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Copyright © 2013 Wesley Soelberg. All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.
My Flickr Portfolio • My Facebook • My Twitter • My LinkedIn • My YouTube • My Tumblr
Copyright © 2013 Wesley Soelberg. All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.
My Flickr Portfolio • My Facebook • My Twitter • My LinkedIn • My YouTube • My Tumblr
Copyright © 2013 Wesley Soelberg. All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.
My Flickr Portfolio • My Facebook • My Twitter • My LinkedIn • My YouTube • My Tumblr
Copyright © 2013 Wesley Soelberg. All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.
New Winds From Uranus.
edited by Norman Chadwick & D.M.Owen.
Toronto, Martin Garth Press, [2] may 1987. 1oo copies numbered in blue ballpoint inside front cover.
8-1/2 x 11, 47 sheets white xerographic bond side-stapled twice into white plainfield covers with 1-1/2" cellotape spine wrapper, all printed black photocopy.
cover graphic by Marilee Pinto.
45 contributors ID'd:
Anon 69, Manuél Abirz, Kathy Acker, Carol Allen, Fortner Anderson, Ed Anger, Carlyle Baker, Eric Beldowski, Phil Bézy, Norman Chadwick, Victor Coleman, Peter Culley, jwcurry, Brian Dedora, Maria Donath, Jean Dubé, Clifford Duffy, M.B.Duggan, Brad Dungey, Greg Eavson, Karen Franzen, George Gott, Alan Halsey, Dale Jensen, Daniel Jones, Arthur Winfield Knight, Wojtek Kozlinski, Mark Laba, Alan Lord, James Loverde, Steve McCaffery, bpNichol, Nancy Bradley Oparka, D.M.Owen, Martin Peach, Tom Phillips, Marilee Pinto, John Riddell, Kate Simon, Rick Smith, Scot Squat, Jnfr Sughe, W.Mark Sutherland, Richard Truhlar, Jeffrey Zable.
curry contributes:
i) "David/Norman Press:" (prose correspondence, pp.5>1o, illustrated with works by Fernando Aguiar, Carlyle Baker, Alan Halsey, Mark Laba & Tom Phillips)
First Horseshoe Inn with stage coach, “on the day of the Oddfellow's Picnic to Aldinga. A band sits atop the horsedrawn coach”.
Opened 1844, later named Horseshoe Hotel, closed 1932 when licence transferred to Horseshoe Hotel, Port Noarlunga. Building used a petrol station, bootmaker & harness repair shop. Re-opened 1983 as a hotel, destroyed by fire 31 Dec 1987, salvaged bricks & limestone now indicate hotel footprint in Winnaynee Park.
After the new South Road by-passed it, the town was renamed Old Noarlunga in 1978. [Photo from State Library of SA: B 7931 (c1860)]
”List of persons who have taken out general publican's licenses, during the fortnight ending this day, for the 28th March 1844. . . Phillip Hollins, ‘The Horse-shoe Inn’, Noarlunga.” [Register 23 Mar 1844]
“The Mount Lofty Range dies away just here, and the river taking a curve round the base of the southern side of the hills forms a small peninsula, or, as it is generally called, Horse-shoe. . . It fell to the South Australian Company, as they had the first choice of the District. In its present infant state it contains buildings that would do credit to a country village even in England. I allude particularly to the ‘Horse-shoe Inn’, which strangers generally take at first sight for a church, and the handsome steam flour mill recently erected by Messrs Stevens, Phillips, and Dehorne, and which is now complete and at work. The tide flows up to the Horse-shoe, so that except when there is a set of the fresh down the river the water is salt.” [Adelaide Observer 13 Apr 1844]
“General Publicans’ General Licenses. . . Alfred Bassel Bock, Horse-Shoe Inn, Noarlunga.” [Register 14 Mar 1849]
“Divine service was performed for the first time on Sunday last, at the ‘Horse Shoe’ Inn. Mr Bock, the worthy landlord, fitted up the room for the occasion, and Miss Plaisted led the various hymns on a splendid organ. . . a great improvement upon the pro tempore places of worship previously used at Noarlunga.” [Adelaide Times 3 Aug 1850]
“Noarlunga . . . Opposite the mill is the Horseshoe Inn, kept by Bock, comfortable in accommodation, and well managed by Mrs. Bock and her son.” [Register 14 Mar 1851]
“The Noarlunga Market. . . When the principal business of the day was over, the company assembled in the large room of the Horseshoe Inn, where Mr. Fred. Lines had prepared a sumptuous repast it being understood that he will on every market day provide for the entertainment of the busy crowd expected to assemble at Noarlunga.” [Register 4 Dec 1851]
“sell by auction, by order of Mr M'Laren. . . Noarlunga.— Valuable corner Lot, numbered 42, measuring 90 feet by 283 feet, adjoining the Chapel reserve and the Lot upon which the Horseshoe Inn is erected.” [Register 11 May 1854 advert]
“Publicans’ General Licences. . . New Applications for Old Houses. . . Dungey. Thomas, Horseshoe Inn. Noarlunga.” [Advertiser 12 Mar 1862[
“Messrs. Poussard and Douay will give a Grand Concert at the Horseshoe Inn, Noarlunga, on Saturday Evening next, September 13, on which occasion they will Sing some of their Comic Duets.” [Register 8 Sep 1862 advert]
“the Horseshoe Inn, Noarlunga. Tenders for the Purchase of this Property, with Lease of Section attached.” [Express & Telegraph 15 Aug 1879 advert]
“Henry Ord Sagor, of the Horseshoe Inn, Noarlunga, was ordered to refloor his premises, clean the walls and ceilings, and add two bedrooms.” [Evening Journal 9 Mar 1887]
“Tenders. . . for Additions to the Horseshoe Hotel, Noarlunga. . . English & Soward, Architects.” [Register 22 Aug 1887 advert]
“The Horseshoe Hotel, Noarlunga, having been thoroughly renovated Excellent Accommodation is now offered to Visitors, who can rely upon having Splendid Sport, Fishing, Shooting, &c. Horses and Traps on Hire. J. C. Dungey, Proprietor.” [Advertiser 20 Dec 1887 advert]
“a hill, over which is seen projecting the vane of an old-fashioned 'Church, with weathercock and battlemented tower. The driver explains that we have now reached 'The Shoe’, as Noarlunga is familiarly called. He puts his foot to the skid, but lets the horses go at a rattling pace down the hill, and brings them up neatly a few inches, from the verandah-post of the Horseshoe Inn, which stands at the foot of the hill.” [Register 24 Jan 1889]
“Noarlunga Racing Club. The Annual Meeting of Members of the above Club will be held at the Horseshoe Inn. Noarlunga, on Saturday Evening.” [Evening Journal 29 Apr 1893 advert]
“Hawdon, in his first overland expedition (1839) struck the Horseshoe after coming down the Onkaparinga, and from thence was able to make a beeline for Adelaide. . . Mr. Peter Giles, an octogenarian comeback, says that in his days there were only six houses, a brewery, and a flourmill in Noarlunga. Beautiful trees and shrubs, wattle, honeysuckle, silver wattle, sheaoak, tea tree, and masses of wild flowers grew in profusion and beauty along the river bank to Port Noarlunga. . . Fifty or sixty years ago the Horseshoe was a busy place, as all the corn grown for miles round was ground at the mill and shipped to the other States. Edward Dutton had the Noarlunga brewery, and left for Yankalilla in 1857. Mr. William Grey spent a fortune trying to make the port and river what they should be, but the time was not ripe then. He imported barges and built wheat stores and a Jetty on the river, also a tunnel under the sandhill at the port, with trucks and rails. . . In the seventies and. eighties Noarlunga was the great changing place of the Yankalilla-Adelaide mail. At the Horseshoe Inn the passengers transhipped into a larger or smaller coach as the case might be.” [Chronicle 31 Oct 1929]
“Mr. L. H. Haslam. S.M., in the Licensing Court today, granted an application for the transfer of the licence of Mr. R. V. Naughton, from the Horseshoe Hotel, Noarlunga, to the Port Noarlunga Hotel, Port Noarlunga.” [News 30 Sep 1932]
After getting suspended after being in the area of a fight with Steve Boniface and Josh Hansen. Keeping a low profile, Jason watched Dungey win the Lites Main Event and I didnt see him after.