13 July 2021

A colourful character shares his memories of Moruya

| Karyn Starmer
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Michel Nader next to plaque at Monarch Hotel in Moruya

Michel Nader outside the Monarch Hotel in Moruya. Photo: Karyn Starmer.

Known for the colourful paintwork of his commercial buildings in the Eurobodalla town centres, publican and businessman Michel Patrick Nader has seen a lot of change since arriving in Moruya in 1929. Now aged in his 90s, Michel can still be found working at the Monarch Hotel on Moruya’s main street.

With a mischievous twinkle in his eyes, it is easy to see that Michel has lost none of his enthusiasm for life in the Eurobodalla.

His long life and success is testament to hard work, grasping opportunity and the enduring bonds of family.

Originally from Lebanon, Michel’s parents emigrated to Australia between World War I and World War II. His mother, Sitti, was just 17, and his father, Rashid, 20, when they left Suez in June 1927.

The great famine at the end of World War I prompted a mass migration from Lebanon. Michel says young couples such as his parents left the ‘old country’ as soon as they were married.

“It was the thing to do,” he says. “No-one wanted to stay so you picked where you wanted to go – the United States, Canada or Australia – bought a ticket and left.”

Upon arriving in Sydney, the young couple were welcomed by the small but growing Lebanese community.

Michel was born soon after.

“My parents wanted to settle in Sydney but jobs were scarce during the Depression,” he explains. “They were told there were lots of farm jobs in Moruya so they got a ride on a truck and arrived in Moruya in 1929.”

Exterior of Monarch Hotel in Moruya

Michel purchased the the Art Deco style Monarch Hotel in 1972. Photo: Moruya Historical Society.

With the assistance of Abraham Emmott, of the famous Emmott Beehive Store, which is now Harris Scarf, the young Nader family set up home in Queen Street, Moruya, on the site of what was to later become the Fiesta Theatre.

“It was essentially a little shed with no electricity, exposed to the heat and cold, but it was home,” says Michel.

“My mother was eternally grateful for Mr Emmott’s help. ‘God Bless Abraham Emmott,’ my mother often used to say.”

His brother, John, who was to become a lifelong pal was born in 1937.

Michel’s father ran a boot repair shop, expanding to a general store selling everything from clothing to linoleum.

The shop moved to various locations until they moved to their own premises, between the newsagent and the pharmacy on Vulcan Street. The Nader family made every concrete brick for the shop by hand in their back garden.

Michel and John Nader in Moruya Mardi Gras street parade

Michel Nader (right) with brother John outside their shop in the legendary Moruya Mardi Gras street parade, circa 1965. Photo: Moruya Historical Society.

Michel’s memories of Moruya are of a bustling small town.

“The population back then was about 1500 but there were not so many houses,” he says. “There were often seven to 10 people living in a house. The whole family would live together.”

With poor roads, goods for the shop came in via a steamer from Sydney.

“The steamer came in to Moruya every Friday evening at high tide,” says Michel. “The call would go out, ‘The boat is coming,’ and everyone would gather at the town wharf.

“I also remember a brass band playing on Friday nights outside the picture theatre where Silly Willy’s is now. As boys, we were paid to spruik for business: ‘Come in, come in.’ That would never happen these days – we were just little kids.”

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Michel said the nuns at St Mary’s School tried their best to interest him “but life outside the school gates was more exciting”.

After leaving school, Michel headed for Sydney but says he missed the cooking and the family life so moved back to Moruya. His mother offered him the menswear side of the business when he was just 17, and the rest is history.

During the years, Naders store grew into a hugely successful business that was to last for 75 years until it closed in 2004, not because Michel had enough, but because his long-standing staff wanted to retire.

Michel married his wife, Pamela, in 1957 and had three children. His son, Michel John, is the publican of the Air Raid Tavern, and grandson, Reuben, is continuing the tradition, helping his grandfather run the Monarch Hotel.

Historic records on wall at Monarch Hotel

Michel’s collection of records and historic photographs decorate the walls of the Monarch Hotel. Photo: Karyn Starmer.

With the success of the family business, Michel says he wanted to secure his family’s future and decided to make investments in each of the town centres.

He purchased the Monarch Hotel in 1972, an Art Deco style building built in 1939 on the site of the old Commercial Hotel and converted it to a hotel-motel. During the next 20 years, Michel purchased sites in Mogo, Moruya, Narooma and Batemans Bay.

“Property was very cheap back then,” he says. “No-one wanted it.

“I remember I was the only person bidding on a site in Batemans Bay. It was a dilapidated timber building, but it had a double main street frontage and still nobody wanted it.”

Advertisement for Naders store in Moruya

An advertisement for Naders store in Moruya. Image: Moruya Historical Society.

Following the purchase, Michel worked onsite, wheeling barrow loads of bricks to build what is now Fenning Place, a pink and purple painted arcade between Orient Street and Perry Street in Batemans Bay.

As part of his enthusiasm for the Eurobodalla Shire, Michel has contributed to many community organisations and projects, including installing a replica of the famous ‘pink gates’ found at the Vulcan Street entry to the showground, near the council chambers.

If you look closely on each of his buildings, you will see a small plaque with the history of the site.

Michel’s collection of photographs in the Monarch Hotel are worth checking out just for a glimpse of the rich history of the little town he drove into on a truck, in his mother’s arms, more than 90 years ago.

Original Article published by Karyn Starmer on About Regional.

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