INVITATION - BBQ FOR NEIGHBOURS AND PEOPLE WHOSE PREMISES ARE MEDIUM RARE & WELL DONE

2011
Overview

Invitation printed on A4 white paper. Title [Experience Friendly Fire]. Top line [Calling all those people and neighbours whose premises are 'Medium Rare to Well / Done' We will be holding a street party to celebrate the end of what has been a pretty / tough week for all of us.]
The invitation also includes a cartoon of a mother pointing to the house as two small dirty children come out a shed. Cartoon caption ['Yes, I read that black is fashionable, black is provocative. Upstairs, first door on the right - BATHROOM'], followed by more information regarding the location, time and place of the bar.b.q.and ends with the line [Persons sporting Black apparel will not be served!]

Historical information

This invitation was available to victims of the Kelmscott & Roleystone Bushfire on the 6th of February 2011. The invitation was left at the Armadale Arena on Townley Street, Armadale which was the evacuation centre during the bushfire. This invitation used humour to promote a community BBQ for people whose homes were damaged by the bushfire.
On the morning of 6th of February 2011, a bushfire was accidentally started by an individual using an angle grinder outside, during a total fire ban. Sparks from the angle grinder set nearby dry grass on fire. High easterly winds caused this scrub fire to quickly turn into a bushfire. Over the course of the rest of the day, the fire spread westerly out of Roleystone, down the hill and into Kelmscott. 150 firefighters were on the ground during the peak of the bushfire. Residents in the path of the fire were ordered to evacuate immediately. Over 4,000 people were evacuated during the bushfire. Many families lost their homes. 69 homes were destroyed with another 71 badly damaged. Residents were evacuated to the Armadale Arena on Townly Street, which was turned into the emergency evacuation centre. Most residents spent the night there and it was not for a few days before they were allowed back into the area to see if their homes had survived.
The Armadale Arena remained a one stop resource centre for victims of the bushfire for 2 weeks after the event.
This bushfire is now regarded as one of the worst in WA history due to the number of homes lost. No one was killed during the bushfire.
For further information, see the Birtwistle Local Studies Library.

Details

Details

Registration number
cwa-org-33-COA2011.17
Item type
Material
Width
210 mm
Height or length
297 mm
Year
Statement of significance

On the 6th of February 2011, the Roleystone Kelmscott Bushfire destroyed over 70 homes in the east Kelmscott and south west Roleystone area. Residents were evacuated to the Armadale Arena, which became the centre for helping those effected by the fire. This sign was put on a notice board for people at the centre. This collection represents not only the destructive nature of the bushfire but also how the local and wider Western Australian community came together to help those in need. This collection is also part of a far broader story about Western Australia's relationship with fire.

Primary significance criteria
Historic significance
Comparative significance criteria
Interpretive capacity
Rare or representative
Well provenanced
City of Armadale - History House

City of Armadale - History House

Organisation Details
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Flyer with text and a black and white cartoon in the middle of two children covered in dirt and soot coming out of a shed with their mother holding a scrubbing brush and pointing to inside the house.
This image has been edited by the curator to remove identifying phone numbers

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