- Willem Siebenhaar
Willem Siebenhaar (1863 - 1936) was a
social activist andwriter inWestern Australia from the 1890s until he left Australia in 1924. His literary contributions and opposition to policies such asconscription were his most notable contributions to the history of the state.Biography
Siebenhaar was born in
The Hague on28 July 1863 , beginning a life-long interest inchess at the age of fifteen. His early life saw him exposed to the Christian anarchist,Ferdinand Domela Nieuwenhuis . In 1882 he graduated fromDelft University ,Holland , and two years later, he emigrated toEngland to become a teacher.cite web | url = http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/AS10435b.htm | title = Siebenhaar, Willem (1863 - 1936) | accessdate = 2007-06-20 | author = | authorlink = | coauthors = Naomi Segal, Edward Duyker | year = 2006 | format = | work =Australian Dictionary of Biography | publisher =Australian National University | pages = | language = | archiveurl = | archivedate = | quote = Naomi Segal, Edward Duyker, 'Siebenhaar, Willem (1863 - 1936)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Online Edition,Copyright 2006, updated continuously, ISSN 1833-7538, published by Australian National University] cite book | first = Edward | last = Duyker | title = Voyage of the Batavia | chapter = The translator | pages = 62–63 | publisher = Hordern House for the Australian National Maritime Museum] He sailed toWestern Australia in 1891, taking up a position on the staff of Perth High School (nowHale School ). The following year he defeated theSouth Australian chess playerErnest Hack , becoming unofficial Western Australian Chess Champion, and taking over Hack's chess column in "The Western Mail". In 1895 he joined the public service, initially as sub-editor of the "Western Australian Yearbook ". Later he would rise to become Government Statistician and Registrar-General.cite book | first = Edward | last = Duyker | title = Voyage of the Batavia | chapter = The translator | pages = 62–63 | publisher = Hordern House for the Australian National Maritime Museum]In 1895, Siebenhaar began a translation of the first edition of "
Ongeluckige voyagie van't schip Batavia " ("Unlucky voyage of the ship Batavia"), a third person transposition ofFrancisco Pelsaert 's journal of the 1629shipwreck of the "Batavia" off the west coast of Australia, and subsequentmutiny and massacre amongst the survivors. Printed in the "Western Mail" in 1897 under the title "The Abrolhos Tragedy", this remains the only English translation of "Ongeluckige voyagie". According toHenrietta Drake-Brockman , it "excited an interest that eventually spread across Australia and has never completely faded".cite book | first = Henrietta | last = Drake-Brockman | authorlink = Henrietta Drake-Brockman | title = Voyage to disaster | edition = 2nd edition | publisher = University of Western Australia Press | isbn = 1-920694-72-2]In 1910, Siebenhaar founded the literary magazine "Leeuwin", which was co-edited by Alfred Chandler ("Spinifex") and A. G Plate. It ran for only six issues, but featured four contributions by
A. G. Stephens on 'The Manly Poetry of Western Australia'. [cite book |last=Wilde |first=W H |authorlink= |coauthors=Hooton, Joy and Andrews, Barry |editor= |others= |title= The Oxford companion to Australian Literature|origdate= |origyear=1985|edition=2nd |series= |year= 1994|publisher= Oxford University Press|location= Melbourne|language= |isbn=0 19 553381 X |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages=p. 459 |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= ] The same year saw theLondon publication of his "Dorothea: A Lyrical Romance in Verse", which would later be scrutinised for sedition.quotation
One day at my friend's house, a chance remark, Half tentative, brought this in answer, whence On much conjecture did my thoughts embark: "It seems that Dorothea, in some sense Regarding this, is also in the dark, And, duly contrite at her grave offence In having passed you without recognition, She hopes to make amends for her omission.
Siebenhaar|Dorothea : a Lyrical Romance in Verse. p. 23 (1910)Shortly afterwards, apparently suffering from poor health, he visited Britain. During this time he married Lydia Bruce Dixon, and may have had contact with the
Russia nPeter Kropotkin . His health having improved, he returned to Western Australia, apparently in late 1913.He became heavily involved in a number of social movements, including the advancement of
women's suffrage , and the anti-conscription movement. Siebenhaar's participating in the latter movement saw him removed from his position in the public service in 1916, with the press release condemning him as a "German" in league with the notoriousIndustrial Workers of the World (IWW). Siebenhaar freely admitted campaigning for the release ofMonty Miller , who had toured for the IWW. Later, an inquiry into his politics and character exonerated him of disloyalty and reinstated his position with restitution.In 1919, Siebenhaar published his "Sentinel Sonnets" (with Alfred Chandler), a eulogy for the anarchist Monty Miller. Other contributions to the literature of the state include his work in collecting and editing material for
James Sykes Battye 's "". His various contributions to newspapers and magazines also reflected the views promulgated by the esoteric society, theTheosophical Society , of which he was a member. He continued to write and critique poetry, entering into debates with early poets such asEdwin Murphy , whose style contrasted his own romantic approach.Siebenhaar returned to England in 1924, living in
Findon, West Sussex . There, in 1927, he translatedEduard Douwes Dekker 's "Max Havelaar ". The preface was supplied by his friendD. H. Lawrence , whose left-wing activist Willie Struthers in the novel "Kangaroo" was based on Siebenhaar. He was struck by a motor car and died from injuries on 29 December 1936 atLittlehampton ,West Sussex .References
Further reading
* J. S. Battye, "The Cyclopedia of Western Australia", vol 1 (Perth, 1912)
* Matters, Leonard W., (Mrs.), "Australasians Who Count in London" and "Who Counts in Western Australia", London, J. Truscott, 1913. Held at the "J S Battye Library ", Perth
* N. Segal, Who and What Was Siebenhaar (Perth, 1988); Bromley Record (London), Apr 1899, May 1899; Who and what was Siebenhaar: A note on the life of a Western Australian anarchist (Studies in Western Australian history occasional papers) ISBN: 0864220774
* Australian Chess Lore, vol 1, 1981, p 38, vol 3, 1984, p 55; Australian Literary Studies, 21, no 1, 2003, p 3
* W Siebenhaar personal file, Colonial Secretary's Office, 2033 1919, Cons 752 AN24/2 and Premier's Dept, 865/30 AN2/10 Acc 1704 (State Records Office of Western Australia).Persondata
NAME=Siebenhaar, Willem
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Twentieth century Australian poet and public servant
DATE OF BIRTH=28 July 1863
PLACE OF BIRTH=The Hague ,Holland
DATE OF DEATH=1936
PLACE OF DEATH=West Sussex ,England
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