Historical information
Mrs Sheila Parkinson was born in Wagga in 1916 and came to Beechworth as a young woman around 1938. Sheila trained as a psychiatric nurse at Mayday Hills hospital prior to the second World War. At that time, unmarried women were accommodated and received nursing training on-site. Shiela was obliged to cease professional training and employment when she married in 1941, which disrupted completion of her final nursing examinations. Following post-war changes to the law that allowed married women to work, Sheila returned to Mayday Hills. Sheila's husband, Don, returned to Beechworth after four years abroad as a serviceman in the Australian Air Force.
Beechworth's institutions were a major source of local employment throughout the twentieth century. As well as providing limited employment opportunities to young women like Shiela, post-war European migrants from Bonegilla Migrant camp found at Mayday Hills, encouraging European migrant settlement in the district.
Mayday Hills was renamed several times since its establishment in 1867. At the peak of operations, it comprised sixty-seven buildings housing over twelve hundred patients patients and five hundred staff. The hospital officially closed in 1998. Today, the decommissioned two-storey Italianate style main building stands on eleven hectares of botanical gardens under National Trust protection. The site remains a popular cultural heritage destination for visitors.
This oral history recording was part of a project conducted by Jennifer Williams in the year 2000 to capture the everyday life and struggles in Beechworth during the twentieth century. This project involved recording seventy oral histories on cassette tapes of local Beechworth residents which were then published in a book titled: Listen to what they say: voices of twentieth century Beechworth.
The cassette tapes were digitised in July 2021 with funds made available by the Friends of the Burke.
Significance
Employed as a psychiatric nurse at one of Beechworth's large welfare institutions, Mayday Hills, Mrs Sheila Parkinson recalls the conditions faced by staff and patients at the hospital, which cared for chronically ill people from the Ovens region and patients from the Yarra Bend Asylum, Melbourne, which closed in 1925. When Sheila first began her nurse training, Mayday Hills suffered from a lack of resources and rudimentary facilities and patients frequently suffered from the cold due to poor heating and inadequate clothing and bedding. However, as the twentieth century progressed, Sheila recalls how conditions and treatments improved as a result of increased government funding of services and advances in psychiatry and pharmaceutical medicine.
Mrs Sheila Parkinson's oral history recording is historically and socially significant for its witness to life in Beechworth in the pre- and post-WWII period. Sheila's story enriches our understanding of processes of modernisation with regard to psychiatric and welfare services, while the course of Sheila's professional training and employment brings attention to systemic and socio-economic barriers faced by women, as well as the valuable contribution women and migrants make in the delivery of care and ancillary services.
This oral history account is socially and historically significant as it is a part of a broader collection of interviews conducted by Jennifer Williams which were published in the book 'Listen to what they say: voices of twentieth-century Beechworth.' While the township of Beechworth is known for its history as a gold rush town, these accounts provide a unique insight into the day-to-day life of the town's residents during the twentieth century, many of which would have been lost if they had not been preserved.
Physical description
This is a digital copy of a recording that was originally captured on a cassette tape. The cassette tape is black with a horizontal white strip and is currently stored in a clear flat plastic rectangular container. It holds up 40 minutes of recordings on each side.
Inscriptions & markings
Mrs Sheila Parkinson /
Subjects
- twentieth century beechworth,
- mayday hills,
- psychiatric care,
- benevolent asylums,
- nursing,
- wwii,
- psychiatric treatment,
- country women,
- psychiatric hostpital,
- beechworth's institutions,
- local employment,
- government institutions,
- listen to what they say,
- oral history,
- burke museum,
- sheila parkinson,
- beechworth lunatic asylum,
- beechworth mental hospital,
- beechworth hospital for the insane,
- the kerferd clinic,
- bonegilla migrant camp,
- working women,
- white australia policy
References
- Listen to what they say : voices of twentieth century Beechworth ISBN/ISSN: 1920795111 Beechworth has always been known for its gold history. This is an account of more than seventy of Beechworth's less well-known residents and their everyday life and struggles. It is a record of a small country town in the twentieth century. It is the transcripts of oral history.
- Carole Woods 1985 Beechworth A Titan's Filed, Hargreen Publishing Company, North Melbourne. ISBN/ISSN: 0949905259
- Explore Beechworth: Mayday Hills
- Virtual Tour Mayday Hills Virtual (drone) tour
- Beechworth Asylum
- Bonegilla Migrant Camp
- Australian Government (DAWE) National Heritage Places - Bonegilla
- https://maydayhills.org.au Blog/Research links
- Finding Records: Beechworth Lunatic Asylum
- Research Data Australia - Beechworth (Asylum 1867-1905; Hospital for the Insane 1905-1934; Mental Hospital 1934-1967; Mayday Hills Mental Hospital 1967-1991; Mayday Hills Psychiatric Hospital 1978-1995). Public Record Office Victoria
- Public Record Office Victoria - Yarra Bend (Asylum 1848-1905; Hospital for the Insane 1905-1925)
- NMA - End of the White Australia Policy