I acknowledge the Traditional Owners on whose land I walk, I work and I live. I pay my respects to Elders past, present and future.

Wednesday, 11 December 2024

Founding of the RSSILA sub branch Ingham 1933 and saga of the Memorial Hall 1938

 FORMATION OF RETURNED SOLDIERS LEAGUES

Already by 1915 invalid returning soldiers from World War 1 were forming associations and gathering in clubhouses to discuss their health problems and concerns about the lack of coordinated repatriation facilities and tailored medical services.

In May 1916 representatives of those associations met in Sydney and then Melbourne to address the need for a unified approach to these concerns. A constitution was formulated and the provisional name the Returned Soldiers and Sailors Imperial League of Australia (RSSILA) was decided upon.

At the first Federal Congress held in Brisbane in September 1916 the RSSILA was formally constituted and name adopted.

 In November 1940 the name was changed to include airmen: Returned Sailors, Soldiers and Airmen’s Imperial League of Australia (RSSAILA).

In October 1965 the name was condensed to Returned Services League of Australia.

Then in September 1990 another name change was made to cater for a wider membership as, with the passing of time, an exclusive membership of returned servicemen and women could no longer be sustained. Today the organization is known as the Returned & Services League of Australia.

FIRST MOVES TO BUILD A MEMORIAL HALL - 1920

Already, in Ingham, returned soldiers had formed themselves into what may have been an unofficial branch of the RSSILA as it wasn’t until 1924 that the North Queensland District of the RSSILA was established. In January 1920 the group held a dance to raise money for a soldiers’ ‘rest room’ in Ingham. The first ANZAC DAY dinner was held at the Masonic Hall on Palm Terrance in Ingham in 1920.  After the opening of the Shire Hall on 18 March 1921 the Honour Roll was housed in the Shire Hall and ANZAC Day ceremonies were conducted outside that building.

A committee was formed of three returned soldiers (Messrs G. Groundwater, E. Billam and C. Renouf) and three civilians (Messrs F. Cassady, G. Cantamessa and G.G. Venables) for the aim of raising funds for a Memorial Hall. A two storied brick and concrete building was envisaged whose entrance would house the honour board. The building would include a meeting room, shops and offices for rent in order to provide revenue to assist paying off the building and for running expenses.

The committee investigated the possibility of obtaining a vacant allotment (originally where the postmaster’s residence had stood) in Lannercost Street between the Post Office and the Police Sergeant’s residence. It was anticipated that between £2000 and £3000 would be required to build the Memorial Hall. Already on the occasion of the visit of the Italian Consul, Count di San Marzano to Ingham in 1929 when the Italian Returned Soldiers’ Association contributed £35 to the construction of a Memorial Hall, £1000 had been raised.

FORMATION OF THE INGHAM SUB BRANCH OF THE TOWNSVILLE RSSILA - 1933

Perhaps spurred on by Halifax which had unveiled a concrete obelisk as a war memorial on ANZAC DAY 1933 and the remark on that occasion that Ingham “was still without anything of the sort” a large number of returned soldiers met in Ingham in June 1933 to discuss the formation of a branch of the RSSILA and the building of a Memorial Hall to commemorate the fallen of World War 1and to provide a meeting place for returned service men of which there were at least 120 returned soldiers living in the district.

The President and Secretary of the Townsville branch of the RSSILA addressed the meeting and suggested that a sub branch of the Townsville branch be formed. As a result of this meeting a Herbert River sub branch committee (herewith referred to as the Sub Branch) was constituted.

LITTLE PROGRESS ON MEMORIAL HALL IN THE 1930s

However, the acquisition of a block of land for a Memorial Hall did not go smoothly. The Lannercost Street site was vetoed in September 1933 by the Lands Department because a piece of land on Townsville Road had already been allotted for that purpose. When the returned soldiers had applied for the Townsville Road land in the early 1920s the Lannercost Street block was not up for application. The 1927 flood saw the Townsville Road allotment go many feet under water which proved its unsuitability for the location of the Memorial Hall, hence the Sub Branch preferring a main street location.

After another unsuccessful bid to secure any of the town allotments that went up for lease in early 1934, the Lands Department agreed that the Council could excise a portion of the Shire Hall land  for the use of the Sub Branch on the proviso that it agreed that the land would revert back to the Council when and if the returned soldiers no longer had any use for the land.

In 1935, tenders were called for the building of the hall with shops on the land adjacent to the Shire Hall but not before another block of land that came up for lease opposite the Court House on Palm Terrace was considered but rejected. But by 1936 even the idea of building near the Shire Hall had faltered.

Though fund raising by the Memorial Hall committee continued the momentum faltered.

VINCENT EDWARD HAY SWAYNE, SOLICITOR OFFERS 4 HAWKINS STREET

A new two-storied brick and concrete building never eventuated. Just before the outbreak of World War 2, which ironically would see a member of the founding Memorial Hall Committee Giuseppe Cantamessa interned as an enemy alien. Vincent E. Swayne, solicitor, and his wife Helen (nee Fraser) offered their home to the Memorial Hall committee. The house was a typical Queenslander style and incorporated a tennis court as many houses then did. Because Swayne had named his property Kentucky, the court was called the Kentucky Court. Swayne and his family were avid tennis players and visiting teams from north and south of Ingham would travel to compete on this court. On one occasion there were 150 spectators watching the hotly contested matches.

The building was acquired for £1750 payable on terms. However, Swayne suggested that he donate £250 towards the furnishing fund if the Sub Branch would pay £1500 outright in cash. The Sub Branch secured a £500 overdraft, and the deal was completed. The Diggers’ Hack Club transferred £117 to the Sub Branch to help pay off the bank overdraft. The furnishing of the ‘Diggers’ Club Rooms’ and alterations required to convert the former home to a club house would be achieved with the donations already received which amounted to £370 and a piano donated by Swayne in addition to the agreed upon £250.

The Sub Branch took possession of the house a few days before it held its first annual general meeting in its new clubhouse at 4 Hawkins Street on Sunday 6 February 1938.

The original Swayne house continued to be renovated for the growing and changing needs of the RSL. Renovations to the club house occurred in the early 1970s, 1999 and 2010. The clubhouse hosted North Queensland District Congresses in 1948, 1957, 1983,1995 and 2011.

Kentucky Tennis Court (Source: Hinchinbrook Shire Library Photograph Collection)


SOURCES:

A Short History of the beginnings of the RSL, http://www.rslangeles.com/history-of-the-rsl/

Herbert River Sub Branch Inc. https://www.rslqld.org/about-us/herbert-river-sub-branch-inc

TROVE – newspapers 1929-1959

Vidonja Balanzategui, The Herbert River Story, Ingham: Hinchinbrook Shire Council, 2011.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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