The Anonymous Widower

It’s Raining in Adelaide

C and I liked Adelaide, when we went there in the 1980s.  But it didn’t rain.  In fact in the whole three weeks we were in Australia we never saw any rain at all.  This was unusual, as we usually had rain on holiday, just like Queen Liz does!

Adelaide is a unique Australian city in that it was planned by Colonel William Light to be a city with wide streets and lots of green spaces. It is also surrounded by a large area of parkland and has proved to be one of the best laid-out cities in the whole world.  There is a statue to his memory called Light’s Vision overlooking the city with this inscription.

The reasons that led me to fix Adelaide where it is I do not expect to be generally understood or calmly judged of at present. My enemies however, by disputing their validity in every particular, have done me the good service of fixing the whole of the responsibility upon me. I am perfectly willing to bear it, and I leave it to posterity and not to them, to decide whether I am entitled to praise or to blame.

Light and his father, Francis, are two of those characters in history, to whom I am drawn.  C and I came across the father first in Penang and realised that the founder of the settlement, had been born in Dallinghoo, which was the next village to Debach, where we lived at the time. So the father of the designer of Adelaide was a Suffolk man.  In fact, he was the illegimate son of a woman in the village, who was taken under the wing of the local landowner.  He certainly was a well-educated and successful man as this extract from Wikipedia shows.

From 1765, he worked as a private country trader. For about ten years he had his headquarters in Salang, Thailand, near Phuket, reviving a failed French trading post. While living there he learned to speak and write several languages, including Malay and Siamese. In 1785, he warned the Thais on Phuket Island of an imminent Burmese attack. Light’s warning enabled the islanders to prepare for Phuket’s defence and subsequently repel the Burmese invasion. For the British East India Company, he leased the island of Penang from the Sultan of Kedah, where many others had failed, and was supposedly given the Princess of Kedah as a reward (other sources state that the Princess was sent to covet Light’s aid on behalf of the Sultan). The multicultural colony of Penang became extraordinarily successful from its inception and Light served as the Superintendent of the colony until his death.

They were an amazing father and son, who from humble beginning made a real positive contribution to the world.  We get massive tomes written about obscure and useless politicians, but where is the dual biography of Francis and William Light?  A book was written in 1901 and it’s here in PDF.

Let’s hope the rain eases up enough for the Aussies to take their deserved beating!

December 5, 2010 - Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | ,

1 Comment »

  1. If you ever got to Kalgoorlie, you would find Paddy Hannan mentioned everywhere – a street, a statue, a railway station, etc. He died in 1925, some of the very old family members alive them remembered him before he went out, and some living up until recently remember one of his (I think) nieces excitement when he died, thinking they were now going to be very very rich. But they werent. Sadly, there is no real paper trail to prove he really is an ancestor, but the family story hold out well.

    Comment by liz | December 5, 2010 | Reply


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