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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Bill Spargo – pioneer prospector and snow skier

By FW

William ‘Bill’ Benjamin Spargo, pioneer of skiing on Mt Hotham, came to the mountain in about 1924 and brought with him the kind of toughness you needed to survive there, even now. He was the first alpine road patrolman employed there by the Country Roads Board, moving from the Omeo/Tallangatta Road which was then referred to as the Omeo Highway. He began skiing on Mount Wills on split woolybutt (Alpine Ash) skis, with working boots nailed to the ‘boards’ instead of bindings – like those used by the Kiandra Goldfield miners of that gold rush period. This story is about gold and Spargo was just the bloke to find it. He built the but you can still see across the Swindlers Creek valley from the Great Alpine Road. Hidden almost by the snow gum trees that have grown so well since the great fire of Black Friday, 1939, Spargo’s but was built from local round timber and lined with tarred paper known then as ‘sisalcraft’. He transported the material via the Mt Loch Spur with a horse-drawn sledge.

Around 1934, when Spargo built his hut, he did so with the intention of finding the gold most prospectors know exists in the deep alluvial leads, and hopefully finding some of the reefs that might have shed gold in claims such as Sol Morrison’s at Boiler Plain, where he panned 12 ounces in one dish!

Bill Spargo was not a big man but what he lacked in size he certainly made up for in spirit and determination. When the great wildfire of Friday 13th January, 1939, came roaring over Hotham and across the deep valley of Swindlers Creek, Bill was ready for it. He had a permanent water supply piped, frost-safe and buried, into his hut from a spring some distance up the hill from the hut.

One winter, quite a few years ago, I took a party of Omeo Ski Club members around from Hotham to Spargo’s, on skis. There we had a good look at the neat little dwelling in which he’d spent so many lonely years.

There was the old tin bath, with the water still running in, filling it and running out through a pipe exiting outside. I was able to tell my party how Spargo had stood there with a gold dish bailing water onto the inside walls while the flames swept over the hut like a tidal wave

H was once asked what it had been like in the hut at the time and he just said “It was a bit steamy what, with the iron getting nearly red-hot and the water coming back at me scalding hot.” That’s how tough Spargo was.

He was also skilful enough to eventually discover the richest reef ever found in this part of Victoria. So determined was he to work it himself, he knocked back an offer of $120,000 for it from a Sydney syndicate.

Like all good prospectors, he dug an awful lot of holes. He paid two fellows to drive a tunnel into the side of Mt Higginbotham because he had the idea that there was a mother lode within reach. He spent seven or eight fruitless years looking for that lode.

Bill Spargo’s hut on Golden Spur was once Australia’s highest residence

Bill Spargo’s hut on Golden Spur was once Australia’s highest residence

One day Bill was wandering around the side of that part of the Mt Loch range that falls into the Cobungra River, towards Dungy’s Gap. It was summer and the bush flies were swarming around his head and about ten kilos of them were hitching a ride on his back. While flicking them off with a snow gum branch, he spotted a likely looking bit of quartz at his feet. His eyes fairly bugged out when he saw that it was studded with gold.

Because there are only two ways you can look in those mountains – either up or down hill – Bill reckoned it must have come down hill, so he looked up. What he saw there, apart from it being awfully steep, was a few red robin birds fluttering above something. “Ah!” he thought, “Must be a snake up there,” and he struggled on up the slope, keeping his eye to the ground looking for more specimens like the one in his bag. Where the robins had been there was no snake – what there was, was an outcropping quartz reef with lots of gold showing!

236 OUNCES IN ONE CRUSHING

The Red Robin reef had just been discovered. Bill sat down and let the adrenalin settle a bit, before grabbing his pick and shovel and digging down beside the reef. It wasn’t very wide on the surface but boy was it rich. There was gold in the quartz everywhere he looked.

So remote was the area there was virtually no chance of if being found by another prospector or stray bushwalker, so Spargo decided there was no need to rush off and register it as a claim. He just kept on digging.

The first parcel of two tons of ore, crushed at the Bairnsdale School of Mines Battery and taken there by Doolan’s Transport of Omeo, returned the astounding clean- up of 236 ounces of gold. That ore was packed out to the chalet on pack horses, just like in the old days.

Next year Spargo packed out a further 2.75 tons which brought him a total from both crushings of 353 ounces, an average of nearly 75 ounces to the ton. A road was dozed to the Red Robin from the Alpine Road around the western side of Mt Loch to Machinery Spur, and a small battery was set up.

When the war intervened, Spargo held the claim for three years, came back in 1946 and crushed another two tons for 106 ounces.

On 27th February, 1946, he married Evelyn Maud Piper, née Davies, a 45-year- old widow. They lived in the high country during the summer months but soon parted and Bill went back to his hut and the Red Robin mine. The ‘One Alone’ became another of Bill’s shows but was never as rich as the Red Robin. From nine tons, a crushing produced only 36 ounces whereas in 1947, six tons from the Red Robin went 32 ounces to the ton from an underlying shaft down to 25 feet. It was still good stone but as could be expected from most reefs in this country, the values were decreasing with depth.

In 1948 the shaft was down to 50 feet and another eight tons produced 207 ounces.

he monument to Bill Spargo credited him with three more years of retirement living than he actually had, dying as he did, in January, 1959

The monument to Bill Spargo credited him with three more years of retirement living than he actually had, dying as he did, in January, 1959

ADOPTED A SOLITARY EXISTENCE

About this time a road was brought up from the Kiewa track and more work was done at the mine. Bill Spargo retired in 1952 having sold out to some Harrietville friends. He retired to Queensland and settled on Magentic Island, which was a strange choice for a man who loved the mountains and had taken pride in living in what had been Australia’s highest residence. Having purchased two houses, one of which he lived in, Spargo reverted to a loner existence and spent his last days in a retreat he built under the tank stand. He died on 7th January, 1959, at Mount Olivet Hospital, Kangaroo Point, Brisbane, and was cremated.

That rich outcropping Bill worked always had me thinking about the gold that must have travelled down the slope from that reef as the country wore down over millions of years. Maybe someone

will try there with a metal detector one day. Maybe they already have.

There are a lot of pockets of gold that the old timers missed in their hard rock mining. A mate of mine struck such a pocket in an old tunnel out in the Gippsland bush. Keen as mustard, he was testing the sides and roof of an old drive when his detector gave a loud cry. One of the bits he weighed on my old gold scales went nearly two ounces.

When the old timers had worked that particular area, they had no such thing as a metal detector, just a candle for light, so it was pretty easy for a pocket of nuggetty gold to be missed. But not every rich pocket was associated with visible quartz.

Before you go clambering down an old shaft, or poking about in any old tunnel, you need to know the risks. The timber that holds all that rock up might be pretty rotten and even a cough or a sneeze can bring it all down on your head.

Tapping the walls and overhead rock will give off a drumming sound if it’s a bit loose, and most visible rock falls have not finished falling. Rotten mine timbers are a sure sign of instability, so my advice is to steer well clear of the place.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

The last laugh at Charters Towers

By JL

The good citizens of Charters Towers thought Cornishman, Richard Craven, was mad. The shaft he had dug was the town joke. They called it Craven’s Folly because he’d been digging deeper and deeper, for three long, expensive years, with barely a sniff of gold. But the people of Charters Towers wouldn’t have laughed quite so hard and for quite so long if they’d realised the joke was on them. Self-confident and boastful, Craven was a well-known figure in the Towers. He had arrived during the first ‘rush’ in March 1872, just after gold was first discovered there by the aboriginal boy, Jupiter Mosman. In fact, while Mosman and party were jubilantly staking their claim, Craven was not far away, on the Mt Leyshon diggings, following the lure of the precious metal, as he had done since his arrival in the colony six years earlier.

As soon as he heard of the new find, he joined the rush of diggers to the new field. Fourteen years later, Craven was still on the field and still following the lure of gold. A mechanical engineer, he had acquired interests in a couple of mines and was director of one of the town’s 29 mills. But for 10 years he had been obsessed with the idea that a huge deposit would one day be found in the area where two rich reefs joined – the Queen reef to the east and the Day Dawn reef to the west. But other ‘junction’ mines had been tried before and all had failed. Everyone had given up on the area, everyone except Richard Craven who, in 1886, took up a lease of 25 acres in what the townspeople called “the barren ground”. But he could find no one who was prepared to risk money backing his dream. By chance however, an old friend, W. Ivers, who had already struck it rich with the fabulously wealthy Day Dawn PC mine (PC stood for Prospecting Claim), and had retired to live in London, returned to the Towers for a visit. Craven persuaded Ivers to invest £12,000 to finance the sinking of a vertical shaft on his lease. Thus, the Brilliant PC Gold Mining Company was formed, with Richard Craven the Chairman of Directors.

Digging got underway and continued for three years with no success and the futile progress of the shaft was watched with much interest and much derision by the townspeople.

Towards the end of 1889, the shaft was at 900 feet – already much deeper than Craven had originally thought necessary, and capital was running out. The directors met and refused to spend any more money digging any deeper.

However, they agreed to give Craven one last chance – not to go deeper but to go back and explore a slightly promising formation at the 700-foot level. Here, one of his miners had previously noticed a 6-inch quartz leader jagging off to the east but at the time it wasn’t promising enough to hold up the deep sinking of the shaft. Now it was Craven’s only hope.

The miners returned to the formation and had driven into it barely a few feet when, to everyone’s astonishment, this humble leader immediately opened out into a reef about three feet wide from wall to wall. The width of the reef increased to eight feet as the drive continued. The quartz in the reef was so heavily charged with gold that the drive was later described as looking like a jeweller’s shop. The rock face literally sparkled in the light of the candles.

This wasn’t the junction of the Queen and Day Dawn reefs which Craven had convinced himself was the root of all riches, but a fabulous new ore body, later called the Brilliant Reef.

The red flag of triumph appeared at the poppet head. Craven was jubilant! So elated was he with his luck, and so incensed by the derision long-levelled at his scheme, he immediately piled his buggy high with some of the rich stone and drove up Gill Street, the main street of Charters Towers, telling all the sceptics in no uncertain terms just what he thought of them. He and his friends then toasted the success of the Brilliant with immense quantities of the best champagne.

Richard Craven

Cables broadcasting the fabulous new mine flew all over the world and in the excitement that followed, the Charters Towers Stock Exchange opened for business in the new Royal Arcade. With each call of the board, the price of its shares rose.

Work commenced and in just three months of the reef being struck, the Brilliant had yielded 5,469 ounces of gold from 1,976 tons – nearly 30 ounces to the ton!

In two years the mine had become the biggest producer on the field averaging 2,500 ounces of gold every three weeks. Over the next 10 years the Brilliant Mine PC yielded £2 million worth of gold. It needs no stretch of the imagination to realise just what it would mean if such a discovery was made today at current gold prices.

The success of the Brilliant proved the value of deep sinking on the Charters Towers goldfield. Speculation and investment, both local and overseas, followed quickly.

The “barren ground” suddenly became very busy with all adjacent ground taken up in leases. Soon there were many more shafts driven into the earth – deep, vertical shafts sunk on the boundary of each lease closest to the Brilliant PC reef, until its ore body was struck. It wasn’t long before the Brilliant PC was surrounded by sister mines.

By 1891 the Brilliant and St George, the Brilliant Freehold, and the Brilliant Central had all tapped into the reef. The Brilliant Block was next but it didn’t hit the reef until a depth of 1,090 feet. It was obvious that the reef was heading downwards.

In 1893 the Brilliant Extended cut the reef at 2,000 feet, while in 1896, the Brilliant Deeps struck the same reef at 2,558 feet, the deepest shaft at that time on the Charters Towers field.

The Brilliant lode, with all its mines, reigned supreme for many years. It was the most productive reef ever discovered in Charters Towers.

Total gold from all reefs, offshoots and crossovers of that lode accounted for approximately half of all the ounces mined on the field. Richard Craven and his Brilliant PC mine had started a new boom for the town, one that was to last for many years and act as the catalyst that turned the town into a city.

Wealth from the Brilliant mines also helped supplement the dwindling coffers of the State of Queensland. By the turn of the century, a disastrous drought plus labour problems had hit its primary production and the Government had run so short of funds it was even forced to retrench many senior civil servants. Profits from the Brilliant lode mines helped to prop up the ailing economy.

In October, 1904, seven miners were killed when a huge fire swept through the Brilliant and into the surrounding mines. Fanned by oxygen from the many tunnels connecting these sister mines for the purpose of cross ventilation, the fire raged for three days with noxious fumes, smoke and incredible heat issuing from the many shafts. Some of the victims were members of rescue parties who were killed by poisonous fumes as they tried to save their fellow workers. Charters Towers went into mourning and the Brilliant PC never re-opened.

A parade down Gill Street, Charters Towers in 1912. Richard Craven organised his own one-man parade driving a buggy full of gold ore down the same street more than 20 years before

Today, all that remains of Craven’s Folly is a jumble of concrete blocks near an overgrown and fenced-off shaft, barely noticeable now in the “barren ground” beside the railway yards. And Richard Craven, the man who helped transform Charters Towers into a city, is remembered only by a narrow laneway that bears his name.

Richard Craven left his mine and the city of Charters Towers in 1892 and retired to live in Sydney, but a long and prosperous life was denied him.

The following obituary appeared in The Sydney Mail, 28th January, 1899: Few men were better known or respected in Northern Queensland, where he resided for upward of a quarter of a century, than the late Mr Richard Craven, who died at his residence, Preston, Birrell Street, Waverley, on the 17th January.

A native of Preston, England, he came out to Queensland some 34 years ago, when the mining industry in that colony was practically in its infancy, and being possessed of indomitable energy, pluck, and perseverance, the essential qualities of the pioneer and prospector, he soon joined the great army of gold seekers that invaded Northern Queensland. He was the prospector of the celebrated Brilliant line of reef on the Charters Towers goldfield, eventually becoming interested in every mine on that lode. His sterling qualities und open-handed generosity were fully recognised by his fellow-citizens of the North, among whom be was deservedly popular. A born sportsman, he was one of the founders of the Charters Towers Jockey Club, of which he was one of the leading spirits during his long residence in the North, and when he came to reside in Sydney, some seven years ago, he quickly identified himself with the national sport, spending money with a liberal hand in the purchase of blood stock, but in neither colony was his success on the turf commensurate with the interest he took in the national sport.

Upright and honourable in his actions, he was greatly respected by all with whom be came in contact, and the esteem in which he was held in this city was manifested at his burial in the Waverley Cemetery on the 18th January, when the cortege included citizens of every grade, and floral tributes from his intercolonial and local friends were many and beautiful. Mr Craven died at the comparatively early age of 53, and left a widow and 10 children to mourn their loss.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

The legend of Russian Jack

Or a lesson in how you should never let the facts get in the way of a good story

Outside the Halls Creek shire office in the far north-west of Western Australia, is the statue of a man known as Russian Jack, who, at one time, had the reputation of being the strongest man in Australia. His feats of strength, such as bending a “oneand-a-half-inch octagonal steel crowbar across his knee”, and his incredible endurance, reportedly wheeling a sick man in a wheelbarrow 480km through the Great Sandy Desert to Wyndham, are both legendary, and in many instances, apocryphal. And, though he was described by some as “a magnificent specimen of manhood,” he wasn’t two metres tall as a few newspapers of the day claimed. The Halls Creek sculpture, by Perth artist, C. P. Somers, was unveiled in 1979 as a tribute to the tough old gold prospectors of the 1800s. Ironically, in spite of being a Russian immigrant, big Jack was regarded by his peers as personifying the great Australian tradition of mateship, for the statue’s inscription reads: “His feat symbolised the mateship and endurance of the pioneers of the region, then lacking all the amenities of civilisation.” The “feat” is his wheeling of a sick Englishman named Halliday to Wyndham (or was it Halls Creek?) but far from it being 480km, Peter Bridge in his book Russian Jack, correctly puts the distance at closer to 50km. Which is still an awfully long way to push a wheelbarrow loaded with supplies and a sick man through the desert. While alive, Russian Jack’s loyalty and kindness to his fellow prospectors was legendary and, since his death, his reputation has been magnified in Western Australian folklore.

Photograph of Russian Jack (aka Ivan Fredericks) taken in 1890

A Grand Monument

The Russian Jack statue, financed by a grant from the Western Australian government and a contribution from the Shire of Halls Creek, stands about two metres high, is two metres in length, a metre wide and weighs about two tonnes – a grand monument indeed to a magnanimous spirit. Russian Jack was born in the White Sea coastal city of Arkhangelsk (Archangel) in Northern Russia in 1852/53, and not 1864 as indicated on his headstone and as claimed by a number of other sources. His real name was John Frederick Kirkoss (aka John Fredericks and Ivan Fredericks). When the Westralian Worker (Perth) reported his death in 1904, they gave his age as 49 but he was actually 52 or 53 when he passed away from pneumonia in a Fremantle hospital in April of that year. He arrived in Derby, WA, by ship in 1886 and so began the legend. While nothing approaching two metres in height, Russian Jack was around the six-foot mark, give or take an inch, and weighed about 16 stone (100kg). One of Jack’s mates remarked that he had exceptionally big forearms, a barrel-like chest and didn’t know his own strength. However, by another observer Jack was conversely described as “Stumpy in body, grizzled of face, unable to write but able to curse, a gentleman to females and a lout to gentlemen…” H. Wilson, in Gateways to Gold, absurdly wrote: “Russian Jack was reputed to be an exceptionally strong and powerful man, over seven feet tall. When he leant across to whisper to the barmaid…all the glasses shook.” What was undisputed was his love of a drink and a hearty meal. “He had occasional drinking bouts but was always a gourmand (glutton),” said one prospector who befriended him. “Three pounds (1.5kg) of steak, a dozen eggs, a loaf of bread and a pound of butter would disappear in no time. “He enjoyed emu eggs. “There was a ‘terrible lot of eating in them,’ Jack would say.”

Abnormally Large Wheelbarrow

In the town of Derby, Russian Jack constructed for his own use an abnormally large wheelbarrow, with shafts 214cm. long, and a specially fashioned wide wheel (which he illegally obtained from an unidentified source) to make it easier to negotiate the sand-dune country where he went in search of gold, often pushing loads in excess of 50 kilograms. It is said that one time, when Jack and a mate were halfway to the Kimberley country, his companion fell ill so Jack loaded his swag and stores onto his barrow allowing the sick man to walk alongside. Having travelled some 60km it became obvious that Jack’s mate was too sick to walk any further, so the big Russian put him on top of the load and wheeled him along the track until he died. Jack then buried his body beside the road and continued the journey alone. During one of his first overland jaunts, the big Russian came across a couple of elderly prospectors who were too exhausted to carry their swags any further and were resting in the shade of a tree, waiting for fate to deal the next hand. Russian Jack quietly loaded all their gear onto his already overburdened wheelbarrow and helped push the weary diggers to the nearest settlement, 60 kilometres away, over waterless plains. During the latter part of the journey, one of the old men collapsed and had to be loaded onto Jack’s wheelbarrow for transporting to the nearest settlement. And I have already mentioned the Good Samaritan act he performed for the desperately ill Englishman, Halliday. In 1907, the eccentric journalist, Daisy Bates, while travelling to the Murchison area, met the big Russian. She wrote: “About 25 miles (40km) from the Peak Hill goldfields, we had stopped our buggy to wait and rest when out from a bush camp stepped a big, burly man with a huge melon in his hands, and from his mouth boomed the words: ‘Melon very good, lady. You like rest and eat?’

No Answer Would He Give

In a moment I thought of Russian Jack and, sure enough, it was he. But no answer would he give to my question about his work or love for his mate; all I could persuade him to say was: ‘That was long time ago. That was nothing.’ “His mate had married and settled down, and Jack was cultivating a vegetable garden for the Peak Hills goldfields, and was in charge of the coach horses plying between the gold area and the coast. “Still he kept his good name with everybody and helped many a ‘down-andouter. “In honesty, in singleness of purpose, in the clean simplicity of his life and his religion, this Russian Jack was a great man, but greatest in his ideal of the real friendship that means so much when men are thrown together far back in a continental interior like Australia.” Another recorded incident concerns Russian Jack and a mate returning from an unsuccessful prospecting venture inland when their food supply ran dangerously low and they decided to shoot a kangaroo to help feed themselves along the track. Jack’s mate spotted a kangaroo and decided to chase it on foot but unfortunately, he tripped and broke a leg. In typical fashion, Jack lifted his injured mate onto his wheelbarrow and pushed him to safety. When the pair eventually arrived in town, one of the locals mentioned that Jack must have travelled over a certain rough track, one noted for its pot holes, stones and gullies. Jack told the admiring on-lookers: “I pushed him over 100 miles (160km) in that damn wheelbarrow.”

The Man With The Broken Leg

The man with the broken leg, from Russian Jack’s wheelbarrow, remarked drily: “Yes, and I swear so far he hasn’t missed a rock.” On the early goldfields of Halls Creek and Cue, the name of Russian Jack quickly acquired the aura of a legend. An article appearing in The Murchison Times newspaper noted: “Our old friend, Russian Jack, whose memorable feats wheeling a heavily laden wheelbarrow all the way from the coast to the Kimberley goldfields has returned to Cue ...” Russian Jack, it is recorded, was one of the earliest arrivals on the Murchison goldfields. He was also one of the first visitors to Cue at a time when it was only a scattering of tents and makeshift buildings. The police station comprised two tents and a makeshift yard for the police horses but there was nowhere to secure any law breakers, so it was decided to transport a large tree stump at Milly Soak to Cue on the back of a wagon. The stump was set up near the police tents and a strong chain was attached to it. Cue now had a goal with offenders secured to the stump for the duration of their sentence or at least until they sobered up. While prospecting in the Cue area, Russian Jack came into town one time for provisions, and as was his habit, he also stopped at the hotel for one beer too many. When the time arrived for Jack to return to his prospecting site, he hastily threw onto his great wheelbarrow all his groceries, a bag of potatoes, drilling gear and explosives. His dynamite was secured in a wooden box but a tin of 50 firing caps, which were extremely sensitive objects, were casually thrown on top of the unwieldy load.

The memorial to Russian Jack at Halls Creek

Carelessly Arranged

Jack tied nothing down. Everything on the wheelbarrow was carelessly arranged. With the slightest mishap, the firing caps could easily explode, causing severe damage or worse. Jack did not care; he was happily drunk. Some observers on the main street watched apprehensively as Russian Jack effortlessly took up the shafts of his great wheelbarrow and uncertainly tried to push it in the right direction. But, being inebriated, he progressed haltingly, weaving all over the road. A policeman, observing Jack’s erratic steps, remarked to a companion: “Russian Jack has a load up inside as well as on his barrow,” and decided to intervene by escorting him safely out of town. Along the way, however, the policeman spotted the tin of firing caps balanced precariously on top of the load. Jack informed the constable he had recently received some money for gold nuggets sent to the bank, and was intent on proceeding to his mine, the “Fairlight”, about 13km out of town. For his own safety, the policeman decided to arrest Russian Jack but was uncertain how to do this, as the big Russian was an unusually strong man and had to be handled cautiously at the best of times. Jack continued staggering all over the road, bellowing out a song in his raucous, booming voice. As he drew near the police tents, several policemen intercepted Jack, suggesting quietly that he should re-pack his barrow. Ever so diplomatically, the police offered the big man a cup of tea as, together, they planned their course of action in getting the drunken Russian safely out of town and back to his bush camp. By this time Jack was thirsty again and he agreed to sit down quietly for a spell. As Jack rested, he started to doze off and the police took the opportunity to repack his barrow securely while waiting for the billy to boil. Soon Russian Jack was fast asleep, so the policeman handcuffed the big man to the huge log, their intention being to restrain him until he had sobered up and was capable of undertaking a safe journey back to his camp.

Chained To The Huge Stump

Overnight, the on-duty policeman was summoned urgently out of town to Cuddingwarra, about 16km to the west. In his haste, the policeman completely forgot about Russian Jack being left chained to the huge stump near the police tents. Later in the day the policeman suddenly remembered the big drunken Russian he had left behind at Cue, chained to a log, and hastily rode back to town. Upon arrival at the police tents he was stunned to find that Russian Jack was gone, and so was the stump. It would have taken three or four men to lift the ‘gaol’, he reasoned, so perhaps some of the residents had moved the stump and Jack to a place out of the sun. When the policeman conducted a quick search of the town site, at the hotel he discovered Russian Jack sitting quietly in the bar having a conversation with the barman. The stump was propped up on the counter and Jack was still chained to it. It was learnt that Jack had awakened during the night with a terrible thirst. He could see a waterbag hanging inside one of the police tents but when he called out for a drink, there was no response, so he heaved the great stump up onto his shoulder and walked to the tent. He then promptly emptied the waterbag and, satisfied, went back to sleep. When he next awakened, it was daylight, and the merciless sun was beating down on him with a vengeance. Desperate for a drink, and not particularly fussy how he obtained it, the big Russian wrenched the tree stump from the ground, balanced it on a shoulder, and walked away in search of refreshment at the nearest pub, which was almost half a kilometre away. When the hotel opened its doors, there was Russian Jack, chained to a stump, asking for a cool ale to prevent him dying of thirst.” “I thought I left you in goal Jack,” the policeman said. “So you did,” Jack replied, “but it was low-down of you to leave me all night with no drink. Anyway, you have one drink with me now and I’ll go back to gaol.” With an amazed police officer in tow, Russian Jack again shouldered the gaol stump and strolled back to the police tents where he restored the makeshift ‘gaol’ to its original location.

Removed Jack’s Chain

At the police camp the officer removed Jack’s chain and put a billy on the campfire which they shared. Jack’s physical strength was known to be immense and many were the stories told of his magnificent feats. At one time, when working as a labourer on Doorawarrah Station, he was dismissed by his employer for wrecking equipment. Jack allegedly bent a 4cm octagonal crowbar over his knees in an angry moment. As a gold prospector Russian Jack was ordinary and when he wasn’t on the gold, which was often, he turned his hand to whatever put food on the table. On a Peak Hill goldfield he ran a crude eating house for a time. A Frenchman, Albert Duclos, set up his camp close to Russian Jack’s business, hoping to steal some of his customers. Jack took quick action and chased the Frenchman off the field with a meat chopper, threatening to “make him the mince meat”. In his grubby eating house the big man waited on his customers, all of them rough gold diggers, without ever wearing boots and with his unwashed trousers rolled up to the knees. A passing coach driver who’d paused outside Jack’s premises, offered him a drink from a half full bottle of whiskey. “No, thanks,” said Jack. “I’m not drinking now.’ When the offer was repeated, Jack grudgingly consented to “haff a sip”. He then poured the half bottle of whiskey into a mug and downed the lot in one gulp. The coach driver’s only comment was that he would have hated to have seen Jack when he was drinking. One time Jack was asked what he would most like to achieve in his life. He said he would like to retire near a city in Western Australia, grow lots of vegetables, and then sit down by himself and eat the lot.

Severe Bout Of Pneumonia

According to the official burial report, Russian Jack died in a private hospital, Mandurah Road, at Fremantle, Western Australia, on 17th April, 1904, aged 40 years (though we know he was at least 12 years older), after succumbing to a severe bout of pneumonia. He was buried two days later in a local cemetery in the public grave section CC, No. 245. His burial particulars state his parent’s names were unknown nor was it known whether he was ever married. At the time of his death it was believed he still had a brother living in Archangel. His burial was presided over by Roman Catholic priest, John Smythe, and drew a crowd of three – George Murdoch, J. O’Donnell and W. H. Jones. Russian Jack’s last years were spent in a shelter for the homeless with the occasional stay in gaol for being drunk and disorderly. He died intestate and was buried in a pauper’s grave with no headstone. His death certificate recorded his profession as “market gardener” revealing that the big man might have finally achieved his life’s ambition of having his own private supply of vegetables. Three weeks after he died, the following obituary appeared in the Murchison Advocate: An old identity, John Fredericks, but a hundred times better known as “Russian Jack”, died a few days ago in a private hospital at Fremantle. His death came as a great surprise, for no one could imagine death in the prime of life to one of such herculean strength. He was so far as physical manhood was concerned, a picture, but he combined the strength of a lion with the tenderness of a woman. Though he had a loud-sounding, sonorous voice that seemed to come out of his boots, there was no more harm in it than in the chirp of a bird. Many instances are known of his uniform good nature, but his extraordinary kindness was manifested a few years ago to a stranger suffering from typhoid fever whom he picked up on the track in the Kimberley district. The stranger had a wheelbarrow and some food, and the burly Russian took the sick stranger and wheeled him nearly 300 miles to a haven of refuge. “Russian Jack”, if there are Angels in Heaven who record the good deeds done on earth, thou wouldst have sufficient to thy credit in that one action to wipe out many of the faults that common flesh is heir to.” Almost a century later, Russian Jack was chosen as “a symbol of nobility” by the Russian Orthodox Church and a marble headstone and cross was erected on his grave.

This simple headstone now marks the final resting place of Russian Jack, even though they got his name and date of birth wrong

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Forever unsolved – the Beaconsfield bank robbery

During the boom days of Beaconsfield’s gold era, which spanned a period of around 40 years, coaches transporting the precious metal on its hazardous journey to Launceston each carried a contingent of armed guards to prevent the valuable cargo from falling into the hands of bushrangers, who were an ever-increasing scourge of the times. However, when the Beaconsfield branch of the Bank of Tasmania was robbed in 1884, the names of famous lawless characters were markedly absent from the list of suspects, and instead, a small number of locals, described as being of “somewhat dubious character”, were at once deemed responsible for the robbery. The story goes that on the evening of 23rd July, 1884, when the then acting bank manager, 21-year-old Cecil A. Stackhouse, was on the return journey from one of his regular visits to the Richie family’s home and store at nearby Swift’s Jetty, he was brutishly grabbed from behind, gagged, bound to a tree, and robbed of his keys. Stackhouse was never able to identify his attackers, but in his account of the incident, told how he was guarded by two of the men for some hours and only released when a shot, fired by an unknown person, echoed from the direction of the town. For the times, the amounts stolen in the robbery were quite substantial, namely £2,100 in notes, £500 in gold and silver coins, 30oz of alluvial gold and a number of cheques. Prior to the theft, the bank had issued notes overprinted with the word BEACONSFIELD in red in the top righthand corner, and then, immediately after the crime was committed, they recalled these notes and restocked the branch with new batches bearing BEACONSFIELD in blue across the centre.

Beaconsfield mine

One of the highlights of a trip to the Beaconsfield Mine & Heritage Centre is an inspection of the head frame and the miner’s cage

News of the crime spread like wildfire, and in Beaconsfield, small-town gossipmongers were kept exceedingly busy, as in fact was the entire state of Tasmania, where an unprecedented amount of interest was shown in the case; a set of circumstances which greatly assisted a police party from Launceston, who, in a pre-dawn raid, swooped on several homes in the Beaconsfield area and arrested seven locals, namely, William and John Barrett, George and Richard Collins, Charles Ward, Edmund O’Keefe and Walter Masters. Then followed a most remarkable chain of events, which began when police decided Masters had no connection with the crime and would be released, while the remaining six alleged offenders were placed under guard in the local hotel until they could be transported to the lock-up in George Town. When their trials began in Beaconsfield Court on 4th August, the Collins brothers’ case was immediately dismissed due to lack of police evidence. Trials of the remaining four men were adjourned to 8th August and when proceedings were about to begin the court received urgent notification, by way of telegram, that the bank did not consider it had sufficient evidence to convict the men and had decided to drop the case against them. Elated by the quite amazing outcome, the seven freed men then got their scheming heads together and decided to sue the bank for false prosecution and wrongful imprisonment. Each of the successful cases was heard in the Hobart court and reaped George Collins and Walter Masters the tidy sum of £150 damages, Charles Ward received £300, and when the bank decided to settle out of court, William and John Barrett and Edmund O’Keefe each collected an even larger windfall of were awarded £175, while Richard Collins received a neat £225. Charles Ward, who claimed to be a man of the highest integrity, stated that his reputation had been most seriously defamed and was awarded an undisclosed amount.

The police, however, remained determined to make an arrest. They understood that the cash and bullion from the loot could not be identified but the old notes were a different proposition, and it wasn’t long after the prisoners were released that notes started to appear around the town with the red BEACONSFIELD having been none-toocleverly erased with chemicals. For the people of Beaconsfield, solving the crime had become a community project. Rumours kept circulating, and in December, Charles Ward was rearrested and charged with giving false evidence at the damages trial. Then, just two months later, John Barrett was again taken into custody while attending the Launceston races and charged with having in his possession, bank notes which appeared to have been treated with chemicals. Barrett was then charged with the robbery and with receiving stolen goods. However, in March, in the Hobart Supreme Court, again due to lack of evidence, John Barrett was acquitted of the robbery charge but found guilty of the charge of receiving and was sentenced to four years hard labour. The next day, in the same courtroom, Charles Ward was sentenced to six years gaol when the prosecution proved he had lied under oath in the damages case. Ward had a string of previous criminal convictions under various aliases but had somehow forgotten to mention this when claiming that his character had been assassinated as a result of being falsely charged with robbery. Finding himself again marooned between prison walls, Ward realized his only road to freedom was to turn informer, and as a result of his new information, police rearrested Edmund O’Keefe, along with a Mr John Rice, a new man on the scene. Both were charged with assaulting the bank manager and robbing him of his keys. The trial was to be held in Launceston, and after the offer of a bribe, together with a short stay in solitary confinement, Barrett was only too willing to give evidence with Ward. In his statement he alleged that Rice and O’Keefe had planned the robbery, and that they had guarded the bank manager while he and Ward carried out the theft. He told how the proceeds had been divided five ways at nearby Brandy Creek, the fifth share going to none other than the bank manager’s host that evening, Mr Ritchie of Swift’s Jetty. Ward also claimed that the men’s legal costs for their actions against the bank were all financed from the proceeds of the robbery. Nevertheless, despite all the preparation by the prosecution, the jury refused to accept the evidence, believing that the men had been coerced into their confessions by the police, and they were again set free. To this day, no person has ever been convicted of having robbed the Beaconsfield branch of the Bank of Tasmania. And to give the story its final comical twist, it was reported that in a friendly gesture, the people of Beaconsfield presented Walter Scott, the Sub-Inspector of Police, with a horse, saddle and bridle for his ardent work on the case and his success in recovering part of the money. No doubt some contributors, especially those who held prominent positions in the town, were eternally grateful that their reputations had remained unscathed.

NOTE: Beaconsfield became the centre of attention once again when the Beaconsfield Gold Mine collapsed due to an earthquake on 25th April, 2006. Of the 17 people who were in the mine at the time, 14 escaped immediately following the collapse. One miner, Larry Knight, was killed and the remaining two, Brant Webb and Todd Russell, were found alive on the sixth day by miners Pat Ball and Steve Saltmarsh. Webb and Russell were rescued on 9th May 2006, two weeks after being trapped nearly one kilometre below the surface. The mine closed in 2012.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

A Yankee desperado’s career in WA

Adapted from The Sunday Times (Perth), 31st January, 1909

You have heard of Jim Connolly. He was a great bushman and a fine prospector, and could fire two revolvers at once. The left hand was as deadly as the right, and either was certain death if Jim had any interest in terminating your existence. He was a curious mixture, this man; for he could be generous and genial so long as he was “flush”, and because of his masterful good-fellowship he was popular with the boys outback.

At the same time, he had no more compunction in taking a life than he had in killing a boodie rat. He was reckless, yet a coward. He was brave behind a six- shooter, but it is certain that he feared the hangman’s death trap, and by a strange piece of business, he escaped it.

Connolly was fairly well-known among the pioneer brigade who cut the tracks through the Mulgaland north of Kalgoorlie from 1893 to 1896. He was unerring in direction, and locality and had an instinct for bushcraft. If he had had a year with blacks he would have beaten them at their own game. Bushmen are born, not made, and that’s the way it was with Connolly. The prospectors admired this uncanny mastery of unfriendly nature as they were astounded at his manipulation of his revolvers. To demonstrate his deadly precision, he had been known to put a circle of bullet holes around the lock of a door, and finish up by lodging a leaden pellet in the brass door- knob, and he could do that with either hand. If he stayed at one camp for any time, the spot would be marked with hundreds of empty cartridge cases where he had been practising. Revolver practice to Connolly was like piano practice to Paderewski – it was an obsession.

But at heart he was a cur – a vindictive, heartless cur. Big and athletic, and not ill-looking, he was also a favourite with a certain class of women who are fascinated by a spurious personality. This is the type of female who likes the male to be aggressive and garish. Jim Connolly’s history with these will never be fully told now, but he knew two at Menzies when that centre was a mere iron and hessian camp, and both of them died violent deaths. One was barmaid at a primitive pub; the other was cook or housemaid at the same place. Connolly was very friendly with the saloon Hebe, but a coolness arose between them, and one day the girl was found with her head in a tank of water – dead. I don’t suggest anything, nevertheless let us look at the sequel.

Above: Shenton Street, Menzies, in the late 1890s

In 1897 Connolly had been in Coolgardie for some time, after a knock-

about up north, where he had been mining and prospecting, and had made a bit of a rise. He was an American and a Pacific Slope gambler (Editor’s note: The Pacific Slope describes geographic regions in North American, Central American, and South American countries that are west of the continental divide and slope down to the Pacific Ocean) and the Old Camp 12 years ago afforded plenty of scope for speculation at poker or two-up, or any other variety of backing chance. A few weeks of this, and a fair consumption of alcohol at a bob a nobbler (Editor’s note: a shilling for roughly a double-shot of whisky) had not improved his bank balance, so one day he hired a sulky, and taking a New Zealander named Robert Reid with him, they started off along the dusty old Ninety- Mile track. It was a heavy trail cut in soft red loam, that came up in a cloud with the revolving wheels.

Just six miles out there was a wayside shanty kept by a woman, who came out in answer to a call from Connolly. What passed is unknown now, but the woman was heard to say “I’ll report you” and the next moment she was staggering back to her hut, with a bullet through her. That was the end of the second woman from the Menzies pub, shot dead by the admirer of her barmaid “mate” who was strangely drowned in a small corrugated iron tank. Dead women tell no tales. The sulky with its murderer and miscreant dashed away, and there were plenty more “thrills” to be experienced within the next few hours.

A couple of miles along, a camel train in the charge of an Afghan obstructed the trail. Connolly ordered the descendant of Mahomet to get to Hades, at the same time sending a bullet through his turban and into the hump of the leading camel. Mahomet fled while the camel collapsed with a broken back, cracking one of its legs in falling.

A little further on there was another hessian shanty standing close under Mt Burgess, that one insistent landmark of the Coolgardie goldfields. It was kept by a man who looked like a derelict as he came shuffling out to Connolly’s summons. “Down on your knees and say what you’ve got to say, because you’re going to die,” Connolly said, pointing a revolver at him. “Get down quick,” he reiterated, as the confused derelict hesitated. “Look here,” stuttered the trembling wretch, “Have pity on me. I’ve got a wife and children.” “I don’t care what you’ve got. You are going to die now. Down on your knees.” Whether Connolly really intended to shoot the man or was just having some sadistic fun with him we will never know. “Don’t shoot him, Jim,” pleaded Reid, “he’s a friend of mine.” Connolly glanced quickly at Reid, to see if he was joking or not. “It’s all right, Jim. I really do know him.” The woman-slayer relaxed. “Very well,” he said. “I intended to perforate him, but as he’s a friend of yours, well, he can go.” The reprieved man, shivering and shuffling, supplied the two desperadoes with a drink, and they drove off. No more adventure was encountered until they swung into the 25-Mile, a small mining camp with a couple of pubs and a store. Here the local constable, unaware of their dastardly doings, allowed them to pass on.

Meanwhile the report of the murder had reached Coolgardie with picturesque embellishments, and Inspector McKenua, with Sergeant Sellinger, accompanied by a volunteer detachment of the Goldfields Light Horse, started in pursuit. The auxiliaries, under Vet. Surgeon Nathan, got as far as the six-mile, but there the full details of the bloodthirsty American and his deadly aim quickened their memories, and they recollected that they had appointments back in Bayley Street which were too urgent to be broken by following a mere murderer. Vet. Surgeon-Major Nathan, however, decided to stick with the police, and no doubt they felt fortified by his presence.

The party hurried on, picking up accounts of what had happened to Mahomet, the camel and the derelict grog merchant. Past the 25-Mile they went, and on to the 42-Mile, following the sulky’s wheel tracks easily.

About six miles before reaching the 42- Mile they struck a condenser, and the owner came out, and dumbly pointed a significant thumb over his shoulder. The officers dismounted and rushed in to capture Reid asleep, with a Winchester rifle alongside him.

He gave no trouble, but declined to supply any information about his death- dealing companion. He was handcuffed to Surgeon Major Nathan, and consigned to the charge of a policeman. The Inspector and Sergeant pushed on, but they found that the trap had been abandoned, and that Connolly had mounted the grey horse, and gone forward with the object of getting as far away from justice as possible.

It was night before the officers reached the 42-Mile and as it was impossible to follow the tracks, they decided to camp at the wayside hotel.

As they were sitting in the little dining room, Sergeant Sellinger said: “I’m going to look for that fellow. He can’t be far away. His horse must be pretty tired, judging by the way it’s been driven.”

“What! Are you going alone?” asked the Inspector.

“Yes, I’ll just have a look around.”

“All right, but you’d better take the constable with you.”

The Sergeant, who by the way was swathed in a porous plaster, got his revolver, called the constable, and they started exploring the scrub in the moonlight. Sellinger was ahead, looking for the grey horse, because he knew the owner would not be far away. After they had gone some distance, the sergeant thought he discerned the horse, and had half-turned to direct the constable’s (Harris’s) attention, when he saw two eyes close to the ground looking at him. Then he made out a man with a rug, and a movement going on under it. All these things are seen and divined in a flash. The Sergeant knew he had run his man to earth, and that whoever was quickest would win, so he literally threw himself at the figure’s throat, and thrusting his revolver against its head, he said: “Move, and I’ll blow your brains out.”

“All right,” said Connolly, “you’ve got me.”

Constable Harris was up by this time, and the handcuffs were adjusted. When the rug was pulled back there were the ruffian’s two “bull-dogs”, fully loaded, but he’d made one mistake – he’d forgotten to sleep with them out of the holsters. Under his head was a bag of cartridges.

He was brought into the hotel, and asked Mrs Hastings Scott for a drink of water.

“Yes,” she replied, “I’d give you a drink of water if it would choke you. You cur! You could shoot a defenceless woman. Why didn’t you shoot the Sergeant?”

The rest of the story is well-known. Connolly and Reid were tried in Perth and – acquitted! Acquitted in the face of daunting evidence. And the same night Connolly entertained the jury at supper. The boys outback had subscribed a big sum, but he swindled all who had saved his neck, including Mr. R. S. Haynes, K.C., and absconded without paying his debts.

A year or two later the scoundrel was shot and killed in Dawson City, Yukon, by the notorious ‘Soapy Smith’.

When the trial was concluded, Sergeant Sellinger said to Connolly: “There are your revolvers and Winchester – they are yours.”

“Oh, you can have them Sergeant. Do you know how you are alive today? Well, I couldn’t get one of those barkers out of the case. If I could, you’d have been a dead man.”

Sergeant Sellinger has since been promoted to Inspector, and is one of the finest officers in the force.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Dodgy gold and crooks aplenty

Colonial goldfields were breeding grounds for crimes of every description – bushranging, hotel holdups, burglary, thuggery, murder and, of course, blatant and successful confidence trickery.

The goldfields attracted diggers from all over the world and it was not surprising that this vast migration of men also contained certain criminal elements. There were no national boundaries as far as these types of people were concerned. They came from Germany, Britain, South Africa, South America, China and a host of other countries. Having arrived on the various goldfields in their thousands, the Chinese, for example, were generally hard working and honest men who often laboured under terrible conditions in order to make even a modest living. Highly respected by some for their industry, they were reviled by many and largely shunned by the white communities. Yet there were those among them who found great difficulty in making a decent living on the goldfields and who, instead, turned to a life of crime and subterfuge. In many instances their activities brought them very significant rewards. Perhaps one of the more rewarding of these subterfuges was the manufacture of spurious gold, that is, gold nuggets that had all the appearances of being genuine but which were later found to be manufactured from various elements, including a small amount of gold but largely from metals of far less value. A gang of Chinese spurious gold manufacturers operated at Mia Mia Flat rear Talbot, Victoria, in 1862. Apparently they had been selling their counterfeit gold for some time but their operations were finally discovered by a storekeeper at Mia Mia named Mr Crump, who informed the police. Accordingly, a detachment of police officers including a Detective Lloyd, Senior Constable Boyle and Constable Bain, went to Crump’s store where the Chinese counterfeiters were expected to put in an appearance. Crump had been caught out with a parcel of spurious gold and was determined to have the criminals arrested when next they came to sell him their false nuggets.

DENSE TANGLE OF BUSHES

When they arrived at the store, Constable Bain hid himself in a dense tangle of bushes near the building while his two fellow officers went inside to hide in one of the rear rooms. Soon afterwards a Chinese digger was seen approaching the store but when this man saw one of the police horses, he became suspicious and beat a hasty retreat. Detective Lloyd ran from the store, mounted his horse and went after the fleeing figure. He was in time to see him enter one of the many Chinese diggers’ tents in the area. Meanwhile another Chinese gang member had also arrived at the store. He was permitted to enter and, unsuspecting, sold some ‘gold’ to the storekeeper. When Detective Lloyd returned, the transaction had just been completed. Lloyd asked the Chinaman what he was selling and the man said “good gold, got in Back Creek and belong to four men.” Crump had handed over more than £10 for the gold (knowing that the police would soon pounce and retrieve his money), and, having received this money for his spurious gold, the Chinese man was now open to arrest. This Lloyd quickly did, slamming closed the front door of the store. Lloyd placed the man under arrest for selling ‘bad gold’. The counterfeiter insisted that all his gold was good but Detective Lloyd ignored the protestations and searched his prisoner. In the man’s pockets the police officer discovered, in addition to the money paid to him by Mr Crump, “...two spurious nuggets one weighing about half an ounce and the other about one pennyweight; there was also a parcel of beautiful looking spurious nuggets, in all about four ounces.”

Taking this man with them, the police officers then made for the Chinese camp on the diggings where about 400 or so Chinese diggers lived and worked. There they entered the prisoner’s tent and found four Chinese nationals busily manufacturing spurious nuggets with a crucible and bellows. The press later reported: “These rascals were at once arrested and, after being handcuffed, the police searched the tent and found several ounces of spurious gold in addition to the implements with which it is made. The five prisoners were then placed in a cart that started for the police camp at Talbot.” The real gold that the counterfeiters used to manufacture their false nuggets was actually bought at the Alma field where they paid about four pounds an ounce for it. Apparently the colour of the gold from the Alma region was slightly darker and therefore more easily disguised.

Australian goldfields

It was hard enough to make a living on the goldfields but the diggers and gold buyers were also plagued by conmen

POSED AS BEGGARS

There were also, occasionally, men who posed as beggars on the goldfields hoping no doubt to generate sympathy from those who had been fortunate enough to win some gold from their claims. For example, in 1862 a man who gave his name as Sam Kong, was operating just such a deception at Emerald Hill, Victoria. He actually started posing as a beggar on Christmas Day 1862. The colonial press subsequently reported, “...to ensure success he got himself up in true mendicant fashion and appeared with a bandaged arm and limbs so weak as to require the support of crutches.” However, his ruse was suspected and the police were called. The officers of the law soon found a ready cure for his infirmities. The bandages were removed, the crutches were confiscated and, like a wondrous cure, it was discovered that Sam Kong had no further infirmities. When searched it was discovered that he had managed to beg the incredible sum of £12 pounds 10 shillings in just a few days of ‘malpractice’. The ‘beggar’ was arrested and taken to Melbourne for punishment. In October 1863, a Chinese digger called at the store owned by a Mr Alderson at Wesley Hill, Forest Creek. Alderson knew the Chinese digger as he had conducted a number of previous transactions with him and therefore had no reason to suspect him of any kind of skullduggery. The Chinaman informed Alderson that he wished to purchase 20 ounces of gold. Alderson told him that he had only 13 ounces on hand and said that if the man would call a few days later, he would have the full 20 ounces ready for him. On the evening of the arranged day, the Chinaman returned to the store to complete the transaction. Alderson greeted him warmly and showed him the full 20 ounces of gold dust. They negotiated and agreed upon a price for the gold, and then the Chinese digger produced a piece of paper and told Alderson that he would wrap the gold in it. To this Alderson readily agreed and he watched carefully as the gold was wrapped into the twist of paper. When he had the parcel ready the Chinaman looked up at Alderson and asked for a piece of string with which to secure the top of the parcel. Alderson nodded agreement, turned his back for a moment, took a short length of string from a shelf and handed it to his customer. The digger took the string and, with great care, secured the top of the paper parcel. When this was done, he took one more step to safeguard the contents. Asking Alderson for some sealing wax and a candle with which to heat it, he proceeded to seal each of the four corners of the parcel to ensure that it could not be tampered with. Into each molten seal he wrote the word ‘Wong’. Having thus secured his gold he gave Alderson a one pound note as a deposit and handed the parcel back to Alderson saying that he would collect it in a few days when he would also pay the balance of the money.

TOOK THE DEPOSIT

Alderson agreed to this arrangement. He took the deposit and the parcel and the Chinaman left the shop. Come the following week the customer had still not returned for his gold but Alderson was not concerned because he had the one pound deposit and also the gold so there was no problem. Except one. During those few days the price of gold on the goldfields had started to drop and Alderson became concerned that if he were stuck with the gold he would have to sell it for less money than he had actually paid for it. When another businessman arrived at his store and expressed a wish to purchase some gold, Alderson had no qualms about selling this new customer the 20 ounces of gold he had reserved for the Chinaman. Taking the gold from his safe he carefully broke each seal in turn, undid the tightly knotted string and opened the crackling paper. To his horror, Alderson found that the gold had been substituted for 20 ounces of lead shot. Apparently the Chinaman had prepared the parcel of lead shot beforehand and when Alderson had turned his back to get the piece of string, the Chinese digger had switched it with the real parcel of gold. It was he who had brought the paper into the store in which to wrap the gold and so the two pieces of paper were identical. It only then remained for the Chinaman to tie the top of the parcel and seal it completely before handing the lead shot to the storekeeper. What became of the Chinese digger is not known. He was never arrested for the crime and as a ship sailed shortly after for Hong Kong, it was believed he had returned home with his ill-gotten gains.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Christy Palmerston – the man versus the legend

by Bartle Frere

(Adapted from the Townsville Daily Bulletin, 11th January, 1946. While the article paints Christie Palmerston as an heroic explorer with an unblemished character, he was actually quite a violent man who thought nothing of robbing white prospectors, and murdering both Chinese diggers and Aborigines when it suited him. But more on that later.)

In 1874 explorer James Venture Mulligan (who had discovered payable gold on the Palmer in 1873, and whose report led to the sensational rush) led another expedition from Cooktown to the Upper Mitchell River. He then discovered the St. George River, which he named in honour of the mining warden, and the McLeod River, which he named after a member of his prospecting party. Both these rivers are tributaries of the Mitchell. On this expedition explorer Mulligan was assisted by a young prospector named Christie Palmerston, who had been mining on the Palmer goldfield. This man was destined to play a very important part in the future development of the coastal district lying between Cooktown and Cardwell. Along this stretch of coast we now have the ports of Port Douglas, Cairns, Innisfail and Mourilyan Harbour, and the sugar mill areas of Mossman, Hambledon, Mulgrave, Babinda, Goondi, Mourilyan, South Johnstone and Tully. Many of the original tracks leading from the Daintree, Mossman, Barron, Mulgrave, Russell, North Johnstone, South Johnstone and Tully rivers to inland centres such at Thornborough, Coolgarra and Herberton, were explored by Palmerston. The East Palmerston and West Palmerston areas, lying west of Innisfail, on the Palmerston Highway to Millaa Millaa and Ravenshoe, commemorate the name of this remarkable man.

To obtain some reliable description of the dense jungle country explored by Palmerston during this period and lying between the Daintree River, on the north, and the Tully River on the south, we will refer to the narrative of explorer William Hann, after he had travelled to the head of The Daintree, in October, 1872. “At our feet,” stated Hann, “lay miles of thick and impenetrable scrub, covering ridges and gullies alike; to have ventured into it, with or without horses, would have been sheer madness, as the sea lay miles away, not even in sight. The prospect was worse than anything seen by us hitherto. Cape Tribulation and the country for miles around its base was a sea of scrub, which extended as far as our vision in a southerly direction. We turned away from the prospect with a dismal sensation of disappointment, as we had hopes that this was one way out, whereas, it proved a gate shutting us in more completely than ever. But still there was one other hope, and that was the road indicated by the natives, so we buoyed ourselves up for another trial, and returned to camp.”

On 12th October, 1872, Hann started early, accompanied by three companions with a native guide. Two or three miles to the south-east a site was selected for his camp. One of the party was sent back to bring up the expedition to this point and the others penetrated about six miles further to the south-east and got on a high hill.

“Our doom is sealed,” stated Hann. “All further progress south is debarred us, and the retreat to the westward has become imperative. It is now a case of personal safety. I saw at once how completely I was frustrated in my desire to reach the coast, which, if I had reached it, would have wrecked the expedition. From this eminence I had a view of the whole country beneath us. Towards the sea stretched miles of broken country, densely covered with scrub of an impenetrable character. To the south, the Dividing Range towered to an immense height, forbidding approach, and also covered with scrub, which seemed to spread over the whole country. The range ended abruptly over the sea, and as far as I could discern, maintained the same character south, as far as visible. There my last hope vanished, and I descended the hill with a feeling of disappointment exceeded by anything I had felt the previous day, when I found my first road was shut against me. I have struggled ahead, but to no purpose; all my endeavours have been frustrated by the completely impassable nature of the country for white men with horses.”

Hann had been informed by an old aboriginal through his native interpreter, that there was no possibility of reaching the sea – that they themselves reached it by canoes which came up saltwater creeks to within a few miles of their camp. The navigable channel thus indicated was the Daintree River.

Dr. R. L. Jack, formerly Government Geologist for Queensland, referring to this incident of Hann’s Expedition states: “It was by the grace of God that Hann had the wisdom to admit his defeat. Had he been endowed with the unbending pertinacity or obstinacy of Kennedy, he would have gone on at all risks to perish with his whole party.”

In the period 1873 to 1880 the Palmer country swarmed with bands of armed whites. Thousands of Chinese miners toiled for the alluvial gold in the river beds and gullies along the Palmer River and its tributaries, many of them in isolated camps or on stretches of the bush tracks such as Battle Camp or Hell’s Gates. Many were waylaid and robbed of their gold, which was carried in chamois leather pouches. As tons of gold were carried away from the Palmer and as an unascertained quantity was sent to the coast and taken to China by miners returning home, this would create a temptation amongst less fortunate and evil-minded tramps to acquire some wealth while it was being carried along the bush tracks from Palmerville to Laura, and thence to Cooktown. (Ed. Note: Palmerston openly declared his hatred for the Chinese early in the piece. In this he had an ally of virtually every European miner in the north).

After the conclusion of J. V. Mulligan’s expedition to the St. George and McLeod Rivers in 1874, Christie Palmerston discovered the Daintree Pass and from 1875 to 1885 he spent his time exploring the virgin country which was bounded on the north by the Daintree River, on the south by the Tully River, on the east by the Pacific coast, and on the west by the Hodgkinson, Thornborough and Herberton goldfields.

Pompo and Christie Palmerston

Palmerston was really a mystery man. No one appeared to know exactly who he was, nor whence he came, nor where he was going. Probably in the early days of the Palmer diggings, when miners rushed there from all the Australian colonies, as well as from New Zealand and other countries, people did not make any searching inquiries. But, when Palmerston had established his reputation as a ‘prince of pathfinders’ and had carried out most difficult exploration work from the Hodgkinson goldfield to the present site of Port Douglas, and on the country surrounding Herberton, as well as between Mourilyan Harbour and Coolgarra, then inhabitants in the settled districts began to interest themselves in his strange career. (Editor’s note: This article perpetuated the legend that Palmerston was an Englishman, the natural son of Viscount Palmerston, former Prime Minister of Great Britain, but the reality was Palmerston was born in Melbourne, the son of Casino Jerome Carandini, the 10th Marquis of Sarzano, and Marie Burgess, an Englishborn opera singer. Palmerston was baptised Cristofero Palmerston Carandini and this is the name he gives on his marriage registration in 1886, when he listed his father as Casino Carandini.) Palmerston arrived in Queensland about the time of the discovery of the Palmer goldfield. There is no evidence that the youthful Palmerston acquired any great wealth on the diggings, but his nomadic life there gave him a valuable knowledge of bushcraft and the mode of life amongst the blacks. This was to prove of great assistance to him when he cut himself off from all contact with the civilised world, and lived in the dense jungle on the banks of rivers such as the Mulgrave, Russell, North Johnstone, South Johnstone and Tully, without supplies of fresh beef, bread, tea, sugar, salt, milk, fruit, vegetables or other such articles of food which we regard as necessaries.

It has been stated that at the time Palmerston entered upon his exploration work, he was on the point of being questioned by the Maytown police regarding his movements and activities at Battle Camp, and Gates of Hell on the tracks leading from Endeavour Inlet to the diggings and that he was virtually a fugitive from justice.

With the frequent movements of diggers from the southern colonies to the mining fields of North Queensland (extending from the Fanning River to the Cape River, and later to the Gilbert and the Etheridge, thence south again to Ravenswood and Charters Towers, and finally northwards to the most sensational alluvial field of the lot, the Palmer River, in the Mitchell River country), is was perhaps inevitable that occasionally young men on the track, between the various newly discovered goldfields would be wrongly or even maliciously accused of some attempted highway robbery and other such offences. That said, in 1869 while working as a drover, Palmerston had been convicted of horse stealing and sentenced to two years in a Brisbane prison.

To get some perspective of this scattered auriferous country during the first 10 years of Townsville’s existence, we must bear in mind that in 1866, the year after Cleveland Bay (Townsville), had been proclaimed a port of entry, payable gold had been found at Keelbottom Creek, not from the Main Range, by two Peak Downs miners, Gibson and Seymour. These men took into the township of Dalrymple the first parcel of gold which had been offered for sale in North Queensland. Prior to that, W. A. Ross had discovered some gold near the Fanning River. His name is commemorated in Ross River, Ross Creek and Ross Island (very early name places in the Townsville district). To him is due the credit of the first successful prospector for gold in the northern division of Queensland.

Dalrymple, named after explorer George Elphinstone Dalrymple, was the principal inland township at that period. There were no railway lines in North Queensland then, and all roads from Bowen, Townsville, and Cardwell, on the coast to the large pastoral holdings and the newly discovered mining fields of the inland, converged on Dalrymple. This settlement was situated in the south west of the Burdekin River, about 75 miles from Townsville and 160 miles from Bowen. It had been settled shortly after Bowen (1861), and before Townsville (1864).

Palmerston photographed with Malays a short time before he contracted fever and died

After the discovery of payable gold at Keelbottom Creek in 1866, a rush set in from Bowen to the Star River Diggings, in the same locality. From these mining fields, Townsville began to receive gold exports and this assisted the progress of the new seaport on Cleveland Bay. Soon after the Star River gold was produced on the Cape, and also at Specimen Gully, and Gehan’s Flat (seven miles nearer Townsville). Very soon there was a rush of 3,000 men from the southern goldfields to the North Queensland fields. The miners of the Upper Cape River, 15 miles from the main camp, gradually moved north to the Gilbert River. In 1869 mining was commenced on the Gilbert Goldfield, in 1870 on the Ravenswood Goldfield, in 1872 on the Charters Towers Goldfield, and in 1873 on the Etheridge Goldfield and the Palmer Goldfield. There was no railway communication anywhere in the north. Supplies were delivered from the sea ports by horsedrawn wagons, or packhorses. The stretch of coastal country lying between Cardwell (Rockingham Bay) and Cooktown (on Endeavour Inlet), was a continuing mass of dense scrub, inhabited by wild blacks. In 1871 Admiral John Moresby (R.N.) then in command of Her Majesty’s cruiser Basilisk described the aboriginals in the coastal district north of Cardwell as follows: “Various tribes of Aborigines range about the vicinity and, not unnaturally, regard the white men who are rapidly dispossessing them of their homes as mortal enemies. They show this feeling by committing murders and outrages, and suffer terrible retaliation at the hands of our countrymen, who employ native troopers, commanded by white men, to hunt down and destroy the offenders.” When Palmerston entered this coastal belt, extending 200 miles from Cooktown to Cardwell, with a depth from the eastern coast to the goldfields in the hinterland of about 75 miles, he did not organise a party of botanists, geologists and zoologists, with carters, labourers and shepherds, as well as horses and carts, and with a flock of sheep for food, as explorer Kennedy had in 1848, when he set out from Rockingham Bay, near the present town of Tully. Palmerston kept coldly aloof from his fellow white men and lived in the scrub and jungle like a native. Leading this life he probably carried small medical supplies, maps and instruments, and relied on his own weapons for personal protection and on the jungle for his food, such as wild game, fish, wild fruits and nuts. He must have accustomed his stomach to the diet of the wild blacks, and he was certainly trusted by the natives, as they appear to have rendered him every assistance in his exploits, where they had previously offered violence and molestation to Kennedy and the other early arrivals in this coastal country. Palmerston had a deep knowledge of the Palmer River country leading towards the Bloomfield and Daintree Rivers.

Prior to this departure from the gold diggings, when officers of the Native Police sought to interview him, Palmerston would vanish out of sight and, by using the mountain passes then known to him in the scrub country, would travel across a district in two days, which the mounted police would spend a week in encirclement. At one stage of his career, Palmerston made his camp at Cedar Creek near the present site at Ravenshoe. From this base he could reach the head waters of the Tully River, which he could follow in an easterly direction to the coast near the present site of Tully Sugar Mill. He could also reach the head waters of the North and South Johnstone Rivers, either of which he could follow in an easterly direction towards the present site of Innisfail, at the confluence of these two rivers – a few miles from the Pacific coast – on to the Mourilyan Harbour. On the north, near the future site of Moomin, he could reach the head waters of the Wild River (the main head of the Herbert River, which flows south through the Ingham district to Hinchinbrook Channel) and he could also reach the head waters of the Walsh River, which flows west to the Mitchell River and the Gulf of Carpentaria, and at Moomin he would be near the head waters of the Barron River, which flows north to the present site of Biboohra and thence easterly by way of the Barron Falls to Trinity Bay, near Cairns.

Palmerston also established a camp at Palmerston Rocks, on the north side of Berner’s Creek, on the present highway named after him and leading from Innisfail to Millaa Millaa and Ravenshoe.

Palmerston’s daughter, Rosina Marie (Carandini) Vaughn-Smith (1889 – 1935) became an accomplished musician

When the agitation for railway communication between the Herberton goldfield and the Pacific coast was brought to the notice of the Queensland Government, he opened a track from Mourilyan Harbour to Coolgarra. He also lived in camp at the Russell River Diggings, Towalia Goldfield and Boonjie, and after displaying nuggets of gold obtained by him in these localities to the chairman and councillors of the Johnstone Shire Council – then Divisional Board – at Innisfail he undertook to guide prospectors through the jungle to the auriferous areas near Mt. Battle Frere. His sole companion on many of his hazardous undertakings was his faithful aboriginal boy, Pompey (correct spelling Pompo). (Editor’s note: This is the only mention of Pompo. Men who lived away from towns sometimes kidnapped aboriginal boys as servants, companions and/or for sexual servitude. Probably seeing a white man for the first time, young Pompo proved intelligent and resourceful. He quickly learned English and adapted to the alien lifestyle. Meanwhile, Palmerston learned from Pompo about traditional foods, medicines, language, and native tracks. Undoubtedly much of the credit given Palmerston as the ‘prince of pathfinders’ belonged to his uncredited companion, usually dismissed as ‘Palmerston’s black boy’). The Jordan Goldfield was opened by prospectors McNeil and Donaldson in 1897, but Palmerston had previously named Henrietta and Rosina Creeks, in honour or his relatives, many years before. During his long period of jungle dwelling Palmerston must have learned how to construct a mia mia (Editor’s note: No doubt Pompo had a hand in teaching him) from lawyer cane vines and branches of trees to shelter himself from the heavy tropical rains, as he does not appear to have carried any camp equipment, and he is certain to have learned the food value of snakes and grubs when supplies of scrub hens, scrub turkeys, fish, and eggs ran out. The blacks’ method of making fire by causing a friction from a rapidly revolving round length of hardwood, about half an inch in diameter and 18 inches long in a central hole of a flat piece of dry soft wood, had no doubt been carefully observed by him early in his Palmer days. He would require some substitute for his matches during the vicissitudes of a long sojourn in the dense tropical jungle. His journeys through the rain forests between the present sites of Innisfail and Millaa Millaa, and his passage across swiftly flowing mountain streams would soon diminish his supplies. He would also have acquired the art of trapping birds and fish, locating the eggs of scrub turkeys and scrub hens in their laying mounds, and robbing the wild bees of their honey in the forks of tall trees. It is probable that Palmerston carried very little money, as he could obtain rations in the few northern settlements on his infrequent visits there by trading his gold nuggets with the storekeepers. The Queensland Government at that period (1875-85) was faced with great pioneering difficulties in opening up this country of mountain, jungle and scrub situated more than 1,000 miles from the seat of Government (Brisbane). The value of this man with uncanny jungle instinct, was officially recognised and he was encouraged to search for suitable road and railway routes from the Thornborough and later the Herberton goldfields to suitable ports in the Pacific coast.

He discovered a track from the inaccessible tableland country to Mourilyan Harbour which in later years enabled cattle to be brought from the Evelyn Tableland to the Johnstone River, when the Hon. T. H. Fitzgerald built the first sugar mill in the Innisfail district in 1880. In the year 1876 the town of Cairns was founded on Trinity Inlet, as an outlet for the Hodgkinson Goldfield, but the access to that port proved difficult from the hinterland, even when two pack tracks (Smith’s and Douglas’s) had been cleared and £10,000 had been spent on the Thornborough Road from Smithfield to the Middle Crossing at Kuranda. In the month of April, 1877, reports were received that Palmerston had found a road to the coast at White Cliffs but no safe anchorage could be found. On 30th June, 1877, the S.S. Corea, in charge of Captain D. H. Owen, called at Island Point (now Port Douglas), with a party from Cooktown. They were met by a party from White Cliffs about nine miles south. In the month of September, 1877, this port was gazetted Port Douglas, in honour of the Premier of Queensland at that time (Hon. John Douglas, C.M.G. F.R. G.S.). On 1st December, 1877, Port Douglas was declared a port of entry, and a road was opened over the range to the Hodgkinson Goldfield. In the month of February, 1878, the Police Magistrate at Cairns was moved to Port Douglas and early in the year 1879, the Government Lands Office and the District Court were moved from Cairns to Port Douglas. The gold escort from the Hodgkinson had already been diverted to Port Douglas in October, 1878. The discovery of tin at Herberton in May, 1880, was speedily followed by the opening of a road there and in July, 1880, the work of explorer Palmerston in cutting through three miles of scrub at Martintown (now Tolga), made it possible to take loading through to Herberton from Port Douglas.

From this view of Palmerston’s exploration, it can be seen that his work was from 1875 to 1885 almost always that of the pathfinder, opening up tracks and short cuts through jungle and scrub, connecting one small settlement with another, and piercing deep into virgin country, which is now Australia’s richest sugar province. When he had completed his exploration north of Mourilyan Harbour, he accepted an appointment for similar work in southeast Asia by the Straits Development Company. Palmerston moved to Borneo and then Malaya where he contracted fever in the jungle and died at Kuala Pilah on 15th January, 1897. He was 46.

WOULD THE REAL CHRISTIE PALMERSTON PLEASE STAND UP

Palmerston joined the Palmer River gold rush of 1872-1874 but old timers on the field noted that while Palmerston never seemed to do any mining, he was always flush with gold and rumours abounded that he, along with his gang of aboriginal men, either murdered or beat up other miners for their gold. In 1880, Palmerston was again part of a private expedition led by James Venture Mulligan to search for gold at the heads of the King and Lukin rivers in northern Queensland. On the King River, Mulligan wrote about how Palmerston shot two aboriginal men and returned to camp with a stolen ‘little blackboy’. At night, they handcuffed the child to Pompo, Palmerston’s other ‘boy’, to prevent him from escaping. The expedition failed to find any significant signs of gold deposits. Towards the end of the 1880s on the Russell River field, as the field played out and was abandoned by European miners, Palmerston induced Chinese miners to come to the diggings by promising them certified amounts of gold per day and guaranteeing protection from aboriginal attack. He charged them £1 per head and the offer was taken up by 30 miners with a further 200 following soon after. The promises were hollow but then, as a standover man, with the backing of his armed aboriginal gang, he extorted money from the Chinese, prevented supplies from reaching the diggings so that he could charge exorbitant prices for meat, and effectively imprisoned the Chinese diggers by beating up any miner who attempted to leave the field. During the 1880s, large parts of coastal far North Queensland were still covered in dense rainforest. Palmerston boasted of shooting a large number of Aborigines in Mamu territory. According to his diary of the Russell River expedition, in the early hours of the morning of 8th of September 1886, Palmerston and his aboriginal bearers from the neighbouring tribe tracked a group of aboriginal people to a cockatoo bora ground on the western bank of the upper Mulgrave River. Just after dawn, Palmerston and his men opened fire from three sides, the river being on the fourth side. Palmerston wrote that afterwards he reduced “heaps of war implements to ashes” and took two young boys as captives but the boys escaped during the night, “shackles and all”. In 1886, possibly around the 22nd July, Palmerston allegedly raped and murdered an aboriginal woman, on the South Johnstone River. Six months later on 6th December, 1886, he married Teresa Rooney at St Joseph’s Church, Townsville. They had one daughter, Rosina, in 1889, but Palmerston abandoned both of them in 1890 when he left Australia for Borneo and Malaya, never to return.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

A Coober Pedy opal gouger remembers

by the late J.E. Grund

It was 15th September, 1946, when a letter arrived from my brother, Max, who was at the Coober Pedy opal fields. He suggested I should take his place on the claim, as the opal had cut out and he wanted a spell. Instructions were for me to borrow dad’s 1928 Buick and meet him at Port Augusta. I was to catch the East-West train that night and make my way to Coober Pedy via Kingoonya, and the weekly mail truck. These instructions were followed, and we exchanged positions at Port Augusta, my brother Max to return to the farm and I, to become an opal gouger. The rest of my journey was played by ear as I had no idea what lay ahead. I waited all that Sunday for the train to leave Port Augusta at 7pm, and I arrived at Kingoonya at 3am Monday morning. As the lights at the station went out, I realised I had no idea where the hotel, run by Jack Crosby, was situated. The stationmaster took me past the tennis court, and pointing at the Southern Cross, said, “If you go that way for about 400 yards, you’ll see the pub light.” The first 300 yards over bare soil and loose gibbers seemed to take a lifetime. There was no sign of a light, and I had thoughts of walking completely out of existence, disappearing God knows where into the darkness. It was with great relief that I saw the glimmer of the weak light, and found the pub. After peeping into a few occupied rooms, I found an empty bed and collapsed into it. Next morning when I apologised to Jack, he said everyone was expected to do just that. The mail truck from Kingoonya to Coober Pedy left on Saturday mornings so I was stuck at Kingoonya for a full week. The road from Port Augusta to Alice Springs had not been developed during the war as the rail system had sufficed for troop movements. The mail truck stopped at every station homestead, overnighted at Mount Eba, and continued to Coober Pedy the next day. I struck up quite a friendship with Jake Santing, the hunchback who operated the mail run. We had on board, in addition to supplies for Coober Pedy, two Aboriginal people and an opal buyer, Bill Francis. Bill’s father was a buyer of White Cliffs fame, and Bill was brought up the hard way, being made to buy opal when only 13 years of age.

Entrance to a Coober Pedy opal miner’s dugout back in the 1940s

THE MAIL TRUCK

The arrival of the mail truck was the weekly event at Coober Pedy. Arriving late Saturday evening, it was greeted by most of the 110 residents of the fields. Personal parcels were collected as the truck was unloaded and then it was around to Bill Oliver’s post office hill to collect the mail as soon as it was sorted. My partner, Walter Bartram, and son, Harry, met me and later we made our way to the Eight Mile where they had two army tents with the floors dug out a couple of feet for extra head room. The rear tent was for sleeping, and the front one for living and eating. Cooking was done in a camp oven out in the open, and a kero primus stove was used for casual cooking. This system was augmented by an old Adelaide No. 2 wood-stove later on, and Keith Wright’s father, old Pop, an ex-pastrycook, used to perform miracles with it. Provisions were kept in boxes and a safe. Beer was bought by the case, four dozen at a time, with each bottle in its own little straw jacket. The beer was placed in a pit and the straw jackets were wetted. The cold night air would settle into the hole, and the beer and the butter would remain cool. When two shafts were connected, beer would be placed in a wet bag as there was always a draught down the hole.

Today, most of the miners live in 5-star luxury compared with the pioneers of yesteryear

Alf Turner, of Mabel Creek, would kill a bullock and Saturday morning was the day he delivered it to Coober Pedy. He would cut it up as you asked for it and anything left over would be given to the Aboriginal people. This meat was supplemented by wild turkey and an occasional chunk of red ‘roo, cooked in the beef fat in the camp oven, and just as good as beef. We all took turns making bread, using dry yeast, and regardless of whether it rose or not, it was always eaten. We never worked on Saturday or Sunday. These days were used to clean up properly and wash our clothes. On Saturday afternoons the two 44-gallon drums were filled from the 250,000-gallon government underground tank, the water being raised by hand pump. Provisions were obtained from the underground store. Sometimes we visited friends, and if we had opal, arrangements were made for a buyer to pay a visit. The mail truck was always met, whether you had anything on it or not. It was a link with the world, Kingoonya being the nearest pub, down a two wheel-mark track 200 miles south. It was a very slow tortuous track threading its way through the mulga. We went for a trip to the crater, 27 miles north of Coober Pedy. Here a neighbour had picked up a buckboard load of large red and white floaters. The colour of this magnificent opal was still visible in the bleached and cracked specimens. On breaking them, they remained weathered to the very centre. The field had been worked 20 years before us, and costeans were all over the half-square mile sunken area. Clear blue potch was in evidence in most of them, and we dug some of it from the banks for doublet backs.

Coober Pedy, despite its harsh geographic location, is a modern, fully serviced town with a population of 1,762 according to the 2016 census

Never a trace of colour was found; evidently the opal level of the floaters had been completely eroded away. A mile or so from here, in the Stuart Ranges, is the most beautiful display of coloured eroded sandstone hills in the world, aptly named by my cousin, Vince Wake, as the Christmas Pudding, the Castle, and the Sleeping Camel. He had a pleasant two mile walk from one vantage viewing point to another. All shaft sinking and gouging was done by pick and shovel. I can recall only twice when a plug of gelignite was used. The handles of the pick and shovel were shortened to save space while sinking. None of the holes I worked was deeper than 12 feet, and with practice, the mullock could be landed on top with hardly any falling back. Footholes were cut in the side of the shaft and this method was used to considerable depths. A completed hole looked like an inverted mushroom as gouging extended six feet all round, then a new hole was sunk in line with the run.

KING STONES

The opal in the Bartram claim was mainly bar vertical running about three feet wide, making and breaking all the time. It continued for well over 120 yards. Occasionally the verticals ran octopus-like into blobs, and the king stones of these deposits were truly magnificent, weighing many ounces. This remarkable claim produced very little potch, and no ‘trace’ at all. A few side shoots missed originally were worked by later diggers. Opal was found at the Eight Mile when Aboriginal women saw it cast out by rabbits. This claim was worked by Barney Leonard, a station hand who married an Aboriginal woman. Below the Bartram open-cut, two claims were worked by King Billy John and his kinfolk. Other successful claims were worked by Frank Hillman, Levi Robins, Keith and Pop Wright, and Bert Wilson and his family. In total about 10 of the claims were successful.

Bert Wilson, a true Australian bushman, overlanded from Queensland direct to Coober Pedy in an army 4 x 4 truck. Before reaching his destination, a tyre gave out completely, so Bert laboriously stuffed the casing with cane grass and continued his journey. He then walked the last eight miles to the new field, finishing with his boots in his hand as rain had prevented any movement of vehicles. The opal used to run horizontally at about the ten-foot level, and in places inclined at about 45 degrees to the surface. The opal I eventually found surfaced in this manner. Sick of finding nothing, I decided I was picking the easy places, so I started in an ornery crab hole covered with spear grass and old man salt bush. It was also covered with the grey billy jasper common to Coober Pedy. While trying to penetrate the hard, brick-red crust which capped the kopi, my pick bounced off a potch vertical two inches thick. Alongside it was the true red opal, and next to that, the blue-green vertical. When this small run cut out 20 yards later, at a depth of ten feet, I broke into Walter Bartram’s prospect hole. He had missed the trace by less than an inch.

DYSENTRY

Our camp, along with the rest of the field, had been decimated by a type of tropical dysentery and, unable to throw it off, Mr Bartram had been flown to Adelaide via Mount Eba Aerial Service. The Flying Doctor Service provided us with the new drug, Sulphaguanadine, which eventually slowed us down to a walk again.

Waiting for the bank to open, c.1935

I am not superstitious, but I believe in coincidence. A big, green praying mantis had taken over our tent, and each day he would be over somebody’s bed. That person would come home with his little opal bag full. The day I found my strike I tipped it out of my boot. I had long since given up carrying an opal bag, and having nothing to put the opal in, I filled up my boots. About three weeks or so later, after my mates had gone home for Christmas on the day that I broke into Pop Bartram’s hole, I found the mantis dead, crushed under my blankets. I had also found my last stone. Opal buyers of those days were Phil Sherman, father of Greg; Harold Brady, a gold blender who suffered continuously from stomach ulcers; and Leo Boygan, an American from 48th Street, New York, who brought with him £200 in twoshilling pieces to trade with the Aboriginal people.

Old Tom Brady, Harold’s uncle, was the pick of them all. Trained at White Cliffs, he always wore a tie. He would sit at the top of our shallow holes, sucking on a roll-your-own and spitting occasionally. The spittle would always land on his tie and drip off the bottom. He would carry anything up to £20,000 in King George V ten-pound notes stuffed inside his shirt, held there only by his trouser belt. He had no fear of being robbed, and no one ever tried. Tom would get the Aboriginal people to throw their stones up and he would throw them down the money. When he was sick with the dysentery, I nursed him in our tent and stuffed our valuable sulphur drugs down his gullet. Tom died in his Adelaide home in 1952, an old man. His overseas contacts were taken over by Vince Wake, author of The Opal Men. There is nothing like success to make one contemptuous of money. Soon are forgotten the weeks and months of failure when opal rolls in at ‘X’ thousands a day.

Why they dig at Coober Pedy

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Kiandra – unique in Australia’s gold rush history

by Wal Ellison

Kiandra would have a lot to brag about if it still existed. For the short time it flourished, it was a rich gold producer; it was the highest and coldest of our goldfields and reportedly the birthplace of skiing in Australia; it was the site of a unique transport enterprise; and it was where one of the most outrageous Gold Commissioners of the 19th century committed his dastardly deeds. As I said, a lot to brag about if it still existed. But it ceased to exist in a physical sense in the 1980s when the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (referred to in many rural areas as the National Pests and Wildfire Service), committed its own dastardly deed. They, the bureaucratic pencil pushers in the city, took their snouts out of the public trough long enough to have one of their meetings. They decided Kiandra didn’t serve any real purpose and therefore needed to be torn down. Despite the inevitable uproar from the local communities and elements of the media, those bureaucrats have never, to this day, satisfactorily explained why they did it. They just roared in with the heavy machinery and ripped the soul out of the place. They left some signs and an information board where an historic town had once stood, so I suppose they figured that was a fair swap. What used to be a thriving gold town but is now a mostly barren locality, Kiandra lies about midway between Tumut and Cooma along the Snowy Mountains Highway, about 90km from either one. From both directions the approaches to Kiandra take the traveller through some of the most breathtaking country in Australia. Originally called Giandarra, meaning ‘sharp stone’, by the local Aboriginal people, the first European name was Gibson’s Plains after an early settler, Dr Gibson, who lived in the area around 1839.

The first town map of Kiandra

The first town map of Kiandra

The discovery of gold came about by chance and not because someone recognised the land as likely gold country and started digging for it. Initially there wasn’t any drama or excitement, just a couple of cattle men bringing their stock up for a bit of high-country grazing as the weather warmed up towards the end of 1859. David and James Pollock had been coming up every year, but this time they found payable gold in what became known as Pollock’s Gully and the rush was on. The gold would prove to be mainly coarse alluvial with many “good sized lumps” found. Within six months more than 10,000 hopefuls had arrived from all over the world. A rudimentary timber village sprang up on what was then known as the Snowy River Diggings, the present Eucumbene River being known as the Snowy River back then. Inevitably, bushrangers and other vultures were attracted to the district by the stories of rich pickings and it became so lawless that for a time the area was known as Mount Rascal. By March of 1860, the bushrangers were a secondary concern as the diggings became a place where many would battle to survive against the bitter cold, the snow, the mud and the freezing slush as that first cruel winter set in. Some had had the foresight to build simple wooden dwellings, but many survived as best they could in canvas tents.

The rush was frantic but relatively shortlived. Within two years most of those first hopefuls had moved on to the numerous other goldfields opening up throughout NSW and Victoria. One of the main reasons for the rush petering out was the local climate in Kiandra. Anywhere else in the country, if conditions were too wet, too dry, too hot or too steep, it simply meant a digger could leave and go somewhere else. But if a heavy snow fall hit Kiandra and closed the track, that’s where you stayed. The harsh reality was that you either survived the winter in place, or you didn’t. The first town map, drawn in 1862 by surveyer, Thomas Evans, a couple of years after the first main rush, shows quite a bustling setup for such a remote and hard-to-get-to place. The map shows the locations of eight licensed pubs, at least 21 other named businesses, the post office, the ‘Alpine Pioneer’ newspaper, the hospital, two independent doctors, the police barracks and the Gold Commissioner’s quarters. It also shows that banks haven’t changed in that they’ve always been overly greedy. Six banks are shown on the town plan, and three of them have other business enterprises in addition to the banking. Several buildings just have the name of whoever lived there without indicating whether there was also a business operating at the same address, and some buildings are simply identified as ‘Diggers Hut’ with no name. In the winter of 1861, Scandinavian miners introduced ‘snow-shoeing’ or skiing to the region but many of the other diggers came from parts of the world where skiing was well established. Although we now see skiing as a sport or a pastime, in those days it was just a practical means of travelling over snow-covered terrain. So, even though some people make the outlandish and completely false claim that skiing was invented at Kiandra, it might well be the place where skiing purely for fun had a start. The miners were in the main fit and healthy people, there was nowhere else to go on the skis, the severe weather meant working on the diggings was often curtailed, so they figured they may as well have some fun.

This image from a glass plate negative entitled ‘Post Office, Kiandra’ shows a weatherboard cottage built in 1900 as a post and telegraph office in Kiandra. It closed in 1969 and was demolished

In common with just about every other goldfield throughout Australia, Kiandra had a community of Chinese, about seven hundred at most. They had arrived with every intention of gold mining, and this they did with some success until that first dreadful winter of 1860 arrived. As the conditions worsened, so the digging became more arduous and less productive. By mid-winter the goldfield was at a virtual standstill, fully snowed in, and it was the severity of that winter which led to the formation of a transport company unique to Kiandra.

The Celestial Carrying Company came into being after some local European businessmen decided that the good news story of Kiandra needed to be spread further afield. The newspaper covering the general district was The Alpine Pioneer and Kiandra Advertiser, published by Thomas Garrett, and it was decided that it would be a good idea to have a branch operation of the newspaper based in Kiandra. The local businessmen in question, Messrs Templeton, Wilson and Cook, hoped to get it established and make some money out of the enterprise but the weather wasn’t on their side. The Braidwood Observer and Miners Advocate reported on 11th August, 1860, that the printing presses for the newspaper couldn’t get through to Kiandra from Russell’s station. The drays couldn’t get up the blocked tracks which covered a distance of about 20km. The paper said the machinery was ‘twice locked in by the snow in endeavouring to get from Russell’s to Kiandra, and had been sixteen days in getting six miles.’ The problem was the load weights on the drays carrying the equipment and supplies. The loads would have to be broken down into smaller lots.

It was well known that the Chinese weren’t afraid of hard physical labour, so Templeton, Wilson and Cook established the Celestial Carrying Company and staffed it using the out-of-work Chinese miners. The loads would be broken down and carried on the backs of individual men. The first priority would be getting the printing machinery up to Kiandra. The Braidwood paper reported that ‘fifty Chinamen were engaged for this job, the drays were got at with considerable difficulty, and the entire loading, weighing 4,400lbs, was carried a distance of fourteen miles though snow, and over very broken country in about ten hours.’ This meant that the men first had to fight their way through more than 20km of steep, broken, snow-covered terrain to get to the drays, and when they got there, unload everything, break it down into individual man-sized loads, and then carry it back. Each man carried an average of about 40kg on the way back and completed the journey in about 10 hours. By any measure this was a remarkable effort.

After the success of this first transportation venture, the Celestial Carrying Company grew. The Chinese were often living on the edge of starvation, earning nothing because the diggings couldn’t be worked, so the work was financially good for them, and Kiandra could get the supplies it desperately needed. The Celestial Carrying Company hired 200 Chinese carriers at £2 each per week, set up a sort of halfway base between Russell’s station and Kiandra, and started bringing all sorts of goods in, charging by the ton. By reverting to the use of manpower rather than relying on a large cart pulled by horses, Kiandra was able to carry on. There was even a proposal to expand the operation as far as Merimbula and Eden, with appropriate way stations but I’m not sure this enterprise got off the ground. The story of Kiandra’s early days would not be complete without mention of the quite shocking conduct of Assistant Gold Commissioner Frederick Cooper of the Kiandra and Crack-Them-Back (Thredbo) Goldfields. Until researching this story, I’d always been of the belief that the Gold Commissioners were senior civil servants appointed to the position by the Crown. Somewhere around the level of a senior police officer and carrying the same status and responsibility. The reality was very different. As a brief aside, in the June 2020 edition of this magazine there was an excellent story about the Queensland gold escort and a Gold Commissioner found guilty of the murder of two of his own men. So, it’s clear these guys weren’t always the paragons of propriety and justice I’d always imagined.

Kiandra Alpine Club

Almost from the time he was appointed a Sub-Commissioner in 1860, Cooper was involved in outrageous scandals concerning his behaviour. The following extract from an early report serves to illustrate just how far from the expected behaviour of a man of his standing he was wont to stray. This took place at the Crack-Them-Back diggings. The report reads: ‘Mr Sub-Commissioner Cooper, on or in January 1860, walked through the diggings in a state of drunken nudity, speeching to a drunken mob, after having shouted for some thirty to five and thirty pounds worth of champagne, which he subsequently refused paying for, threatening to fine Rawson for sly-grog selling in case he was requested to pay, and instructing the police so to do’. Cooper came from a very well-to-do Sydney family, and his pretty useless life as a young man possibly led them to try to find him a government position, where being useless was often a virtue. In fact that’s something that hasn’t changed in the best part of 200 years – dolts and wastrels still gravitate towards politics and public service. Cooper resigned his seat in the NSW parliament when he was 26, probably due to a scandal involving his drinking and outrageous behavior. Before this he had been the first undergraduate to be expelled from Sydney University. His family were probably relieved when the fool was packed off to the goldfields but the very fact such a useless person could be appointed to what was a pretty important position, highlights the very real problem that existed on many goldfields. Initially I thought that Cooper would be an anomaly, that he’d be the one bad apple in the barrel, but the more research I did, the more I realised that the Commissioners, as a group, were a pretty dodgy bunch, and that almost the entire barrel was rotten. Even though gold was providing the various levels of government with huge revenues, gold mining was still seen as some sort of rough or unseemly trade, not a real profession. Because of the grubby image it had, the administration of the gold mining industry didn’t appeal to serious and experienced civil servants. It wasn’t seen as being suitable for a ‘gentleman’. This led to positions such as the Gold Commissioner being filled by less than properly qualified people. Another letter published in the Alpine Pioneer on 12th October, 1860, makes this very point. In part it reads as follows: ‘Another crying evil connected with the goldfields is the appointment, by the Government, of Commissioners whose incapacity is the subject of general remark among the miners. Experience seems to be regarded by the Government as of no weight in selecting Commissioners...They appear to have been selected without any test of ability for this situation.’

For the most part, the Commissioners were young and inexperienced, and it seems the main requirement for the position was that they come from a ‘good family’. They were paid well, about £700 a year, and generally lived in selfindulgent comfort. One Commissioner bragged, ‘Those were snug times! We had handsome salaries, all our expenses paid, as many servants as we pleased, all paid for. Nothing to do but order whatever we choose, and send in the accounts’. The Commissioners often designed their own uniforms according to reports of the time, though many just used a police uniform, adding to the confusion. A writer at the time describes them as: ‘Petty tyrants encased in musical comedy uniforms. Young men for the most part they were, a-glitter with buttons and braid and eating their heads off at the expense of a community ill fitted to subsidise such parasites’. I don’t doubt that there were honest and hardworking Gold Commissioners here and there, men who sincerely tried to bring proper organisation and decency to what was a relatively chaotic and brutish industry, but unfortunately, it appears they were in the minority. All of this barely scratches the surface of Kiandra’s past. It’s a place with a rich and fascinating history, and I really do recommend further reading about Kiandra and the rest of our ‘high country’. If possible, go there, take in the emptiness, and listen to the endless whisper of the wind. You’ll hear voices that will tell the story far better than I ever could.

Note: Much of the information about Kiandra and its fascinating and very unusual history, came from the excellent website of the Kiandra Historical Society. Do yourself a favour and check out the site for yourself. I contacted Hugh Capel of the Society and he kindly gave me permission to use material from their website for this article.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Women on the goldfields

by Mark Thurtell

While a lot has been written about the trials and tribulations of men on the Australian goldfields, very little has been said about the many hardships faced by the women who accompanied their husbands in the quest for gold. Fortunately, some women kept a day-today diary of life and events on the diggings in the 1850s, and one in particular, an English lass by the name of Ellen Clacy, gives us a birdseye view of what it was like. She writes that while her brother and his friends walked to the Bendigo diggings, she rode on the dray they had purchased which contained all the provisions needed for their adventure. The vehicle was laden with food, camp ovens, tents, cooking utensils, tin plates, pannikins, blankets, and opossum rugs, and she made the trip walled in by canvas and tent poles, leaning against a bag of flour, and with her feet resting on a large cheese. Ellen also states that she was dressed in a common dark blue serge, a waterproof coat and wore a wide-a-wake hat (this was a soft widebrimmed low-crown felt hat). On their arrival at the diggings she describes hearing the rattle of cradles as they swayed to and fro, the sounds of picks and shovels, and the hum of thousands of voices. She mentions the stores, noting that they stocked everything, including East Indian pickles, ankle jack-boots, baby caps, sugar candy, cradles, potted anchovies, needles, and picks, while at one store a pair of herrings lay dripping into a bag of sugar. Ellen noted that an average digger’s tent was a dreary place, the only contents being bedding, which lay on the dirt floor, and his table, which was a block of wood on top of a box. From this primitive piece of furniture, a miner ate his meals of mutton, damper and tea. However, if a miner was lucky enough to have his wife with him, she would make it more comfortable by placing dry sacking or pieces of carpet on the ground, the beds would have had sheets and blankets, and some women kept a pet cockatoo chained to a perch outside their tent so as to have some company while the husband was working their gold claim. Coming to terms with life on the goldfields was far from easy, and while some woman became frightened and angry with the outcome, leading to fights and quarrels with their partners, most settled down with a grin and-bear-it attitude.

A sly grog shop on the diggings

A sly grog shop on the diggings

DANGERS ON THE DIGGINGS

An eyewitness account sheds light on a typical night on the diggings: “Imagine some hundreds of revolvers almost simultaneously fired. There was murder here, murder there, revolvers cracking, blunderbusses bombing, rifles going off, balls whistling, one man groaning with a broken leg, another shouting because he couldn’t find the way to his hole, and a third equally vociferous because he has tumbled into one.” There was an abundance of sly grog shanties on the diggings, where an unwary miner might be served a spiked drink, and wake up with his hard-earned gold gone from his pockets. A lot of these illegal dens were thinly disguised as coffee tents but the real source of income came from the business of selling grog. The grog was sometimes watered down and adulterated with herbs or even tobacco to give it a stronger taste to the unsuspecting patron. Ellen writes of a typical female serving grog at a sly grog tent, saying “A dirty, gaudy coloured dress hung unfastened about her shoulders, coarse black hair unbrushed, uncombed, dangled about her face, over which her evil habits had spread a genuine Bacchanalian glow.” Because the crinoline dress was the fashion from the 1850s to the late 1860s, women wore them on the diggings. These were large bell-shaped dresses supported by a cage of spring steel hoops and petticoats, and they were a most dangerous item in themselves. Many women often suffered horrible injuries, and some even died, when these dresses caught fire while they were simply stoking the camp fire or cooking a meal. An example of just such a disaster occurred in June, 1862. A Mrs Steele, the wife of the bootmaker at Rutherglen, was cooking with a camp oven when she made the mistake of turning around and letting her crinoline dress come in contact with the oven. The material caught fire and in a short time she was engulfed in flames. Alerted by her screams, her husband and two other men ran to her aid and did their upmost to smother the flames, sustaining severe burns in the process. But they were too late to stop the poor woman being roasted about her legs and lower body. A doctor was sent for and medical aid administered, but to no avail. According to the newspaper report at the time, Mrs Steele “lingered in great agony until four o’clock the next morning when death mercifully put an end to her suffering.”

ANGELS ON THE DIGGINGS

One prospector with a reporter’s interest in women on the goldfields, was Mark Hammond, who mined for gold at Forbes in 1861-62. He writes about the women who worked in the saloons and states that “The hotels with dancing saloons employed girls. The dancing saloon in such places was every night decorated out like a first-class ballroom, some of the girls appearing in ball dresses as rich and beautiful as money could procure. In short, the women so engaged were as a general rule of good appearance, well behaved, handsomely dressed, and for their services were well paid by the proprietor. “Let us take a peep into one of those first-class saloons during the dancing of a set of quadrilles. The ladies are beautifully dressed, but who are their partners? Not one well-dressed gentleman is to be seen. They are mostly miners in their moleskins. Some are young squatters wearing riding boots and breeches. We as miners on the field understand this, but as a stranger, would hardly think that the man making his fortune would be found dancing with these girls in his clay-coloured moleskins and a Crimean shirt with a coloured sash around his waist, wearing polished or patent boots with a silk handkerchief around his neck.”

Hammond also writes that even though he was a stranger, a woman came to his aid while he was on his way back to Lambing Flat from Forbes. It appears he was suffering from an abscess in one ear and he says, “That evening as I lay down under one of the wagons, an administering angel came to where she heard me moaning. She had a look at me and found the whole side of my head was swollen to a fearful extent. The abscess had broken several times but always appeared to get worse as it came on again. The angel was the good woman who had driven one of the teams all day. She went to her own wagon and brought a little oil and bluestone. She fed a drop into my ear, then she gave me some pills and left. By the next night the pain had ceased and the swelling had almost disappeared. That woman’s kindness did not cost her much, but it won in me a lasting respect which in memory will never be forgotten.” Historian are indebted to another woman who kept quite a meticulous record of what life was like on the Victorian goldfields during the 1850s and ’60s. Her name was Emily (Fillan) Skinner (c1832-1890) who left her middle-class London family in 1854 and courageously sailed, unchaperoned, as an unassisted immigrant, halfway around the world to Melbourne, to be reunited with and marry her finance, William Elliott Skinner, with whom she had previously worked in service. She showed her resourcefulness by quickly befriending a married female cabin companion, to protect her middleclass respectability.

Carte-de-Visite photograph by Richards of Ballarat of a well-dressed woman of the 1850s

Carte-de-Visite photograph by Richards of Ballarat of a well-dressed woman of the 1850s

When Emily arrived in Melbourne, William had already been moderately successful at the Forest Creek (or Castlemaine) goldfield but was then working in the retail trade. However, four months after their marriage, he decided to try his luck again, this time on the Ovens gold fields, leaving Emily in Melbourne. In May 1855, despite her awareness of stories of murderers, bushrangers and lawlessness in the bush, Emily showed great pluck and determination by traveling alone to Beechworth (or Spring Creek) to join her husband. She was five months pregnant and took the 8-day trip with 11 other passengers, over rough jolting roads, in a light American wagon. The Skinners made several subsequent moves around the Ovens goldfields where they lived for 12 years. In early 1856, they were on the Woolshed before returning to Spring Creek in 1857. They spent eight years in the Buckland Valley from 1859 and then moved back to Beechworth at the end of 1867. These frequent moves were not exceptional for goldminers’ families and the fact that Emily had nine children from 1855 until l880, three of whom did not survive did to adulthood, was also unremarkable. Her variety of homes on the diggings – a bark hut at Spring Creek; green baize-lined tent at the Woolshed; and wooden houses at Spring Creek, Beechworth and the Buckland Valley, as well as the frequent establishment of a garden – were also quite usual. Many women on the goldfields supplemented the family’s variable mining income by washing, ironing, sewing clothes or cooking meals for unpartnered gold diggers. What was remarkable about Emily is that she used her literary skills to write a journal during her sea voyage to Australia and later wrote a manuscript about life on the Ovens goldfields. These were not published but kept, copied and passed down to her descendants for more than 100 years, until Dr Edward Duyker, an academic, researched Emily’s life and in 1995 edited and published her handwritten manuscript. In her shipboard journal, Emily identified fellow passengers by name. Duyker used this to discover the identity of the pseudonyms used for her goldfields manuscript characters. By disguising the identity of her characters, using pseudonyms, Emily could be absolutely frank, accepting, warm and compassionate in her writings, which are matter of fact, like those of working-class women and non-judgmental, as well as empathetic, unlike the critical writings of superior middle-class authoresses.

Her writings are devoid of ethnic or religious prejudice. Her story is free of the verbal contortions designed to maintain the writer’s respectability “as a lady”. She sometimes does not mention events, likely to compromise respectability and so avoids perpetuating the double sexual moral standard of the time. So, she omitted any mention of her marriage to William three weeks after her arrival in Melbourne, when they both lived in the new suburb of Collingwood. She also ignored the possibility of the girls, working in goldfields hotels and restaurants who attended the balls as miners’ companions, being prostitutes. But Emily felt safe in revealing that while on route to Spring Creek in 1856, in one small fully-booked hotel where she was forced to share a room with two fellow female passengers, she had screamed with fright when she woke to find a strange man undressing in her room. In 1998, Joy Hooton included a part of Emily Skinner’s memoirs in her collection of Australian autobiographical writings titled Australian Lives. Emily’s story of her and William simultaneously contracting a fever at the Woolshed diggings and Emily hovering close to death for weeks, while their first-born baby son died and was buried in an unmarked grave by strangers, is judged to be “one of the most graphic and reflective of goldfields narratives”. Emily claimed that her experiences on the goldfields were those of hundreds of miner’s wives. However, women and their experiences were virtually invisible on the masculine goldfields, the predominant male view being that it was not an appropriate place for respectable women. Emily’s presence and actions and those of other women on the goldfields, challenged this.

After William’s retirement, the Skinner’s gypsy life continued when, in 1888, they went to Melbourne to live on William’s government pension, first sharing a house in Brunswick West and then in Sydney Road where 58-year-old Emily died in March 1890 as a result of a stroke. Her death certificate describes her as a “housewife” however she was much more than that. She was a spirited, intelligent, determined, hard-working woman who endured illness, poverty, loneliness, great personal loss and sorrow as well as hard domestic labour. She also left an engaging, authentic, first-hand account of life for a woman on the Ovens goldfields during the goldrush era. She was buried in the Church of England section of the Coburg cemetery in Melbourne. For other women, life amidst the isolated, male-dominated goldfields proved a lonely, alienating experience. Elizabeth Skinner, who suffered as a result of her husband’s unsuccessful pursuit of gold, recalled being lonely and sick and fainting while attending to her children, and wrote: ‘How one longed for mothers and sisters at such times and envied the poorest women at home who in sickness generally have some relative near.’ Copies of the book A Woman on the Goldfields. Recollections of Emily Skinner 1854-1878, edited by Dr Edward Duyker, are readily available online.

Emily Skinner was a remarkable woman of her age

Emily Skinner was a remarkable woman of her age

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

The legend of The Ragged Thirteen

Hollywood has given us the Fantastic Four, the Magnificent Seven, the Hateful Eight and Ocean’s Eleven through Thirteen – all of them fanciful inventions. But more than 150 years ago the gold rush to the Kimberley gave rise to a band of men known as the Ragged Thirteen, and they were as real as it gets.

(Adapted from the Daily Mercury, Mackay, Qld., 20th December, 1938)

The most elusive of all legends in the north is that of the Ragged Thirteen, whose fame extended over the Northern Territory and Queensland and the West. Their story has taken me seven years to verify (writes Ernestine Hill in the Sydney Morning Herald). Thanks to the good offices and the good memory of a Territory historian who knew the leader well, I can now dispel the mists of mystery and romance in the clear light of truth. It was in 1856 that the Kimberley rush set in. Ballarat and Bendigo were cities built on subterranean halls of gold, and the tattered battalions that found them were out round the continent looking for another. They were to find it – Kalgoorlie in the west – but it was 10,000 miles and 40 years to rainbow’s end.

Many a reef of wealth and many a wildcat had called them northward, when a cry of triumph came from a citadel of the blacks in the far north west. Hall and Slattery, two lone prospectors, panning out on the Elvira River, had washed 200 ounces in a week. Not a spectacular find, but, strangely enough, it started a raging epidemic of gold fever. (Ed. On Christmas Day, 1885, Charlie Hall found a huge 870-gram (28-troy-ounce) gold nugget at a site that would eventually be named after him – Hall’s Creek). A motley crowd of some 15,000 crusaders set out from all over Australia, from New Zealand, and California and the Yukon. Three thousand miles across the desert, 6,000 miles round the coast, they rode, and sailed, and pushed their hand-carts, facing death every mile of the way by hunger, by thirst, by spears. Some of them were years on the trail. Too many found “a goldmine in the sky”.

They arrived at last – those who did arrive – at Fata Morgana in the ranges, and there was nothing else but ranges there. The Hall’s Creek goldfield was worked out in less than three months. The first on the field, it seemed, in their broken cradles, had stripped the land bare of its yellow treasure. Knights-errant or highwaymen – you will hear them described as either or both in the north – the Ragged Thirteen were only 13 of thousands, who met in a chance fellowship, shared the road where there was no road, and finally drifted away from each other. Some of the 13 had travelled to Hall’s Creek from Queensland; some had come from South Australia and the Centre. The two groups came together at Abraham’s Billabong on the Roper River. Men from all the eastern States, an Englishman, an Irishman, and a Scotsman, a runaway sailor, a “cocky” farmer, and an old convict – they were the usual band of “mates” that rides in any day to any goldfield, camps on the creek, and fades away forgotten. They could not know that their memory would live in history, but posterity is ever capricious, and chooses its own immortals.

To haggle about the true identity of men such as Will Scarlett, Little John, and Tom the Tinker is to nibble away the bay-leaves of romance, but there is still unending controversy in the top half of Australia regarding the personnel of this heroic band of scallywags. I myself have met at least three dozen men who claimed to have ridden with the Ragged Thirteen but in actual fact, all are dead, and here is the list, as supplied by the leader himself. He was Tom Nugent, later the founder of Banka Banka station, 40 miles above Tennant Creek on the Great North Road, that soon, in its turn, will be a little town. The others were Hughie Campbell, who had left his sailing ship at Port Augusta, and set his course due north across the sand; “Sandy Myrtle” McDonald, from Farina, South Australia, forsaking the gold of fleeces for the gold of earth; “Wonoka Jack” Brown, and George Brown, his brother, of Hawker; Jack Dalley, a farmer of Terowie; “New England Jack” Woods; “Larrikin Bill” Smith, one of Major Colles’s “orphans” from his settlement on the Norman River, North Queensland; Jim Carmody, a New Zealander, brother-in-law of Black Jack Reid, the “Maori Smuggler” of Borroloola; Bob Anderson, founder of Tobermorey station, on the Queensland border; Jimmy Woodford; Jim Fitzgerald, and, last and least, Tommy the Rag.

From Renner Springs, on the Overland Telegraph line, they travelled north together. Just at this time the cattlemen were stocking up that spare million square miles “on the outside” of civilisation, and the 13 certainly brought bad luck to them. Cattlemen are immune to gold fever. A reef, ounces rich, in their own horse paddock, excites little more than derision, and then, as now, they resented the rabble passing. Shepherds watched their flocks by night when “the Kimberley crowd” came along. It was “Bluey” Buchanan, the grand old pioneer of Wave Hill, who camped with them at Frew’s Ponds, tallied them up and told them they were the devil’s number. It was a cattleman named Cashman, looking for them with wrath in his eye, near the “blind tiger” sly grog at Katherine, who gave them their name. When asked which 13 he was looking for, the only name Cashman could remember was Tommy the Rag and so the devil’s dozen became the Ragged Thirteen. (Ed. Or that is at least one version of how they got their name. There are several and any one of them could be correct).

Above: Banka Banka homestead, 1900

Above: Banka Banka homestead, 1900

But they already had a bad name. At Abraham’s Billabongs, where there was a shack and a fresh meat depot, they had found a beast on the gallows, tried to buy, beg, or borrow a porterhouse steak or two, and when they were refused, made off with the lot. After that, many a bullock on the hoof was fair game, and good eating in a hungry land, regardless of the brand. Men must live, and when they were challenged, they fought the case with fists – “Your best man to our best man, and if we lose, we pay.” Such was the law in the Territory then, and for a long time after.

From Katherine the ragged little regiment turned west for the border and the Ord – past Springvale, to which Alfred Giles had just brought up cattle and sheep 2,000 miles overland for Dr. Brown; past Chinaman’s billabongs; a glory of red lilies; across Vampire Creek and the King River, men and horses swimming a deep and perilous crossing; and the Sardine lagoons and the Flora Falls, where the blacks were “bad” indeed. No doubt they earned a rib roast when they got it. Two hundred miles from the last white outpost, they, at length, rode in to the first slab hut of Victoria River Downs, today the largest cattle run in the world. The manager, Lindsay Crawford, was out with the cattle and only the storekeeper, Lockhart, was at home. Tom Nugent rode up to the station and introduced himself as a potential squatter, looking at the country – which was, of course, technically true.

While Tom played cribbage with the storekeeper, the other 12 took a few slabs out of the side of the store, helped themselves to 6cwt of horseshoes, and made by moonlight for the Jasper Gorge, where the blacks were even worse. That was the only really black mark against them. Horseshoes were worth a king’s ransom, but the robbers were well away. At the Ord River they killed two or three bullocks, and smoked and salted them in the salt pan. So they came to Hall’s Creek, and did penance for their sins in “two years’ hard digging” for no wages, with never a glint of gold. After that they disbanded.

Some of them drifted down with the discoverers of the great goldfields of the West, and some of them drifted back to Queensland’s fields. Larrikin Jack Smith was one of the first in the golden hills of New Guinea; Jim Carmody was drowned in the Katherine River while fishing; New England Jack set out with a borrowed plant of horses and was never heard of again; while a fall from a horse cut short Bob Anderson’s life. Hughie Campbell developed a disease in which he could not perspire – a fatality in that country – and picked up yet another ship for Singapore and England. Jack Dalley became a leading townsman of Cloncurry and when eager, young reporters came for his reminiscences as a member of the Ragged Thirteen, he threatened them with a rifle; Sandy Myrtle ran a pub on the Arltunga goldfield in South Australia and too much of the good life that followed saw him grow fatter by the minute and his life shorter by the day. Tom Nugent, the captain, drove the first wagon from the Barkly Tablelands to Borroloola, opened the road to what was to be a port of the Gulf – and some day may be. His passenger on that occasion was a young naval officer, “bagging it”, as the bushmen say, for education and recreation. When they arrived at Borroloola, there was a letter awaiting that young naval officer, from the Admiralty, appointing him to command. He was later Admiral Creswell. Tom Nugent, as linesman for the telegraph, found a good little pocket of country between Tennant and Powell’s Creek, took up the title deeds from the Warramunga tribe, bought a mob of Herefords – and Banka Banka was on the map to stay. Today the travellers go by at the rate of 40 a day, but nothing passed for months on end in Tom Nugent’s time. When he died, he left the property to three Sydney nephews, who inherited an outpost among the wild blacks. The last of these nephews, Mr Paddy Ambrose, one of the best-known and best- hearted of station-owners of the Centre, has seen a pageant of progress in the past 10 years, on the Great North road from Adelaide to Darwin – but his quaint old homestead, and even the blacks about it, still cherish happy memories of Tom Nugent and the Ragged Thirteen.

THE LAST OF THE RAGGED THIRTEEN

The Forbes Advocate 9th August, 1929

The feats of cattle thieves of the west, with their half dozen or so head of cattle pale into significance with the thefts of one rustler, who has just died on a Northern Territory cattle station, aged 91. According to his own account, he had “lifted” 8,000 head in 10 years! He was a member of the “Ragged Thirteen” a collection of the biggest cattle thieves who ever levied tribute on the stations of Central Australia. Leaving Clermont in the early 80s this band raided every station on route to the Kimberley goldfields, in Western Australia. On the way they sold hundreds of head of station cattle and horses and then established themselves near Anthony’s Lagoon, where they bred from the stolen beasts, and sold the progeny, while the majority of the band took a big draft to the Kimberley goldfields and sold them. Near Anthony’s Lagoon, a main route to the gold fields, and 500 miles from the nearest police station, the gang set up a pub and butcher’s shop, and fairly raked in the coin from travellers, who were plentiful in those days. All the stock slaughtered were stolen from surrounding holdings, and when the squatters started to complain the gang offered to sell out for £1,000. The squatters refused, and sent word to police headquarters. Mounted troopers started out from Cloncurry, but the gang heard of their advent, burnt down the sly grog pub and the butcher’s shop and continued their operations elsewhere. Later, this particular gangster was given a stiff leg for the rest of his days, through being speared in a blacks’ camp during a squabble. Unable to ride, be had to give up cattle-duffing, and settle down for the last 35 years on an outstation in the Territory. He was the last survivor of the Ragged Thirteen.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Tall tales and true from The Ridge

Lightening Ridge

By RW

I once spent eight months at Lightning Ridge supervising power line maintenance and found it a delightful and friendly place – provided you obeyed a few unwritten laws. The main ones were: 1. Don’t ask personal questions, and 2. Don’t move in uninvited. When I learned to open and close my mouth at the right times I was readily accepted, and some of the friends I made and the characters I met I will never forget.

Here are a few of the stories I heard during my time at The Ridge; most of them are true in every detail and one or two were ‘coloured in’ by the colourful character telling the story.

MY MATE DAVE

I became firm friends with a bloke called Dave. He was well into his senior years, but he would only admit to being 76 years young. Dave was a great yarn spinner and never told the same story twice, which is why he was keenly sought after by tourist companies to point out interesting features around the opal fields. Though some of the stories he told those tourists were nothing short of outrageous.

Dave was a survivalist, badly wounded in the Second World War, he lost half his stomach but this didn’t stop him getting about like a bloke half his age.

When a couple of yokels broke into Dave’s house (probably believing he had money or opals hidden somewhere) and found nothing they, hit him on the head with an axe!

“Bloody hell mate, you were lucky to survive that,” I said in disbelief.

“Yeah mate,” he said, “I suppose I was lucky. I had two axes on the wood heap and them silly bastards picked the blunt one.”

WHINGE AND WIN

Two mates arrived at the Ridge looking for a claim. They eventually acquired a lease that had been let go by the previous, owners who were two short blokes, each about five-foot-six in the old measurement. The new leaseholders were an odd couple, one was about five-foot-six and the other was at least six-foot-six. The drive in the claim was 10 metres long and suited the shorter of the two, but the tall bloke was always whinging because he had to bend his head all the way down to the work face. Shorty finally got sick of his mate’s constant complaining and said, “We’ll take a foot of dirt out of the floor and maybe that will shut you up.”

It did. They won £120,000 worth of opal from the floor.

THE LITTLE PILE OF STONES

A good friend of mine was lucky enough to hit the jackpot. He and a couple of his mates opened up a new field and the first shaft was a beauty. They had only driven about three metres when they took out a parcel of gemstones and I was privileged to be included in the celebrations. After a few bubblies with tinnie chasers, it was time to view the spoils.

A small plastic bag was produced and the contents tipped into the middle of the kitchen table. To me it was an anti- climax – I could have covered the lot with one hand.

My mate looked up and asked, “Whadya think of that lot?”

To which I replied, “To me it just looks like an ordinary pile of rocks.” Everyone went quiet and my mate said, “That little lot should cut about a $120,000.” By now readers will have correctly guessed that what I know about opal mining would fit inside the brain of a dust mite.

GETTING OUT QUICK

One of my favourite stories was told by a bloke I met several times. He lived “somewhere else” and when you asked him where (which you should never do at The Ridge) he would point in the general direction of “away”, but he visited the Ridge whenever he got the chance. He had spent many years in the area, shearing for tucker money then opal mining until the money ran out. Here is the story in his own words:

“Just after the war (WWII) I mated up with a pommy bloke who I met while I was working in a shearing shed. He didn’t seem a bad sort of cove, so I suggested we head to the Ridge and do a bit of gouging after the shed cut out.

“When we arrived on the fields there was a lot of talk about the Germans who had been on good opal but pulled out when the roof of the drive kept coming in. It was certainly too dangerous to work but my mate suggested we write to his dad who was a mining engineer back in England and ask his advice.

“Sure enough, back came the details of how to prop the roof to make it safe. We worked our little freckles off putting in those props and when we reckoned it was safe, we started to mine the face. I swear that mine had a jinx on it. We were onto a bit of nice colour when the roof came in again. We made it back past the props but the fall knocked the first three out.

“We gave it a miss for a couple of days and then went down for a look. My mate wouldn’t venture past the last prop so I went on to see what had happened. It looked like there was a large fault in the level and the roof was hanging suspended. I picked a couple of nice looking nobbies from the wall and was looking for more when my old mate yelled ‘Look out, she’s comin’ in again!’”

At this point I interrupted his story with “Shit, you would have had to get out of there in a hurry!”

“You’d better believe I did,” he replied. “I was thirty feet up the shaft before I realised the ladders were on the other side.”

THE NEW CHUM

Shortly after World War Two, a young bloke turned up at the Ridge with the rights to a claim that hadn’t been worked for years, and, to the best of local knowledge, wasn’t much good when it was being worked.

He camped on the claim, took a look down the mine and decided he didn’t have a clue what he was looking for. The lad had a bit of nous and he volunteered his labour for free to any miner who would take him on, provided they taught him about opal.

He worked for the old miners for a couple of months then started to work his own claim. In three weeks he won £50,000 worth of opal, sold the claim and was never seen at the Ridge again.

NEVER BORING

I once met a bloke at the Ridge who was a Pommy born in South Africa, educated in America, living in Australia, buying opals in Australia for a West German firm who flogged them to Russia. Cop that lot.

You could say the Ridge is a little bit different, but never, ever boring.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

The Story of Paddy Hannan

As told by the man himself to J. W. Kirwin, M.L.C., President of the Legislative Council. (Adapted from the Western Argus, Kalgoorlie, 6th September, 1927)

Visitors to Kalgoorlie for the “Back to the Goldfields” fortnight will view with interest a pepper tree at the eastern end of Egan Street, near the Boulder railway line. The tree is protected by a small fence, on which there is a notification that it marks the spot where, in June, 1893, Paddy Hannan discovered gold. The discovery was the beginning of a goldfield that has produced to date some £100,000,000 worth of gold. It is a pity that a spot of such historic importance to Western Australia, and, in fact, to Australia, is not marked by some more lasting memorial than a pepper tree, the life of which is comparatively short. The tree was planted in the presence of Hannan on August 3, 1897 – four years and a couple of months after his discovery. The day before the planting I accompanied him when he pointed to the exact spot where the find was made. In the years that had intervened the appearance of the locality had, as he explained, considerably changed. Much of the country had been denuded of bush, streets had been cleared, and buildings erected, but he had the unerring instinct of a bushman. He surveyed the landscape carefully and deliberately walked about for a quarter of an hour, and seemed to have little or no difficulty in fixing the location of the find. Subsequently, we wandered through the gullies to the foot of Maritana Hill, and whilst viewing old camps and deserted alluvial workings, he talked of his great discovery – or rather, I asked questions that he answered. In appearance Hannan was under rather than over the average height, of medium build, with bright beady eyes, a long beard that was then turning grey, and a ruddy complexion that betokened a healthy and vigorous outdoor life. Like many of the prospectors who opened the goldfields, he was an Irishman. He was born in the parish of Quin, County Clare, about 1842, and came to Australia in 1863, and to Western Australia in 1889. In disposition, he was not of the jovial, riotous type, fairly common on the goldfields, and though not a total abstainer, yet was remarkably temperate. When Kalgoorlie was populous and prosperous, he occasionally returned to the scene of his prospecting success, and wherever he went he met those who were eager and even anxious to entertain him, but nothing could induce him to go beyond the limits of what temperance prescribes. On that point he was adamant, even under the strongest temptation to be otherwise. This may not have added to his popularity amongst a few of the gay reckless spirits of the early goldfields days.

Patrick ‘Paddy’ Hannan

Patrick ‘Paddy’ Hannan

He was not garrulous or a good conversationalist, though in some respects pleasant and genial. He was of a kindly disposition, quiet, and reserved, and particularly concerning himself he was not disposed to be communicative. His education was that of the ordinary Irish peasant boy, educated under the national school system, but he wrote a remarkably good hand, and letters that I have before me, penned shortly before his death, when he was an old man, are singular for their clearness of diction and calligraphy. Despite Hannan’s nationality, he was seemingly without imagination or a strong sense of humour. To him all that he went through was prosaic. The romantic side of gold seeking was never realised by him. He was not drawn to the bush by such poetic considerations as “…the vision splendid of the sunlit plains extended, And at night the wondrous glory of the everlasting stars.” (Ed. Here Kirwin is quoting Banjo Patterson’s poem ‘Clancy of the Overflow’) Nor was there anything that appealed to him in the goldfields as they were in the early nineties, with the glorious uncertainties that they presented and the tens of thousands of light-hearted, optimistic, adventurous young men that the discoveries of Bayley and Ford (Ed. Fly Flat, 1892 from which Coolgardie was born) attracted from all parts of the world. After the walk and talk with Hannan on the day he pointed out the scene of his find, we went to my office, where his story of the discovery as related by him was written down, and subsequently read to him and checked. There is nothing sensational about it, but at the present time it is worth re-telling. Following are its exact words: “I reached Coolgardie a few days after Bayley reported his discovery. I was at Parker’s Range, about 40 miles south of Southern Cross. There was not much mining going on. Fraser’s mine and the Central mine were the principal properties. “Early in June, 1893, news arrived at Coolgardie of a rich discovery at a place called Mount Youle, somewhere to the east or north-east, and parties left Coolgardie in search of the new find. A few days after the report of the discovery had been received, my mate, Thomas Flanagan (Ed. often spelled differently), and myself, left Coolgardie. We left on June 7, and would have gone earlier with the others, but we could not obtain horses, and so we were delayed two or three days. We were lucky enough to pick up some animals in the bush ten or twelve miles out of Coolgardie. The other parties were mostly travelling with teams, but only one or two of the prospecting groups had horses of their own. “My mate and I had previously made up our minds not to travel with the teams, but to form a separate party of our own. We would thus be left free to travel how and when we liked. We could also by this arrangement, if we chose, prospect any country during the journey.

“On June 10, three days after leaving Coolgardie, we reached what is now known as Kalgoorlie. The other parties had gone on in the direction of the reported discovery, only to find later that the report had been false. Coolgardie was getting dull, and a large number of men had started from there for Mount Youle. There were a great many men travelling all over the country. Only Bayley’s claim was working at Coolgardie, and the alluvial had become exhausted just about the time I left. “Well, as I’ve said, when we came on June 10 to Mount Charlotte, my mate and I decided to stop and prospect the country round about, as we had found two colours of gold. On the 14th we shifted down to near the place I have just pointed out as where the first gold was found. We got good gold more or less from the north end of Mount Charlotte to down south of Maritana Hill.

A more lasting tribute to the legacy of Paddy Hannan

A more lasting tribute to the legacy of Paddy Hannan

“There was another man, by the way – Dan Shea was his name (Ed. Also spelled O’Shea) – to whom we gave an equal share of our prospecting claim. “On June 17 I started for Coolgardie to apply for a reward claim. I got there on a Saturday night. The news of our find soon got abroad, and people began to set out for the scene. There was a good deal of excitement over my report, and there were 1,400 or 1,500 men dry-blowing in the locality, in about a week. In fact, most of the men who had got beyond Southern Cross were quickly on the field. “The water difficulty, which was usually great, was solved. Rain began to fall when I was on my way into Coolgardie, and continued for some time. The fall was fairly heavy, and, of course, exceedingly welcome. The downpour left plenty of water in the lake, and the supply lasted till the following November. “There were no surface indications that I noticed of the existence of reefs. I think Red Hill was the richest alluvial ground there. There were also some very rich claims between Cassidy’s Hill and Maritana Hill. Two or three hundred ounces were taken out of one claim. As time went on, whilst some of the diggers settled down, others were leaving every day as the alluvial got worked out. A great many went further back. Broad Arrow, Bardoc, White Feather, and the I.O.U. were found. “The first two applications for mining leases at Kalgoorlie – apart from alluvial claims – were those of Cassidy’s Hill and Maritana Hill. Jim Cassidy pegged out his lease first, and the Maritana was pegged out soon after. “Other discoveries took a great many people away from the locality, but there were continually new arrivals from the other side. The population in general began to increase. Before Christmas two hotels were opened.

“I left about January 20, 1894, for a holiday, as I had then been on the goldfields for some years, and had not seen the sea since my arrival in Western Australia, nearly five years previously. I was not at that time in the best of health, and a brief spell away from the fields I felt to be necessary. Life on the fields was of course, much more trying than some years later. It was only now and again we could get fresh meat.” Above are the bare facts of Hannan’s discovery thirty years ago in Kalgoorlie, as told by himself. It was apparently altogether an afterthought that made him think it worthwhile mentioning that when he left to make the application for the claim at Coolgardie they had only two quarts of water left, and, as he observed, “but for the rain I don’t know what we would have done.” There were other incidents of common knowledge that Hannan did not mention. For example, he brought to Coolgardie when he applied for a reward claim, a parcel of gold. Its exact value was unknown, with the result that it was widely exaggerated. Hannan’s application notice was put up at the tent which served as the Registrar’s office, at 9 o’clock in the evening, and during the night and next morning there was a stampede from Coolgardie of men towards the new find. It is said that scarcely fifty men were left in Coolgardie. Some of those who started lost their way, and were days later in reaching their destination. Others were inadequately equipped for the journey. The fall of rain to which Hannan refers, whilst solving the water problem, interfered with the operation of dry-blowing. The difficulty due to the moistness of the earth was, however, met by lighting fires and burning the stuff before it was treated.

Paddy Hannan and party at the pepper tree planting ceremony in 1897

Paddy Hannan and party at the pepper tree planting ceremony in 1897

Many stories differing from that related by Hannan have been current amongst old goldfielders. By some it was said that it was not Hannan that first discovered gold near Mount Charlotte. Hannan was then over 50 years of age, but both Flanagan and Shea were older men. Because he was the youngest of the three, he was asked by the others to make the journey to Coolgardie to apply for a reward claim. As he made the first report the find became associated with him, and was known as “Hannan’s”. One old and highly respected resident of the goldfields, who was intimately acquainted with all three men about the time of the find, positively asserted to me that Flanagan was the first to find gold, and that he found it when looking for a horse. Flanagan, like Hannan, came from Clare. Soon after, Flanagan died in Melbourne.

Other old residents say that the three men, when proceeding with a much larger party to Mount Youle, found gold near Mount Charlotte, but carefully concealed the fact of the discovery in order that they might be able to make the most of it. It was asserted that they stayed behind on the plea that they lost a horse. The members of the main party continued their journey unsuspectingly, and when, many days later, they discovered that the Mount Youle find was but a wild goose chase, they were amazed to see the neighbourhood of Mount Charlotte a hive of dry-blowers, most of whom were finding gold.

Hannan’s account differs somewhat from the story of the find as published in W. B. Kimberley’s “History of Western Australia”, which was issued in 1897. This account states: “A few of the men who set forth for Mount Youle camped at Mount Charlotte, and among them were ‘Pat’ Hannan and ‘Tom’ Flanagan. There was feed but no water at this spot, which was at once named Dry Camp, and as the horses could not proceed without a drink, the men remained there for two days searching for native wells or rock soaks. It is said that Hannan returned for water to what had become known as the Nine Mile Rocks, and that in his absence, Flanagan found gold in the neighbourhood. After Hannan arrived from the Nine Mile Rocks, Flanagan induced him to remain and prospect more fully. The two men searched the surface for alluvial for about a week after the other teams, which practically walked over gold scattered on the ground, had resumed their journey to Mount Youle. In three days Hannan and Flanagan picked up about 100oz, but the exact weight is not recorded, for the discoverers did not whisper their secret to every passer-by.” All the accounts given above differ materially from that given by Dan O’Shea, who was a partner of Hannan and Flanagan, and who came to my office in Kalgoorlie not long after the version given by Hannan was published. O’Shea was then very old. Tall, thin, erect, with snow-white hair and beard, and piercing eyes, he was a picturesque figure. He was indignant at the kudos given to Hannan. He claimed that it was he, and not Hannan, who first discovered gold, but his memory seemed to be failing, and he could not give a very coherent account of what actually took place. All that he was insistent upon was that it was he who picked up the first gold. O’Shea died many years ago.

Hannan Street, Kalgoorlie, 19th December 1900

Personally, I believe that Hannan, who had a good memory, was accurate in what he said. As to which of the three first found gold is really immaterial. As already explained, Hannan was not over popular amongst some early day prospectors, and there were perhaps amongst them those who were jealous of the reputation he acquired. Hannan and his mates made comparatively little money out of the find. Hannan never had much wealth, and during his later years he lived in Victoria on a small annuity – £150 – from the Western Australian State Government. I last saw Hannan in Melbourne in 1925. He never married, and was living with his sister, Mrs Lynch, in a cottage in Fallon Street, Brunswick. He was happy and contented, told me he had everything he could wish for in reason, talked with interest and even animation, of his prospecting experiences in Western Australia, inquired about the then state of Kalgoorlie and the goldfield, and asked to be remembered to all old friends in this State. He was then 83 years of age, his beard was snow white and he showed traces of a recent severe illness. Some weeks later he died.

Editor’s Note: While in Bendigo, in November 1899, Thomas Flanagan, 67, contracted influenza and died after a twoweek illness. He was buried in the White Hills cemetery. Dan O’Shea, 71, contracted a chill through persisting in his prospecting habit of sleeping on the floor. Living in Fremantle at the time, he tried to get admitted to the Fremantle Hospital but was refused on the grounds that he was not sufficiently ill. He then made his way to Perth, his condition worsened and he passed away in the Perth Hospital on 8th September, 1908.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Gilgunnia Gold

by John ‘Nugget’ Campbell

The former gold mining town of Gilgunnia, NSW, is 110km south of Cobar and 146km north of Hillston, but not much exists there today. There’s a rest area with a small historical mining display and some local history information on the rest stop sign, and that’s about it. Most likely because it was at the intersection of three major roads and on a travelling stock route, the Gilgunnia Hotel was established there in 1873 by Mr and Mrs Kruge, and things moved along at a typical outback pace until small amounts of alluvial gold were found in the area around 1887. This didn’t cause too much excitement but the discovery was enough to fire the imaginations of a few serious prospectors and eventually the first payable reef gold was discovered by John “Jackey” Owen in 1895. He went on to discover other notable mineral fields. By June 1895 there were about 450 men on the field with 17 claims on payable gold. There was good gold showing in the reefs and by October there were a number of mines operating including the No.1 North; No.2 West; the Hand in Hand; The Off Chance; Riley’s; the Mount Allen Syndicate; the Rising Sun; The Dream (later to become Her Dream); the FourMile; Keep It Dark; Australian Natives; Tarcombe; The Welcome, White Reef; and Talbot and Cranes. No.1 North and Australian Natives were the deepest at 100 feet and still showing good gold.

Above: John ‘Jackey’ Owen, discoverer of the first payable reef at Gilgunnia

Above: John ‘Jackey’ Owen, discoverer of the first payable reef at Gilgunnia

By November 1895 the miners were calling for a battery to be erected and some of the ore was extremely rich, with one mine sending six tons of ore to the Clyde works in Sydney for a yield of seven ounces per ton. A report in June 1896 noted that the lack of water had held up mining but rains had recently filled the tanks; it also noted that the much-needed battery was being constructed and that there were at least 1,000 tons of stone waiting to be crushed. In the same month, one troubled miner suicided by putting a stick of Rackarock (explosive consisting of potassium chlorate and nitrobenzene) with a slow fuse and detonator into his mouth and lighting it. The papers noted that this wasn’t uncommon on mining fields. On the 28th of July the first battery was officially declared open with Mr Maschwitz being the proprietor, and a celebratory ball was held in the evening. Most crushings ended up yielding about an ounce of gold per ton but in 1897 the Her Dream Mine was an exception when, in December, it treated 51 tons for just over 106oz of gold. It had produced 666oz of gold from its last five crushings and paid a dividend of five guineas per share, there being some 80 shares in the venture. The town of Gilgunnia was declared in 1897 and this pretty much coincided with its peak population of 1,000 residents who were serviced by a court house, police station, school, several general stores, three pubs, a billiards hall, a dance hall and various other retail establishments. There was no mention of a church. By 1898 the newspapers had lost a lot of interest in the field but reported that crushings of an ounce per ton were still the average, with the Her Dream Mine usually producing a slightly better yield. Water was still a problem – either a lack of it or too much courtesy of torrential rain.

The Royal Hotel closed in 1898 leaving thirst-quenching duties to Tattersalls and The Commercial. In September of that year another miner became deranged, first threatening his family and then cutting his own throat. It was not clear if he passed away but it was noted that he was the son of the miner who had suicided in 1896. The total gold yield for the field in 1898 was just over 628oz with Her Dream (sometimes called The Dream) accounting for more than 375oz. At the other end of the scale the Hidden Treasure lived up to the negative connotations of its name and produced one solitary ounce of gold for the entire year. By the middle of 1899 the battery was out of commission waiting for the arrival of new shoes and dies. Some mines were now down to the 180-foot level without rich ore being discovered. On April 6th, Ah Clun, one of the Chinese market gardeners who supplied the town with vegetables grown at Boggy Tank, was found almost dead with multiple cuts, bruises and broken bones. It was claimed his mate, Ah Pling, had tried to murder him with an axe, rod and slasher. Ah Clun was conveyed to the pub then on to Nymagee Hospital. Constable Macpherson covered a lot of ground and eventually tracked down the culprit and arrested him on the road to Nymagee. In December 1899, Her Dream crushed 85 tons for a fabulous return of 603oz of gold.

The Tattersalls Hotel, Gilgunnia, 1922. It later became the post office but by then Gilgunnia was more of a reference point on a map than an actual town

The Tattersalls Hotel, Gilgunnia, 1922. It later became the post office but by then Gilgunnia was more of a reference point on a map than an actual town

A year later several mines had closed and some were on tribute but Her Dream was still the standout mine and was now down to 200 feet. In early December 1900 it crushed 50 tons for 107oz and later that same month, 141 tons for 262oz of gold. The entire gold output for the field in 1901 was 927oz from 431 tons however 273 ounces of that came from Her Dream’s December crushing of 150 tons. An earlier crushing in August had yielded more than 8oz to the ton so it is clear that most of the other mines still operating were on their last legs. During the year the Gilgunnia Battery Company had erected two 60-ton cyanide vats to treat the tailings and it was hoped that this plant would help the profitability of existing mines. By now the town had shrunk to one pub, a post office, the police station, two small general stores, a butcher, a few scattered mostly empty houses and the battery. The battery and cyaniding plant were eventually sold to Her Dream in August 1902. Most mines, including Her Dream, were still averaging about one ounce to the ton but in October, Seigal and Sons at the Last Chance, produced nearly 69oz from 17 tons. In July 1905, Mr Helm, the much admired school headmaster who had started the school in January 1896, was promoted and posted to Blayney. Although there were still 18 pupils attending the school, a new teacher, Mr F. Bisley, wasn’t appointed until July 1907 but he didn’t accept the posting and the school closed the same month. Mining struggled along until 1907 when the Her Dream Mine and also the battery and cyaniding plant it owned, went into liquidation. The mine hadn’t been profitable for two years and was down to the 260-foot level. In 1913 Mr Wallace obtained the Her Dream mine with high hopes of making his fortune but water in the mine proved his undoing.

In 1915 a Cobar syndicate tried to dewater Her Dream. This was the only work being carried out on the field and it ultimately proved unsuccessful. In 1917 another local syndicate tried to get Her Dream back up and running and struggled with the water problem into 1918, to no avail. As for the town, the only decent building still standing was Tattersalls Hotel, the police station having been “abolished” in December 1915. The years rolled by until Mr A. Hodge, with more hope than good sense, assumed ownership of Her Dream in 1936 and had two men install 200 feet of ladders. Fortune did not favour him. In 1939, Her Dream’s charms managed to attract the Seigal Brothers who laboured through until the end of 1940 for little or no result. Since the Second World War the only activity on the field was an open cut operation that started back in the early 1990s but it came to nothing. The town of Gilgunnia and the mines that feasted on its reefs fended off droughts, fires, the Spanish Flu epidemic, heatwaves, duststorms, frost and grasshopper plagues but couldn’t survive when water was struck at depth and gold at depth was too expensive to mine.

MINER BLOWS HIS HEAD OFF

Bathurst Free Press and Mining Journal Friday, 12th June, 1896

At the Four Mile, near Gilgunnia goldfield, on Wednesday morning, a miner named McLaughlin committed suicide in a most determined manner. About 7.30am, a miner named Talbott, whose camp is distant some 30 yards from that of McLaughlin, was aroused by a loud report, but owing to the dense fog prevailing at the time could not locate the direction. About half-an-hour later, however, he went to McLaughlin’s tent and was horrified to find the deceased lying on bis back on his bed with the whole of his face and front portion of his head blown away, and the brain exposed. Portions of the brain and parts of the skull, teeth, and beard were lying scattered around the bed, floor, and side of the tent. Pieces of bone and beard were also scattered outside the tent from the force of the explosion. Rackarock was evidently the means employed to effect his purpose. Half a plug of the explosive was missing from the Moonlight claim on which McLaughlin’s claim was situated, and also a short piece of fuse which he must have secured on Tuesday night or very early on Wednesday morning. The explosive he evidently placed in his mouth with the detonator and fuse attached. The facts at present disclose no reason for the rash act. At 8 o’clock on Tuesday evening McLaughlin appeared to be in his usual spirits, and was conversing rationally and cheerfully. He was at one time proprietor of an hotel in Bourke, and was well liked and respected. It is thought that his financial troubles may have affected his reason. The body has been brought into town. An inquest will be held.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Echoes from the past

A FORTUNATE FIND

Sydney Morning Herald

16th July, 1934
A family passing through Mudgee had a fortunate find. They camped on pipeclay, about four miles from Mudgee, and the father started prospecting among the old mining workings, with no results, until his little son, who had been playing on an old mullock heap, scratched the surface and picked up a gold nugget which was found to weight seven ounces. Can you imagine the scene. The boy probably called out, “Is this what you’re looking for Dad?”

WEDDERBURN GOLD RUSH

Sydney Morning Herald

22nd March, 1950
The new Wedderburn gold rush is on in earnest with prospectors coming from all parts of Victoria. After a meeting of the shire council this afternoon, the shire secretary, Mr A. E. Cooper, said: “We will grant as many claims as possible to people wanting to dig the streets, provided the earth is put back in its position. Gold is better out of the ground that in it. It has reached a stage where it is open go.” “We’ll dig up the whole town,” one resident said. Thirty claims have been pegged in Wilson Street – the main road through the town. Claims have also been pegged in Reef Street, off Wilson Street, by people who like the sound of the name. Backyard mining is also on in full swing today. The local publican, Mr R. Baker, and his barmen, spent more time in the mine at the back of the hotel than in the bar. No big find was reported today – only several pieces weighing two or three pennyweights and some specks.

SEARCH FOR A LOST REEF

Sydney Morning Herald

28th March, 1952
Mr Leslie Hall, 56, a bachelor, found a gold nugget valued at £500 six inches below the surface of Wilson Street, Wedderburn, today. He was sinking a shaft when his pick brought up the nugget. It weighed 27 ounces. The place is opposite the home of Mr David Butterick who has dug up a £10,000 fortune from his backyard gold mine. Mr Hall recently took over the claim of another prospector, former greengrocer Albert Smith, who dug up a £1,100 nugget from the spot two years ago, and retired six months ago. He hopes to find a gold reef which old residents of Wedderburn believe runs under Wilson Street. An Italian named Cerchi found the reef during the gold rush last century but it was lost.

FLOODED WITH SPECKS OF GOLD

Sydney Morning Herald

22nd June, 1952
This week’s floods caused an avalanche at Walhalla (population 400) ghost mining town 125 miles east of Melbourne, and poured tons of gold-flecked rock and mud into the streets. Disregarding their wrecked homes, some old prospectors are busy washing paydirt. They predict new prosperity for the township, through which, last century, £10,000,000 of gold passed. But Walhalla faces a new peril before it can think of gold. Waters from Stringer’s Creek are running wildly through the town. Melbourne is rushing pipes and other equipment and teams of men are trying to save Walhalla from its third swift flooding in a week. The first flood cut Walhalla off from the rest of Victoria early this week and no word of the township’s ordeal came to the outside world until yesterday. Water rushed down from the hills carrying a great mass of mullock that had been stacked outside old diggings. Then came an avalanche, a huge landslide from the soaked and crumbling hills. And the gold. There is a glint in the miners’ eyes as they pile up flood defences. They are dreaming of the old Walhalla and its 14 hotels, flashing wealth and thousands of people.

THE GOLD ESCORT ROBBERY

The Herald (Melbourne)

18th July, 1953
It was 100 years ago that a band of desperate bushrangers huddled beside dim lights on the Heathcote goldfields and planned the daring robbery that led three to the gallows of the old Melbourne gaol in Russell Street. The gold they stole was then worth £10,000 and most of it was never found. According to the legends of the hills, the treasure is still believed to be buried in the scrub near Heathcote, once known as McIvor. The weekly gold escort jogged out of this prosperous mining town for Kyneton and Melbourne about 9am on July 20, 1853. In the coach, behind the driver Thomas Fookes, were 46 packages containing 2,323 ounces of gold and nearly £1,000 in cash. Around the coach rode Superintendent Warner, Sergeant Duins and troopers Davis, Morton and Reiswetter. The troopers trotted about 14 miles from McIvor, came to a sharp bend in the road and slowed when they saw a strange palisade of gum tree trunks and branches on a rise beside the dusty track.

Before the suspicious troopers could fumble for their heavy pistols, “a murderous fire was poured on them from the palisade above.” Fookes fell from the coach with a bullet through his knee and a gash across his temple. Morton collapsed with a severe shoulder wound, Reiswetter with a ball in his leg, and Davis with another through his cheeks. Duins, his horse wounded twice, fired his pistol at the bushrangers and galloped off to McIvor for help as Warner rode into the scrub to try to attack the ambushers from a flank.

The wounded men were still groaning on the ground as six bushrangers, wearing heavy guernseys, rifled the coach and thundered into the bush to measure out the gold with powder flasks. By nightfall, when the wounded men had been rescued, about 400 miners and volunteer special constables were searching the bush. But while the searching continued, some of the bushrangers had reached Collingwood and other districts and were trying to board ships listed for Mauritius and other ports. By August 4, rewards offered for the capture of the bushrangers totalled £2,900, one of the biggest in Victorian history. Inquiries were at a dead end when one of the bushrangers, George Francis, suddenly turned informer and gave detectives information that led to the arrest of three men. Soon afterwards, he escaped from his escort and committed suicide. But by then the police were sure they still had two men to find. One – his name was Grey – was never traced. The other, when captured, said his name was John Francis, brother of the dead bushranger, and was willing to turn Queen’s evidence in return for a free pardon.

John Francis received his pardon and was the chief Crown witness on Saturday, September 17, 1853, when George Melville, George Wilson and William Atkins appeared on charges of robbery under arms. The three prisoners were tried, found guilty and hanged but police admitted that they had recovered less than £1,000 worth of the gold. What happened to the bulk of the gold, which today would be worth about £35,000? (Ed. More than $5 million these days). Was it taken from a cache by Grey, the man who was never caught? Was it passed to friends of the condemned men before the police surprised them?

Or is it – as many old bushmen believe – still hidden in the earth near Heathcote from which it was mined 100 years ago?

GOLD BUYER DUPED

Bendigo Advertiser

18th January, 1906
Two men, William Sherwin and Benjamin Evans, were arrested today at Fremantle on a charge of false pretences. It is alleged that the two men are connected with a case of imposition reported recently to the Kalgoorlie detective office. About six months ago Sherwin arrived in Kalgoorlie, and, knowing something about his past activities, the police kept him under surveillance. Four months ago the other man, Evans, came to the district, and almost immediately started betting. Concurrently with the arrival of Evans in Kalgoorlie, Sherwin made the acquaintance of a Boulder resident, Oliver William Osmond, and, posing as a well- informed racing tipster, he occasionally gave his newly-found friend tips.

It is alleged that about a week ago, Sherwin told Osmond, as a great secret, that he (Sherwin) had a brother working as an assayer in one of the big mines, and that his brother had a large quantity of gold to dispose of. The upshot of the conversation was that Osmond agreed to buy the gold himself at a very attractive price. On Thursday last, Osmond met Sherwin and his alleged brother, who was none other than Evans, by appointment. At this interview another meeting was arranged for at 3 o’clock on the following day, when Sherwin and Evans stated that they would have bar gold to the value of £500 with them. The trio met at the appointed time, and Osmond then handed £250 in cash and a post-dated cheque for a smaller amount to Sherwin and Evans, and received what was apparently three 100oz bars of gold in exchange. The sellers of the gold bricks wanted Osmond to pay the full amount in cash, but Osmond declined to do so until he had the bricks assayed. The buyer and the sellers then parted.

Later in the day Osmond, suspecting that he had been duped, chopped one of the bars in two, and found to his sorrow that what he had bought for gold was only copper covered over with gold leaf. He at once communicated with the local detectives and they satisfied themselves as to the identity of the men wanted, and telegraphed the information to Perth, with the result that Sherwin and Evans were arrested at Fremantle today.

FLOGGED FOR FINDING GOLD

The World’s News (Sydney)
11th August, 1951
A convict was triced up for a flogging in Berrima gaol – back bare, hands lashed to rings in the wall above his head, feet manacled.

The lash fell – 60 strokes. And what was this convict’s crime? He had found gold, picked up grains of the precious metal and hidden them in his clothes. Maybe a mate gave him away, for to find gold was a crime in those days. The authorities believed if a gold rush came, every warder would go and leave the prisoners to escape. This was in 1825. The point arises. Why did the convict even look for gold? He must have heard about it being found, and he had.

As far back as 1814, when the road was being built across the Blue Mountains, a gang found large quantities of gold. This was reported to the engineer in charge. He ordered them to keep it secret on pain of being flogged. They had all been promised a pardon when the road was finished, so they kept quiet. The next report came in 1823 when assistant-surveyor James McBrian found gold on the Fish River, 15 miles from Bathurst. In his field book, now preserved in Sydney, he reported, “At eight chains 50 links to river and marked gum tree, found numerous particles of gold in the sand and in the hills convenient to the river.”

Again, in 1830, gold with pyrites, was found in Vale of Clywdd in the Blue Mountains. The discoverer was the Polish scientist Count Strezlecki, who later named Mount Kosciusko. At the urgent request of the Government, he did not make his find public. But 11 years later, an experienced geologist, Rev. W. B. Clarke found gold in the Macquarie Valley, and also at Vale of Clywdd.

Clarke had come to New South Wales “to take charge” of King’s School at Parramatta. His essays on science were the basis for study of such subjects in New South Wales. Without having heard of Strezlecki’s find at Vale of Clywdd, Clarke found gold there and later in the valley of the Macquarie River, near Bathurst. That was in 1844, when the State was reaching out in commerce and trade and barriers were being broken down. Clarke had been in Russia, then practically the only gold- producing country in the world. In 1847, comparing Australia with Russia, he said, “New South Wales will probably on some future day be found wonderfully rich in minerals.”

In the Maitland Mercury of January 31, 1849, he wrote, “It is well known that a gold mine is certain ruin to its first workers, and in the long run gold washing will be found more suitable for slaves than British freemen.”

Incidentally, at that time British freemen were swarming across the Pacific to the Californian fields. Among them was Edward Hammond Hargreaves, who in 1851, found gold at Summer Hill Creek near Bathurst. This was done on his hurried return, after observing that the country, where gold was won in California, resembled the land near Bathurst. He was right; but he was far from being the first man to find gold in Australia. Under any system but a convict one, Australia would have leaped ahead when the road was made over the mountains in 1814 and gold found there. But that is how history is made. The real discoverers never get the credit.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Coolgardie – The rush that saved the west

By John Drain

Arthur Wellesley Bayley and William Ford are accredited with finding the first gold at Coolgardie on September 13th, 1892, however, controversy has existed over the years as to who were the rightful discoverers. The pair were granted the reward claim on 17th September.

Nothing I have ever read on the matter actually attempts to discredit the partners in the finding of the reef or their subsequent sale of it, but there is ample evidence to suggest they may not have been the first to find gold in the vicinity.

Probably the earliest reference to gold believed found in the general area of that part of the country, later to be known as Coolgardie, is reported in the journals of Charles C. Hunt, a surveyor employed by the Western Australian Government to search for and find pastoral country suitable for grazing stock. This work was carried out to the east of the town of York and spread into the goldfield, now known as Hampton Plain, between the years 1864 and 1866. Hunt’s commission also required him to establish watering points such as soaks and wells to enable those who might follow to be able to sustain themselves. For this purpose, he was supplied with several convicts who were to do the manual work, and several pensioner soldiers as guards.

William Ford, c.1900

William Ford, c.1900

When they were well into the eastern goldfields the convicts took it into their heads to grab some of the horses and food, and set off overland to make their escape to South Australia. Not being experienced bushmen and probably weakened by the hard work of digging wells, together with a poor staple diet, the convicts were soon overtaken by Hunt’s soldiers. On being returned to camp they were found to be in possession of a small quantity of gold. It seems their wanderings were such and their navigation so poor they were not able to lead Hunt’s party to the spot where the gold was found. It’s likely of course, they may simply have been playing dumb as many do about the whereabouts of gold.

Bayley and Ford first met in Croydon, Queensland, when each was prospecting there. After the Croydon gold ran out, they separated, with Bayley moving to Southern Cross where gold had been discovered in 1888 and which, at the time, was the most eastern field being worked in Western Australia.

One night while Bayley was resting from his work with a mining syndicate, Gilles McPherson, a well-known prospector in the Yilgarn district, staggered into Bayley’s tent having suffered a terrible perish due to the shortage of water. McPherson, a hardy Scotsman, was in a bad way and it took several days nursing on the part of Bayley before he recovered sufficiently to make much sense. He showed Bayley some gold he had found to the east and south that seemed to fit in with the direction from which McPherson had come from Lake Lefroy. McPherson went to great lengths to impress on Bayley the fact that there was some gold out there but also emphasised the terrible shortage of water. Perhaps fired by McPherson’s enthusiasm for prospecting, or simply disenchanted with working for wages, Bayley threw up the job and set off to Nullagine some 1,200 kilometres to the northwest in the Pilbara Goldfield.

Bayley and Ford photographed after being granted the reward claim.

Bayley and Ford photographed after being granted the reward claim.

Nullagine produced a lot of alluvial gold between the township and as far east as Mosquito Creek. Bayley found some gold but after a time shifted 200 kilometres south to Top Camp on the Ashburton field. Here he joined with noted prospector Tom Kegney as sharing mates and during their time together they had the good fortune to find a handsome amount of gold, including one 68-ounce nugget. Never short of a solution to a problem, Bayley promptly chopped the nugget in half so each might have his share.

Hearing of rich gold at Nickol River to the north, Bayley decided to try his luck there. The field was along the tidal sea- shore and could only be worked while the tide was out – a difficulty unlike any other on Western Australian goldfields. Bayley did find some gold but it seems he wasn’t particularly impressed with this area because he returned to Perth. From here he travelled back to Southern Cross where he once more became acquainted with William Ford.

Ford had been working in the mines for nearly a year when Bayley arrived but he was able to relate some adventures of his own to his friend that amounted to almost certain confirmation of the claims made by McPherson earlier.

Arthur Bayley

Arthur Bayley

Ford, together with prospectors George Withers and Luigi Jacoletti, had found gold at a place known as Natives Grave between Southern Cross and Parkers Range to the southeast. The prospectors had sold their claim for £300 and Ford and Jacoletti had taken the job of looking after the show for the new owner. Meanwhile, George Withers had obtained horses and supplies, and travelled eastward from Southern Cross on yet another prospecting trip. Three weeks later he returned to the Cross, a spear wound in his shoulder and a chamois of gold in his pocket.

More than ever this latest event seemed to substantiate Gilles McPherson’s claims, which Bayley and Ford had discussed at some length. They decided on plans to follow up the other’s discovery but realised that in so doing, their party would need to be well founded to survive.

At this time a message arrived from McPherson for Bayley stating that he was on good gold and that Bayley should join him at Nannine, a new field on Annean Station about 500 kilometres northeast of Geraldton. Bayley made his way there as quickly as possible and together with his two mates of the time, found gold, although the results weren’t outstanding. Bayley found gold on an island in Lake Annean, later named Bayley’s Island, and it became one of the richest fields in the district.

It is not clear what Ford was doing while Bayley was at Nannine, but perhaps he and his mate were still caretaking the mine.

Throughout the history of the gold discovery at Coolgardie, Ford has always seemed to be in the background, not that he actually played any lesser part in the proceedings but rather that he was a quiet, retiring type who did not readily respond to publicity. The irony is that Ford was actually the one to discover the gold!

By the time Bayley returned and joined Ford at Southern Cross, he had managed to accumulate some £1,000 for the purchase of horses and equipment. He had also learned a little more about McPherson’s adventures and the type of country he and Ford might have to traverse on their trip. McPherson was emphatic that safe travel eastward from Southern Cross was only possible directly after rain when gnamma holes and wells would be full. Both partners were experienced enough prospectors to heed the good advice.

Bayley and Ford were fully equipped and ready to go however the rains held off, delaying their departure. A prospector named Speakman found gold at Ularring in 1891 to the northeast of town, to which they responded. Although they found a little gold, the find was not startling and in a short while the tremendous shortage of water forced them to fall back on Southern Cross.

In June 1892 rain fell in the Yilgarn District so Bayley and Ford, with 10 packhorses and eight weeks’ supply of food, set off eastwards. The country they travelled over was, and is, a heavy sandplain sparsely timbered with a short scrub gradually turning to eucalypt forest the further eastward you go. The rain ensured an abundance of feed for the horses and in the first weeks, water was fairly readily available especially in the vicinity of the numerous granite outcrops that occurred throughout the plain.

Picking up George Withers’s tracks, they followed these until they came upon a native well at the place later to be known as Coolgardie. There was a spot where Withers had dug a hole and dryblown the wash but whether this was the spot where he had obtained his gold before being speared, they couldn’t tell, though subsequent events led them to think so.

While taking his horse to drink at the native well, Ford specked a half-ounce nugget in the area later to be known as Fly Flat. That set the couple to serious specking and on that same day a total of 80 ounces was found, the largest nugget being about five ounces. This patch was about a kilometre from George Withers’s pothole. They also saw ground that had been pegged in 1888 according to a notice on it but could find no gold there themselves.

Coolgardie today

Coolgardie today

Bayley and Ford had been there about a month when a party of three white men accompanied by a black arrived and set up camp nearby. Two of these men, Jack Reidy and German Charlie, were known to Ford. The partners by this time had between them close to 300 ounces of gold and had to play it cool for the whole period the visitors remained. One can imagine the relief when the party eventually packed up and moved on. Later, where their horses had been tethered, Ford found several nuggets. Some 10 days later, having lost flour to the wet weather and about 20 pounds of bacon to the dingoes, Bayley and Ford set off to Southern Cross to replenish their supplies.

The partners wasted little time in Southern Cross and set off eastwards as soon as their provisions were ready. They joked to people that they knew, “Yes, we’ve found a little gold, and are going back to see what Jack Reidy is up to!” However, their tale was not swallowed by three young miners just out from England, and obtaining a native guide, Tommy Talbot, Baker and Dick Fosser set out to follow the pair.

The young miners had no trouble following the partners as far as Gnarlbine Rock, a large granite outcrop where there was a good soak of permanent water. While arguing the point about which track to take from the rock, Jack Reidy and his party arrived. They were able to settle the dispute and put the miners on the right trail.

Talbot and party came upon the Coolgardie rockhole and camped nearby. Next morning several horses came to the well to drink and by backtracking them, the miners found Bayley working some alluvial on the area known as Fly Flat. As a result, the flies were not the only thing to distract Bayley and although he was cordial enough to them, the newcomers were not convinced of the truth.

This occurrence is the chapter in the story of the discovery of gold at Coolgardie that has proved to be the most controversial. All those writing of it in the past seem to have been uncertain of just what did happen, and all that can be recorded with any certainty is that there was controversy at the time.

The most popular belief seems to be that after a time, the young miners, having found some gold in the vicinity of a large quartz outcrop, showed their find to Bayley and Ford. It turned out that this was the same ground the partners had previously pegged but which was not yet registered. After some argument with the newcomers, Bayley and Ford helped the trio peg ground adjacent to their own.

The upshot was it was no longer practical to keep the find under wraps. The claim needed to be registered, a reward claim made and protection sought to ensure the safety of the prospectors.

The first shaft at Bayley’s Reward gold mine

The first shaft at Bayley’s Reward gold mine

On arrival in Southern Cross, Bayley showed 554 ounces of gold to Warden Finnerty before lodging the same in the Commercial Bank, a small iron shanty with a hessian partition separating the office from the living room. In spite of his good intentions, after being lectured by Ford not to do so, Bayley went to Cameron’s Hotel for a drink. The drink loosened his mouth and he couldn’t help himself so told the story. We’ve no way of knowing whether he embellished the yarn which, after all, would well and truly have stood on its own merits, but someone among the crowd is thought to have spiked his drink putting him out of action for some time. He awakened to find his horses gone and some one hundred diggers were already on the track to Coolgardie.

Considerable good did come out of Bayley’s announcement although he would not have appreciated it at the time. For several years the country had been in a depression due to its reliance on the Mother Country and the fact that Britain itself was in a bad way financially. The Bank of England was no longer making loans, many Australian banks were failing and business generally was on the brink of collapse.

Strangely, at the time Bayley’s story broke, in spite of the high employment throughout Western Australia, Southern Cross was in the grip of a miner’s strike. Well, that was the end of the strike but the mine proprietors were no better off because practically every able-bodied man who had a wagon, horse, wheelbarrow or a good pair of legs, was on his way eastward towards Coolgardie.

It was several days before Bayley obtain a horse and then only because his old acquaintance, McPherson, turned up to sell him one. Now mounted, he set off posthaste to guide Warden Finnerty to the new find.

Meanwhile, Ford had his own problems at Coolgardie. Not only did he continually chase off the three young miners from the lease but when the first of those in the rush arrived, he had to stand guard with a gun in each hand to ensure they kept their distance – an all but impossible task for a man on his own. No doubt he was glad to see Bayley and the Warden when they finally arrived. In spite of his guard duty, Ford had not been idle. In one pothole alone he had found nuggets weighing 200, 150 and 50 ounces only three yards from the reef! Such was the richness of the find.

The outcrop was described as being 36 feet in length, six feet wide, and 12 feet in height and was not so much rock containing gold but gold holding together rock! Ford’s own words are probably worth quoting: “...and I started to break into that reef. I had a gad and hammered it in, but when ItriedtogetitoutIcouldnotasI had driven it into solid gold.”

In March 1893, Bayley and Ford sold their claim to a company for £6,000 and a sixth interest in the mine, and Bayley, having returned to Victoria, took up land near Avenel and lived, for a very short while, in prosperous circumstances. Though

an outwardly strong, athletic man, he fell into ill health, possibly on account of the privations he had suffered while a prospector, and died at Avenel, of hepatitis and haematemesis, on 29th October, 1896. He was 31 years old and left a widow but no children. His estate was valued at more than £28,000.

Ford moved to Sydney and in 1904 built a handsome sandstone Federation house called ‘Wyckliffe’ in the suburb of Chatswood. Ford and his wife had a baby girl in 1906; a son followed not long after. Ford lived quietly at ‘Wyckliffe’ until his death, in 1932, at the age of 80.

Public meeting in Bayley Street, Coolgardie, in 1894. By this time both Bayley and Ford had sold up and moved back east

Public meeting in Bayley Street, Coolgardie, in 1894. By this time both Bayley and Ford had sold up and moved back east

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

The mysterious Tom Cue

By Jim Foster

Tom Cue is mostly known for his involvement in the finding of gold near Cue, the Western Australian town that bears his name. And while most people assume it was Tom who did the discovering, it was actually his partners, Michael John Fitzgerald and Edward Heffernan, who found the incredibly rich field that is now Cue. Tom was away on other business at the time the gold was found. Upon his return he was told of the find by the wildly excited pair but there was a problem. The only horse that was in good enough shape to make the trip to Nannine to register their claim was Tom’s horse, despite the fact it had just finished a hard ride. So, Tom volunteered to make the journey but strangely never put his name on the claim alongside Heffernan and Fitzgerald. Tom Cue was thought to have been born in County Cork, Ireland, somewhere between 1849 and 1855 but as no birth certificate has ever been found, it’s anyone’s guess. Counting back from the date of his death in Canada on 4th September, 1920, at the recorded age of 65, he would have been born in 1855 but the age on the death certificate was either a guess on the part of the medical examiner or a guess by his wife Eugene. The general consensus is he was born in 1850 and was 70 years old at the time of his death.

The store in Casterton, owned by Tom Cue’s parents, where Tom worked until he was 16

The store in Casterton, owned by Tom Cue’s parents, where Tom worked until he was 16

Tom arrived in Victoria at a very young age and travelled with his family to Casterton in south-west Victoria where his father, Thomas George Cue, set up a general store. Young Tom was given a very good education and excelled at sports. He left school to work in his father’s store but at the age of 16 decided he wanted to see the world and headed off to the Victorian goldfields. We know he worked for a short time in a saw mill near Castlemaine but after that nothing is known about him until the early 1890s, when he showed up in WA exhibiting all the signs of having done very well for himself.

The first gold at Cue was found near this small hill. It is fitting that an Aborigine is honoured atop the hill as it was an Aborigine known as ‘Governor’ who led Fitzgerald and Hefferman to the first slugs of gold found there

The first gold at Cue was found near this small hill. It is fitting that an Aborigine is honoured atop the hill as it was an Aborigine known as ‘Governor’ who led Fitzgerald and Hefferman to the first slugs of gold found there

No one knows where Tom made his money but we can speculate. When Tom arrived in the Victorian goldfields there was still good finds of gold being made, and it is possible Tom did well on the diggings. It is also rumoured he had some involvement with the early finds of opal but there is no documentation to substantiate this. Tom often spoke with fondness of the hills and cool mountains of Gippsland but all we know is that he acquired a considerable amount of capital during those unaccounted-for years.

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Arriving in WA it was noted that Tom always stayed at the best hotels in town. Rather than ride a horse with a packhorse in train, Tom travelled everywhere in a horse and trap, probably as it allowed him to carry a comprehensive range of prospecting and mining gear as well as water and other luggage. Teaming up with Michael John Fitzgerald and Edward Hefferman, the three men set out for what is now the Cue district where they made their now famous find. Tom stayed in and around Cue for a few years, becoming involved in other mining ventures and even travelling to Perth where he mixed with politicians and other shakers and movers of the era.

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During this time the train tracks arrived in Cue and, perpetuating the myth that it was Tom who found the gold, the first locomotive into Cue was named the ‘Tom Cue’. During this time Tom returned home to Casterton where his father was in financial difficulties but as all the family papers have been lost, the exact purpose of Tom’s visit isn’t known though we do know his father went bankrupt. Tom’s biggest find was Cue’s Patch 10km north of Lawlers. He had found an immensely rich alluvial patch and reef that others had missed at what was to become Agnew. Naming the mine The Woronga, Tom only stayed for 18 months before selling the mine for a very large sum. The mine must have been a good one as the Ogilvie line of reef was still being worked up until a few years ago. And then once again, Tom simply dropped off the face of the Earth. There were stories that he travelled to the Cloncurry and Chillagoe districts and in the latter was involved in the establishment of the copper mining industry, but again this is only speculation. It is also rumoured that he was at Broken Hill at one time. The next chapter in Tom Cue’s life was a prospecting trip up the Amazon River which he helped finance and organise. And while we know this expedition took place and that Cue was heavily involved, nothing is known about what the expedition uncovered. After the Amazon trip Tom returned to Victoria and met Eugene Spencer Tyson, nee Wills.

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Tom and Eugene travelled to Vancouver, Canada, where they were married and had a daughter they named Eva. Eva never married and died in 1972. The family then travelled to Alaska as by now Tom was an avid mining speculator who journeyed far and wide in search of investment opportunities. At one stage he was known to be in Circle City (just outside the Arctic Circle) but whether for investment purposes or to “take the waters” at the hot springs there is unknown. When he took his family to Dawson City he would have taken the famed White Horse Pass rail line from Skagway to Lake Bennet, then boarded a stern-wheeler below Miles Canyon for the last leg down the fabled Yukon River to Dawson. But, like much of Tom’s life, why he went to Dawson City and what he did there is a mystery. In 1900 Tom and his family were reported as living in Vancouver before returning to Australia in 1902 on the SS Africa, via Cape Town, South Africa. Not long after, Tom returned to Cape Town by himself, giving his age as 51.

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In 1903 he was living in Toorak, Melbourne, and gave his occupation as mining engineer and his age as 55. It’s little wonder there is so much speculation as to the exact date of his birth when Tom himself seemed to have no idea of how old he was.

As befitting a man so shrouded in mystery, there are no known photographs of Tom Cue. In 1991 a couple were fossicking for gold near Cue and found a metal printer’s plate depicting Tom Cue filling his pipe. And that is all we have to identify a man …

As befitting a man so shrouded in mystery, there are no known photographs of Tom Cue. In 1991 a couple were fossicking for gold near Cue and found a metal printer’s plate depicting Tom Cue filling his pipe. And that is all we have to identify a man described as being nearly six feet tall and quite burly

From shipping company records we know that Tom and his family travelled extensively, often taking trips to the United States, Canada, England and back to Australia. What he and his family did when they arrived at those destinations we will never know. Much of this travel might have involved mining and investment but we don’t know for sure. Tom must have invested wisely in many mining companies to have accumulated the kind of wealth that allowed him to travel so extensively. Even in the early days of the great Western Australian gold rushes, there is little evidence that Tom did much actual mining himself. He certainly did some prospecting as evidenced by his big find at what it now Agnew, but there is no reference to him actually getting his hands dirty. Tom, it seems, was willing to invest in others and to share their success when it came.

Tom Cue’s death certificate shows that he died from inflammation of the inner lining of the heart and hardening of the arteries. He lived his last days in Vancouver a long way from the heat and dust of the Australian goldfields. His wife, Eugene, an…

Tom Cue’s death certificate shows that he died from inflammation of the inner lining of the heart and hardening of the arteries. He lived his last days in Vancouver a long way from the heat and dust of the Australian goldfields. His wife, Eugene, and daughter, Eva, moved back to Australia after his death

Some people might think less of a man who lets others get down and dirty then claims a share of their hard work, but in the mining game, and especially prospecting, there would have been far fewer miners and prospectors who could have afforded to get out there and make a go of it if it wasn’t for men like Tom Cue. And any speculator or investor takes a huge risk when grubstaking a prospector or miner. Many was the investor who never saw a penny in return after their original investment disappeared into the hungry earth.

Eugene Cue, the wife of Tom Cue, was originally married to Peter Tyson before divorcing him for drunkenness

Eugene Cue, the wife of Tom Cue, was originally married to Peter Tyson before divorcing him for drunkenness

To further deepen the mystery surrounding Tom Cue, it would appear there has never been a gold lease or a claim with the name Tom Cue, or Thomas George Cue, or simply T. Cue recorded anywhere in Australia. Not even the Woroonga mine which he sold.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Ballarat’s golden “Canadian” connection

By Kevin Ruddick

Visitors to Ballarat will readily notice two 1850s goldrush terms in constant modern commercial use, namely, “Sovereign” and “Eureka”. You can get anything from a Eureka Pizza to pre-cast products from Sovereign Concrete. But another goldrush term, “Canadian”, also gets a pretty good workout, and with regards to gold production, “Canadian” was far more important than either Eureka or Sovereign. This article was originally going to be about an interesting mining relic I found while detecting in the Canadian Forest, on Ballarat’s eastern fringe, however the origins and golden history of all things “Canadian” at Ballarat are so fascinating they deserve some explanation.

The 4-gram bit specked by the author in Canadian Forest

The 4-gram bit specked by the author in Canadian Forest

There are five usages of the word Canadian at Ballarat and, in historical and geographical order, they are: Canadian Gully, Canadian Deep Lead, Canadian Creek, the suburb of Canadian, and Canadian Forest. All have gold, but certainly not in equal proportions. Canadian Gully was first opened at its shallow head in September 1851, probably by the notable David Ham, but more seriously in mid1852. It was named after a Canadian digger called Swift, who prospected there with compatriot Canadians and Americans. But what is the relationship between Canadian Gully and the other “Canadians”? Remembering the adage that a picture is worth a thousand words, I have drawn a flat plan and a vertical cross section through the Canadian Gully (Ballarat East) to clearly explain what a thousand words would struggle to do.

Chunky bits panned in Canadian Creek

Chunky bits panned in Canadian Creek

Harrie Wood’s authoritative Notes on the Ballarat Goldfield informs us that by February 1853, the miners, sinking down to rock bottom (or pipeclay) in the Canadian Gully, started tracing their way down the gully, finding that they had to go to ever greater depths to find rock bottom and the gold. But what fabulous gold awaited them! In the short space of 11 days in January 1853, not one, but three monster nuggets, the likes of which the world had never seen, were found in quick succession. The largest, named the “Sarah Sands”, was at that time the heaviest nugget anyone in the world had ever laid eyes on. The three monsters weighed 1,619 ounces; 1,117 ounces; and 1,011 ounces, the last two being found in the same claim! All the other claims in the gully averaged 420 ounces. As the gully reached the flat below, the golden rock bottom was now so deep it started being referred to as the Canadian Deep Lead. It took a sharp 90-degree turn to the left (north) and the claims were now paying an unbelievable £2,000 per man.

Canadian Creek Gold

But the best was yet to come. When the Canadian Lead amalgamated with the Prince Regent Lead, a small claim on this site called the Blacksmith’s Hole produced an incredible one ton of gold. Remember, this was a small-area claim worked by a windlass and eight men, with only limited short drives. I suspect it was possibly the richest small claim worked by a windlass in the history of the world. I would be interested to hear of any rivals. No wonder the name “Canadian” became famous throughout Europe. And a little further north, where the Canadian Lead entered Dalton’s Flat, another monster nugget of 1,177 ounces, called “The Lady Hotham Nugget”, was found. This nugget and the three monsters already mentioned, would soon be eclipsed by the “Welcome” and the “Welcome Stranger” nuggets. The Sarah Sands nugget remains the fourth largest ever found in Australia, a delirious dream for the four relative new chums who took it back home to England with them on the good ship Sarah Sands, the inspiration for its name. Today, if you’re looking for the historical location of Canadian Gully, you’ll find it behind the fence of the Sovereign Hill Park, at the Park’s southernmost end, where their horses graze and the light show is held. It is parallel, and near to, Elsworth Street and while you won’t be doing any metal detecting there, you can still pan specks in Canadian Creek.

The pulley in its pre-restoration state

The pulley in its pre-restoration state

The creek, at the surface, roughly follows the same course as the Canadian Lead, buried deep below it. I have found many pennyweights there (but not ounces I’m afraid) and some chunky bits too. Thirty or more years ago, my son Chris and his mate, Terry, were poking around in Canadian Creek looking for old bottles rather than gold. Terry looked down and specked a 1.5-ounce nugget right beside the York Street bridge, in the middle of Ballarat suburbia! He still has it. But it’s getting hard to find specks there now and you feel a bit odd panning behind someone’s backyard fence.

The pulley after sand-blasting and painting

The pulley after sand-blasting and painting

The Canadian Forest is another story however, and people certainly detect there. It is so named because it adjoins the suburb of Canadian, but on the other side of the suburb, and nearly 2km from Canadian Gully. There is still plenty of evidence of mining there, with many shallow shafts near the Pax Hill scout camp. A storage dam and head race hint at past ground sluicing, which is also clearly evident. But this was never a big producer like Golden Point or Canadian Gully, and old newspaper references to gold mining in the Canadian Forest are rare. The word is that detectors are finding a few subgram bits there on occasions – very rare occasions I suspect. Then again…one day I was walking my dog on the dirt track just a few metres short of the forest. It had rained that morning, exceptionally heavy rain, the heaviest in my memory, and I was shocked to see that every pebble and grain of sand had been washed clearn away, leaving a smooth, clay road, bereft of any covering. The thought of gold immediately crossed my mind and I kept my eyes peeled as there were several little mine heaps only metres away, right on the road reserve. Lo and behold, a 4-gram nugget was sitting in the clay gutter, completely free of any sand or stones. The rain had washed absolutely everything away, but the nugget, being heavy, just sat there, and was perhaps exposed for the first time ever. I had walked past that little nugget every night for years but it took a freak storm to reveal it. For some inexplicable reason, I get a bigger thrill specking gold than any other way of finding it.

The author’s flat plan of Canadian Gully

The author’s flat plan of Canadian Gully

Vertical cross-section of Canadian Gully drawn by the author

Vertical cross-section of Canadian Gully drawn by the author

I did say this article was originally going to be about a mining relic I’d found, so I’d better get on with it. A few months back I was trying my luck with the detector in the Canadian Forest about 100 metres from where I’d specked the 4-gram bit. I was working around the aforementioned old shallow shafts and heaps when suddenly Above: The pulley in its pre-restoration state Above, right: The pulley after sand-blasting and painting Below: The author’s flat plan of Canadian Gully Bottom: Vertical cross-section of Canadian Gully drawn by the author Australian Gold Gem & Treasure 9 my detector nearly blew its head off. Just under the leaf litter I dug up an old pulley block. It was quite rusty, but the word “Digger” was clearly legible, being cast into the pulley. I can’t be certain, but being in the middle of a goldfield, it’s reasonable to assume that miners used it to help haul up their bucket or kibble.

Bucketload

I took it home to clean it up but it was so rusty it gave the impression that with a little rough treatment, it might fall apart. I took a risk, got it professionally sandblasted and it was surprisingly sound with the detail around the axle now clearly visible. I then primed and spray painted it black. Just for a bit of fun I built a tripod over some old diggings to let the grandkids have a play around with it. I’m sure the miners would have built something much more substantial – probably involving a windlass. Some research on the internet to investigate the “Digger” brand name revealed that a company called Gray’s Pty Ltd from Victoria manufactured picks, shovels, hoes and so on under the brand name “Digger”, but that was all I could ascertain. Maybe someone else can add to the story. My brother-in-law has a great collection of heritage Aussie tools and artifacts in his own backyard patio museum, so my old pulley block has a home to go to where I hope it will be appreciated by many.

Footnote: The Canadian Forest has recently been made into a park by the Victorian government. It is now called Woowookarung Regional Park, in deference to the local Wadawurrung people. Interestingly, detecting is allowed and the remnants of mining have not been destroyed. At 640 hectares, it is one of Ballarat’s best kept secrets. There might still be some gold on offer but the trees, birds, animals and beautiful wildflowers are the real treasures of Ballarat’s Canadian Forest

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Did Dan Kelly and Steve Hart survive the Glenrowan Inn fire?

by Trevor Percival

History tells us that an enterprising woman named Ann Jones established the Glenrowan Inn in 1878 to service travellers, but that it only ran for two years before it was the scene of the last stand the Kelly Gang. By the time the siege was over, with Ned Kelly captured and the rest of the gang dead, the inn had been destroyed by fire, lit by police to flush out gang members. Dan Kelly’s and Steve Hart’s charred bodies were returned to Kelly family members in the evening of the siege, on Monday 28th June, 1880. The body of Joe Byrne, who was killed earlier in the siege by a police bullet, was retrieved unburnt from the inn. Ann Jones’s 13-year-old son, John, and the hostage, Martin Cherry, later died from wounds suffered in the shootout. There were in fact more than 60 hostages in the Glenrowan Inn when the first shots were fired. Ned Kelly was tried, convicted and sentenced to death. He was hung at Old Melbourne Gaol on 11th November, 1880, aged 25. His “reported” last words were “Such is life”. This is what history tells us. But what if some of that history is wrong. What if Dan Kelly and Steve Hart didn’t perish in the Glenrowan Inn fire? One year, while fossicking on Chinaman Creek, I met an elderly gentleman who said he had met Steve Hart’s sister who claimed Dan Kelly had moved north to live in a hut outside of Mitchell in western Queensland. The gentleman, in his travels, had also met Steve Hart who had shown him burn scars on his back and said that he and Dan had hidden in the cellar and escaped during the night. A Queensland Sunday Mail article by Wayne Kelly (no relation to Ned and Dan) which published on 17th July, 1988, said that one person who scoffed at the stories of Dan Kelly’s and Steve Hart’s escape was Frank Rolleston of Eton near Mackay. Rolleston said that because of the rumours of an escape, for years afterwards, any old greybeard camped in isolation was not only suspected of being Dan Kelly but a published series about a man who said he was Dan Kelly had brought protests from at least five other “Dan Kellys” living in various corners of Australia.

Steve Hart Bushranger

But the article also suggested that Dan and Steve, after learning of Ned’s capture and therefore his certain death by hanging, went by ship to Argentina and then to South Africa. Long-time Kelly researcher, Kieran Magill, of Redbank Plains, told the Queensland Sunday Mail that it was indeed possible Dan and Steve had escaped. Mr Magill, who had studied official records of the Kelly Gang, including those of the Royal Commission which followed, said an escape could have been made in the final hours of the Glenrowan siege.

Glenrowan Inn

Glenrowan Inn

Amateur historian, Hilda Hornberg, of Redland Bay, also told of a meeting she had had in Roma in 1933 with Dan Kelly, then in his seventies. Ms Hornberg said Dan was on his way to a station to see Steve Hart and the man calling himself Dan Kelly had shown her and others his burn scars. Another person, J. Hunter, of Ipswich, contacted the Sunday Mail saying his sister, who had been a trainee nurse at Royal Brisbane Hospital, had told of a dying patient with burn scars who said he was Dan Kelly. The man would have been in his eighties. No-one disputes the fact that the remains of two very burnt bodies were later retrieved from the smouldering ruins of the inn and it was simply assumed they were the charred corpses of Dan Kelly and Steve Hart. Their identification however, was solely based on the word of Matthew Gibney, a priest from Western Australia, who was on a trip to the colonies on the east coast of Australia and was travelling by train between Benalla and Albury when he heard about the siege while the train was stopped at Glenrowan. Gibney decided to go and take a look. Gibney had never set eyes on Kelly or Hart but later, when he heroically entered the burning Glenrowan Inn in an attempt to rescue anyone inside, he said he had discovered the then unburnt bodies of Dan Kelly and Hart, who he surmised had committed suicide.

Dan Kelly - Bushranger

Dan Kelly - Bushranger

But the bodies were never positively identified by the police and the Kelly family, who took charge of the blackened remains, refused to give them up for an inquest. In a second Sunday Mail article, this one by Ken Blanch, which published on 26th November, 1989, it was revealed that a man by the name of William Bede Melville, in August 1902, had cabled several Australian newspapers from Capetown in South Africa, that two men had identified themselves to him as Kelly and Hart. Melville, an ex-Sydney pressman, was at one time private secretary to Sir George Dibbs, three times Premier of NSW. Melville said the two Australians were brought to his hotel room in Pretoria one night in Africa at midnight by a mutual acquaintance. What follows is part of Melville’s account of the discussion that took place: “A bottle was opened, pipes were filled and long after midnight, Dan Kelly combed his tangled hair with his fingers and said, ‘Steve here, and me, and Joe Byrne was in that pub all right. Ned got away nicely, and we was to follow him, but Joe Byrne was boozed and we couldn’t pull him together. When we wasn’t watching, he slipped outside and was shot. After that, two drunken coves was shot through the winder. They wanted to have a go at the traps, so we give them rifles, revolvers, powder and shot. The firing where they dropped was too hot for us to reach them, so our rifles and revolvers were found by their remains. This was why they thought we were dead. I’m sorry for those coves as they didn’t take my tip and go out with a flag, but they’d the drink and the devil in them. Well, Steve and me then planned an escape. We was in a trap and we had to get out of it. The next thing was how to leave the pub.

Joe Byrne - Bushranger

Joe Byrne - Bushranger

We had spare troopers’ uniforms with caps that we always carried so we put them on. There were some trees and logs at the back so we hung along the ground for a few yards and then blazed away at the pub just like the troopers and you couldn’t tell us from the bloomin’ traps. We retreated from tree to tree and bush to bush, pretending to take cover. Soon, we was amongst the scattered traps and we banged away at the bloomin’ shanty more than any of them. The traps came from a hundred miles around and only some of them knowed each other. They didn’t know us anyhow. They couldn’t tell us from themselves. We worked back into the timber and got away. Soon afterwards, we saw the old house nearly burnt to the ground and we thanked our stars we was not burnt alive. Well, we got to a friend’s (shepherd’s) hut and we stayed three days and the shepherd brought us papers with whole pages about our terrible end, and burnt up bodies and all that sort of stuff. We read of Ned’s capture and we was for taking to the bush again, but the shepherd made us promise to leave Australia quietly. He gave us clothes and money. We got to Sydney and shipped to Argentina. We had a good time of it and didn’t get interfered with and we didn’t interfere with anybody also. We pretty much kept to ourselves so as not to bring attention to us. A few years ago we crossed to South Africa where the Boer War broke out, and being out of work, we went to the front. We had some narrer escapes but nothing like the Glenrowan pub. We’re off in an hour or so but we don’t want the world to know. You can say what I tell you, but wait three weeks or a month. Listen, if you give us away, this little thing in my hand, a friend of mine, will blow you out.’ And he put the point of the revolver into my eye. I looked at him sharply, and the awful glare in his eyes and the suspicion that convulsed his face, convinced me he meant it. The other day, six weeks later, I was surprised to encounter Dan Kelly and Steve Hart in Adderley Street, Capetown. ‘Well,’ said Kelly, ‘You kept your promise. We have not been interfered with. You may write what you like after termorrow.’ I did not enquire about their destination and they did not volunteer the information.”

Ned Kelly at Old Melbourne Gaol

Ned Kelly at Old Melbourne Gaol

Some more of the details in Melville’s account appeared years later in a story that published on 18th December, 2007, in the Brisbane Courier Mail. The article was accompanied by a photograph of Mr Collin Sippel of Murgon. Mr Sippel and Bill Roberts, a former Mayor of Murgon, were investigating the deathbed confession of a gentleman, Bill Meade, who had died in the nearby Wondai Hospital in 1938. Meade went to his grave claiming he was actually Steve Hart of the Kelly Gang. Mr Sipple was six-years-old when he first met Meade who taught him leatherwork when he was living in the Redgate area near Murgon. Mr Roberts had also known Meade in his younger days. There was talk of raising money to have the body of Meade exhumed for modern DNA testing. Mr Sipple and Mr Roberts said the Bill Meade they remembered was similar in stature, appearance and age to early photographs of Hart. In September of 2009 I rang Mr Sipple to enquire how the investigation was progressing and was told that they were having problems in raising enough money or getting a sponsor to invest in the process of finding out if Bill Meade’s statement that he was Steve Hart, was true or false. Nothing ever came of the matter and Bill Meade’s bones lie undisturbed in his grave. Bill Meade was 78 or 79 when he died in 1938 so he would have been born around 1860 making him either 20 or 21 at the time of the Glenrowan fire. Steve Hart was born on 13th February, 1859. He was 21 when he “died” at the siege of the Glenrowan Inn.

So, did Dan Kelly and Steve Hart make it out of the burning Glenrowan Inn all the way to Argentina and then to South Africa to fight in the Boer War, before returning to Australia decades later? The truth might never be known but it makes a good story all the same.

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Rhys Thomas Rhys Thomas

Head across to the Apple Isle for some gold and gems

By Jim Foster

In the three times we have visited Tasmania, and having spent almost six months in total in the Apple Isle, we had never done any prospecting simply because we didn’t think there would be much, if any, reward for our efforts. It just goes to show how wrong you can be. In fact, gold can be found in many places in Tasmania. We didn’t know it at the time but when we visited Corinna on the Pieman River on the west coast, we were very close to the Whyte River goldfield. We even climbed over a huge moss-covered quartz blow out on the Whyte River walking track that could have shed gold. We did visit a couple of gold towns but these were built to service deep mines and we weren’t aware of any alluvial workings in those places. The fact we didn’t have our detectors made it a moot point, but when we return to the Apple Isle next year we won’t be making the same mistake. Gold is thought to have first been discovered by a convict at Nine Mile Springs near Lefroy, in north-eastern Tasmania, in 1840.

Then, it is said, John Gardner found gold-bearing quartz in 1847 on Blythe Creek, near Beaconsfield. Officially however, the first payable alluvial deposits were reported in the north-east of the state in 1852 by James Grant at the Nook, also known as Mangana, and Tower Hill Creek. And the first registered gold strike (2lb 10oz) was made by Charles Gould at Tullochgoram in the east, near Fingal, south of St. Marys.

A very beautiful ounce-plus nugget from the Lefroy area of Tasmania

A very beautiful ounce-plus nugget from the Lefroy area of Tasmania

Alluvial and reef gold was then found in the many creeks running into the Pieman River near Waratah, and into the Whyte and Hazelwood Rivers on the west coast. Having been to the Pieman and Whyte, I can attest to how rough and wild the terrain is and I have no desire to brave the leech- and mosquito-infested wilderness of the Whyte or Pieman goldfields to do a little prospecting, despite the fact there is still good gold to be found there. Everything I have read and heard about Tasmanian gold these days is that it is mostly sub-gram stuff. While that might be true in many areas, there are still nuggets being found down there that tip the scales at more than an ounce. We actually don’t mind what size it is – gold is gold and as we only prospect for fun these days, we get as much satisfaction and pleasure out of a pretty one grammer as we do out of a 1-ouncer. As a bloke once said to me “Anyone can find the big lumps but it takes real skill to find the flyspecks.”

Tasmania has designated fossicking areas for both gold and gemstones. No license is required to work these areas

Tasmania has designated fossicking areas for both gold and gemstones. No license is required to work these areas

Looking at maps of the Tasmanian goldfields we see that they range from the east coast to the west and are concentrated in the north. The biggest blank space is down in the south-west but that’s because most of that incredible wilderness has never been explored let alone prospected. At Specimen Hill, Nine Mile Springs (now Lefroy) in the north-east, the first alluvial gold was discovered by Samuel Richards in 1869.

As can been seen from this map of just the north-east corner of Tasmania, there are plenty of goldfields but you do need a license and permission for most of them

As can been seen from this map of just the north-east corner of Tasmania, there are plenty of goldfields but you do need a license and permission for most of them

Reef gold was actually identified at this location in 1867 with production mainly restricted to the Native Youth, Chum, Volunteer and New Pinafore Reef mines.

An SDC2300 is probably the best detector for Tasmania. The small coil is ideal for tight undergrowth and the detector’s ability to find tiny scraps of gold means you’re more likely to find at least some of the right stuff

An SDC2300 is probably the best detector for Tasmania. The small coil is ideal for tight undergrowth and the detector’s ability to find tiny scraps of gold means you’re more likely to find at least some of the right stuff

News of Richards’s discovery precipitated the first big rush to Nine Mile Springs and a township quickly developed beside the present main road from Bell Bay to Bridport. Dozens of miners pegged out claims there and at nearby Back Creek, and the usual goods and services providers followed in their wake.

A specimen from the Apple Isle

A specimen from the Apple Isle

While the Specimen Hill find was alluvial gold, most of the gold in the Nine Mile Springs area was bonded to quartz below the surface. Consequently, companies moved in to crush the ore and the Lefroy Goldfield became the first profitable goldfield in the colony.

Osmiridium nuggets aren’t worth as much as gold but at around $560 an ounce, they’re not chicken feed either

Osmiridium nuggets aren’t worth as much as gold but at around $560 an ounce, they’re not chicken feed either

The largest gold nugget ever found in Tasmania weighed more than 243 ounces and was found in 1883 by J. McGinty, D. Neil, and T. Richards at Rocky River in the north-west near the township of Golden Ridge. It should be noted that more gold was obtained from the surrounding area than the famous Golden Ridge itself. Overall nearly 30,000 ounces of gold was won from this location. If you want to do some detecting in Tasmania my advice is to join the Prospectors and Miners Association of Tasmania (PMAT). They have members who know Tasmania very well and they can put you onto the best proclaimed fossicking areas around the state. They also have a forum which will enable you to garner a great deal of useful information. But if gemstones are more to your liking, you’ll be pleased to know that Tasmania is literally awash with them. One of the most popular and easy-to-get-to spots if it’s sapphires you want, is at Weldborough in the north-east on the Weld River. While you’re there the Weldborough Hotel is well worth a visit and there is a camping ground right beside the Weld River.

A handful of Weld River sapphires. Most Tasmanian sapphires have been found in the creeks and rivers that drain the Blue Tier and Mt Paris area in the north-east of the state

A handful of Weld River sapphires. Most Tasmanian sapphires have been found in the creeks and rivers that drain the Blue Tier and Mt Paris area in the north-east of the state

Osmiridium is another metal that is popular with prospectors in Tasmania at the moment. It is a natural alloy of the elements osmium and iridium, with traces of other platinum-group metals, and at the time of writing was fetching about US$400 an ounce. The main use for osmiridium was as hard, durable tips for fountain pen nibs however the popularity of ballpoint pens led to a huge reduction in the market for fountain pens and hence for osmiridium, although the alloy has some other uses. You can readily research osmiridium on the internet and while it might not be worth as much as gold, it’s still an interesting metal to find. Goldfields in Tasmania are generally much smaller than in Victoria or Western Australia and most are on private land or leases, or both.

If you go gold prospecting or gemstone fossicking on Tasmania’s west coast without the right gear and a whole lot of experience, at least leave a note for the coroner

If you go gold prospecting or gemstone fossicking on Tasmania’s west coast without the right gear and a whole lot of experience, at least leave a note for the coroner

Local knowledge is a must if you want to access goldfields that are not proclaimed fossicking areas. Prospecting opportunities in Tasmania also depend on the type of country you’re in. Much of the northern area of the state compares favourably with parts of Victoria but the west coast goldfields such as the Tarkine, Whyte River and Pieman goldfields are in dense temperate rainforests where even the locals get lost. But if you’re prepared to brave the wild west, make sure you’re carrying whatever it takes to ward off the marauding armies of leeches, sand flies and mosquitoes. If you’re interested in prospecting for gold or gemstones in Tasmania you’ll find a great deal of information online as well as on the Tasmanian Detecting club’s forum. Simply visiting Tasmania as a tourist is extremely rewarding but throw in some prospecting or fossicking, like Cheryl and I plan on doing next year, and your visit will be even more memorable.

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