I am writing the history of the Jamberoo dairy factory.
The minutes are thorough. Motions moved. Votes carried. Chairmen thanked. Directors named.
The record is male because in that era authority was male.
That is the structure the archive preserves.
From the 1940s through to the 1970s the dairy industry ran on family labour. Women rose for early milking. They fed calves. They sterilised equipment. They kept the production books and the household accounts. They stretched the milk cheque across machinery payments and grocery bills. They managed rationing in drought years. They hosted meetings. They sustained community networks. They carried the emotional load when prices dipped or disease struck.
None of of that appears in the official file.
Board minutes record motions. Newspapers quote chairmen. Legislation names directors. The kitchens and calf sheds rarely make print. Even our local retrospectives, rich in civic detail, move through institutions and office holders. In the Kiama Independent Our History Supplement the pattern is consistent. Public life is recorded through public roles.
The tragedy sits elsewhere. The women who carried half the enterprise are now largely gone, and their voices were rarely recorded in their own words.
Oral history could have balanced the record. Time has narrowed that opportunity. It is archival reality.
When I read through factory reports and industry correspondence, I can trace leadership decisions with precision. I can follow drought policy, milk zones, compensation debates. I can name the men who chaired meetings and negotiated with ministers.
I cannot hear the conversation at the kitchen table when the milk price fell.
I cannot see the private calculations made after a vet bill arrived.
I cannot read the words of a woman who rose at 4 am and went to bed after the books were balanced.
Half the enterprise sits between the lines.
Wanting to change that makes sense. It shifts the lens forward rather than back. It asks who is documenting women’s lived experience now, while those voices are still present. It asks whose work is counted as leadership.
If we are serious about industry history, we record the boardroom and the calf shed. We record the motion and the margin. We record the lived experience
Interviews, recorded conversations, written reflections. These are not embellishments. They are structural repair.
An industry history written only through formal office leaves half the story implied.
I am writing “Milk and men (and no women.)”
The next chapter needs different sources. I hope those voices can be found
