Mail - Mt Evelyn Star Mail - 29th October 2024

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Tuesday, 29 October, 2024

Free insurance health check event

Christmas appeals launch in Lilydale

Men’s Shed learn vital first aid

See Real Estate liftout inside

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A Star News Group Publication

Phone: 5957 3700 Trades and Classifieds: 1300 666 808

Artspace unveiled Artist Jessie Bleakley and the team at Round Bird Food and Wine Merchants in Lilydale have teamed up to create a new artspace, with a vision for delivering both workshops and exhibitions. Officially launching the space on Sunday 27 October, with Jessie’s own exhibition Fields, it signifies a chance for creatives of all ages to delve into the art world of displaying and making in all forms. Jessie endeavours to provide a space that makes art accessible, while also encouraging people learn some simple art skills that can be replicated at home. To read more about the project, turn to page 8

Artist Jessie Bleakley opening her Fields exhibition at the new Round Bird Artspace. (Jesse Graham)

New book looks at incident that changed the face of aviation...

Plane crash legacy The stories of a potential Prime Minister, a trio of winemakers and a newly wed couple intertwine in the devastating and deadly tale of the Kyeema plane crash. On 25 October 1938 the Australian National Airways DC-2 Kyeema plane took off from Adelaide heading for Essendon. On board were 14 passengers and four crew members.

Flying in what was reported by The Argus as “dense cloud” with “visibility…restricted to 50 yards”, the plane plunged into the side of Mount Dandenong, the location now just metres away from the famed Burkes’ Lookout. At the time it was Australia’s “worst disaster in the history of aviation” but it also became an important mark in the country’s history. Delving into the stories and mishaps that led to the plane’s untimely demise, Joel Martin

explores it all in his newly authored book The Weeping Mountain. Growing up in Montrose and still a resident in the outer east, Joel said “I just got curious, it’s always fascinated me”. Beginning the research as a pandemic project Joel realised there was much that had been left untold. “It was a big government stuff up where there was a beacon system that should have

worked but it wasn’t turned on because they wouldn’t let them buy the right planes to test them, because the planes were American,” Joel said. “So we had an English policy. The beacons didn’t work, the plane was in the sky, it was meant to land at Essendon but it kept going and it hit Mount Dandenong instead. Continued page 6

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By Mikayla van Loon


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