Catherine Maude Hiah, 1884-1949
aka Maude Teaguer, Maude Hiah
Daughter of William Hiah and Julia Teager
Maude Hiah
Maude Teaguer
1915: “Mis (sic) Maud Teaguer gave a farewell tea prior to her departure for Western Australia to Mrs Green, Misses Dorothy, Hetty, and Possie Green, Campbell, and Usher. The hostess was attired in a frock of ivory glace, adorned with black Chantilly lace, and had a black and white paille hat set with black ospreys.” [03]
In around 1925, Maude began working with Frank Sam Goon (F S Goon), a Chinese herbalist, at his premises at 3 Peel Street, Ballarat.
Goon was born in Canton and migrated to Australia in 1896. He was initially working with his uncle – another Chinese herbalist – in Ararat. He married Florence Keen in Ararat in April 1907 and they moved to Ballarat to operate his own Chinese Herbalist business in August that year. Goon divorced his wife in 1909 after a saga of infidelity and theft on her part. [04]
1935: By 1935, Maude was living and working in Melbourne and advertised in The Age as a “Lady Herbalist (Chinese)”: “M Teaguer, late of F S Goon, the original Ballarat Chinese Herbalist, for 10 years. F S Goon having returned to China, M Teaguer has commenced Practice at ‘Marleston’, 18 Evelyn-st, one tram-stop past Parliament House, op Royal College of Surgeons. Phone Cent 2108.” [05]
Interestingly, F S Goon also advertised in the same issue: “Mr F S Goon, Herbalist, 3 Peel-st, Ballarat, may be Consulted at 128 Exhibition-st, Melb, from 8th Jan to 15th Jan. Central 2739.” [06]
1936: “J N Ming, Herbalist, may be Consulted at Marleston, 18 Evelyn-st, E Melb (take Bourke-st tram to one stop beyond Parliament House). Also at the same address , M Teaguer, Lady Herbalist (Chinese), may be Consulted. M Teaguer specialises in Women’s and Children’s Complaints. Cent 2108 (No other address).” [07]
F S Goon is also advertising: “Herbalist, 3 Peel-st, Ballarat, May be Consulted at 128 Exhibition-st, Melb, from 1st to 8th April. Cent 2739.”
1946: Ming died in March 1946. Maude placed a death notice in The Age: “Ming – On March 18 at Melbourne Hospital (suddenly), J N. – Inserted by Maude Teaguer.” [08] She closed up their joint practice and bought a house in Boronia, where she died on 24 October 1949. Her funeral service was held the following day at Padbury’s Chapel, 13 Cotham Road, Kew [09]. She was cremated and the ashes spread at Springvale, now the Springvale Botanical Cemetery. The immediate cause of death was a cerebral haemorrhage, but she had been under a doctor’s care for arteriosclerosis. Her death certificate recorded her occupation as “doctor’s attendant”.
Footnotes
01⇧ | Built in 1896 and operated by the German Norddeutscher-Lloyd line, this was the Bremen‘s last voyage to Australia. In April the following year, she sailed through the debris field left by the sinking of the RMS Titanic. She did not stop to recover bodies as the White Star Line – Titanic‘s operator – had already contracted another ship to recover the bodies and debris. One crew member of the Bremen photographed what he claimed to be the iceberg that the Titanic had hit. See SS Bremen |
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02⇧ | See also The Teager Name. |
03⇧ | The Sun (Sydney), 15 December 1915, Page 9 – Tea Parties at the Australia. [Retrieved from Trove] |
04⇧ | Hamilton Spectator, 20 August 1909, Page 3 – Chinese Divorce – Goon v Goon. [Retrieved from Trove] – In November 1907, Florence Goon left him and moved to the Chinese quarter of Melbourne, taking a lot of his valuables with her. They were reconciled in July 1908 and lived together until October 1908 when she left again taking a £10 diamond ring. The court filing by Frank named Ah Kyong, Ah Quin, and “other persons to the petitioner unknown” as guilty of “misconduct.” Florence had been living with Ah Kyong and Ah Quin at various times, and was living as Ah Quin’s wife when the court papers were served. The divorce decree was granted on Thursday, 19 August 1909. |
05⇧ | The Age, 24 December 1935, Page 3. [Retrieved from Trove] – Evelyn-st is now Evelyn Lane but the building is no longer there. |
06⇧ | If he had “returned to China”, he was back. |
07⇧ | The Age, 6 April 1936, Page 4. [Retrieved from Trove] |
08⇧ | The Age, 20 March 1946, Page 10. [Retrieved from Trove] |
09⇧ | The Argus, 25 October 1949, Page 12. [Retrieved from Trove] |