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The Early Years

How the Swiss Club of Victoria was founded.

As recorded in the first Edelweiss newsletter published on 1 January 1900; “... on 24 December 1898, afternoon 3 o'clock, six jolly Swiss souls made a promise - not with crossed swords, as their ancestors in the "Rütli" have done it, but with sparkling glasses filled with wine - to make joint efforts to establish a Swiss association for the purpose of promoting social activity and a closer connection among the Swiss living here."

"... and on 1 February 1899 the matter had progressed to the point that the club was formally founded and was given the not very poetic, yet very important sounding name of "Swiss Club of Victoria."

But the foundations for the club were laid many years earlier. The first wave of Swiss migration to Victoria started only five years after the foundation of the first permanent Victorian settlement in 1834. It was initiated by the appointment of Charles Joseph La Trobe as superintendent for the Port Phillip District, as Victoria was called before 1850. La Trobe was married to Sophie de Montmollin. The de Montmollin family belonged to Neuchâtel’s aristocratic elite. Through this connection, over 100 winegrowers from Neuchâtel and adjacent districts were encouraged to migrate and work in the colonial wine industry.

Solidarity was strong among the now considerable number of Swiss citizens living in the district. Many had fallen on hard times because the promise of gold and fortune came true for only a few, and it did not take long until the first benevolent society was founded. This was usually done by wealthy businessmen and tradesmen committing themselves to helping newly arrived or needy countrymen. And thus, on the 17th of April 1879, the ‘Swiss Society of Victoria’ was founded. There were 21 founding members and within six years the membership climbed to a record 136, a number that until today remains unsurpassed.

     

     M. Louis W. Grasset with his Australian wife Hannah Burville

In 1890, the ‘Swiss Society of Victoria’ patronised the foundation of the ‘Social Club Helvetia’ to take responsibility for organising social events and festivities, such as the Swiss National Day. The closing down of this club only six years later due to financial problems made way for the formation of a club that was independent of the ‘Swiss Society’ and so, the ‘Swiss Club of Victoria’ was founded in 1899. In order to raise community interest and increase membership, the club published a monthly newsletter called ‘Edelweiss', a newsletter we are proud to continue today.

Despite efforts to boost membership and secure the club's financial viability, the first incarnation of the Swiss Club of Victoria dissolved in 1904. A second attempt to establish a social club arose after World War I, primarily attracting migrants from the German-speaking Cantons of Switzerland. Launched with generous private donations totaling over £100, this new version of the Swiss Club held its inaugural meeting in 1924 at the Manchester Unity Hall.

The initiative to re-form the club came from a passionate group of 48 Swiss residents in Melbourne, supported by the Swiss Consul at the time. The bond between the Swiss Club of Victoria and the Consulate General of Switzerland was strong from the beginning and lasted until the consulate closed in 2007. That year, the National Day Gala Ball held special significance, celebrating 150 years of Victorian statehood while bidding farewell to the consulate after 150 years of continuous representation. Following the closure, the Swiss consulate in Melbourne became an honorary post, with consuls appointed from the Swiss community.


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