23 August

History has left only traces of the experience of girlhood. Yet traces do remain, poignant and important. They tell the stories of girls and young women and the central role they have played in our history.

Nineteenth-century Australian society had restrictive ideas about what girls should and should not do, who they should and should not be, and who was and was not a girl. Girls adhered to and subverted these directives. They were creative, resilient and resourceful—active participants in their families, communities and society.

A pale porcelain dolls head with blushed cheeks and brown hair lay on table.
Doll belonging to Alice and Ethel Tong
Source: Heritage Victoria archaeology collection

However, girls are hard to find in history and are often only visible in the things they owned, used, made or discarded. Drawing from collections around Victoria, these traces, in the form of handiwork, scrapbooks, writing, archaeological artefacts and photographs, will be displayed throughout Como House. Through these objects, the stories of girls from very different backgrounds who grew up in 19th and early 20th-century Victoria, including those who lived at Como, will be uncovered.

Traces of Girlhood demonstrates the opportunities girls had, the expectations placed upon them, and their ability to defy, refuse and subvert these strictures. It explores girls making and learning, their work and contributions, their health and death, and how they played and connected with one another. It also examines the absence and silence–many girls remain invisible in the traces left behind.

The portrait shows Laura not looking at the camera, her hair is down and over her shoulders. She wears a white dress and flower decoration draped over her left shoulder.
Studio portrait of Laura Evelyn Armytage
Source: University of Melbourne Archives.

More information

The exhibition runs from the 23 August to 20 October 2024, and is open on Saturdays and Sundays between 1pm and 4pm. You can purchase tickets at the National Trust website.

Page last updated: 23/08/24