Sunday, November 5, 2017

SUCCUMBING TO THE VAPOURS AT THE MELBOURNE CUP

The special  conditions for  women  attending the 1900  November Cup Carnival at Flemington included attendants  who "hovered respectfully " to loosen tightly laced  whalebone corsets . In addition ,they were provided with  free face powder, eau-de-cologne  and hairpins .These  enchanting   snippets come  from  Peeps into the Past , a book of Melbourne's curiosities , by Mary Maxwell , illustrated by  Ruth  Iggsten , published by Heinemann, 1957, a copy of which was  discovered on Magnetic Island , North Queensland .

"Lady swooners " were also catered for at the  track  with palm leaf fans  and smelling salts . Another  curious  item  related to women  covered  Melbourne's first women's club, the Austral Salon , started  during Queen Victoria's  reign , by a group of women journalists , its objects : to encourage women to take an interest in the arts, to provide a meeting place  for those actively associated   with writing , and  to  encourage young  students striving  for  recognition .
  
The book, which   had at one  stage been in the   Terang Mechanics' Institute   Free Library ,  subscription  seven shillings and  sixpence a quarter ( payable in advance ),  includes the trade sticker of  Seward  booksellers   and   penned  in  name   Jane  Ronald  on  the front free endpaper.