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Jennifer Horsfield Jennifer Horsfield i(A85345 works by)
Gender: Female
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1 y separately published work icon Building a City : C.S. Daley and the Story of Canberra Jennifer Horsfield , Port Adelaide : Ginninderra Press , 2015 9104563 2015 single work biography

'Canberra residents have little reason to know Charles Daley’s name or be aware of the details of his life in Victoria as a teacher, botanist, writer and historian. But they might be more familiar with the name of his eldest son, Charles Studdy (C.S.) Daley, whose close connection with the story of Canberra for over fifty years is the subject of this book. Father and son had much in common. Both took seriously the notion of public service as a high and honourable calling. Daley senior retired after forty-six years of zealous and effective teaching in Victorian schools, and thereafter devoted his energies to numerous voluntary cultural and educational projects. His son was to be involved with a wide range of community groups in Canberra during his working life with the Commonwealth Government and in retirement. Both men shared a schoolmasterly desire to educate others, to help their fellow Australians appreciate their country’s history and its unique but fragile environment. During his lifetime, Daley senior published a number of well-regarded books, including two that became standard references in their field. His last book, The Story of Gippsland, was published by his sons after his death. C.S. Daley, for his part, always hoped that he would be given the chance to write the official history of Canberra, whose early years he had been so closely involved with. He was disappointed in this hope, but until the end of his life he saw himself as an authentic spokesman for early Canberra and a reliable witness to those first decades when the Commonwealth’s new city was being planned and built on the Limestone Plains.' (Publication summary)

1 4 y separately published work icon The Edgeworth David Women Jennifer Horsfield , Kenthurst : Rosenberg Publishing Pty Ltd , 2012 Z1853567 2012 single work biography

'The young Cara Mallett, an orphan from a working class background in rural England, emigrated to the colony of NSW in the late Victorian era. She proved to be pioneer, establishing the first college in NSW to train women teachers. Her adventurous spirit met its match in a lifelong partnership with another émigré, T.W.Edgeworth David, a young mining surveyor. Settling in Sydney when Edgeworth David was appointed as Professor of Geology at Sydney University, the couple raised a family there while actively engaged with many aspects of Sydney’s cultural and political life.' (Source: Publisher's blurb)

1 2 y separately published work icon Greta's Story : A Memoir Jennifer Horsfield , Canberra : Ginninderra Press , 2008 Z1527448 2008 single work biography Greta Rado's childhood and young adult life were shadowed by the anti-semitism of her Austrian homeland. After Hitler's invasion of Austria in 1938, her family fled to Hungary. There they endured the brutal occupation of Budapest by German and Hungarian troops from 1944. In the winter of 1948 Greta, her husband and daughter escaped from Hungary to Austria and travelled to Australia, where their intelligence and capacity for hard work has brought them prosperity and security.
1 2 y separately published work icon Rainbow: The Story of Rania MacPhillamy Jennifer Horsfield , Charnwood : Ginninderra Press , 2007 Z1382551 2007 single work biography

'This remarkable story is the result of the discovery of hundreds of letters and photographs preserved by Rania MacPhillamy's family. The beautiful and accomplished daughter of a wealthy squatter, Rania left Australia in 1915 to work in a Cairo hospital treating the wounded from Gallipoli. Following the death of her soldier sweetheart she stayed on in Egypt and together with Alice Chisholm, set up a series of canteens for the men of the Light Horse. These canteens provided a restful and civilised haven, and the one contact with home for the men of the Egypt and Palestine campaigns.'

Source: Australian War Memorial.

1 2 y separately published work icon Mary Cunningham : An Australian Life Jennifer Horsfield , Charnwood : Ginninderra Press , 2004 Z1155368 2004 single work biography

'Born in 1869 in Goulburn, New South Wales, Mary was the second of eight children born to Edward and Emily Twynam. Mary married James Cunningham in 1889 and they lived in the Canberra region from the late 1800s. Her life, spanning the last 30 years of the old century, and the first 30 years of the new, was bound up with some of the great stories of early nationhood. 'The prosperity brought by wool, the arrival of Federation, the imperial enthusiasms of the Edwardian era, the creation of the national capital, and the sorrows and losses of the Great War are all events that occurred during Mary's lifetime. 'This biography draws upon both the public record and private correspondence to reveal Mary Cunningham as a sensitive and thoughtful woman, struggling to find a sense of purpose and value in her life at time of great social change.' (Publication summary)

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