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THE PAUL AND HETTIE WENZ PROJECT
To conserve the Wenz Collection of books at the Forbes Library, NSW, and establish cultural links between Paul Wenz's birthplace, the French city of Reims, and the Shire of Forbes where Paul & Hettie Wenz spent much of their lives.
CONTENTS
Paul Wenz Society formed in Merrill's garden >> [March 2008]
WENZ LIBRARY IN URGENT NEED OF CONSERVATION >>
Mayor of Reims names street for Paul Wenz >>
Wenz book presented to Forbes mayor >>
Nanima, the Wenzes' Australian farm on the Lachlan River >>
Paul and Hettie Wenz's grave in Forbes cemetery >>
Catalogue of the Wenz Collection >> [pdf 221 kb]
Significance Assessment of Wenz Collection by Stephen Gapps >> [pdf 233kb]
Short story by Paul Wenz: Fifty-five Minutes Late >>
NEW! Wenz archives: articles from the Forbes Advocate since 1959 >>
Wenz Collection in urgent need of conservation & a new home
Seven
hundred historic books stacked in a back room of the public
library in Forbes, New South Wales, some of them dating from the 1830s, are in desperate
need of conservation and a permanent
new home.
The
books are from the personal library of local pastoralists and
world travellers, Paul Wenz and Hettie Dunne, who settled on Nanima
Station on the Lachlan River near Forbes after their marriage in 1898. They map the minds of this couple who, despite the isolation of their farm, included amongst their friends and acquaintances writers such as Miles
Franklin, Dorothea Mackellar, André
Gide, Jack
London and Joseph
Conrad. These books are a record of Paul and Hettie's rich intellectual
life, their engagement with the issues of their day, and
their enthusiasm for experiencing other cultures beyond
the frontiers of what were then the French, British and
Dutch empires.
Paul
Wenz, born Reims, France, 1869. Buried Forbes, Australia,
1939. See the tomb he shares with Hettie in the Forbes cemetery >>
Paul Wenz himself is remembered as a writer who published in both
his native French and in English. Some of his stories, such as Fifty-five Minutes Late, evoke rural life
on the plains of inland Australia before and after Federation (1901),
while others draw on his overseas travels.
Wenz is best known in Australia for his Diary of a new
chum first published in Melbourne in 1908 and republished
in 1990, in Diary of a new chum and other lost stories (Angus & Robertson) edited by Maurice
Blackman, with translations by Patricia Brulant, Margaret Whitlam and Maurice Blackman. This new edition includes a preface by Frank
Moorhouse and notes by Jean-Paul
Delamotte. A translation by Maurice Blackman of another Wenz novel, The Thorn In The Flesh, was published in 2004 (Imprint, Sydney) with an introduction by Australian writer, Helen Garner. It seems that this novel was strongly inspired by Wenz's visits to Netley Station, the Darling River property where Hettie Dunne grew up. Part of Netley has since been re-named Bindara Station, and for one of its current owners, Barb Arnold, reading Thorn in the Flesh was 'like history coming alive'. Barb feels certain that the novel was set on Netley.
Wenz's
publications in French, some of them written under the pseudonym
Paul Warrego, include A l'autre bout du monde : aventures
et moeurs Australiennes (1905); Un Australien tout
neu (Diary of a New Chum) republished in French by Petite
Maison for Association culturelle franco-australienne,
Boulogne, 1989; Contes Australiens : sous la croix du
sud (Paris, 1911); Bonnes gens de la Grande Guerre (Paris, 1918); Choses d'hier (Paris, 1919); L'echarde (Paris, 1931), and Le Pays de leurs peres (Their Fathers' land) about Australian 'Diggers' on the Western Front in WWI.
Paul
and Hettie Wenz in front of their Nanima
homestead on the Lachlan River near Forbes. Photo by
Denis Wenz, 1930s. From the Mitchell Library, Sydney, which acquired part of the Wenz Collection in the 1950s
Meeting the Wenzes at Forbes Library
I was introduced to the Wenzes and their personal library in 2002 by Wenz-scholar and enthusiast Dr Jean-Paul Delamotte on one
of his regular pilgrimages to Wenz country, and was soon captivated, not only by the musty old volumes themselves, but also by their
history and their potential to
inspire a new generation of writers along the Lachlan. I dreamed that one day the Wenz Collection would be conserved and more appropriately housed and displayed in a modern cultural complex of some kind rather than in the inaccessible and dusty back room of the local library ... and I still hope that one day this will happen. A shorter-term option may be a climate-controlled glass case within the library's reading room, however.
In 2004 I catalogued the Collection as a first step towards conserving it and, after Forbes Shire Councillors resolved to adopt a Heritage Committee recommendation "That Council apply for a National Library of
Australia Community Heritage Grant for the conservation
and valuation of the Paul Wenz book collection held at the
Forbes Library" (17 June 2004), I did what was necessary to get the submission in the mail. Our application was partially successful: the sum we received from the National Library Community Heritage Fund enabled the Shire Council to commission a Heritage Significance Assessment of the books in the back room of the library and the associated memorabilia in the Forbes Museum, as a necessary first step towards their conservation. But much more still needs to be done, and many intriguing questions about the provenance of the Wenz Collection remain to be answered, as I've discovered. More >>
Forbes,
29 June 2004
Phew! The Community
Heritage Grant application is now on its way to Canberra
after a last minute panic to catch the 4 pm courier. My thanks to Paul Bennett and all the staff
at Forbes
Shire Council office who helped in the rush to meet the deadline.
Portrait
of Paul Wenz on display with
other Wenz memorabilia at the Forbes and District Historical
Society Museum, June 2004. Photo by Merrill Findlay.
Many
other people contributed to the funding application with their
letters of support and professional quotes, and I
thank them too.
The
support letters confirmed that the Wenz Collection is highly
valued by many people and for many different reasons. Paris-based
writer, translator, publisher and Wenz scholar Jean-Paul
Delamotte wrote about the ‘Wenzies’
rural Australian links, for example, as well as their associations
with American writer, Jack
London, whose work Paul Wenz translated, and their friendship
with Joseph Krug, founder of the Krug
champagne empire.
Delamotte
also drew attention to the Wenzes’ global travels,
and to Paul Wenz’s work as a Red Cross volunteer during WWI when he crossed the channel between France and Britain 55
times with wounded Australian soldiers. Wenz later wrote
a book about the Diggers he helped to save. Nicholas
Pounder, an antiquarian
bookseller in Double Bay, enthusiastically supported
the Paul & Hettie Wenz Project as "not only an appropriate memorial
but as a resource to scholarship – the best of many
ways in which this writer’s life and works may be
promoted."
Forbes
Shire Council’s Heritage Consultant, architect David
Scobie, gave a brief professional assessment of the
Collection’s heritage significance and its links with
local institutions, such as the Forbes
Library, the Family
History Group and the Forbes
Museum, as well as its associations with local heritage
sites including Nanima Station.
He believes the Collection "should provide an important
Cultural and Economic asset in promoting Forbes."
Paul
and Hettie Wenz in Durban in 1925 on one of their many overseas
trips. There is a strong correlation between books in the
Wenz Collection and photographs documenting the couple's
travels in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Americas and Melanesia.
Jan
Richards, manager of library services, Central
West Libraries Cooperative, likewise emphasized the
Wenz Collection’s potential as a "catalyst for
further cultural development in Forbes."
Dulcie
Lavers, President of Forbes
and District Historical Society Inc, reminded Council
that the Wenz Collection of books now stored at the Forbes
Library complemented the Museum's own Wenz collection of
‘irreplaceable items such as photos, books, art, documents
and numerous other exhibits’ which the Forbes Morning
Rotary Club is now documenting as part of their volunteer
project to build a web site for the Museum.
'It is through these displays that our future generations
can enjoy the history of this wonderful town of Forbes,'
Dulcie Lavers wrote.
Hannah
Semler, executive officer of Arts
Out West, said her organization was 'excited'
about the Wenz
Collection and would 'endeavor to assist Council
in all possible ways' with the project because '[b]y
maintaining this collection within the region and bringing
professional expertise in to properly archive, document
and manage [it], not only will we in the Central West, but
all Australians have the opportunity to learn from, be inspired
and to recognize aspects of our common heritage, hereto
little acknowledged.'
Rob
Willis, a folklore
collector for the National Library of Australia, social
historian and long-time resident of Forbes, echoed claims
that the Collection was 'an important link with the
cultural past of the Forbes area’. But to him the
Wenz Collection ‘also reinforces the multicultural
traditions of this region, particularly with the French.'
Dominic
Williams, a member of the executive committee of
the Australian
French Association of Science (AFAS) and a director
of the Chateau Champsaur Wine
Society, expanded upon the theme of multiculturalism
and French connections.
He commented that the French
Ambassador and French Trade Commissioner had both visited
Forbes in 2003 to meet ‘descendants of the early French
settlers’ and added that he and his fellow wine society
directors, Pierre Dalle and Peter Deprez, were attempting
to 'preserve the historic Chateau Champsaur Winery
established by the Reymond and Nicholas families who came
from France and settled in Forbes in the 1860s.' Both
AFAS and the Wine Society were 'keen to see the Wenz
Collection preserved.'
My
thanks to all these supporters
Omissions and silences
But
there were two very conspicuous omissions in the support
letters and other documentation associated with this grant
application - and I regret that I didn't have time to attend
to these gaps myself.
The
first blank I noticed was the absence of references to Hettie
Dunne as an independent woman, the ‘squatters' daughter’
from South
Australia who grew up on the million acre Netley Station on the Darling River
in the second half of the nineteenth century, at a time
when both the Australian
nation and the White
Australia Policy were emerging, and when women were
still campaigning for the
right to vote.
Many
books in the Wenz Collection belonged to Hettie and date
from before her marriage to Paul. As a woman myself I found
these volumes particularly interesting, because they gave
me a glimpse into the mind of a very modern female whose
literary tastes, even though she grew into adulthood at the end
of the nineteenth century, were not so different from my
own in some respects. Hettie Wenz died in her nineties in the decade I was
born -- and yet, as young women, we both read many of the same
authors, it seems.
And
the other omission? The traditional owners of the land on
which Nanima Station was first
established, of course. The people of the Wiradjuri
nation. Indeed, Nanima, the name of the property the Wenzes bought, is a Wiradjuri word said to mean 'something that is lost.' A reserve of the same name was established near Wellington in 1910 and Wiradjuri people still live there, but now they administer the community themselves.
So
many references have been made to the internationally famous European, American and Anglo-Australian
writers the Wenzes knew, but in these post-colonial
times we now have the privilege of reading the works of descendants of the people who were dispossessed during the Wenzes' lifetime: Wiradjuri
writers such as Anita
Heiss, Kevin
Gilbert, John
Muk Muk Burke, Iris
Clayton, Flo Grant, Rita
Keed, Robert
James Merritt, Jane
Downing and Mary
Coe, for example. Mary Coe's book, Windradyne, a Wiradjuri Koorie (Aboriginal Studies Press, 1989), tells the important story of the great Wiradjuri
warrior who resisted the British invasion. 'For few white Australians realise there
was a war and fewer still have heard the Aboriginal side,' Coe says.
Other 'silences' I've been remembering include
the Afghans and Chinese who, like the English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, German, Italian, Greek,
Indian and other
migrants and their descendants, contributed so much
to the development of inland New South Wales. The Wenzes were familiar with these groups, as Paul Wenz's fiction reveals. And what about
the now very degraded Lachlan
River and its broad alluvial valley, the very land and water upon which the Wenzes depended and on which we all still depend?
Ah,
there are so many gaps in the Paul
& Hettie Wenz story. So many different perspectives
to explore, so many ways of interpreting the Wenz Collection
to yet consider ....
Forbes,
21 June, 2004: a plot revealed
Today I hid in a garret beneath the tower of the historic
Forbes Town Hall reading old letters, newspaper cuttings,
last wills and testaments and Council reports relating to
the Wenz Collection of books now stacked in a back room
of the Forbes Library.
I wanted to know how these books
came to be in the Forbes Library and why they had been hidden in
the back room. But instead of finding definitive answers
I found more questions. And I discovered that
we're very lucky that the books are still in Forbes -- because,
in 1989, a Shire Clerk invited the French Embassy to find
them a more 'suitable' home, and Embassy
staff were very willing to oblige.
The letters I sifted through were especially revealing. The first, dated 26 July, 1989, was from Forbes
Shire Clerk P.E. Huthnance to Jean-Marie Lebon, editor
of the French Embassy's magazine Presence. In this letter Mr P.E. Huthnance invited M. Lebon to find a "more suitable"
home for the Wenz Collection. Lebon replied from the Embassy
in Yarralumla nearly two months later that he
had found an empty room in the new Alliance Francaise building
which would be very "suitable" for the Wenz Collection. And
that yes, the French Embassy would be very happy to assume
the responsibility of shifting them to Canberra (letter
dated September 14, 1989).
The
Shire Clerk presented the Embassy's offer to Council at
its October 1989 meeting and recommended that it be accepted.
This could have been the last we ever heard of the Wenz
Collection. But those dear Councillors back in 1989 were intransigent
at their October meeting! They refused to accept the Shire
Clerk's recommendation and voted instead to "defer a final
decision" until the next meeting "pending a further inspection"
of the books!
I found
nothing in the Wenz file to suggest that any "further inspection"
had taken place, but on 23 March 1990 the poor Shire Clerk
was again writing to Jean-Marie Lebon: "I regret to advise
that further complications have arisen in this matter".
These
"further complications" arose, it seems, from a visit to
Forbes by a Wenz scholar Jean-Paul Delamotte
and his wife Monique Delamotte who wanted to launch a new
publication of Wenz's Diary of A New
Chum And Other Lost Stories in Forbes and make a
documentary film about Wenz's life. "Therefore it does seem
necessary to retain the Paul Wenz collection in Forbes for
the time being," the Shire Clerk wrote to the
editor of Presence, Jean-Marie Lebon, and begged
him to "bear with Council until this matter can be finally
resolved."
Lebon is not entirely
innocent in this story. He knew about the re-release of Diary of a New Chum and had already published an
essay by Jean-Paul Delamotte, Paul Wenz: le plus francais
des ecrivains australiens et le plus australien des ecrivains
francais in his magazine (Presence nos 11 & 12, 1989, pp
33-35). He had also apparently visited Forbes to conduct his
own inspection of the books. According to P.E. Huthnance,
Lebon had photographed the Wenz Collection in the back room
of the library and had interviewed the then-Librarian Helen
Bassett well before the request to find a "more suitable"
home for the books had been written.
Do
you smell a mini-conspiracy here, or am I being paranoid!
Shire
Clerk P.E. Huthnance doggedly persevered with Council and put the Wenz
Collection onto the agenda for its August 1990 meeting
-- by which time, he figured, New Chum would be well
and truly launched and the Delamottes and their pesky documentary
film crew would have left town.
But
P.E. Huthnance didn't reckon on the Lachlan River flooding! Just before New
Chum was to be launched water engulfed the
town and both the launch and the television documentary
were indefinitely postponed.
The
damage to the Huthnance and Lebon plan had already been
done, however. Jean-Paul and Monique Delamotte's visit and
interest in the Wenz Collection had convinced some of the
councillors that those musty old books had something
going for them. The Councillors therefore continued to raise objections
to the Shire Clerk's recommendations and P.E. Huthnance
was asked to write another letter to Lebon: "Council resolved
to explain to you that because of the resurgence of local
interest in Paul Wenz associated with the book launch, and
bearing in mind that valuable Wenz books are in the Mitchell
Library in Sydney, Council will probably put the remainder
of the collection back on display in the Forbes Library."
It
seems Council did, indeed, put the books on display, because
Mayor Clive Thomas later reported to Council that he had
visited the library to discuss returning them to the back
room! By then librarian Jenny Hawke was in command of the
library and she had other more visionary ideas! To her the
Wenz books were part of "our local heritage"
and therefore should never be locked away or "stolen". And,
what's more, she had a "counter-plan" ...
Mayor
Thomas was delighted with the new librarian's rebellious
attitude, it seems, and presented her with all the material
he'd been sent for the ill-fated book launch, including
the set of glossy 5x7 black and white photographs of the Wenz's Nanima Station.
He also recommended "that Council resolve to keep the Paul
Wenz collection in its possession for the present and give
Miss Hawke assistance when required, to accomplish her project"
(Business Paper presented to Forbes Shire Council, 26th
September, 1991, p. 171).
Jenny
Hawke succeeded in implementing her counter-plan -- for
a while at least. A small room with big glass windows was
constructed in one corner of the library as a permanent
home for the Wenz Collection. But, of course, nothing is
ever 'permanent' -- or at least not in Forbes! By the time
I discovered the books they had already been re-despatched
to the back room, and Jenny Hawkes' purpose-built display
space was filled with school kids and back-packers checking
their email at a bank of brand new computers!
So
we're back to where we began in this story. The books are stacked in the back room and we're still looking for a "more suitable" home for them!
Unresolved mysteries concerning the Wenzes' last wills and testaments
Paul
and Hettie Wenz's simple polished granite
tombstone in the Forbes cemetery. Photo by Merrill Findlay,
June 2004
When
French-Australian writer, farmer (or 'grazier') and wool-broker Paul Wenz
died on 23 August 1939 his entire estate, including Nanima
Station and his many books, went
to his wife Harriet Adela Annette Wenz (also known as Hettie).
Hettie lived another twenty years following her husband's death. In her Last Will and
Testament she bequeathed
to the Trustees of the Mitchell Library, Sydney, "such
of my books as they or their representatives may select
for the purposes of the Library" and instructed
the executors of her estate to send all the French language
books not selected for the Mitchell "to the Fathers of
the Catholic Mission at Yule
Island " off the coast of Papua New Guinea. (Now there's
a story yet to be told!)
So
how come we have still an estimated one hundred
French language books in what we now call the Wenz Collection
in the store room of the Forbes library?
My
rather amateur survey of the French language books
reveals that they date from the 1830s and that some of
the oldest were acquired from the Alliance Francaise Biblioteque
in Sydney. Others were bought by Paul Wenz either in France
or Canada, while some may have been bought in Australia
or from France by mail order.
The
Wenz Collection also includes at least five hundred
books in English, some of them inscribed in either Hettie
or Paul Wenz's hand writing or stamped by them. Many of
these books, like the French language volumes, were in public
circulation in the Forbes Library until the 1960s.
Are
the Forbes volumes the ones the Mitchell Library trustees didn't want
and ones that were also rejected by the Fathers of Yule Island? Or did
they find their way into the Forbes Library by some other route?
Paul
and Hettie Wenz also donated books from their personal collection
to the community school at Peyton Bridge near Nanima Station,
along with the land on which the school was built (Jeannette
Hildred, Forbes, NSW, Forbes Shire Council 1997,
p.532). This school is long gone, but what happened
to its books? Are some of these also stacked in the
back room of the Forbes Library as the Wenz Collection?
These
are questions others will have to answer. For
now I'm simply grateful that the books remain in the district
and I feel very privileged to have spent time thumbing through
them in the cold, dark back room of my local library getting
to know the minds of Paul and Hettie Wenz. My hope now is
that other locals, as well as visiting scholars and other
outsiders, will be able to experience the same thrill, the
same deep sensual and intellectual pleasure I have found
in these old volumes -- and that some day they will truly find a "more suitable" home in Forbes.
Page
created 13 June 2004, updated 1 March 2007 and significantly revised and renovated 21 January 2008. Last revised 1 May, 2008.
Copyright
Merrill Findlay
| |

Above: Portrait of Paul Wenz by Paul Laurens now in the Wenz Collection, Forbes & District Historical Society Museum, NSW.
NEWS FLASH
31 April 2008
The Paul Wenz Society is now a legal entity, Secretary Sabine Pierard reported today. It was formally incorporated as a community association by the NSW Office of Fair Trading on 14 April 2008, registration no. INC9889208.
The PWS Inc can therefore now operate in its own name to fulfil the aims and objectives outlined at its founding meeting.
PAUL WENZ SOCIETY ESTABLISHED
Forbes, NSW, 9 March, 2008
A new cultural organisation, the Paul Wenz Society, was founded in Forbes today to conserve, promote and build upon the literary legacy left by French-Australian writer, Paul Wenz.
Wenz scholar and translator, Maurice Blackman, former head of the French Department at NSW University, was unanimously elected the Society's founding President, Sabine Pierard its first Secretary and Public Officer, and Andrew Gale its first Treasurer, at a meeting held in the garden of writer Merrill Findlay.
The committee also includes Paris-based Wenz enthusiast Monique Dalamotte; Mark Bennie, a Warroo farmer who represents the Forbes Community Writers Group; Anna Townend, a French teacher at Forbes High School, whose students are expected to benefit from the Society's programs; and Jill Moxey who now lives at Nanima, the property once owned by Paul and Hettie Wenz.

Above: Patron of the Paul Wenz Society, Jean-Paul Delamotte (left) with committee member, Monique Delamotte, Society Secretary Sabine Pierard and President Maurice Blackman outside the Forbes Library, NSW. Photo by Merrill Findlay, 10 March, 2008.
PWS Patrons
The two patrons of the Paul Wenz Society are Paris-based author, publisher and Wenz scholar Jean-Paul Delamotte of Atelier Litteraire Franco-Australien (ALFA), and Janet Moxey, dairy farmer and Vice-President of the NSW Farmers Association, who now lives in the house Wenz built on Nanima Station in the 1890s. Janet's family company, Moxey Farms P/L, purchased Nanima in late 2007 from the Bruce family and operates a large dairy on a nearby property, The Angles, which Paul Wenz would also have known.
Aims and Objectives
The aims and objectives of the Paul Wenz Society are as follows:
-- To promote the understanding and knowledge of the literary works of Paul Wenz, along with his life and times;
-- To foster, conserve, and extend Paul Wenz’s legacy in the Shire of Forbes (Australia) and La Champagne Ardenne region (France);
-- To promote all kinds of cultural and other relations between the town of Forbes and the city of Reims, and more broadly between France and Australia;
-- To foster cultural reciprocity, including educational experiences, opportunities and exchanges for people of all ages and backgrounds in both the Shire of Forbes and La Champagne Ardenne.
The Paul Wenz Society is expected to announce its first cultural interventions in the coming months.
Contact the PWS Secretary, Sabine Pierard, for more information.

Diary of a New Chum and Other Lost Stories by Paul Wenz, Imprint, Angus & Robertson Books, North Ryde, 1990.
Unique Wenz Book presented to mayor
Forbes, 10 March, 2008
Designer bookbinder and Secretary of the Paul Wenz Society, Sabine Pierard, today presented the Mayor of Forbes, Rhonda Keane, with a hand-bound edition of short stories by Paul Wenz printed on paper made by Euraba
Paper Company of Boggabilla.
Forbes Shire Council purchased the book during the Double Bush Binding Exhibition which visited Forbes in 2006 after opening in Sydney. The exhibition later travelled to Japan and to Reims, France, where Paul Wenz was born. The book will be on public exhibition in Forbes and take pride of place in the Shire's Wenz Collection.

Above: Mayor Rhonda Keane accepts the handbound book of stories by Paul Wenz from its creator, Sabine Pierard, Secretary of the Paul Wenz Society, Forbes, 10 March, 2008. Photo by Merrill Findlay.
See local coverage of the presentation in the Forbes Advocate, 11 March, 2008 >>
REIMS NAMES STREET FOR PAUL WENZ
Reims, 4 February 2008
The Mayor of Reims, Jean-Louis Schneiter, formally named one of his city's streets in honour of French-Australian writer, Paul Wenz today.
Wenz was born in Reims in 1869 but lived much of his adult life in Australia where he settled on Nanima, a property on the Lachlan River in central NSW. He died in Forbes in 1939 and is buried in the local cemetery.

Paul
Wenz Park in Forbes, NSW, just off Hettie Place in the Wenz residential estate.
Wenz and his Australian-born wife Hettie Dunne have already been honoured in Forbes: a housing estate and park are named for Paul and a street is named for Hettie. The Forbes & District Historical Museum has erected a bronze plaque commemorating the couple in Paul Wenz Park.
People in the Wenz network see the acknowledgement Paul Wenz is now receiving in Reims as yet another step towards forging strong cultural links between the city in which the writer was born and Forbes Shire where he spent some of the most creative years of his life. [Posted 23 January 2008]
PRESS COVERAGE OF THIS EVENT
Articles in the Forbes Advocate and L'Union L'Ardennais ... More >>
WENZ BOOK EXHIBITION
'Double Bush Binding' 2006: exhibition of hand-bound short stories by Paul Wenz in French and English >>
'Double Bush Binding' international flier >>
Wenz 'Double Bush Binding' Exhibition in Forbes >>
Frank Moorhouse to open 'Double Bush Binding' Exhibition in Forbes: Press release 7 August 2006 >> |