Friday, May 10, 2013

Granny takes a trip

While in Sydney we wandered from the vicinity of Chinatown south-eastwards to Paddington.

One website describes the suburb in these gushing/uber-cool terms" "A luxe, boutique-strewn suburb, Paddo is famous for fine threads, pretty residents and a very Eastern Suburbs private school vibe. And let's face it: that's why we love it. Come here to be transported. Narrow William Street's got you sorted for high-end duds, while all the Big Shops have a home on Oxford Street."

We didn't make it as far as Williams St, but we did traverse a small portion of Oxford St.

We were taken by some of the 'retro' boutiques in Crown St - 'retro' because they specialise in clothes & accessories from the 60s and 70s.



One in particular took my eye - Grandma Takes A Trip!

When I saw it I was convinced it was named after an obscure 60s pop song by one of the British underground psychedelic bands like the early Pink Floyd. The shop assistant didn't know much about it, but did think it was named after a shop in London in the "swinging sixties".

A little research after I got home showed I was NEARLY right!

There was both a shop AND a song. According to Wikipedia "Granny Takes a Trip was a boutique opened in February 1966 at 488 Kings Road, Chelsea, London, by Nigel Waymouth, his girlfriend Sheila Cohen and John Pearse. The shop, which was acquired by Freddie Hornik in 1969, remained open until the mid-70s and has been called the 'first psychedelic boutique in Groovy London of the 1960s' ".

The song was called - strange to relate - "Granny Takes a Trip" and was written & recorded by a group called The Purple Gang - one-hit wonders.

YouTube is also a useful source of content.

This clip has a wonderful promo clip from 1967 for the single

A second clip is a BBC interview with one of the founders, John Pearse.

And to prove that aging hippies don't die - they just move north, have a look at The Purple Gang performing the song at The Castle Pub in Macclesfield about 2007!

Ah me - now if I could only find another shirt made of fabric with a pattern of Groucho Marx heads on it!

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Tales From The Trunk # 5

Prison-time for Joe

James & Margaret Mulligan had a younger brother, Joseph Edward, born about 1859.  Joe was to become a convicted felon and spend time in jail.  And to get a number of mentions in the British Parliament.

It transpired like this.

According a Mr. Lonsdale ( MP for Armagh, Mid.), "on Sunday the 11th February [1906], a mob of 300 persons, headed by Mr. Thomas Smith, J.P., chairman of the Cavan Rural District Council, Mr. Fitzpatrick, D.C., and Joseph Mulligan, an evicted tenant, marched on to the farm of Peter Brady, near Ballyhaise, tore down fences and held a meeting, at which threats were uttered against Brady."

By the time Lonsdale raised the matter in Parliament, the matter was the subject of "proceedings in the Land Judge's Court which resulted in an order by the learned Judge for the attachment of the persons named in the Question."  It appears that "attachment of the persons" meant they were imprisoned.  Lonsdale raised the matter during Question Time on 15 March 1906.

5 days later, MR. Dillon (Mayo, E.) asked a series of questions on the same matter of "the Chief Secretary to the Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland", to which Mt Bryce replied, in part, "I understand that these persons were charged with contempt of court in taking part in an unlawful assembly, the object of which was alleged to be to intimidate the holder of a farm which is under the control of the Court."

There followed a brief flurry of comment focussing on the iniquity of a judicial system which allowed for ordering "unlimited terms of imprisonment", with the effect that "they may be kept in prison for life unless they plead guilty of a charge which they deny having committed".

On 28 March, a further exchange occurred which dealt with the conditions under which the 3 were held (locked in cells for 22 hours per day) and could receive visitors (watched over by guards ready to take notes).

John Redmond and Sir Edward Carson, both notable National MPs, felt moved to become involved.  There followed an attempt to clarify the role of "Mr. Arthur Forbes, ... sub-sheriff for County Cavan".  Redmond summarised his role thus:  "Then the person who initiated the proceedings and obtained the order of attachment afterwards as sheriff executed it?"  Odd, to say the least.  Bryce agreed Redmonds view was correct.

2 months later, on 28 May, in answer to a question from MR. P. A. McHugh, Bryce told the House, "I am informed that the three men named were released on April 23rd, on the completion of one month's imprisonment, by an order of the Land Judge's Court. The order of release was unconditional."

One of Joseph's descendants, Sheila Openshaw, provided the links to this Tale, and also added, "Mum told me he spent a night in prison & when I rang (Uncle) Bob on the farm at Lisnashanna he told me it was 6 months!  My grandad Frank had to do the ploughing & keep the farm running when he was just 11 years old whilst his dad was in prison.  Seems that he was in Dundalk Prison for a month."

The exchanges mentioned above can be found online at:
http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1906/mar/15/ballyhaise-disturbances
http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1906/mar/20/commitments-for-contempt-of-court
http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1906/mar/26/commitments-for-contempt-of-court
http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1906/mar/28/imprisonment-for-contempt-of-court
http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1906/may/28/irish-contempt-of-court-prisoners

Joseph's place in our family tree can be understood at
http://ourfamilyhistory.co.nz/mulligans/charts/mulg03.html#157