Thursday, December 26, 2024

George Emanuel (Manuel) Australia’s first Greek.

 BOOK 'WILD COLONIAL GREEKS' FINDS GREEK MARINER GEORGE EMANUEL or MANUEL ARRIVED IN AUSTRALIA IN 1823 

      

In my book 'Wild Colonial Greeks', published in early December 2020 by Australian Scholarly Publishing / Arcadia, I present evidence that a Greek from Corfu named George Manuel was living in Australia in 1823. This was well before the arrival of the seven pirate-convicts in 1829, considered to be Australia’s first Greeks.

 

It is hard to believe that no Greek – not even a sailor – set foot in Australia until four decades after the First Fleet, and not surprising that some time and effort has been expended in searching for an Hellene who came to our shores before the seven pirate-convicts of 1829. 

Historian Hugh Gilchrist speculated about Greeks who may have come earlier. Effie Alexakis and Leonard Janiszewski kept the hope alive, noting that while the earliest Greek contact with Australia is unknown, there may be an issue of the ‘Sydney Gazette of 1817 or 1818’, warning of the dangers to Sydney children after dark from, ‘Irish, English and Greek convicts’.

Craig Turnbull and Chris Valiotis in 2001 also referred to accounts of Greeks ‘arriving in the late 1810s’, and mentioned the apocryphal report in The Sydney Gazette, but dismissed them as ‘conjecture’ and ‘fable’.

It seems to have been generally accepted that apart from the seven pirates, the only other person of Greek origin to come to Australia as a convict, was a man named Joseph Simmons or Simmonds. He is recorded in convict archives as a seaman aged 40, a single man, an illiterate, and in religion a Protestant, who gave his ‘native place’ as Greece. Gilchrist, however, describes him as an Ionian Islander and, ‘in fact a Greek Jew who landed in Sydney from the convict ship Isabella IV in March 1832’, after having been ‘convicted at the Dorsett Assizes and sentenced to transportation for life for stealing a handkerchief’.

It is surprising that another convict with the decidedly Greek name of Timoleon Vlasto has been overlooked by historians. It is even more surprising when one considers the infamy that Vlasto acquired in 1849 for stealing ancient Greek coins worth a small fortune from the British Museum in London. His trial was widely reported in the British press and ended with a sentence of transportation for a term of seven years to Van Diemen’s Land (now Tasmania), where he arrived near the end of May 1851. Timoleon Vlasto’s crime and his Greek identity – albeit that of a diaspora Greek – was also reported in Australian newspapers.

Among the candidates for ‘first Australian Greek’, the claim of George Papas at first seems plausible. He is said to have been a part-Aboriginal man, the child of an Aboriginal mother and a Greek sailor. It is known that he died in Sydney in 1849 at the age of 35, which would put his birth year at 1814, some 15 years before the arrival in Australia of the seven Greek pirates. However, the known facts about George Papas indicate that he was a Greek sailor who arrived in Sydney in August 1849 as a crewman aboard a British ship. According to a Coroner's determination reported in the press, he was seriously ill when he arrived and died just a week later. His progression to the status of ‘Aborigine’ seems to have begun when his body was mistakenly described in burial records at Camperdown Cemetery as that of a ‘coloured man’.

A more credible claim to the title of ‘Australia’s first Greek’ can be made for another sailor. On 28 June 1878 The Sydney Morning Herald reported the funeral at Castle Hill near Sydney of a ‘George Manuel or George Emanuel, on whose coffin was inscribed the age of 101 years’. The Herald was cautious in its reference to Manuel’s age, but was more definite in describing him as a sailor who ‘had fought under Nelson at the Nile and other places’. It was reported that ‘For the last twenty years he had resided in the locality where he died, and until recently had retained the possession of his faculties to a very great extent.’ His death notice published in the Herald the previous day stated: ‘June 22 at his residence, Castle Hill, George Emanuel, aged 101 years, after a long and painful illness.’ Another newspaper lionised Emanuel as ‘an old veteran’, who had ‘fought in several battles under our great hero Nelson’, and noted that he was familiarly known as George the Greek. The great age claimed for Emanuel attracted attention and his death was reported in at least five other newspapers. At his death he was said to have lived in the colony for 76 years and, if that is true, George Emanuel was Australia’s first Greek, arriving in 1802, some 27 years before the seven Greek pirates.

Newspaper reports may not be enough to establish historical facts beyond doubt. However, a further intriguing piece of information noted by Gilchrist is that a Greek monk known as Christophoros, who journeyed extensively in the Australian colonies in the 1860s, visited Sydney in October 1867 and later reported that one of the Greeks in Australia had settled there 70 years before.

We can rely on newspaper reports for the confirmation of George Emanuel’s Greek identity. The Sydney Morning Herald, in reporting a bushfire at Castle Hill in December 1875, noted that a house narrowly escaped destruction, ‘the usual occupant, styled Old George the Greek – a man of nearly 90 summers – being at the time in Sydney with a load of fruit’. The location of George Emanuel’s orchard was along the present route of the New Line Road in the vicinity of Davids Road and Pyes Creek; in 1897, nearly two decades after his death, a newspaper report noted that the locality where a small bridge crossed this creek was once known as ‘George the Greek’s’.

George Emanuel’s will, made in 1877, stated that he had no children or other relatives in the Colony and that his farm was 40 acres in extent. In signing the document with his mark he showed that he was illiterate.

Prior to 1862, George Manuel or Emanuel does not seem to figure in the newspapers. However, a man of that name is noted in government records from time to time: from 1859 to 1861 as a freeholder in the Dural area; in 1841 residing at Field of Mars; in February 1839 receiving a land grant of 30 acres at Field of Mars, Parramatta; and in September 1832 transacting the sale of a piece of land at Parramatta to William Parrington for the sum of £7.

It was reported in the press that in his younger days, ‘Old George the Greek’ had been a mariner and it is quite possible that he was the ‘George Emanuel’ who is recorded as a crewman on the brig Courier, a ship that first arrived in New South Wales waters in 1823. He might also have served – or attempted to serve – on the brig Belinda, a ship bound for the ‘South Sea fishery’ that listed in its muster roll in May 1824 a ‘George Manuel’ who was noted as having come to New South Wales ‘in the Brig Courier’.

A further record of interest is that of a criminal prosecution heard at Parramatta on 5 November 1832 in which George ‘Manual’ and his associate, John Long, were charged with ‘feloniously’ receiving 50 pounds weight of tobacco to the value of £5, knowing that the tobacco had been ‘feloniously stolen … by force of arms’. John Long was sentenced to a term of 12 calendar months in irons working on the public works of the colony, while George Manual was sentenced to 12 calendar months at hard labour in Her Majesty’s Gaol at Newcastle.

From an entry in the gaol entrance and description book for Newcastle we learn some important facts about George Manual (or Manuel or Emanuel). He began his term of imprisonment at the Sydney Gaol on 20 November 1832 and from there was taken to Newcastle Gaol where he gave his native place as ‘Corfu’, his occupation as ‘mariner’, and his legal status on arriving in the Colony and on entering gaol as ‘free’. Furthermore, he gave his year of arrival in the Colony as 1823. The ship on which he came was recorded as the ‘Carrier Brig’, but this appears to be a mistaken rendering of ‘Courier Brig’ as the Sydney and Hobart press of the 1820s and 1830s make more than 160 references to a brig named Courier, and none to any ship named Carrier. Furthermore, the Courier first arrived in 1823 at Hobart – at that time part of New South Wales – thereafter sailing regularly between London and Sydney until her later purchase by Sydney merchants Cooper and Levey who fitted the vessel out for whaling in the South Seas.

George Manual may well have been the same man as the old mariner, ‘George the Greek of Castle Hill’, but even if he was not, he was a native of Corfu who came to Australia before the seven Greek pirates, preceding them by six years.

 

Peter Prineas.

 

Sources for this article are cited in my book, 'Wild Colonial Greeks,' available from the publisher, Australian Scholarly Publishing / Arcadia at: 

 

https://scholarly.info/book/wild-colonial-greeks/

Friday, January 29, 2010

Peter Prineas Writer




'KATSEHAMOS AND THE GREAT IDEA
A true story of Greeks and Australians in the early 20th century'






'BRITAIN'S GREEK ISLANDS
Kythera and the Ionian Islands 1809 to 1864'







          'WILD COLONIAL GREEKS'


                                                                            





You can buy these three books by Peter Prineas from the Kytherian World Heritage Fund


'Katsehamos' and 'Britain's Greek Islands' are also available as e-books from Amazon.com



Saturday, January 2, 2010

"KATSEHAMOS AND THE GREAT IDEA"










'KATSEHAMOS AND THE GREAT IDEA
A true story of Greeks and Australians in the early 20th century'
by Peter Prineas


When Peter Prineas learned in 2004 that his grandfather, Peter Feros, nicknamed ‘Katsehamos’, had built a picture theatre in the small town of Bingara in the 1930s, he wanted to know more about it. The result is ‘Katsehamos and the Great Idea’ a book that digs deeply into the shared history of Greeks and Australians in the turbulent years during and after the First World War. It is a story with a different take on Gallipoli and other aspects of Australian history.

Prineas follows Peter Feros’s journey to America as a sixteen year-old boy in 1907, his return to Greece with much patriotic fanfare in 1912 in the company of thousands of other young Greeks to fight in the Balkan Wars, and his journey to Australia in 1921. The book recounts how Peter Feros, with his brothers Phillip and Manolis, between them fought four wars for the ‘Great Idea,’ Greece’s bid to reclaim Constantinople and her former Byzantine glory. The dream was shattered on the plains of Anatolia in 1922.

In Australia, Peter Feros prospered and in the 1930s he became caught up in another ‘Great Idea’. This time it was in the small town of Bingara in north-western NSW where the commercial ambitions of one of his business partners, George Psaltis ‘Katsavias’, entangled him in the building of the ‘Roxy’, an art deco picture theatre impressive enough to grace a city. The book’s account of Bingara’s ‘cinema wars’ is a fascinating addition to Australian picture theatre history. Although success in the cinema business eluded him, Peter Feros endured and went on to build a new life. In the end, ‘Katsehamos’ is about the journey of a man and his family towards accepting, and being accepted by, Australia.

Peter Prineas has worked as a lawyer, environmental consultant, political adviser, and writer. He has written or contributed to books on Australian landscape and environment but ‘Katsehamos’ is his first book of historical writing. He lives in Sydney.

Some comments on the book

'I found the book fascinating because it contains the the dreams and aspirations of all Greek immigrants of my father's generation, a world that has faded from the collective Greek consciousness as much as the Great Idea. Most of all, however, I was struck by the literary quality of the book which is far superior to almost all works of this type that I have read.' 
- Nicholas Gage

'The mass migrations that followed the early twentieth century turmoil in the Balkans laid the foundations for that great Australian institution the Greek country cafe ... Peter Prineas' spirited account of migrants building small empires of cafes and cinemas is also tinged with the loneliness and isolation they experienced in xenophobic bush towns.' 
- Tony Maniaty 'Weekend Australian'.

'A poignant celebration of early Greek immigrants'
- 'Odyssey Magazine'.

'A tale of stoicism, doggedness and pride that is profoundly recognisable to the children of the Greek diaspora' 
- Kiriaki Orfanos.

'There are two in-depth chapters, 'Cinema Wars' and 'The Finest Show in Bingara', dealing with the building of the Roxy Theatre at Bingara in 1936. This was also a turbulent time there for the Greeks, which resulted in a cinema war with their opposition, the Regent Theatre and its owner (Victor Peacocke), who was also an Alderman on the local council (get the picture?). He was hell-bent on stopping the Greeks from moving in on his territory. It's a fascinating read and one that will delight any cinema afficionado and historian
- John Adey, 'Kino Cinema Quarterly'.



'KATSEHAMOS AND THE GREAT IDEA'
ISBN 0858812134
Published by Plateia, April 2006.
Soft cover, 241pp., Bibliog., Notes, Index, Illustrations.
 

Available from the Kytherian World Heritage Fund
 

You can also buy this title as an E-Book from Amazon.com



Monday, October 19, 2009

"Britain's Greek Islands"





BRITAIN'S GREEK ISLANDS

Kythera and the Ionian Islands 1809 to 1864


Author: Peter Prineas


ISBN 9780980672213

Soft cover 230mm x 150mm, 415 pages, bibliography,

notes, index, maps and 16 pages of illustrations


'Britain's Greek Islands' tells the story of five decades in the nineteenth century when the British ruled Kythera and the Ionian Islands. It is a very readable history, painstakingly assembled from hundreds of hand-written letters and documents, most previously unpublished. The book conveys the texture and detail of life, society and politics in the island of Cerigo (Kythera) and the Ionian Islands and illuminates important but largely forgotten events. Based on extensive research in the archives, and illustrated with maps, photographs and historic prints, 'Britain's Greek Islands' reveals the sometimes turbulent relations that existed in the Protectorate named the 'United States of the Ionian Islands'. The narrative is placed within the wider history of Europe and the Near East, from the Napoleonic Wars, through the Greek War of Independence, the Crimean War, and conflicts over the 'Eastern Question' that resonate to this day.


'A labour of love, meticulously researched. A fascinating personal account of the Seven Islands which were "British" before becoming Greek.' – Vrasidas Karalis, Department of Modern Greek, University of Sydney.


'Prineas paints a lively portrait of the history of the United States of the Ionian Islands, as the British named their protectorate. He follows the often extravagant lifestyles of the state’s lord high commissioners who, believing that the British-style parliamentary system was unsuitable for its Ionian subjects, oversaw a highly undemocratic political regime, centred in Corfu, which became increasingly unpopular with the islands’ elites and wider populations. ... Much more than the history of one small island, Britain’s Greek Islands is a worthy contribution to the study of the history of the Ionian Islands and Greek history in general.' 
- Damian Mac Con Ulladh, Athens News

'Congratulations on an original, thorough and well-researched book''
– Jim Potts, Corfu


Listed in Books of the Month for January 2010. 
- Newsletter of the Hellenic Society Prometheas, Washington DC, USA.


ORDERS AND INQUIRIES

Kytherian Association of Australia: Kytherian World Heritage Fund



You can also purchase this title as an e-book from Amazon.com