
This clip captures scenes of daily life in the main streets of Footscray, Melbourne, in 1910 and 1911.
Summary by Poppy De Souza
In this clip, the camera films from street level and remains mostly static, although it does occasionally pan to follow the movement of people within the frame. Some members of the public consciously acknowledge the camera (particularly children), while others conduct their business regardless. A moving image camera and crew was still a novelty for people in the early decades of last century and provoked curiosity.
These scenes were filmed in the middle of a Melbourne summer in 1910, but the only obvious indication that it was not winter are the few boys wearing shorts. The clothing custom of the time dictated that men and women were formally clothed in public.
This unedited actuality footage of Footscray in 1910 captures street scenes of daily life in the Melbourne suburb. The film is silent, without intertitles and filmed mostly with a static camera.
This is one of the earliest moving image recordings of Footscray. According to the Footscray Advertiser newspaper, most of the footage was shot on 14 December 1910 by a Pathé Australian Animated Gazette film crew. The unedited footage was compiled with intertitles and screened a week later at the Federal Hall in Nicholson Street, Footscray, to a local audience.
In 1971, prominent Melbourne film lover and collector Harry Davidson shot actuality footage of Footscray for his friend Brian Davis, possibly for the 60th anniversary celebrations of the Grand Picture Palace. It is unusual to have actuality footage of the same suburb so many years apart and, when both are viewed together, it is remarkable to see the development of the suburb over that time.
Notes by Poppy De Souza
This black-and-white silent clip filmed in 1910 and 1911 shows scenes of daily life in the streets of Footscray, an inner western suburb of Melbourne, Victoria. Footage includes carts, buggies, bicycles and a solitary car as well as pedestrians, shopfronts, awnings and shop signs. The camera, placed in a few fixed positions, films pedestrians as they cross the street, including a young girl in a bonnet, a man smoking, a young boy with a lace collar and a woman driving a buggy. Passers-by appear curious about the camera. In the final scene people are grouped outside a shop.
Education notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.