Interview with Giancarlo Marchioro [sound recording] Interviewer: Madeleine Regan, Part 3 of 3
Interview with Johnny Marchioro who was born in Adelaide on 17 August 1940; father arrived in Australia in 1927; mother married his father by proxy and joined him in Adelaide, father aged 32, mother 22; they worked a market garden in Frogmore Road and then moved to White Ave Lockleys; father had 14 glasshouses, used horse and cart until 1947; grew tomatoes; he went to Flinders Park Primary School; spoke Italian at home; father had three acres at Lockleys, pumped water from the Torrens; eventually had 21 glasshouses; Johnny went to East End market every morning at 3am; grew beetroots and onions and tomatoes; worked 12 hour days, all work by hand, no tractors; left school at 15 to work with parents; won McCallum medal in football in 1957 and 1959; played League for West Torrens until 1963; glasshouse dug by hand, 112 by 15 feet; some growers had to send tomatoes to Melbourne as Adelaide market too small; half case (24 pound) tomatoes sold for 1 pound to 1 pound 10; 14 glasshouses was enough to make a living, now it is 30; at Bolivar, bought tractor and rotary hoe; worked at Bolivar for 38 years; land originally barren and took 4-5 years to establish good soil; 5 acres; after parents retired they helped at Bolivar 2 days a week for 20 years; from 1965 -1970 properties at Lockleys sold for housing; 1940s land at Findon called 'St James' - 14 glasshouse gardens; good quality soil; gardening continued to 1990; in 1920s all families came from northern Italy; father and others interned in WWII - worked in mines and Adelaide Railway Station doing terrazzo floor; mother managed garden; all growers used bore water; glasshouses had to be moved every 10 years; annual fumigation; frost management; got married in 1965 and moved to Bolivar, land cheap and Findon not big enough; moved 12 glasshouses from Lockleys in 5 months; put in bore; put in 6 inches of topsoil; May 1966 first tomato crop planted and daughter born; 800 plants per glasshouse, 2 crops per year, got $4 a box for first class; left at 2:30 am for East End market; picked 200-300 boxes a week, got to 21 glasshouses; put in a cool room in 1974; grew several other vegetables; best years 1973-1980; Pooraka market opened in 1987; this cut out little growers and supermarkets with cold storage took over; food grown by companies such as Coles and Woolworths; Vietnamese and Cambodians moved into Virginia, selling to friends and locals; worked over 50 years at Bolivar and Lockleys in glasshouses.
Recording length2 hours 54 minsNo restrictions on copying. Publication only with the written permission of the interviewee, via the State Library.





