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Dolores San Miguel - The Secret Love Letters: A Family History

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Dolores San Miguel The Secret Love Letters: A Family History
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The Secret Love Letters: A Family History: summary, description and annotation

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In The Secret Love Letters: A Family History, the author delves into the history of her Spanish ancestors, the once-illustrious San Miguels, and uncovers the forbidden love affair that tore the family apart.

Fay Johnston told her daughter of a collection of letters she had kept hidden away for over 60 years, promising to show them to her when the time was right. It was only after her mother died that Dolores found the letters, concealed beneath a large piece of wood deep within a storage cupboard. Through endless research and close analysis, Dolores pieced together nearly a hundred letters, newspaper ads, doctors notes, and postcards to unravel the story of her parents romance, kept secret for over two decades.

Dolores San Miguel, acclaimed author of The Ballroom: The Melbourne Punk and Post-punk Scene delivers a luminous, tightly woven account that places her own family saga in the wider context of early European immigration to Australia, as well as offering a fascinating glimpse into Melbourne life in the lead-up to World War 2.

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The Secret Love Letters A Family History - photo 1

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Published by Melbourne Books Level 9 100 Collins Street Melb - photo 14

Published by Melbourne Books Level 9 100 Collins Street Melbourne VIC 3000 - photo 15

Published by Melbourne Books Level 9 100 Collins Street Melbourne VIC 3000 - photo 16

Published by Melbourne Books Level 9 100 Collins Street Melbourne VIC 3000 - photo 17

Published by Melbourne Books

Level 9, 100 Collins Street,

Melbourne, VIC 3000

Australia

www.melbournebooks.com.au

Copyright Dolores San Miguel 2014

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the publishers.

National Library of Australia

Cataloguing-in-Publication entry

Creator: San Miguel, Dolores.

Title: The Secret Love Letters : A Family History.

eISBN: 9781922129642 (ebook)

Subjects: San Miguel, DoloresFamily.

Johnston, FayCorrespondence.

Love-letters.

Courtship.

Families.

ImmigrantsAustraliaBiography.

Melbourne (Vic.)Social life and customs

20th century.

Dewey Number: 920.72

www.facebook.com/TheSecretLoveLettersBook

Digital edition distributed by

Port Campbell Press

www.portcampbellpress.com.au

Conversion by

This book is dedicated to my Mother and Father my daughters Hayley and - photo 18

This book is dedicated to my Mother and Father, my daughters Hayley and Charlotte, and my Grandparents, Antonio and Rebecca San Miguel, and William and Annie Johnston.

Acknowledgments

Once again thanks to my wonderful publisher, David Tenenbaum, for letting me tell yet another true life story. My daughter, Charlotte Callander, for a brilliant job as editor. My loyal assistant, Josephine Simmons, who has been by my side right from the start of researching this book, I would have been lost without her help! Her incredible job putting together the Family Tree on Ancestry.com, a long and arduous task!

My eldest daughter, Hayley Callander, for her support and encouragement, my good friend, Debbie Nankervis, who put me up in Sydney, and was with me as we traipsed around the city on my research there.

I also thank Jennifer Elder, from the Box Hill Historical Society, who put me in touch with my cousin in Queensland, Annette Blight (nee San Miguel). Sue Barnett, of the Surry Hills Historical Society, who has solved a few mysteries for me and been very supportive. Juris and Ilona Briedis, current owners of St. Abbs, they graciously showed Josephine and me through their beautiful home. Ann Simpson, former owner of Hartland, in Elmie St. Hawthorn. Thanks to Peter Rhoden, of Xavier College, and Julianne Barlow, of Genazzano Convent, for their patience and help.

Maudie Palmer, current owner of Green Ivies, for allowing my cousins and me, a tour through her delightful home. My nephew, Greg San Miguel, and my sister in-law, Jeanette San Miguel for the photos and some amazing ancient letters.

My new cousins on the San Miguel side, Annette Blight, for suppling a bundle of important documents, and her sister, Linda Jane Johnson. David, Chris, and Rodney Allen, for photos and documents of great value and importance. Silvia Vidal Marti, my cousin in Barcelona for her research there.

Thanks to my cousins on the Johnston side, Ron Johnston, for the photos and history he supplied, Phil Johnston, for his support and hospitality over the years, and Jenni Higgins (nee Johnston) for her support. My new Johnston cousins, Mary Ellen Webb (formally Beryl Mitchell) and her daughters, Lynden Thiessen and Alison Webb. Without everyones help this book would be missing some very important pieces!

I stood looking out of the lounge room window The rain had finally stopped and - photo 19

I stood looking out of the lounge room window. The rain had finally stopped and small droplets trickled down the glass panes, in rhythm with my tears. Mum and Sister Hill, the kind, elderly nurse who had helped Mum look after my father for the last year or so, waited in the bedroom with Dad. She had been with Mum last Monday when he took another stroke around five-thirty in the afternoon. Dr Wilson was called and recommended Dad be moved to a private nursing home. Mum and Sister Hill tried all night to find one with a vacancy, all to no avail. Finally, a friend of my mothers with a few connections arranged a bed at Heatherleigh Private Hospital nearby in Hawthorn, for today, Wednesday.

The ambulance pulled into the gravel drive, and I watched the two officers emerge. I knew Dad would never return home and I was overwhelmed with sadness. I had no idea how sick he was while I was away in England for the last two years. Mum had kept it quiet, so as not to ruin my trip. I had arrived back late December of 1973, and Dad was totally blind by then. Today was 6 March 1974, so wed really only had two months together.

I remembered how excited he was when I rang from Barcelona last year on his birthday, 23 July. I had just arrived back from meeting his relatives in Alella, a little village in the hills on the north coast of Barcelona. It had taken some detective work on my part to find them, as Dads memory and recollections of his family had faded after his first stroke. Mum said he had cried with happiness after the call, and had carried the letter I had sent of the events in the pocket of his pyjamas.

From December of 1971 to December of 1973, I lived in London with my boyfriend, Paul Thompson. In the summer of 1973 we bought an old Bedford van and set off for Europe. During our time in Morocco we met an American girl from California who wanted to share petrol expenses and get a lift to Spain. She spoke and wrote fluent Spanish, so I gave her the details about my father and the San Miguels and she wrote it all down in Spanish. When Paul and I arrived in Barcelona, my main aim was to find my Spanish relatives, and as I had no address or name other than San Miguel (the Spanish equivalent of Smith), it would take a combination of luck and a miracle!

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