this bloody battle
played out on the streets of Brunswick, in particular right in front of
the Sarah Sands Hotel, the southern gateway to Brunswick.
On Sunday 19 July 1896
the Police Commissioner prohibited the march. What better way to make sure
there was a big turn out? And there was. Thousands found their way to this
stretch of Sydney Road by whatever means was available and they succeeded in
preventing the Orangemen from marching. There were violent clashes, though, and
the newspaper headlines the next day shouted ‘A riotous Sunday afternoon in
Brunswick’.
The following year
there was huge media attention and the press published photos of masses of
people at what they called ‘Red Flag’ corner. It was Sunday 18 July 1897 and
almost 300 police, mostly constables on foot, had taken their places, ready to
face the largest crowd ever assembled in Brunswick. It is believed that more than
30,000 people converged on the Sarah Sands corner that afternoon, arriving by
tram, train and on foot from all over the city. Tensions rose as the Orangemen
began their march at about 3pm and it was at this corner that the crowd broke
through the barriers.
Image the excitement
when a middle aged woman, later identified as 37 year old servant Johanna
McMahon, leapt into the parade swirling her umbrella around. She didn’t do much
damage, though, because in those days of poor roads and unmade roads, and in
the middle of winter, Johanna was pushed by the police into the mud. That
slowed her down enough for the police to bundle her into a cab and take her to
the lockup. A few others tried to interrupt the procession but this time the
marchers got through.
There were no marches,
no protests the following year. So for just two years in the 1890s, this little
part of Brunswick was the subject of huge media attention for its battles of
the orange and the green.
And in case you’re
interested, Johanna McMahon was taken before the Carlton Court, remanded to
appear in Brunswick Court where she was fined 10 shillings and allowed to go
home.
If you stand on the Sarah Sands corner and look around you at the recent developments that blend Brunswick’s past with its future you'll be hard put to believe the ferocity of the religious and national
tensions between the English and the Irish that played out here and over many
years within unions, benevolent associations, political parties and workplaces.
It probably still exists in some families. It was a very real thing and
affected generations of Anglo-Celtic families in Australia.