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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Travels in Western Australia, by May
-Vivienne
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Travels in Western Australia
- being a description of the various cities and towns, goldfields,
- and agricultural districts of that state
-
-Author: May Vivienne
-
-Release Date: October 19, 2022 [eBook #69184]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: MWS and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
- Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRAVELS IN WESTERN
-AUSTRALIA ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-TRAVELS IN WESTERN AUSTRALIA
-
-
-
-
-TRAVELS IN WESTERN AUSTRALIA
-
-
-Some Press Opinions of the First Edition
-
-_The Daily Chronicle_: “This book is a pleasant and interesting one; it
-tells what somebody really saw and felt, not what somebody thought the
-proper thing to say. The average man will find May Vivienne a delightful
-and exhilarating guide to the still only half-understood pleasures and
-resources of Western Australia.”
-
-_The Empire Review_: “It contains much first-hand information, clearly
-given, concerning the cities, goldfields, and agricultural districts
-of Western Australia. It is well illustrated, and will be found a most
-useful work of reference.”
-
-_The Financial Times_: “Among the several books published dealing
-with Western Australia, we know of few, if any, which are at once so
-entertaining and so instructive as this volume. Any one who desires
-to obtain in a most pleasant way a good general knowledge of this
-distant colony could scarcely do better than purchase this book. As a
-mere record of travel, apart from its special interest as dealing with
-a gold-producing colony, it is well worth reading, and it contains a
-profusion of interesting illustrations.”
-
-_The Pall Mall Gazette_: “Miss Vivienne knows her Westralia up and down;
-she takes us to farms and timber estates; she has visited the goldfields
-more than once, inspected all the chief mines, pegged a claim with her
-own hand, and pluckily traversed the pioneer fringe of civilisation.
-Her delightful journeys, which (with admirable illustrations) take us
-over the whole country, reveal its astounding promise, which has already
-largely become performance.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _John Forrest_]
-
-
-
-
- TRAVELS IN
- WESTERN AUSTRALIA
-
- BEING A DESCRIPTION OF THE VARIOUS
- CITIES AND TOWNS, GOLDFIELDS, AND
- AGRICULTURAL DISTRICTS
- OF THAT STATE
-
- BY
- MAY VIVIENNE
-
- WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- [Illustration]
-
- LONDON
- WILLIAM HEINEMANN
- 1902
-
- _First Edition, May 1901_
- _Second Edition, January 1902_
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
-
-
- “_He Masters whose Spirit Masters_”
-
- DEDICATED TO
- THE RIGHT HON. SIR JOHN FORREST
- P.C., K.C.M.G., G.C.M.G.
- EX-PREMIER OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA
- AND
- MINISTER FOR FEDERAL DEFENCE
- IN THE COMMONWEALTH
- OF
- UNITED AUSTRALIA
-
- “_Steer thou with good strong hand and wary eye, oh Helmsman_”
-
-
-
-
-_AUTHOR’S NOTE_
-
-
-_Some readers may be disposed to question the accuracy of my statements
-regarding the mines, and the actual wealth in gold of the State. I can
-assure them that these statements are absolutely devoid of exaggeration,
-and capable of being easily verified._
-
-_This is true also of what is said respecting timber, fruits, and
-agricultural produce._
-
-_Finally, my hope in issuing this volume is that it may induce people not
-only to visit but to settle in Western Australia, and so share in the
-benefits offered by its prolific tracts._
-
- _M. V._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- Albany—Sweet Boronia—Middleton Beach—Little
- Grove—Regatta—Buildings—Whaling—Old Colonists—Travelling
- Dairy—Splendid Vegetables—Wattle Farm—Porongurup—Land
- Regulations—King George’s Sound Pp. 1-14
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- Torbay—Denmark Timber Mills—Mount
- Barker—Katanning—Wagin—Narrogin—Beverly—York—Lovely
- Wildflowers Pp. 15-28
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- Perth—Public Buildings—Yacht Clubs—Government House—Recreation
- Ground—Lovely Perth Park—“Bond or Free” Pp. 29-40
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- Darling Quarries—Kalayamba Vineyard—Mr. Brookman—Lady
- Forrest—Cambria—Mayor of Perth—Mr. Hackett—Canning Park
- Races Pp. 41-46
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- The Museum—Flower Show—Musical—Native Risings—Zoo—South
- Perth—The Old Mill—Moonlight Pp. 49-69
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- Drive to Claremont—Osborne—Keane’s Point—The
- Chine—Cottesloe—The Ocean—North Fremantle—Arthur’s
- Head—Smelting Works—Our Contingent—Fremantle Pp. 70-83
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- Rottnest—Steam to Rottnest—The Lovely River—Crawley Point—The
- Island—Boys’ Orphanage—Fremantle Harbour Pp. 84-89
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- Guildford—Henley Park—Hunting—Mundaring Weir—Sir John
- Forrest—Darling Nurseries—Kelmscott—Armadale—Jarrahdale—Whitby
- Falls—Mandurah—Yarloop Mills—Harvey—Collie Coalfields Pp. 90-105
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- Bunbury—Exploring Days—The Estuary—Early Times—Whaling—Native
- Murder—Mr. Layman—Retribution—Pasture Land—Robert Scott—Old
- Residents Pp. 106-117
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- Dardanup Park—Donnybrook—Bridgetown—The Grange—Dallgarrup—A
- Prodigious Prize—Greenbushes—Tinfield—The Great Forest Pp. 118-123
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- Busselton—Napoleon’s Grave—Cattle Chosen—“All
- aboard”—Karridale—Touring the Forest—King Karri—The Sand
- Patch Pp. 124-136
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- Deepdene Caves—Margaret Caves—A Welcome Lunch—Cape Leeuwin Pp. 137-147
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- Pretty Newcastle—Oranges!—New Norcia—Native Love—The
- Mission—Northam—The Grand Old Man—Ploughing Match—Oat Crop—The
- Show Pp. 148-158
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- Southern Cross—Early Discoveries of Gold—Heavy Tramps—Walking
- on Gold—Bayley’s Reward—Fabulous Finds—The Potato
- Ground—Bayley’s Death—The 90-Mile—The Treasure House—Great
- Boulder Find—The Londonderry Pp. 159-175
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- Coolgardie—The Camels are Coming—The Landlord’s Record—Meeting
- a Friend—A Goldfields Camp—“Nap”—The Reward Mine—Bonnie
- Vale—Londonderry—Nearly Lost—King Solomon’s Mine—Hampton
- Plains Pp. 176-195
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- The Golden Butterfly—Norseman—Gold Exhibits—Coolgardie—Alluvial
- Treasures Pp. 196-203
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- Kalgoorlie City—The Six Great Mines in the Golden Mile—Mr.
- Kaufman—Early Predictions Verified—Associated—Lake View Consols
- and Great Boulder Pp. 204-223
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- The Ivanhoe—The Famous Stope—Climbing the Ladders—Boulder
- Perseverance—The Rock Drill—Down 500 Feet in a Bucket—Blasting
- the Rock—British Westralia Syndicate—Mr. Frank Gardner and our
- own Zeb. Lane—Kalgoorlie Again—Wages on the Mines—Yield of the
- Goldfields Pp. 224-236
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- Kanowna—The Great Alluvial Rush—Big Nuggets—“The Joker”—Father
- Long’s Golden Sickle—Nobility Represented—Bulong Pp. 237-245
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- Broad Arrow—Menzies—Rich Mines—Lady Shenton—Luncheon in the
- Caverns of the Earth—Hon. H. J. Saunders—Welcome Tea and
- Cake—Native Murder—A Lost Prospector—Cake of Gold—Box-seat
- of the Coach—Mount Malcolm—Gold Escort—Windmills and Fresh
- Water Pp. 246-256
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
- A New Field—Mertondale—Stupendous Richness—Gold, Gold
- Everywhere—A Lucky Prospector—Garden in the Bush—Murrin!
- Murrin!—A Welcome Surprise—Western Australian Mount
- Morgans—Golden Hills—Blackfellows on the Trail—The Lagoon Pp. 257-268
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
- Laverton—Excitement among the Miners—Bachelors and Grass
- Widowers—More Souvenirs—Lucky Discoveries—Erlistoun—Lost—Eagle
- Nugget—Euro Mine—Hospitality in the Bush Pp. 269-279
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
- Leonora—The Gwalia Mines—In a Gingerbeer Cart—More Nuggets—Gold
- Blocks—Pastoral Land—Swampers—Scarcity of the Fair Sex—Saturday
- Life—Alas, poor Prospectors! Pp. 280-291
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
- Lawlers—Splendid Vegetables—Waiting for a Samaritan—Mount Sir
- Samuel—While the Billy boils—The Kangaroo—Lake Way—Across the
- Country—The “Back-blocks”—Camping Out—Arrival at Nannine—Bed
- Once More—Splendid Mines of the Murchison—Peak Hill—The Gold
- Patch—An Old Friend—A Hearty Welcome Pp. 292-312
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
- Tuckanarra—The Lights of Cue—Surprising Vegetation—Sweet
- Flowers Again—High Wages—Splendid Meat—The Island—The
- Mirage—Jolly Faces—Mount Magnet—Donkeys—A Tasteful Camp—The
- Morning Star—Windsor Castle Pp. 313-324
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
- Yalgoo—A Cold Welcome—Native Shepherds—Geraldton—Pearls—The
- Abrolhos—Dutch Navigators—Aborigines—Finis Pp. 325-344
-
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- _Page_
-
- _The Right Hon. Sir John Forrest_ _Frontispiece_
-
- _Bird’s-eye View of Albany_ 1
-
- _The_ “Omrah” _at Albany_ 1
-
- _A Part of Kendinup Station_ 5
-
- _Civilised Aborigines at Kendinup Station_ 11
-
- _The Residency, Albany_ 13
-
- _The Homestead, Kendinup Station_ 17
-
- _Hauling Logs at the Mills_ 19
-
- _Ready for Cross-cutting, Denmark Mills_ 23
-
- _York_ 25
-
- _Moirs’ Buildings_ 29
-
- _Swan River, Perth_ 29
-
- _Hay Street, Perth_ 31
-
- _Perth Railway Station_ 33
-
- _Melville Water_ 35
-
- _Perth Water_ 37
-
- _Mount Eliza and Swan River_ 43
-
- _St. George’s Terrace_ 47
-
- _City of Perth_ 53
-
- _Aboriginal Camp_ 55
-
- _Driving in Perth Park, at the Summit_ 59
-
- _Gathering Wildflowers_ 63
-
- _South Perth from the Banks of the Swan_ 67
-
- _Fremantle Pier_ 70
-
- _Freshwater Bay, Claremont_ 73
-
- _North Fremantle_ 77
-
- _High Street, Fremantle_ 81
-
- _Government House, Perth_ 87
-
- _Hon. H. J. Saunders_ 91
-
- _Government Bore, near Mundaring_ 93
-
- _Lunatic Asylum, Western Australia_ 99
-
- _Paper Bark Tree_ 106
-
- _Lady Forrest_ 109
-
- _Bunbury_ 115
-
- _Blackwood River_ 118
-
- _Davies’ Karridale Timber Station_ 129
-
- _Felling the Giant Karri_ 132
-
- _The Sand Patch_ 133
-
- _Cave_ 139
-
- _Lighthouse_ 145
-
- _Newcastle_ 149
-
- _Avon River_ 157
-
- _Camel Water Train going to Coolgardie_ 159
-
- _Teams Returned to Southern Cross from Coolgardie_ 163
-
- _Bakery and Miners’ Camp, Southern Cross_ 166
-
- _Bayley’s Reward Mine—Underlay Shaft_ 169
-
- _Bayley Street, Coolgardie, 1897_ 176
-
- _Early Days, Coolgardie_ 177
-
- _Water Condenser—Filling the Water-bag_ 183
-
- _Burbanks Grand Junction Mine_ 187
-
- _Vale of Coolgardie Mine_ 188
-
- _Jubilee at Red Hill Mine_ 191
-
- _Golden Butterfly Nugget_ 196
-
- _The Main Shaft. Butterfly Leases_ 197
-
- _The Miners’ Holiday_ 201
-
- _Hannan Street, Kalgoorlie, 1898_ 204
-
- _Palace Hotel, Kalgoorlie_ 207
-
- _Hannan Street, Kalgoorlie, Early Days_ 208
-
- _Great Boulder Mine and Offices from Lake View Consols_ 213
-
- _Overlooking the Great Boulder_ 215
-
- _Hannan’s Star Mine_ 217
-
- _The Ivanhoe Mine_ 219
-
- _Mr. Zebina Lane_ 221
-
- _Roll-up at the Boulder Perseverance Mine_ 226
-
- _Lane’s Shaft, Boulder Perseverance Mine_ 227
-
- _Mr. Frank L. Gardner_ 231
-
- _Hannan’s Public Crushing Company_ 233
-
- _Central Boulder Mines and Manager’s House_ 234
-
- _Saturday Afternoon at Kanowna_ 237
-
- _Deep Lead, Kanowna_ 240
-
- _Alluvial Diggings, Kanowna_ 243
-
- _Hill End Mine—Broad Arrow_ 246
-
- _Part of Lady Shenton Battery_ 248
-
- _Messrs. A. Forrest and J. Dunn on a Prospecting Tour_ 251
-
- _Merton’s Find, Mertondale_ 257
-
- _Mr. Alick Forrest Inspecting Dunn’s Shaft near Mount Morgans_ 261
-
- _Westralian Mount Morgans Mine_ 265
-
- _Mine at Laverton_ 269
-
- _Miners’ Camp, Laverton_ 273
-
- _Sons of Gwalia Mine, Mount Leonora_ 280
-
- _Camels at Diorite King_ 285
-
- _Auction Sale, Goldfields (Tin Hotel)_ 287
-
- _Off by Coach to Lawlers_ 292
-
- _Lake Way Gold Mine_ 293
-
- _Kangaroo_ 297
-
- _A Well near Lake Way_ 300
-
- _Lubra and Pickaninny_ 301
-
- _Dry-blowing in the Golden West_ 307
-
- _Mine at Cue_ 313
-
- _Inclined Shaft, Cue One Mine_ 315
-
- _Colonel North’s Expedition to Mount Magnet_ 319
-
- _Donkey Team, Mount Magnet_ 323
-
- _Marine Terrace, Geraldton_ 327
-
- _Four Generations of the Western Australian Native_ 334
-
- _Aborigines with Spears_ 338
-
- _Distant View of Fremantle_ 341
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Bird’s-Eye View of Albany]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
- Albany—Sweet Boronia—Middleton Beach—Little
- Grove—Regatta—Buildings—Whaling—Old Colonists—Travelling
- Dairy—Splendid Vegetables—Wattle Farm—Porongurup—Land
- Regulations—King George’s Sound.
-
-
-[Illustration: The _Omrah_ at Albany]
-
-Having travelled all over Tasmania, Queensland, New South Wales,
-Victoria, and South Australia (now United Australia), I one day made up
-my mind to set out for the land of gold, Western Australia, that has
-created such a _furore_ in these last few years. Accordingly I took
-my passage from Sydney in the mail-steamer _Omrah_ and, after a very
-charming voyage on board that splendid vessel, landed at Albany. It was a
-lovely day, and the first things that pleasantly greeted the passengers
-on stepping from the tug-boat to the wharf were various small boys with
-huge bunches of the exquisite-smelling boronia, of which I had often
-heard. Pretty little Albany looked charming. The day was really perfect
-in its loveliness; the country round looked like an exquisite emerald
-robe fringed with pearl and sapphire, the grand blue mountains in the
-distance, the opal sea, with its white-winged yachts and various sailing
-vessels lying at anchor in beautiful Princess Royal Harbour; the blue
-sky above, with here and there a tiny white cloud like a dove carrying
-a message to heaven; the matchless wild flowers springing around in
-profusion, and the scent of the sweet boronia wafting on the breeze from
-the gullies, where it grows in such luxuriance that one wonders no scent
-farm has been started to distil the exquisite perfume, made the drive
-taken by most of us before lunch most delightful. The peacefulness of
-this charming place was broken only by the arrival of the great steamers,
-with their crowds of passengers, who always went ashore for an hour or
-so, some of them to take the train _en route_ to Perth, Fremantle, or the
-goldfields; the others, after driving, lunching, or dining, as time will
-allow, at the Freemasons’ Hotel (where I put up for a week), returning to
-the steamer to continue their passage “home,” as all we Australians call
-dear mother England.
-
-After an excellent lunch at the above-named hotel we set out to view the
-surroundings of Albany.
-
-On that day everything really looked so beautiful that one might
-believe Nature to have put on her most attractive garb for us, as if to
-say, “Why go from here?” Driving round the Marine Drive to Middleton
-Beach, we thought nothing could be lovelier than the view to which no
-attraction seemed wanting. The calm and stillness were broken only by a
-few other tourists, also feasting their eyes on this scene of beauty.
-It is a five-mile drive to Middleton Beach. The beach forms a circle
-of some three miles. Mount Clarence is in the background; in front is
-the land-locked Princess Royal Harbour, with its narrow gateway for the
-passage of ships; tiny bays surround it, and the picturesque islands
-look like so many lions guarding the portal. This is a favourite place
-for picnics; family parties are often here in numbers; the water is
-so limpid and shallow that children can dabble about to their hearts’
-content; the sand is beautifully white and firm, and many little spades
-and buckets are employed in making sandhouses. Afternoon tea-parties are
-also quite an institution; it is considered quite “the thing” to bring a
-party of friends to tea, and, if you do not wish to have it _al fresco_,
-there is the pretty Esplanade Hotel, where everything, from afternoon
-teas to wedding breakfasts, is served up in most excellent fashion.
-
-Another beauteous spot near Albany is Little Grove. The day I went the
-steamer was full, it being a holiday. Launches were plying from jetty
-to jetty, taking parties of picnickers to the pretty shady groves. A
-regatta was also being held, and many people were watching it. It was
-a pretty sight to see the contest of the boats as they sailed merrily
-round the lovely bay. The weather was exquisite, but a strong breeze
-was blowing; good seamanship was called into play in the sailing of the
-yachts and robust muscular exertion in the rowing events. Albany may well
-be called the sanatorium of the colony. The air is so invigorating that,
-after being there only a few days, one feels almost a new being. Any one
-suffering from brain fag or exhaustion cannot do better than go to Albany
-for a holiday. One need only look at the faces of the children, see their
-healthy looks, bright eyes and general activity, to know that they have
-been born and brought up amongst healthy surroundings. One feature of the
-children is their beautiful hair; many possess such luxuriant tresses
-that one feels inclined to envy the lovely colour and beauty of them, and
-to wish one also had been born in Albany.
-
-The town possesses some very good buildings, and, although not of very
-large extent, is well laid out. It lies between the Mounts Clarence and
-Melville, and the many dwellings on the hillsides give it a most quaint
-and charming appearance. The principal places are the Town Hall, Post
-Office, Customs House Office, and large sheds, also some fine stores.
-There are still some very old structures standing, for Albany is an old
-town, Princess Royal Harbour having been called after the daughter of
-King George of England. The old-fashioned church of St. John has been
-beautified by the hand of time and adorned with a mantle of ivy green.
-Many stone cottages show the primitive way of building that prevailed in
-1836. The gaol, built about that year, and in much the same style, still
-exists, but the stocks then in use have almost disappeared. A very old
-woman to whom I was speaking told me she remembered three women at a time
-being put into them. Other evidences of days gone by are immense heaps of
-bleached whalebones lying about in some parts. Albany was once a fishing
-village frequented by traders of all countries, who did a large trade in
-whale-oil, seals, &c., and exchanged for these things not only coin but
-also potatoes and fruit. There were evidently stirring times in Albany in
-those early days, and it was not an uncommon thing to see nine whales at
-a time disporting themselves in the harbour. The huge mail-steamers must
-have frightened them all away, for a whale is now a rare visitor. I spent
-a pleasant hour at the house of Mr. J. McKenzie, which in the ’fifties
-was the only hotel in Albany, and was known as The Thistle. It was also
-the general concert-hall and theatre. There were no theatrical companies
-in Western Australia in those days, and the small community used to get
-up its own entertainments without aid from outside. Among the relics
-cherished by Mr. McKenzie is the speaking-trumpet used by his father, a
-master mariner, an imposing-looking instrument of brass, something like a
-cornet. A magnificent double-pearl shell, with five or six lovely pearls
-embedded in its sides, must be of great value.
-
-One of the most prominent early colonists was Captain John Hassell,
-who, after calling two or three times in his brig the _Belinda_, being
-wrecked, and undergoing many hardships, was still so much attracted by
-the splendid locality that he resolved to settle here, took another
-trip to Sydney, N.S.W., and returned with his family in 1838, bringing
-with him 700 sheep, 12 horses, 20 head of cattle, poultry, 15 men, also
-rations for twelve months. Captain Hassell went first to Strawberry
-Hill and afterwards to Kendinup Station, where a fine mansion stands,
-which now belongs to his son, John Hassell. It comprises 41,144 acres of
-freehold and 122,000 acres of leasehold property; the area is 225 square
-miles, and there are 320 miles of fencing on it. 6000 sheep are on the
-run, and one magnificent flock of imported sheep cost Mr. Hassell £4000.
-The samples of wool I saw from this station are really splendid. There
-is a plentiful supply of water, one well being 80 feet deep, and nearly
-always full. There are 30 civilised natives on the station, photographs
-of five of whom are here given.
-
-[Illustration: A PART OF KENDINUP STATION]
-
-Albany has been connected with the capital by rail since 1886; previous
-to that time the overland journey of more than 300 miles was made by
-mail-coach or private conveyance over a very lonely road. The first
-railway here was negotiated by the late Mr. Anthony Hordern, of Sydney,
-N.S.W., and constructed under the land-grant system by a company of
-which he was director-chairman. Mr. Hordern took up large grants of land
-near Albany, having a high opinion of its agricultural possibilities.
-He had also large schemes for the future of the south-west part of the
-colony, and intended to build agricultural colleges to teach people how
-to use the splendid soil to advantage. Unfortunately Mr. Hordern did not
-live to complete the schemes; he died at sea, and a splendid monument
-to his memory tops the incline of the principal street in Albany. The
-late Premier, Sir John Forrest, said he remembered taking a journey from
-Albany to Perth in 1880, when the coach broke down at a distance of some
-40 or 50 miles from the town, and it was necessary to get a team and
-travel by it another 40 or 50 miles; also many other difficulties were
-encountered before arriving at Perth, and the journey took a week. My
-own experiences when I visited this colony in 1882 were worse than the
-Premier’s. I landed in Albany with a party of four others; we hired two
-conveyances and four horses, paying £50 for them, provisioned for ten
-days, and set off through the sand and bush. As it took us sixteen days
-to perform the journey, as very little food could be obtained anywhere,
-and as we arrived at our journey’s end with only two horses, the other
-two having died on the way, the pleasures of that expedition can better
-be imagined than described.
-
-The garden lands which lie in the valleys close to the town are being
-largely cultivated, and selectors from England and elsewhere are
-frequently arriving with the intention of taking up selections, and
-undertaking dairy farming and market gardening. The new travelling dairy
-instituted by the Government will be a great boon; it will have all the
-latest appliances, and the plant will be erected in places where the
-people have not facilities for making butter, &c., and persons who do not
-understand the process can be instructed. The yield from this district
-is one ton of hay, or fifteen bushels of wheat, per acre. This quantity
-has been exceeded at Toobrunup Lake, where the yield was twenty bushels
-per acre. Further proof of the fertility of the soil is given by the fact
-that cabbages grown at Mr. Horton’s selection weighed from 20 to 30 lb.,
-and grew to maturity in thirteen weeks. Forty-two tons of cabbage came
-off three acres of land last year, and brought £10 per ton. Potatoes from
-the farm at Strawberry Hill, cultivated 60 years ago by Sir R. Spencer,
-weigh over a pound each, so that at dinner you are not asked to take
-potatoes but a part of one. These potatoes are really stupendous; one
-that I had in my hand I measured, and found it to be nearly a foot long,
-and wide in proportion! Seventy tons of these gigantic tubers, grown
-without the aid of any fertilisers, were taken from nine acres. Turnips
-flourish in the same way and grow to the weight of 3 and 5 lb. It is not
-“some pumpkins,” as they say in America, but “some turnips,” as they say
-in Australia. Onions also grow to an immense size, often weighing over 6
-lb. each.
-
-Albany and its surroundings are really as near perfection as it is
-possible for any place to be. It has a heavenly summer climate, the
-coolest in Australia. A day is considered hot if the mercury rises above
-80°. During the week of the terrible heat-wave, when in other parts
-of the colony the temperature was from 110° to 115°, the record heat
-here was 95°. There are never by any chance hot winds. The grass is
-always green and flowers are always blooming. With its miles of harbour
-frontage, its lovely valleys nestling at the foot of its grand hills, its
-beautiful river, and the natural drainage which keeps the little town
-always clean and healthy, no wonder it should be regarded as the very
-choicest of health resorts. The rainfall is abundant, and the district
-seldom suffers from frost. The winters are very mild, snow has only been
-known to fall two or three times, and then was so novel a sight as to
-excite wonder in all the native-born Albanians. Last winter, however, Mr.
-Knight, of Wattle Farm, carted into town a huge snowball that had been
-rolled on his farm in the Porongurup ranges, which then were covered with
-snow, and afforded the grandest spectacle ever seen here. At Mr. Knight’s
-farm and orchard some magnificent fruit is grown, the apples being
-sometimes over a pound in weight. I shall never forget the lovely sight
-of that orchard. It is on an elevation of 1200 feet above the sea-level,
-and commands a view of the rich and fertile valleys around. The soil is
-of a rich deep chocolate colour, and the country is stated by experts to
-be volcanic.
-
-Besides being endowed with beauty and richness of soil, Albany is likely
-to become famous as a coal- and gold-producing district, for coal has
-recently been found, and a company which will make further researches
-formed. Timber also is abundant, and copper has recently been found at
-the Phillips River, about 180 miles away. Thousands of people who have
-gone direct to the goldfields have no idea of the beauty of this place.
-They only think of Western Australia as a place in which, to look for
-gold, and when that has been obtained in sufficiency, to be left behind
-as quickly as possible. Tinned fruits, meat and vegetables have until
-recently been the staple food of dwellers in the goldfields; but, as
-population increases and fertile lands are taken up and cultivated,
-a sufficiency of fresh fruits for all requirements will probably be
-produced before long.
-
-[Illustration: CIVILISED ABORIGINALS AT KENDINUP STATION]
-
-The land regulations of Western Australia are so favourable to the
-colonist that, if well known in England and upon the continent of Europe,
-they would probably attract many families of the vine-growing, artisan,
-and small capitalist classes. Any person over the age of eighteen, who
-is the head of a family, can take up an area of 160 acres of land for a
-free or homestead farm. A deposit of £1 is required as a guarantee of
-_bona fides_. The applicant must live on the land for six months of each
-year, and within two years must spend £30 in clearing or cropping, or put
-down two acres of garden, orchard or vineyard; within five years, one
-quarter of the selection must be fenced and one-eighth cropped; within
-seven years the whole area must be fenced, and one quarter cultivated.
-The selector then becomes entitled to his certificate of title, after
-having paid for it and the cost of survey. Direct purchase can be made,
-if desired, of from 100 to 5000 acres. The land is valued at 10_s._ per
-acre, of which 10 per cent. is payable on application and the balance by
-four quarterly instalments. Applicants must fence in the course of three
-years and spend 5_s._ per acre within seven years, and then can acquire
-their certificates of title. Grazing farms can be taken up at a rental of
-2½_d._ per acre. Pastoral leases, or grass rights for grazing purposes,
-can be got for the nominal rental of 2_s._ 6_d._ per 1000 acres per
-annum and upwards. Garden lots, from 5 up to 50 acres, can be obtained.
-In this case the land is valued at 20_s._ per acre, and the plot must
-be fenced within three years, one-tenth to be put under cultivation as
-a _bona fide_ garden. The terms are 10 per cent. deposit on application
-and the balance in six half-yearly instalments. In addition to all this,
-the Government have done yet more to induce land settlements by offering
-assistance from the Agricultural Bank, created by the late Premier, Sir
-John Forrest, for the benefit of all who desire to make a home in Western
-Australia. This bank will lend money on freeholds at conditional purchase
-(already fenced) to the amount of £800. An application fee of 1 per cent.
-on the loan is demanded, and this amount covers cost of inspection
-and mortgage. The amount lent is repayable by the borrower in thirty
-years; for the first five years the interest is payable half-yearly. At
-the sixth year a sinking fund of 4 per cent. commences, and continues
-until the end of the thirty years, when the debt is wiped out. There are
-Government land agents in nearly every agricultural town of the colony,
-and a would-be selector arriving and communicating with the Government
-agent receives all the assistance he wishes in making his selection. The
-present population of Albany is about 3500.
-
-[Illustration: The Residency, Albany]
-
-A fine Quarantine Station has lately been built at a cost of £10,000. The
-forts are very interesting. No doubt, in the future Albany will become
-an important Naval station. An Imperial Officer of the Royal Artillery
-is in command, there is a small garrison, and some murderous-looking
-guns are in readiness to give a warm reception to any enemy who may
-appear. Before leaving Albany I accepted an invitation to take a trip
-out into the Sound. This was named by Vancouver, in 1791, King George’s
-Sound, after the then reigning sovereign of England. It is sheltered by
-magnificent granite rocks or headlands, and the anchorage is perfect,
-for the islands of Breaksea, Michaelmas, and Haul Off Rock—an immense
-block of stone, almost like a mediæval fortress—break the ocean swell.
-The beauties of King George’s Sound have been well known since the first
-navigators sought refuge in its quiet waters, and its maritime value can
-never cease.
-
-I said “Good-bye” with much regret to the many friends made during my
-short stay in this little town, where even the Railway Reserve is a
-perfect garden of Arum lilies. These peerless flowers seem to grow wild,
-and their stately heads are to be seen everywhere. The scent of the
-boronia is wafted on the breeze from afar; you hear the merry laughter
-of boating-parties and of children who come along with their hands full
-of gorgeous wild flowers. One of the townsfolk brought me a lovely
-collection of orchids, of which there are many varieties to be found
-hereabout; another friend brought me a collection of Western Australia
-curiosities, shells, corals, &c.; indeed I was overwhelmed with kindness
-by the warm-hearted people, and could not but be sorry to leave a place
-where I had been received with so much kindness.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: A Chopping Contest.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
- Torbay—Denmark Timber Mills—Mount
- Barker—Katanning—Wagin—Narrogin—Beverly—York—Lovely Wildflowers.
-
-
-Leaving Albany under more auspicious circumstances this time than when I
-had left it by road, I took my seat in the train, my destination being
-Denmark Mills, where I went to see a great timber station and Jarrah
-Forest. On arrival at Torbay Junction, 9 miles from Albany, I left the
-mail train and took the timber train, as the company, who own the Denmark
-Timber Mills, have a private line running to that place; once seated
-I was soon carried into the timber country. We passed through country
-covered with boronia and other sweet flowers, and with Sheoak, Karri,
-and Jarrah trees. We crossed the Hay river and came to Denmark Mill and
-township. We were now in the thick of the Karri country, covered with
-immense trees. The site of the township, covering 150 acres, has, of
-course, been cleared, and there are many comfortable wooden and slab
-cottages with nice gardens attached, giving a plentiful supply of fruit
-and vegetables; as well as a good store, where everything appertaining
-to housekeeping can be obtained. No liquor is allowed to be sold at the
-mill on account of the dangerous nature of the occupation, consequently
-this is a model township. There are several coffee-houses, and, in spite
-of their enforced sobriety, the men seem to be very jolly and happy. An
-enormous stack of timber was ready to be shipped to Colombo, and the men
-were at work cutting more, as the enormous demand for Western Australian
-wood keeps the workmen busy night and day, working in relays. The line
-train wound round the hills in picturesque fashion, until we came to
-a valley which looked more picturesque still, but rather dangerous to
-cross in a timber-train. Here the flying fox or aerial tram is used to
-bridge the steep part and to carry small timber. I was glad I did not
-venture down into the valley, for I was afterwards told that it was not
-an infrequent occurrence for the timber-trucks, and occasionally the
-engine also, to leave the line, and as the trucks are of the roughest
-description, consisting merely of four wheels and a platform, and are
-loaded with immense logs, the passenger can only travel on the engine,
-or on the “dummy,” which is a special truck placed immediately behind
-the engine to keep it from being damaged in case some huge log, weighing
-perhaps 20 tons, should slide forward in the course of a descent. It is
-difficult to give an idea of the size of the gigantic Karri-trees here.
-One which I saw was quite hollow, and a bullock team drove right through
-it with perfect ease. In returning to the town I saw another large
-quantity of battens or pickets waiting to be shipped for London to fence
-two large cemeteries. Enormous fires are always burning in the town to
-consume the great heaps of waste from the mills. A pile, about 120 feet
-high, was waiting to be burned, and it did seem a pity that good wood
-should be reduced to ashes merely to get it out of the way. A scheme for
-shipping the refuse of the mills to America for conversion into paper has
-lately been mooted.
-
-[Illustration: THE HOMESTEAD, KENDINUP STATION]
-
-[Illustration: Hauling Logs at the Mills]
-
-The Karri-trees, grow to a height of 300 feet, with a circumference of
-from 20 to 30 feet. From one Karri-tree alone 100 tons of timber have
-been cut. Karri is also called _Eucalyptus collossea_ or _diversicolor_,
-the latter name denoting the difference between its leaves and those
-of other eucalypti. The timber is impervious to damp. I was shown a
-block cut from a log that had been buried forty-six years in moist
-earth, and it was perfectly sound. For mining, harbour works, railways
-and street-paving the wood is unequalled, and is now greatly used in
-different parts of London, notably in paving Charing Cross, where traffic
-goes on at the rate of 402 omnibuses every hour; and in Paris the Rue
-Lafayette and Rue Château d’Eau are also paved with our famous Australian
-woods. This particular wood is preferred for street-paving because it is
-safer for horse traffic than other kinds; observations taken by Colonel
-Hayward, late City Engineer of London, have shown that horses might be
-expected to travel over 446 miles of Karri road without accident. On
-Westminster Bridge, London (south side), the Jarrah paving has lasted
-for seven years. This wood is also being used all over the world for
-jetty piles; some enormous ones, 90 feet in length, were waiting at the
-train-shed to go to Albany, where thirty vessels are under charter to
-take the timber away to South Africa, South America, India, &c. There
-is another very large karri district which I mean to visit; I must not
-therefore exhaust all I have to say about karri timber here, but pass
-on, leaving behind Denmark Mill with its 20,000 acres of forest, where
-the manager told me over two million loads of timber were waiting to be
-cut down. Mr. Millar also owns very large jarrah forests, the Wagerup of
-35,000 acres, and the Mornington, 55,000 acres, and employs upon them a
-very large staff of workmen.
-
-Returning next day to Torbay Junction, I caught the mail-train and
-continued my travels, passing thousands of acres of land waiting for
-selectors. Stopping at Mount Barker, 28 miles from Torbay, I visited the
-homestead of Mr. Somnes, the land around which was first cultivated over
-40 years ago by Mr. Somnes, senior, now 90 years of age, and many of the
-fruit-trees, though planted so long ago, are still bearing good crops of
-fruit. Over 55 acres of fruit-trees of different kinds, bearing lovely
-fruit, testify to the excellence of the soil. Two thousand apple-trees
-seem to be specially prolific. In another part of the Mount Barker
-district, Mr. Miller’s estate, comprising more than 5000 acres, has a
-fine orchard of over 6000 fruit-trees of all descriptions. Two other
-orchards, not quite so large but with much exquisite fruit, are not
-far off, and the old homestead of St. Werbergs, where the late Colonel
-Warburton resided, is a place of much interest. In addition to fruit, the
-necessary potato and onion are being cultivated, and in some cases yield
-very largely per acre. It was my intention to stay at Katanning, as I
-wished to see the much-talked-of orchard and vineyard of the Hon. F. H.
-Piesse.
-
-It being night when I arrived, I could not see what the place was like,
-but in the morning light I found it a most charming little village.
-A great deal of land has recently been taken up by selectors; during
-last year over 1500 applications were made for homesteads and farms
-on conditional purchase, and many more for pastoral leases and town
-and suburban lots. The harvest returns here are very satisfactory, 15
-bushels of wheat to the acre being the average. Many farmers are coming
-over from the other colonies to select land for farms, as well as people
-from England and other countries. The Katanning area contains 100,000
-acres, so there is plenty of room for many farms and orchards. Assisted
-passages are granted from England to intending farmers and agriculturists
-and their families, also to single women and widows. They can come to
-this colony by only paying £8 5_s._ towards their passages. These people
-must, however, be approved by the Agent-General, Hon. Henry Bruce Lefroy,
-in London (15 Victoria Street, Westminster, S.W.), from whose clerks
-intending passengers can get any necessary information by writing to ask
-for it. On arrival in Western Australia the new-comer will be afforded
-every assistance by the Government land-agents who are stationed in the
-principal towns.
-
-The orchards and vineyards of Mr. Piesse are really wonderful. There are
-65 acres of fruit-trees, bearing all kinds of fruit of exquisite flavour,
-some of the pears weighing over 2 lb. each, and the peaches, apricots,
-and apples of equal size and beauty. The apples grown here are famed for
-their size, sweetness, and flavour.
-
-There were acres and acres of vines loaded with large and luscious
-grapes, the purple ones, with their lovely bloom, offering a picture to
-the eye as well as refreshment to the palate. The cost of clearing land
-in this district is only from 35s. to £3 per acre, so that any one with
-small capital could soon have an orchard or farm of their own. The day is
-evidently not far distant when Western Australia will not only produce
-sufficient for all her own requirements, but, being nearer the European
-markets by several days’ journey than the other colonies, will be able
-to supply the markets of the outside world with her fruits, especially
-grapes, the soil in some parts being particularly suitable for vine
-culture. Her goldfields may in time be exhausted, her forests may be
-converted into timber, but the soil will always remain and vines will
-always grow as long as the sun shines to mature the grapes for wine to
-make glad the heart of man. Almond-trees also grow wonderfully well, and
-tons of almonds are sent every year from Katanning to different parts of
-the colonies.
-
-One very great feature connected with fruit farming in Western Australia
-is that there are no fruit pests in the colony, no phylloxera, no codlin
-moth, and no nasty little fruit-fly to spoil the growth of things. Every
-care is taken that nothing of the kind shall be brought here from other
-places, all fruit being rigorously examined by experts before being
-passed by the Customs.
-
-Seated behind a fast pair of Australian brumbys—(these horses, called by
-the natives Warrigals, are very hardy animals, and are well known to go
-longer distances without nourishment of any sort than any others of their
-kind; when proper food is unobtainable, they can subsist on the driest
-of spinifex grass, or scrub, and what would kill other horses does not
-seem materially to injure them)—I had a lovely drive over Mr. Piesse’s
-properties. One splendid field of wheat, 300 acres in extent, was a great
-sight. As far as the eye could reach this field, with its magnificent
-crop, waved before the breeze. We had passed the orchard with its acres
-of fruit-trees bending beneath the weight of fruit. Then we came to the
-vines with their rich and luscious grapes, then—a complete and charming
-change of scene—to the cornfield. On the far side of the field two
-waggons, each drawn by nine horses and laden with a tremendous load of
-produce of the glorious earth, were wending their way to the mill, which
-was seen in the distance on the other side. A forest of trees, white gum,
-York gum, and raspberry wood, sent a subtle perfume through the air.
-Opening a large white double gate (one of many), we drove right through
-the pretty cornfield, and one could imagine the feelings of Bobby Burns
-when he wrote his exquisite poem, “When the corn is waving, Annie dear.”
-Returning on the other side of the field, a pretty view is seen of the
-village of Katanning bathed in the golden sunlight.
-
-We passed the model farm of Mr. Stanbury and came to Mr. Piesse’s
-splendid and most interesting mill: all the very newest machinery for
-turning the ripe corn into flour is here. I thought of our ancestors
-crushing wheat between stones, and watched the beautiful white stuff
-coming down the huge cylinders, automatically filling the corn sacks
-and coming to a dead stop when full, with no assistance from the human
-hand, while the man who had placed the sack on the cylinder stood by
-sewing up with twine the last one filled. The click came to notify that
-a bag was full; it was taken off, and another put on to go through the
-same process. Tons of refuse from the wheat were being thrown out, and
-on my asking what was done with it, Mr. Piesse said that it was given to
-the pigs. This splendid mill was built in 1891, but, in consequence of
-the rush to goldfields which broke out in 1893, lay idle for nearly two
-years, all the produce being wanted for chaff, which could not be cut
-quick enough for the demand.
-
-A great deal of land-clearing is going on in the different selections,
-and it is interesting to see the forest devil or tree-puller at work.
-This operates by means of a chain placed round the tree and a lever
-worked by a man; in about 15 minutes a great tree will come up root and
-branch, and fall never to rise again.
-
-[Illustration: Ready for Cross-cutting, Denmark Mills]
-
-Resuming my journey next morning, I once more sped on by train through
-the flower-scented country, passing Wagin, Narrogin, famous for oranges;
-Pingelly, and Beverley (all rich agricultural country). Here we partook
-of a very good repast, this being the place where many Perth passengers
-break the journey when going to Albany, or _vice versâ_; then, after a
-further run of 20 miles, we stopped at the pretty little town of York, on
-the banks of the Avon river. It nestles in a valley almost surrounded
-by green hills, and as I walked across the bridge, built of jarrah-wood,
-that spans the pretty river, I thought I had never seen a more pastoral
-or a prettier place. The town is in two parts, one each side of the Avon,
-which is crossed by three bridges. The pale yellow fields of corn, the
-pretty houses on the hillsides, the beautiful cattle grazing, and the
-fruit growing in profusion in the various gardens and orchards, make a
-charming picture. Quantities of sandal-wood grow close to the town, and
-constitute a valuable industry; the jam-wood also thrives well, and the
-scent of it makes one imagine oneself in the vicinity of a raspberry-jam
-factory. The headquarters of Parker’s Eucalyptus Distillery are here. The
-distillery is at Dangin, about 40 miles off, where the beautiful fruits
-that grow at York are preserved by the same firm, and are quite tempting
-to look at and exquisite to taste. Farming is very advanced in York.
-I was shown some wheat from a farm, a portion of a crop that yielded
-32 bushels per acre. The farmers employ the very latest improvements
-in machinery, and say that, though expensive at first, they find these
-cheaper in the end, the expense of working the land being greatly reduced
-by using the newest strippers, &c. It speaks well for the productive
-capacity of the district that 24,000 bushels of splendid wheat were
-waiting, at the Empire Milling Company’s storehouse, to be turned into
-flour.
-
-Driving from York to Greenhills, through the Avon valley, I passed Mr.
-Jesse Scott’s magnificent farm. Imagine a cornfield, or, I should say, a
-succession of cornfields, of 450 acres, on some parts of which the oats
-had attained the height of 7 feet. These portions of the fields would
-yield 60 bushels to the acre, and the whole 450 acres would average 35
-bushels per acre. It was, indeed, a magnificent sight. On other parts of
-Mr. Scott’s property rye, buffalo, and prairie grass were making great
-progress, while 12 acres were planted with vines.
-
-[Illustration: YORK]
-
-The tanning industry is well represented. I saw splendid samples of plain
-and fancy leather when visiting Mr. Hay’s factory; one enormous side
-weighed 39 pounds, kangaroo skins are also tanned and make a beautiful
-shiny leather. Kangaroo meat is eaten here, although beef and mutton are
-plentiful. Many people seem to prefer “Roo” steak. I confess I was rather
-surprised at breakfast to hear the waiter, in reading the menu, mention
-the latter dish. I did not test it, but at dinner tried kangaroo-tail
-soup, and found it really excellent. The much-esteemed Roman Catholic
-priest, Father Gibney, brother of Bishop Gibney, lives in York, and also
-has a pretty little place (which is his hobby) called Springfield, about
-three miles out. The Rev. Father has hundreds of fruit-trees of different
-kinds, and quite an orangery. I brought away several branches with eight
-or nine oranges on each as mementoes of my very pleasant visit. There
-are some good buildings, a fine Post Office, Mechanics’ Institute,
-Court-house, and some handsome churches, as well as many good shops. York
-is one of the oldest Western Australian towns, and enjoys the distinction
-of being the place where the first official execution took place in
-1840. The wife of a settler, Mrs. Cook, and her infant, were murdered
-by aborigines during the absence of her husband. The murderers escaped
-into the Bush, and were only brought to justice through a tribal quarrel
-which resulted in some natives betraying them. They were conveyed to the
-scene of their crime and hanged in chains, in the presence of a large
-gathering of natives. Up to this time there was an impression amongst the
-natives that an absence in the bush, long or short, absolved them from
-punishment. This execution dispelled any idea of that kind which they may
-have entertained, and taught them a wholesome lesson.
-
-A very well-known person in early times was called the Duke of York. He
-used to go between Perth and York in a little cart carrying goods, not
-least of which was a keg of rum, the virtues of which would have been
-even more warmly appreciated if the old fellow had left it in its natural
-state, and not mixed so much _aqua pura_ with it. His descendants have
-risen in the world, and in place of the keg of rum of their ancestor have
-now bonded stores of large extent.
-
-On leaving York _en route_ for Perth the train journey was rendered
-delightful by the beautiful carpet of wild and many-coloured flowers on
-each side of the line. As the train sped past the idea struck me that
-these flowers—lovely immortelles, white, pink, and yellow, growing in
-countless millions—could be turned to good account. Conversing with a
-Westralian (white) native in the train, I find such a thing had never
-been thought of, and what could be made a source of wealth by some
-energetic people seems here hardly to be noticed. Thousands of crosses,
-wreaths, anchors, screens, fans, and other decorations could be made
-of these flowers, and would, I am sure, command a ready sale on the
-Continent, especially in France, where there is such a love of flowers
-for ceremonial purposes. At present, like the boronia, which usually
-seems to waste its sweetness on the desert air, they appear to be not
-much admired, except by people travelling through the country, who
-cannot fail to be impressed, like myself, by their beauty. For perfumery
-purposes, the little coffee-coloured boronia must have a great future
-before it, as well as the lovely immortelles. My friend in the train
-said, “I don’t think they are much good.” He put me in mind of the
-soldier, a good many years ago, who, on the defeat of Parses the Persian,
-found a bag of shining leather filled with pearls. Not knowing their
-value, he threw them away, but kept the leather bag, saying, “What was of
-no use could be of no value.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Moirs’ Buildings]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
- Perth—Public Buildings—Yacht Clubs—Government House—Recreation
- Ground—Lovely Perth Park—“Bond or Free.”
-
-
-And now for Perth, the capital city of the Golden West. As I remember it
-on my last arrival, after my memorable journey across the sand plains, it
-was a very sleepy little town. Now it is a handsome and prosperous city,
-with noble buildings on all sides, electric light, tramcars, beautiful
-parks around it, and yachts dancing on the broad waters of the Swan
-river. Perth is beautifully situated, and one cannot fail to be charmed
-with its picturesque and lovely surroundings.
-
-[Illustration: Swan River, Perth]
-
-Perth on a Spring day presents a charming and animated picture. Boats
-and steamers ply across Perth Water to and from South Perth on the other
-shore, while black swans, which are to be seen in hundreds, are much
-admired by the many visitors. The pretty villas, shrubberies and trees,
-the old mill at the Point, and Mount Eliza lifting above everything its
-smiling face perfectly ablaze with gorgeous wild flowers of every colour,
-all help to give charm to the scene. St. George’s Terrace, the principal
-fashionable street, is nearly two miles in length and planted with shady
-trees. The Council have also lately had lemon-trees put in, with the
-idea, I suppose, of presently raising a crop of lemons. The golden fruit
-growing along the street will be something novel, but not, perhaps,
-financially profitable, since in the hot summer time it will offer rather
-a temptation to small boys who may have a leaning towards lemon squash.
-Russell Square will, in course of time, be as fine a public ground as
-any in Western Australia. A great day of tree-planting recently occurred
-there. Mr. Randall, Minister of Education, and the Mayor of Perth,
-assisted by some of the city fathers, planted the first trees: the rest
-were set by the school children, who had been invited to attend. Many
-beautiful Westralian, tropical, and sub-tropical trees will in future
-throw their grateful shade over this fine square.
-
-[Illustration: HAY STREET, PERTH]
-
-Many handsome public buildings have lately been erected in Perth: Moirs’
-Buildings, Prince’s Buildings, the Bank of New South Wales, De Baun’s
-Hotel, the Esplanade Hotel, and the new Public Works Offices would
-do credit to any city in the world. The Town Hall, which, although
-an imposing-looking building, is old, will shortly be removed, the
-Government having been offered a very large sum for the site, which is
-one of the most important in Perth, and very valuable. A new Town Hall
-will, accordingly, rise in some quieter part of the city. The Post Office
-is a fine building in the French Renaissance style. Then there are the
-Mines Department Offices, the Mechanics’ Institute, with its large hall
-for entertainments, and St. George’s Hall; Cremorne Gardens, where in the
-hot weather people take their amusements in the open air while smoking
-and otherwise refreshing themselves; there is a fine theatre in Hay
-Street, and another will shortly be erected in Barrack Street; across
-the bridge we come to the Victoria Public Library, a splendid stone
-building recently built, with an excellent library of 28,000 books and
-pamphlets. The Museum adjoins it, and contains valuable specimens of all
-the minerals of the colony, as well as biological and botanical samples.
-The Railway Station and Offices form a fine block of buildings, and an
-overhead railway is shortly to be started. There are some very large
-churches, Trinity Church, St. George’s Cathedral, and Wesley Church,
-in connection with which the new Queen’s Hall and the fine block of
-buildings adjoining it have been erected. The Roman Catholic Cathedral,
-an imposing structure on the hill overlooking the city, has on Sundays a
-very large congregation. The Bishop’s Palace and Convent are near it. Not
-far off is the Hospital, which is a credit to Perth, not only on account
-of the arrangements, which are excellent, but on account of the kindness,
-skilfulness, and attention received by the patients. It is most highly
-spoken of by all who have ever been its inmates. The Royal Mint is a new
-and handsome building, recently opened and Western Australia can now coin
-its own gold into sovereigns, instead of sending it to Melbourne, as was
-formerly done.
-
-[Illustration: Perth Railway Station]
-
-Perth, having such a broad river, has also several very fine yachts
-and rowing clubs. The Swan River Rowing Club is one of the oldest
-institutions, and has not only a splendid new boathouse, whose
-accommodation and appointments excel those of any other on this side of
-the continent, but also the newest racing-skiffs procurable and handsome
-sailing-boats. The Club also has splendid gymnastic appliances, of which
-the members avail themselves largely. The Club’s rowing prowess has
-earned the distinction of being “at the head of the river.” The Royal
-Perth Yacht Club also has a spacious club-house by the riverside, and the
-many white-winged yachts that form the flotilla are a pretty sight when
-sailing on the broad bosom of the Swan.
-
-Government House is a very handsome residence, its towers and colonnade
-giving it a most picturesque appearance, and the grounds, though small,
-are very beautiful; they slope gently down to the river by a series of
-terraces, and contain many rare plants and shrubs.
-
-The Recreation Ground is quite close to the city. It is well laid out,
-and on holiday afternoons the cricket and football clubs indulge in
-their favourite sport, under the sunny skies and genial air that render
-open-air existence so delightful in Perth. A mimic fleet moored in the
-river faces the ground. This fleet belongs to the Royal Perth Yacht Club,
-whose club-boathouse is here. At the upper part is the bowling-green,
-where the gentlemen of Perth who have passed their first youth take
-their favourite exercise. Many ladies are to be found there on a fine
-afternoon, for the club members are very gallant and always have nice
-afternoon tea and its accessories for their lady visitors. The Cricket
-Association possess a very fine ground, covering fourteen acres, at the
-other end of the town, near the Causeway.
-
-[Illustration: Melville Water]
-
-It is only recently, since Western Australia has made such remarkable
-strides, that the now lovely Perth Park has been appreciated. A few years
-ago it was nothing but wild bush, and though, of course, the view was
-just as good as it is now, few people ever cared to toil up the sandhills
-to the top of the Mount in order to see it. You can now go by tram, and
-a transformation has taken place. The park is surrounded by a fence,
-and has been laid out in paths and gardens, while pretty summer-houses
-have been built; it is five miles in circumference, and on the west side
-are numerous villas, gardens, and good roads. The observatory, near
-the entrance gate, forms an imposing landmark. Standing at this point
-a magnificent panorama is spread before you. The city of Perth lies at
-your feet, while far away in the distance the noble Swan river winds
-its way to Fremantle and Guildford. You feel as if you are almost up in
-the clouds looking down at the lovely scene of the earth beneath. Going
-along the broad drive you come to the highest pavilion on the summit of
-the Mount. Perth Water, with the boat-sheds and their many boats and
-yachts, and little steamers plying across to South Perth, lies like a
-jewel below. At the foot of the Mount are situated the Infirm Old Men’s
-Depôt and the splendid Swan Brewery. The road continues on, and we soon
-begin to go down the incline, where another still finer view looms in the
-distance. Crawley Park and the residence of Sir George Shenton are at
-the foot, the point standing sharply out of the blue water. Across the
-river is Melville Park. The scene is so exquisite that one cannot bear to
-go on, but must pull up the horse and stop for a few minutes, that the
-mind may drink in the sight. I have seen many beautiful places in the
-other colonies, and in New Zealand; but the view from Mount Eliza on a
-spring morning in the season of blossom, when every wild bush is ablaze
-with flowers, is a sight never to be forgotten. I felt I must stay for
-a while and gather some of the beautiful and quaint wildflowers, which
-are far more varied than any I had ever before seen. I found afterwards
-that by doing so I had transgressed the law, but, being a stranger, hope
-for forgiveness. Besides the flowers that grow in native profusion, many
-species have been transplanted from other parts of the colony. Young
-eucalyptus and tica folia, trees which are indigenous to the Albany
-district, and bear a handsome scarlet flower, have been planted on both
-sides of the road, and will in time form an avenue.
-
-Many kinds of trees and flowers abound, the callistemon, with its
-brilliant scarlet plumes; the petrophila, with its exquisite velvety
-softness; banksias, honeysuckles, verticordias, with their lemon-centred
-foliage; the beautiful snowflake flower; the sweet-smelling, rich yellow
-hibbertia; the pretty blue gardenia, the lovely lilac hibiscus, or
-native tulip, fringed lilies, satin flowers, and others too numerous
-to particularise, form a picture so strikingly beautiful that I shall
-never forget the magnificent scene of green hills and flowery dales,
-country and town, blue sky and opal water, stretching far and wide.
-Terraces have been formed, and paths wind their way down the hill to
-the lower road. Here and there are rustic seats, where visitors can
-rest and enjoy the splendid view, and there are, of course, tea-houses,
-where you can enjoy the cup that cheers, or regale yourself with other
-refreshments. Rockwork, grass plots, and all kind of flowering plants
-add to the natural beauty of the spot. From the highest pavilion a
-really superb view of the city and surrounding country is seen on all
-sides. Steamboats are going merrily through the Narrows to the famous
-and beautiful Melville Park. In the background, the Darling Ranges loom
-grandly; in fact, the view is a magnificent panorama that could never be
-justly described by pen. Sir John Forrest and the members of the Park
-Board deserve the hearty thanks of the people for the improvements made
-to this lovely spot in so short a space of time. Perth has now settled
-down and become quite a quiet city again, whereas a few years ago,
-when the gold fever was at its height, the state of the town was very
-different. Then the excitement was tremendous. The talk everywhere was
-of nothing but gold; wherever one went gold was the universal topic, and
-one scarcely met a person who did not exhibit a nugget or some gold dust,
-or who had not specimens in hand—received from persons interested, who
-expected to make fortunes, and, indeed, in many cases did so—of gold in
-quartz, or of some other stone from one of the different “shows,” as they
-were called.
-
-[Illustration: PERTH WATER]
-
-Western Australia was once a convict settlement, and every stranger
-who came to the country had to conform to the country’s laws. The term
-“sandgroper” means white native; another term used here is “straight
-hair,” given in the early days by the free inhabitants to the convicts,
-on account of always having their hair cropped short. Thirty years ago
-any one walking in the streets of Perth after 10 P.M. took his chance of
-being arrested for the night. The constables on their beats invariably
-threw out the challenge, “Bond or free?” and unless the person so
-challenged could answer to the complete satisfaction of Constable X.Y.Z.,
-he was marched off to the Waterside lock-up. A well-known citizen was
-challenged by a newly appointed officer. “Halt! Bond or free?” “Free,”
-answered the pedestrian. “Your name?” “Churchyard.” “Ah, that’s not good
-enough,” said the officer incredulously; “who ever heard of a person of
-that name before? You’ll have to come along.” After a deal of explanation
-the minion of the law rather reluctantly let the citizen proceed on his
-way. A few yards further along he challenged another man, who gave the
-name of “Snowball.” This name was too much for the new policeman, who
-remarked that he was foolish to let the other fellow go, for who ever
-heard of such names before? Explanations, though freely offered, would
-not be accepted by the officer, who triumphantly marched a well-known
-and reputable citizen to the police-station under the belief that he was
-some desperate criminal on a midnight excursion. It was not until the
-prisoner was identified at the station that he was permitted to go home.
-All this is now changed in Western Australia, the only convicts who are
-now alive being a few old people whose terms have expired and who are now
-inmates of charitable homes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
- Darling Quarries—Kalayamba Vineyard—Mr. Brookman—Lady
- Forrest—Cambria—Mayor of Perth—Mr. Hackett—Canning Park Races.
-
-
-It was a very pretty drive from Perth to the Darling Range Quarries,
-where great quantities of stone for road-making and other purposes
-were being turned out. The quarry is situated on the western slopes of
-the range, and commands a magnificent view of the whole country to the
-sea-board. The proprietor of the now prosperous quarries, Mr. Statham,
-gave us a brief history of his enterprise, which began nearly five years
-ago. For the first three years, March 26 was for him an unlucky day.
-First he was burned out and lost between £300 and £400. In the following
-year the same thing occurred, and he was a loser by £1200. The third
-time, when March 26 came round, he felt disposed to stop the machinery,
-but the day did not pass without accident, for the engineer was blown
-up, and had to be taken to the hospital, but recovered in about a month.
-Since the third accident Mr. Statham has felt proof against disaster on
-March 26.
-
-Stretching away from here in the direction of Bunbury are over 80,000
-acres of well-matured land waiting for clearance and then cultivation; at
-present there is no stock to feed on it, no creatures being seen but a
-few wild horses.
-
-The homestead and vine plantations of Kalayamba, belonging to Mr.
-Wiedenbach, are prettily situated on the wooded banks of the Canning
-river, and the grapes some of the finest that I have ever seen. Five
-years ago Mr. Wiedenbach obtained cuttings at a cost of 2_s._ 6_d._
-each, and from these he grafted six vines, out of that number four grew,
-and at the present time the vines from the four cuttings number 500 or
-600. The vinery contains 4000 vines. There are 3100 citron-trees, and
-over 5000 other fruit-trees, many of them having fruit of phenomenal
-size and most exquisite flavour. The oranges, especially the mandarins,
-are really splendid. Last year 300 orange-trees yielded over 3000 dozen
-oranges. The lemon-trees are almost as good. The climate of Western
-Australia is specially suited to the growth of the orange. The most
-delicious oranges I have ever tasted grow on the slopes of the Darling
-Range, and must be eaten to be appreciated. The apple- and quince-trees
-were positively bent to the ground with their lovely burdens; while the
-almond-trees were a beautiful sight.
-
-There is also a magnificent estate situated on the Canning river at
-Cannington, called Riverside, and belonging to Mr. W. Brookman, the
-well-known mining millionaire of Perth and Kalgoorlie.
-
-This gentleman’s town house is full of fine furniture and curiosities
-brought in part from Europe, among these being a dinner service of 120
-pieces, each of which bears a different pattern of Venetian lace, the
-whole set representing every pattern made in Venice since the earliest
-manufacture of lace. In the drawing-room are exquisite chairs, the
-embroidery of which is the work of a continental sisterhood; vases of
-Venetian glass which cost 100 guineas each, Bohemian glass bowls in
-amethyst, thickly encrusted with gold; priceless statuettes of Carrara
-marble, and elegant Louis Seize cabinets containing rare curios from all
-countries, are a few of the contents of this rich room; while on the
-polished floor are handsome Brussels squares, on which lie rare skins,
-one specimen of a magnificent Polar bear, with glistening teeth, bright
-eyes, and perfect head, lying almost life-like. A fine aviary adjoining
-the house is full of the twittering of birds and chattering of parrots.
-
-[Illustration: MOUNT ELIZA AND SWAN RIVER]
-
-After the wealth and magnificence of the Gold King’s house, it is not
-to be wondered at if other homes look plainly furnished, and yet Lady
-Forrest’s, although an old-fashioned house, is most pleasant to visit.
-The furniture and surroundings are in exquisite taste. The afternoon I
-called, the artistic drawing-room looking out into the garden of sweet
-flowers was most restful to the eye. Lady Forrest is most kind and
-genial, and very much liked by every one. She takes great interest in her
-husband’s work, and takes many a worry from him by seeing people herself
-who come to interview him. “Sir John is nearly always busy,” said Lady
-Forrest pathetically, “I can’t get him to talk to me sometimes.” There
-are a great many works of art in the house, especially pictures, some by
-Lady Forrest herself and some by well-known artists; many portraits of
-Lady Forrest’s ancestors, and also bits of lovely English scenery from
-her father, the late Mr. Hammersly’s, old home in England, called Pyrton,
-of which she is justly proud. Mr. Hammersly was an English sportsman, and
-came to Australia many years ago. Lady Forrest is a Western Australian
-born.
-
-There are many other nice old houses in Perth, notably Mrs. O’Grady
-Lefroy’s, at the upper end of St. George’s Terrace, called Cambay. The
-house stands back in spacious grounds, and belongs to the family, which
-is of old standing in Perth. Mr. H. Maxwell Lefroy in 1843 made an
-excursion into the Lake District to the east of York, and his discoveries
-have been of great value to the country. Twenty years after, in 1863,
-Mr. Lefroy made a more extended exploration. Mr. H. Bruce. Lefroy,
-the late genial Minister of Mines, is a Western Australian, but was
-educated at Rugby, England. He was Minister of Education in 1897, and
-has administered the Department of Mines with great skill, and to the
-satisfaction of Parliament and people.
-
-Next to Mrs. Lefroy’s house is that of the late Mr. Alexander Forrest, in
-1900 Mayor of Perth for the third time. Mr. Forrest has also done good
-service in the early exploration of the colony, and is now known as the
-Cattle King, because he took up immense tracts of land in the various
-districts, utilised them for cattle stations, and amassed a large fortune.
-
-There are two daily newspapers in Perth. The _West Australian_ is edited
-and owned by the Hon. J. Hackett, M.L.C. Mr. Hackett is an Irishman who
-landed in Melbourne thirty-five years ago. He was a barrister, but shook
-off the shackles of the law, came to Western Australia, took up land, and
-eventually became proprietor of the _Western Australian_ newspaper.
-
-The other daily, the _Morning Herald_, belongs to a syndicate. As there
-are several weekly papers, and a _Sunday Times_, Perth is well supplied
-with newspaper lore.
-
-The weather being beautifully fine, I one day accepted an invitation
-to the races, and behind a spanking pair of horses, and in congenial
-company, whirled away to Canning Park. Arriving at the course, after a
-pleasant drive, we found fully 3000 people on the picturesque racecourse.
-Nature had donned her most inviting garb, the day was beautifully cool,
-and the effect of the mantle of green with which the lovely country was
-decked was heightened by the shades of the surrounding hills. The vista
-from the grand stand was delightful, and everybody was in good spirits
-and well pleased. The terrible stiffness which, as a rule, characterises
-Perth society, seemed to be thrown off for a time, and the leaders did
-not, as they often do, glare at all newcomers as if to say, “How dare
-you come here? This is our country; stay away.” Many pleasant afternoon
-tea-parties were in evidence, the racing was good, and the band played
-excellently. Some very handsome dresses were worn. When we left to return
-to Perth I felt quite charmed with the pretty course, and also with
-my good luck, for I had won two dozen pairs of gloves and ten golden
-sovereigns—quite a run of luck for me.
-
-[Illustration: ST. GEORGE’S TERRACE]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
- The Museum—Flower Show—Musical—Native Risings—Zoo—South
- Perth—The Old Mill—Moonlight.
-
-
-The new public library and museum in Beaufort Street is a very handsome
-building, and well worth visiting. It contains many interesting
-collections of birds, beasts, fishes, and other specimens indigenous to
-Western Australia. The fossils found in the coastal limestone and in the
-carboniferous formations extending from the Irwin to the Gascoyne and
-thence to Kimberly are truly wonderful.
-
-The upper part of a mastodon gives one an idea of the tremendous size
-and strength the animal must have had. The casts of the fish-eating
-reptiles and saurians are marvellous. Any one going through the museum
-and noting the productions of Western Australia, past and present—other
-than gold, which many people seem to think is the only thing the colony
-can produce—will be considerably surprised.
-
-The marsupials are, I think, of especial interest, and of these there
-is a large and varied collection. These marsupials or pouched animals,
-from the tiny crescent wallaby, no larger than a very small rabbit,
-the pretty little kangaroo-rat, and the funny spectacled wallaby, to
-the rufus or red kangaroo, and the great old-man grey kangaroo, taller
-than a big man, and possessed of enormous strength and vitality, are,
-according to Mr. Woodward, the curator of the museum, characteristic
-only of the Australian region, the only kind of animal at all like them
-in the world being the American opossum. Some opossums, however, have no
-pouch, but carry their young on their backs. The kangaroos, as I think
-all Australians know, always carry the little Joeys snug in their pouch.
-And during my travels I have often seen them peeping out of their snug
-home. Many different kinds of pretty opossums come next, ranging from
-the pigmy flying opossum, little ring-tail opossum, and the odd little
-rabbit bandicoot to the pussy-looking black, grey, or white opossum,
-whose skin and fur make such warm and comfortable rugs for cold places,
-but are not often wanted in the mild climate of Western Australia. One
-tiny little mouse-coloured kangaroo-rat, found only in the south of
-the colony, is very pretty, and makes a dear little pet; these animals
-feed on the nectar of flowers, and when tamed, on bread and honey; they
-sleep all day curled up into a ball, but are very lively at night.
-Sleepless persons desiring a companion may be glad to note this. The
-_Myrmecobius fasciatus_, or banded ant-eater, from Coolgardie, is a most
-remarkable-looking creature, as, indeed, its Latin name indicates.
-
-The splendid collection of Western Australian birds is really surprising;
-after seeing it one wonders how some people could say that there are no
-birds in Australia. The typical black swan, white swan, and pelican from
-the Swan River; the handsome bittern from Herdsman’s Lake, near Perth;
-the giant petrel from Fremantle; enormous emus from the Murchison, are
-all to be seen here, the last named with some dear little striped fluffy
-young ones, the size of goslings. I have often seen these birds when
-travelling on the Murchison myself. The ossifrag, a gigantic black-necked
-stork from Derby, in the far north; the Australian egret, so often
-plundered for ladies’ hats; magnificent sea-eagles; a most interesting
-nest of the sparrow-hawk made of twigs and gum-leaves, and containing
-four young ones, over whom the mother mounts guard; cockatoos, parrots
-innumerable, with most lovely plumage; and last, but not least, the
-graceful native companion from Broome. These are only a few of the birds
-belonging to the colony of Western Australia, but I have not space to
-mention more of them.
-
-The nests of the trap-door spider are very peculiar; they look like
-a piece of ordinary clay, but when the door is opened a perfectly
-hollowed-out room is seen within, where the spider and his prey almost
-exemplify the old rhyme of childhood’s days. Some of the moths are very
-handsome, notably the diuran and the podacanthus, the first named being
-very large and of a lovely heliotrope colour. From these insects to a
-whale is a big jump, and the skeleton of the whale stranded at the Vasse
-in 1897 and secured by Mr. E. C. B. Locke, M.L.A., for the Museum, is one
-of the largest of its species, if not _the_ largest; it is nearly 80 feet
-in length, and when in the flesh it must have measured 86 feet. The head
-alone weighs a ton or more, and the whole skeleton is prodigious. Coming
-back from viewing the whale, my attention was drawn to the first two
-sovereigns struck off in the Perth Mint, which repose on a velvet bed,
-and are, it appears, of much interest to the rising generation, for three
-boys were looking at them with great attention. The models of all the
-great and wonderful diamonds ever found in the world, some very ancient
-Greek coins, and famous French medals, work of noted French medallists
-also a cast of the celebrated Moabite stone, the original of which is in
-the British Museum, are near here; the last named is of great interest,
-being inscribed in three languages—Egyptian hieroglyphics, Semitic, and
-Greek; it was discovered in 1799 in the little town of Rosetta, on the
-Nile. It was the deciphering of this stone in the Greek language that
-gave the clue to Egyptian hieroglyphics. There are also copies of many of
-the great works of art in London and Paris, so that, although separated
-by so many thousands of miles, Perth still keeps touch with the old world.
-
-The relics from the wrecks of the _Batavia_ in 1629, and of the _Zeewyk_,
-wrecked in 1727 at the Abrolhos Islands (the story of which I will tell
-later on), are the most interesting things to be seen in the museum.
-They consist of silver and copper coins, rosary beads, clay tobacco
-pipes, copper kettles and stewpans, knives, spoons, scissors, fish-hooks
-and sinkers, tumblers and wine-glasses, some of most delicate glass,
-enormous greenish-looking liquor bottles, and some round ones, capable, I
-should think, of holding gallons, cannon-balls and bullets, said to have
-been manufactured by the mutineers on the islands, and two complete but
-rather gruesome skeletons tell a silent and sorrowful tale of the past.
-
-The wonderful shells and corals from these islands made me no longer
-wonder that the Dutchmen in 1629 named them “Abros vos olhos,” or “Keep
-your eyes open”; they must have named them not only for the dangers of
-the coast but for the marvellous things to be seen there.
-
-[Illustration: CITY OF PERTH]
-
-The different kinds of shells, sponges, corals, fish, and birds are
-simply amazing. I can only specify a few, amongst which are the
-tremendous cup-sponge shell, fully three feet long, the peculiar
-montipara or screw coral, and the enormous sponges, the many wonderful
-kinds of fish, birds, &c., from these strange islands so near our shore,
-as well as from Mandurah, Rottnest, Garden Island, and Fremantle must
-be seen to be appreciated, and I recommend every one visiting Western
-Australia to go and see them for themselves. The collection of aboriginal
-curiosities and relics is ample. The skull of a notorious aboriginal
-murderer called Pigeon, who gave the police much trouble in catching him,
-was shown to me. This native was named Pigeon on account of his favourite
-way of despatching his victims by wringing their necks. There are some
-fine native shields, spears, knife dabbas, meeras or throwing-sticks,
-kileys or boomerangs, &c., and some most peculiar boat-shaped shells
-that are hollowed from young trees and used for carrying water or food;
-a wooden helmet, exactly like a sou’-wester, makes one think that one of
-the Dutch sailors who came ashore in the early days must have dropped his
-hat and some savage have copied the pattern in wood. The fish-spears have
-about eighteen barbs both ways; the spearheads are made of many kinds
-of different glass, and nowadays the natives knock down the telegraph
-insulators and make them into spearheads. In former times silex, of
-which knives and chisels were made, was used, but the other material is
-easier to get, and the black fellow is well known to be as much averse to
-trouble as some of the white fellows. I possess three spear heads from
-the Kimberly district, one of which gave the death-blow to a man from
-whose chest it was extracted.
-
-[Illustration: Aboriginal Camp]
-
-The medicine-stick or bunganarrie used by the natives as a cure is very
-strangely marked, the markings no doubt constituting some imaginary
-spell. The dandie is used for tattooing, and the gunda-stick, with a
-knob at the end, looks like our life-preserver. The pindie pindie is a
-native ornament stick, frilled to represent a feather, and sometimes made
-of pretty green and cream colour. The effect is produced by scraping
-down the green part of a young branch about two inches till it frills,
-then scraping the inner pale part to frill over that. A space comes
-next, and then another frill, until the ornament reaches the length
-required. These objects the natives stick all over their heads. They
-also make very handsome ornaments of large mother-of-pearl shells by
-drilling a hole through the top, and hang them by a string of hair about
-their bodies. The women have an ornament made from pearl-shell called
-the binjah binjah, which hangs down their back attached to a currican
-or woman’s necklace. The long marrie is an ornament of kangaroo teeth
-attached to a hair-string, to hang down between the eyes. The booran is
-a belt made from human hair, worn by the Kimberly natives. The native
-women have most stringent ideas of mourning for their dead. A picture
-of one mourning for her brother shows her hair all screwed up in little
-knobs with wilgie clay and fat. Wilgie is a red-coloured clay or earth
-used for various rites and ceremonies. The tomahawk or pulboo has a
-handle of wood, the head being made of a kind of flint or stone, fixed
-in with a resinous substance called pulga or gum, made from the roots of
-the spinifex grass. Native spearheads too are fastened on with this gum,
-which is found in solid lumps, and dissolves with heat. String is made by
-the natives from the skin of the opossum by means of an instrument called
-the boolga, which consists of a long thin round stick, crossed near the
-top by two shorter sticks, and has somewhat the appearance of a boy’s
-kite. In making their implements they generally employ a tool called a
-bedoo, which resembles a spearhead. The ongath or fire-stick is used for
-lighting fires, and keeps alight a long while, burning very slowly. These
-sticks are carried about almost as we carry matches. The letter-sticks of
-the natives, or paper-talk as they now call them, are beautifully marked
-and of different sizes, the designs on those from the Gascoyne district
-being quite remarkable. Around the stick will be marked, in a kind of
-blue ink, all sorts of odd signs and figures, such as a crab, a gun, a
-leg, an arm, a lover’s knot, a hand and arm outstretched almost like a
-masonic emblem, and many other peculiar signs best known to themselves.
-The dewark, or throwing-stick, is also an interesting object, and so are
-the many aboriginal carvings and the sharp stones used in their sacred
-or tribal rites. The stones used for grinding their food consist of a
-large flat stone and a round smooth heavy one. Nalgo is the name of the
-principal seed thus ground, but they have many different kinds of food,
-which I will describe later. A tree called the boobah-tree grows at
-Derby, and produces a nut as large as a goose egg.
-
-The natives about Perth and Fremantle were in early days very numerous
-and troublesome. Native risings were frequent, and many hundreds of
-aborigines were shot. The present site of the Great Western Hotel was
-the scene of a large fight, arising out of the murder of two boys, the
-sons of settlers, who were minding cows, and were set upon by the blacks.
-The boys ran away to the Swan river, and one jumped in and swam across,
-only to be speared on the other side. The other boy did not reach the
-bank, but received five spears in his back and died at once. At this the
-settlers were soon up in arms, and one bloodthirsty native called Yagin
-was outlawed. He was eventually shot near Hutt Street, where the rising
-took place, by Dr. Dodd, who afterwards took a large strip of his skin
-from shoulder to foot, tanned it, and made it into a belt, which he wore
-for years!
-
-That silk can be grown in Perth is testified by some lovely blue and
-cream-coloured handkerchiefs made from silk grown here, and presented
-to the museum by Sir John Forrest. Next to this case is an old plan of
-Leschenhault Port, now called Bunbury, in 1803. Also a little picture of
-the ship _Success_ and a man-of-war in Careering Bay, Swan River, in 1829.
-
-Perth does not yet boast of a large Botanic Garden, but as, in the
-spring, the whole country around is one vast garden the absence is
-not severely felt. There is a charming public garden, small, but very
-prettily laid out, near Government House, and opposite the Post Office.
-
-Sir John Forrest prophesied, ten years ago, that in the future Western
-Australia would come to the fore, and the prophecy is being amply
-fulfilled; no travellers now ever think of making a tour in Australia
-without coming to the West. Mr. Frederick Villiers, the famous war
-correspondent, says that when he came to the colonies, seven years ago,
-he was nearly coming here, and, now having been, he professes to be so
-much charmed with Perth, and the view of the Swan River, as to feel
-inclined to settle down and end his days there. These little corners of
-the world have made him dissatisfied with his business, and as I gazed
-upon the many spots of beauty on the river before me, while the faint
-red blush of the sky deepened into a crimson sunset and cast a glorious
-reflection on the water, I felt myself agreeing with Mr. Villiers and
-disposed to stay in my pretty Claremont home for ever, where the sun
-seldom shines too fiercely and the winter is like a gentle friend.
-
-One spring day I drove in to Perth to see the flower show, then being
-held in the Town Hall. The drive over the bloom-covered slopes of the
-park, the sweet odours of the pretty flowers of the Bush mingling with
-that of the golden wattle, was most enjoyable. I can never ride or
-drive through that park, and gaze on the beautiful scene below, without
-feeling that God has indeed given us a lovely world to live in. It was
-a holiday, and consequently many little parties (frequently of two)
-were exploring the flower-scented knolls and enjoying the breeze from
-the water. Perth was quite gay, all the carriages of the _élite_ seemed
-engaged in carrying their fair owners to the flower-show. On entering
-the Town Hall a perfect blaze of beauty in the shape of wild flowers met
-the eye. The silver and golden wattle, laden with fragrant perfume, drew
-me immediately to the spot where they were. In the “Salyang Mia-Mia”
-(wattle-house) a most refreshing cup of tea was to be procured. Sitting
-in this fragrant bower and sipping tea brought to mind the lines:
-
- All the world is turning golden, turning golden,
- Gold buttercups, gold moths upon the wing,
- Gold is shining thro’ the eyelids that were holden,
- Till the spring.
-
-“Djanni Mia-Mia” (bark-tree house) was a triumph of rusticity, and the
-collection of hibiscus, boronia, flannel-plants and mauve everlastings
-were so lovely that I was obliged to buy several bunches of the different
-kinds. The bamboo stall was also very artistic, and the bamboos furnished
-receptacles for water, by means of which the flowers were kept fresh.
-“Yanget Mia-Mia” was the name of the bush-house, which had a background
-of bulrushes and blossom, and various bouquets of all sorts, sizes and
-scents were so tempting that I bought more, and found myself becoming a
-walking flower-garden. Wild flowers were here in every variety and hue.
-Specimens of native flora had been gathered from the hills and dales for
-miles around. The anygoxanthus (kangaroo paw), a most wonderful flower,
-was to be seen in many different hues: the blue and red leschenaultia,
-the trailing white clematis, or virgin’s bower, hanging in charming
-clusters, white and red hibiscus, and the more delicate heliotrope
-variety of the same flower, the delicate grey smoke-plant, with its dark
-green leaves, the snowflake flower, which, when blooming on its native
-earth, looks like a snow white carpet, one after another caught the eye.
-These flowers have long stems, and make exquisite table decorations.
-The thysanctus, or fringed lily, is a remarkable satiny-looking flower,
-and has a habit of climbing. The delightful boronia has many different
-varieties, the pale yellow being the prettiest, and the pink and white
-coming next; the dark red or brown, however, gives off a most delightful
-and refreshing perfume. The native roses are very pretty, the small blue
-ones being the first and last flowers to bloom during the season. The
-blossoms of the eucalyptus are of a magnificent crimson, and the delicate
-pink and white flowers of the crowea hang in loose clusters. Having
-travelled through so much of the Western Australian country, I recognised
-many of the beautiful gems that are to be seen adorning the Bush in
-various parts I visited. The kangaroo paw, before spoken of, has many
-varieties, ranging from faint cream colour, through scarlet, crimson,
-yellow, chrome, and green to sable, and in form is exactly like the foot
-of our typical Australian animal. The little trigger (candolea) plant,
-with its white flower suffused with shades of pink and yellow, and the
-marianthus, a climbing flower, are extremely beautiful.
-
-[Illustration: DRIVING IN PERTH PARK AT THE SUMMIT]
-
-The peculiar-looking ice-plant grows in the hot dry sand of the coast.
-I admired greatly some soft-tinted native tulips (pink), which were
-prettily veined and almost transparent. The actinotis (or flannel
-flower) is very abundant and long lasting, and therefore well fitted for
-decorations. Pilotus (or cat’s paw) has a pink and white flower, and
-retains its colour for a long time. A flower called the lactinostachys
-is most phenomenal; the stem and leaves seem to be without sap, and have
-a thick woolly covering; the flower looks so artificial that one can
-hardly believe it to be real. It is found in the northern part of the
-colony in hot dry localities. The clematis is a sweet pure white flower,
-which literally covers the trees and shrubs where it climbs. The banksia
-(or honeysuckle) is a handsome flower, with a kind of crimson cone. The
-parrot-plant looks like a many-coloured bird. The grevillia (or native
-fuchsia) is here in many hues. Sturt’s desert-pea is a very handsome,
-brilliant scarlet flower, with black centre. The fringed verticordia,
-with its lemon-centred foliage, is pretty, and so is the callistemon,
-which has bright scarlet plumes. The petrophila flower has striking
-blossoms that look like rich pink velvet, while the yellow flowers and
-peculiarly formed leaves (resembling a stag’s horn) of the synaphea were
-the most remarkable growths that I saw. Everlastings in every colour
-imaginable were there. The delicate but striking beauty of various
-orchids was shown to great advantage; the calendia (or spider orchid),
-with its peculiar spots, was particularly attractive: the douris (or
-dog-ear orchid), and the prasophyllum, with its spikes, 18 inches long,
-of dense white flowers, were interesting; so was the lyperanthus orchid,
-whose flowers turn black when dried; while the drakea (or hammer-head
-orchid) looked almost like a little duckling. The glossodia, spotted
-white, seemed as if it were varnished. Then there was a sensitive plant
-called the pterostylis, which almost resembled a tiny box, with a movable
-labellum, which is sensitive, and, when irritated by an insect, closes
-the box and imprisons the insect. Droseracea belongs to the fly-trap
-family, and has leaves and tentacles covered with a sticky juicy kind of
-acid, which arrests the inquisitive little insects, who come doubtless
-attracted by the dew on the leaf. As soon as these tentacles are touched
-the leaf closes in upon the unwary insect, which is soon absorbed by the
-juice exuded by the plant. The flower of the byblis, by far the largest
-and most attractive of the species, is of a rich salmon-pink colour.
-Probably the brightness of the flower attracts the insect to the stem and
-leaves, which are covered with the same juice as the droseracea, but in
-this instance the insect is absorbed on the surface of the plant. There
-are thirty-six species of insectivorous droseracea.
-
-[Illustration: GATHERING WILDFLOWERS]
-
-There are hundreds of other species of orchids and thousands more of
-wild flowers. The late Baron von Mueller said, “Australia is a great
-continent, and much of its vegetation is yet unexplored.” The Baron added
-“that more than half of the total vegetable species known in Australia
-were represented in the West,” and mentioned over 9000 of them. Dr.
-Morrison, our Government botanist, informed me that there were more than
-3000 species of wild flowers.
-
-As I was leaving the flower-show I noticed some very fine Anthorreas.
-“The King Blackboy” is a Western Australian grass-tree much admired.
-A handsome painting of the Nutsyia fire-tree, or Christmas-bush, also
-demanded notice. This tree bears very bright yellow or amber flowers
-about November and December, and the blossoms being of such a brilliant
-colour, and growing on trees that attain the height of from 20 to 30
-feet, are very conspicuous and visible at a great distance.
-
-Taking the little steamer one morning I crossed to South Perth. The new
-Zoological Gardens are worth seeing, if only for the superb view from
-them. A recent visitor said that he had seen many gardens in various
-parts of the world, but none in a more beautiful position than at Perth.
-The gardens occupy about forty acres of ground, and are a favourite
-resort on Sundays and holidays. Family parties are made up to go to the
-“Zoo,” for many Western Australian children have never seen wild animals
-elsewhere, except in picture-books. The grounds are beautifully laid
-out; the aromatic flower-beds, ornamental ponds and rockeries, gushing
-fountains, miniature castles, turrets, &c., make it a charming place to
-spend an afternoon and evening. At night the grounds are illuminated with
-hundreds of different-coloured lamps, which send a rainbow radiance
-over the scene. Concerts are held every Saturday evening during summer,
-and there is a really fine quartet, called the Orpheus, whose harmonious
-blending of sweet music in the lovely summer nights is well worth
-listening to; the Headquarters band also plays. Many of the animals
-awakened by the sounds of music (which is said to soothe the savage
-breast) evince much curiosity, others slumber on, no doubt soothed by
-the sweet strains. There are two splendid lions in separate cages. The
-lioness is very bad-tempered, and on being placed in the cage with the
-king of beasts, instead of showing a taste for his society, clawed him
-unmercifully, he standing the bad treatment in a most kingly manner. Her
-highness was, therefore, placed in a cage by herself to recover her good
-temper.
-
-The baby tiger seemed to be a great favourite, and it was quite amusing
-to see the antics of the monkeys in their play-room with the little
-ourang-outang, with whom they seemed to fraternise amicably and to
-play with quite happily. A ride on the donkey was much enjoyed by my
-little niece. I wanted her to mount the dromedary, but she declined
-that pleasure. Boys are pleased with the ponies, and the handsome
-goat-carriages come in for a share of admiration. The sacred Indian cow
-from Singapore, the newly arrived leopards, the white kangaroo (a great
-favourite), and all the others, too numerous to mention, were thoroughly
-inspected, and the children from the goldfields seemed delighted to see
-animals hitherto only known to them through the medium of books. Hot
-water is provided free of charge, and picnics are frequent; happy parties
-of little ones were sitting down in the cool shade and making the place
-ring with their voices. A view of the Canning river lies on one side and
-of the Swan river on the other, the garden being situated on an arm of
-land almost surrounded by water.
-
-[Illustration: SOUTH PERTH FROM THE BANKS OF THE SWAN]
-
-South Perth was in early days intended for the site of the city, but the
-business parts having occupied the other side of the river, South Perth
-has been left to become a most charming and aristocratic suburb, many
-handsome residences, pretty villas and gardens adding to the natural
-beauty of the place. An old mill is still standing on the extreme end of
-the Point, and eventually a bridge will span the Swan river and connect
-Mill Point with Perth at the foot of Mount Eliza, near the park. Land
-is becoming very valuable here, and I have bought a plot with a view to
-building a villa in this beautiful place.
-
-I did not return by steamer, which only takes ten minutes to cross the
-water, but preferred to drive round by land—a drive of about four miles.
-We drove about three miles before coming to the glorious Causeway, a
-stretch of water which is spanned by an enormous and handsome bridge.
-From this point a moonlight view of South Perth, Perth, and the Swan
-river winding its way to Guildford, is seen, and forms a very fitting end
-to a day’s pleasant excursion.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Fremantle Pier]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
- Drive to Claremont—Osborne—Keane’s Point—The
- Chine—Cottesloe—The Ocean—North Fremantle—Arthur’s
- Head—Smelting Works—Our Contingent—Fremantle.
-
-
-One bright morning I started to drive from Perth to Fremantle, a distance
-of twelve miles. Taking the lower road around Mount Eliza, a beautiful
-prospect lay before me. The Mount rises 200 feet above the road, which
-is only a little way from the broad river; the sun shone on Melville
-Water in the distance, while on the other side lay the Canning river,
-with trees and hills beyond. The pretty suburb of South Perth on its arm
-of land, with the old mill at the extreme end; the many little boats and
-steamers going to and fro, made a charming summer-day’s picture. Along
-the road past Perth Park we saw the blue and silvery water all the time,
-and then, when we came to Crawley, we entered a road fenced on each side.
-Valuable land is placarded for sale, and no doubt in course of time will
-become even more valuable. Already streets have been laid out for a
-suburb, which, being so beautifully situated, will be charming to live
-in. After a pretty drive of six miles we reached the fashionable suburb
-of Claremont, where there are some very elegant villas and mansions.
-A mile farther on is Osborne, the most magnificent hotel and grounds
-in Western Australia. This fine building stands in large gardens and
-grounds, and is surrounded by splendid conservatories and terraces. There
-are wide balconies, arbours, and seats, and, in the matter of beauty,
-the place almost realises Claude Melnotte’s description of “a palace
-lifting to eternal summer.” It seems almost incredible that three years
-ago this exquisite spot was the abode only of the blackboy, banksia, and
-other native trees, and a shelter for the dusky son of the soil. Towering
-high above the hotel is a turret of spacious dimensions, from which the
-growing port of Fremantle, with many merchant vessels and steamships
-riding peacefully at anchor, may be clearly seen in the distance. The
-adjacent islands of Carnac, Garden, and Rottnest, with their rugged
-coast-lines, lashed by the surging waves of the ocean, are but a few
-miles distant. The clearness of the air gives a wonderful range of vision
-from the tower. As you turn, you behold in the distance the dark woodland
-of the Darling Ranges, whose summits seem to touch the sky. In the zenith
-of summer heat in Western Australia, Osborne is always delightfully
-shaded and cool.
-
-An artesian well in the grounds, which struck water at a depth of 150
-feet, gives an abundant supply, capable of supplying the whole of Perth.
-No less than 50,000 gallons of water are used every day on the grounds of
-Osborne alone. Steamers come to Osborne jetty during the week, and every
-Sunday in the summer, bringing hundreds of people to enjoy the scene.
-The steamer moors at a landing at the bottom of the cliff, and hundred
-of steps have to be climbed before the top is reached. The climb is made
-easy by a platform with seats at the end of every flight of steps, of
-which there are five, and one can rest on these to enjoy the pleasing
-prospect. Pretty villas are built all around the hillsides; dear little
-Freshwater Bay, with its numerous bathing-houses and jetties, the pretty
-yachts and boats on its bosom looking like white-winged birds, lies at
-your feet; and the wild note of the magpies, not yet frightened away
-by civilisation as the aborigines have been, is heard from the trees
-in the distance. Continuing our drive, we took the inner road up the
-hill. Another pretty little bay and suburb called Peppermint Grove, from
-the fact that at one time it was a grove of delicate peppermint-trees,
-discloses itself. There are many beautiful villas with gardens, a nice
-white, hard sandy beach, a fine jetty for the many boats that come from
-Perth and Fremantle, and the Yacht Club House. Keane’s Point, with a
-handsome old bungalow on a fine site, hides a bend of the river. The
-Chine, so called from its peculiar conformation, the ridge appearing
-like the backbone of an enormous whale or other gigantic sea monster, is
-another pretty spot. Any one who has the fortitude to climb to the top of
-the Chine will be rewarded by one of the most exquisite panoramic views
-of ocean, river, flower, shrub, sea and sky ever seen. The tints of the
-water from the reflection of the azure sky melting into pale yellow, then
-into rich gold and crimson from the setting sun, once seen will never be
-forgotten. Turning back, we resumed our drive up Forrest Street and into
-the main Fremantle Road. We were now in the seaside suburb of Cottesloe,
-and away over the hill lay the beautiful Cottesloe Beach, stretching
-along for miles. Cottesloe is one of the most flourishing suburbs of
-Perth. A few years ago it was all one dense bush; now it is full of human
-life, and houses are going up in all directions as fast as the builders
-can erect them. Past the quarries we went until a turn of the road
-brought us to a view so magnificent that its effect can never fade from
-my memory. In the distance the dark blue Indian Ocean rolled in all its
-majestic splendour; North Fremantle was in sight, and so was the mouth of
-the Swan river. We approached the bridge to cross it, and saw an effect
-even more beautiful. From the bridge on which we stopped a few minutes
-in order to gaze on this gorgeous scene we saw many fine ships lying at
-anchor on the broad ocean; up the river many small boats and steamers
-were moored; in the distance were white cliffs and pretty houses; the
-magnificent German steamer, the _Friedrich der Grosse_, was just going
-out to sea—and altogether the scene was truly a grand one. I hope I
-shall not be thought to rhapsodise too much, but I can assure my readers
-that I am writing exactly as I felt when first viewing the approach to
-Fremantle.
-
-[Illustration: FRESHWATER BAY, CLAREMONT]
-
-When the new harbour is finished, Fremantle will be, as Sir John Forrest
-puts it, the Brindisi of Australia. And now we crossed the bridge and
-entered East Fremantle, leaving behind us the broad river winding its way
-to the ocean between two splendid breakwaters.
-
-On we drove down Cantonment Road into High Street, the principal
-thoroughfare, at the top of which is the fine Town Hall with its splendid
-clock. From that point the street runs to Arthur’s Head, and is connected
-by a tunnel with the sea; on the top of the limestone cliff is an old
-building called the Old Cantonment, formerly used as a lock-up. Fremantle
-is built on a low-lying neck of land between Arthur’s Head on the one
-side and the limestone heights on the other, hemmed in on one hand by
-the river and on the other by the sea. The city was named after Captain
-Fremantle, who first hoisted the British flag there, in 1829.
-
-There is a fine lighthouse on Arthur’s Head. It is a white stone tower
-71 feet high, with a fixed white light, visible for 16 miles. Fremantle
-still possesses some old and singular-looking buildings. The old gaol
-and court-house, with the harbourmaster’s quarters and the barracks,
-will, no doubt, in course of time be replaced by more up-to-date
-structures; there are already many very fine new buildings. Fremantle
-has an excellent Grammar School, where most of the boys from Perth and
-the country districts receive their education. Mr. G. Bland Humble, the
-present worthy and respected Town Clerk of Fremantle, was the first
-master, having been brought from England in 1886 to teach the young idea
-of Western Australia how to shoot.
-
-There are many good hotels, the Hotel Fremantle being the best at the
-city end of the town, and the Hotel Australia at the upper end. This
-latter is really a splendid hotel, standing in an excellent position,
-with a grand view of the river, harbour, and islands beyond. The jetty is
-half a mile long, and some large vessels are always lying there.
-
-Fremantle is rapidly increasing in size and population, and social life
-is not so divided as in Perth; there seem to be more geniality and not
-so much stiffness about the people. A volunteer artillery corps, turf,
-bicycle, rowing, cricket, and football clubs provide various forms of
-social activity. There is a nice park, also a good recreation-ground, and
-several places of entertainment, and the large hall in the Town Hall is
-very handsome and superbly decorated. An inexhaustible supply of water is
-obtained from three large wells connected by drives. The water is pumped
-up by steam into reservoirs at the rate of 45,000 gallons an hour.
-
-The smelting works about two miles from Fremantle, at Owen’s Anchorage,
-have lately commenced working, and are a great boon to the goldfields,
-which until recently were very much handicapped by having to send their
-ore to the other colonies to be smelted.
-
-[Illustration: NORTH FREMANTLE]
-
-The South African War is the general topic of the day, and with what
-sorrow do we read of the sacrifice of so many noble lives! Several
-contingents of our brave Australians have left the different parts of the
-colonies to assist their British brothers with a little of the courage
-we have in the Sunny South. The second contingent has just left these
-shores, and Fremantle has had the honour of giving them the send-off.
-Over 30,000 people assembled to bid them farewell, and a scene of such
-unbounded enthusiasm ensued as has never before been witnessed in the
-colony. The magnificent steamer _Surrey_ brought the New South Wales
-and South Australian contingents, and these soldiers came in for their
-share of admiration no less than the Western Australians. The enthusiasm
-shown for the Western Australian contingent from the time they left
-the camp at Karrakatta until they waved their last good-bye from the
-steamer’s side will never be forgotten. The street decorations, although
-hurriedly got up, were handsome and patriotic. At the Oval, where the
-reception to the troops was held, a huge marquee occupied considerable
-space, and rows of tables laden with every delicacy were provided for
-the troops and for the many distinguished visitors. Over 200 of the
-leading society ladies of Fremantle acted as waitresses, proud to attend
-on brave men soon to embark for the perils of war. Although the men were
-going away to face battle, all seemed jubilant, proud, and confident.
-The three contingents were all like brothers. The cries of the multitude
-were: “Cheers for the Cornstalks of New South Wales,” another for the
-“Gum-suckers of Victoria,” one for the “Crow-eaters of South Australia,”
-and “A great big one for Westralians; do your best, boys!”[1] At the
-wharf, prior to the _Surrey_ leaving next day, somebody handed up a
-bottle of whisky, intending it for a Westralian trooper. A Cornstalk,
-however, became possessed of it. “That’s not for you, it’s for one of the
-Western Australians,” shouted the donor. “It doesn’t matter, we’re all
-alike, we’ll soon be Federated Australia,” laughed the Cornstalk, and
-opening the bottle took a drop, then handed it round to the rest, who all
-participated in it with real federal spirit. When the time came for the
-troopship to leave, some affecting scenes took place between mothers,
-sisters, wives and soldiers, but all bore up as bravely as possible.
-Were they not going for the glory of Old England and the honour of their
-beloved Queen?
-
-A Bushmen’s contingent has since left all the colonies, comprising men
-who are accustomed to rough-riding and thoroughly used to rough life in
-most trying conditions. From what I know of many of the Bushmen I have
-met in my travels, I should say that they will afford the British troops
-valuable aid in reconnoitring the wily Boer.
-
-As we all know, the Australians have since bravely distinguished
-themselves, and our late dearly beloved Queen testified her approval of
-their actions in many ways. Her late Majesty’s gracious act of proposing
-that the Duke and Duchess of York should go so far in order to open
-the Federal Parliament of Australia endeared her still more, were that
-possible, to the hearts of her colonial subjects. As one of them who saw
-the late lamented Prince Edward and Prince George when they went out to
-Australia years ago in the _Bacchante_, “I can testify to the unswerving
-loyalty and affection of Australians for our beloved Queen and all her
-family.”
-
-[Illustration: HIGH STREET, FREMANTLE]
-
-And what a brilliant record our Western Australians, especially those of
-the first contingent, who have returned to Perth, have taken back with
-them! Truly they deserve the laurel-wreath of honour, while those who
-fell on the field of battle, giving up their lives for their beloved
-Queen and country, will live for all time in our hearts. I cannot do
-better, I am sure, than give Major McWilliams’ description (at the
-banquet given in Perth in honour of their return) of the way in which
-some Australians bravely distinguished themselves.
-
-“Before closing, he desired to tell them a story about their entry
-into Pretoria. He thought it was an incident that all who participated
-in would remember to the last days of their lives. The hills around
-Pretoria were most strongly held by the enemy. Their mounted infantry,
-which included the 1st Western Australians, were ordered to take a hill.
-They climbed up the kopje, the horses being led behind them, and fought
-until relieved by the Gordon Highlanders. Their little band had to do
-the work of infantry, and the handful of men held the top of that hill,
-and kept the enemy at bay, until the Imperial troops appeared on the
-scene. The latter said: ‘This is our job now; you are mounted, and you
-will be required somewhere else.’ The colonials informally handed over
-the work to the Highlanders, and an order came from Colonel De Lisle to
-move back to the hills to outflank the enemy, if possible. They did so
-under a heavy fire, but the enemy, on seeing them, must have exaggerated
-their numbers, for they made off into Pretoria as fast as they could. The
-Western Australians followed, and on that night got within a thousand
-yards of Pretoria. At that time Lord Roberts’ main column was six miles
-in their rear. Their infantry decided to hold the position close to
-Pretoria until morning. During that night one of their number, a son of
-an esteemed resident of Perth—he referred to Captain Parker—was sent with
-a few men into Pretoria to blow up the line, and he certainly had the
-honour of being the first armed man to enter Pretoria. That, he thought,
-was a great thing to claim for a Western Australian. He might also state
-a fact not generally known, that the flag of truce on the night before
-was taken in by a New South Wales officer, an Australian born. This
-little company numbered less than one hundred men.”
-
- TWO MORE COLONIAL VICTORIA CROSSES.
-
- The _Gazette_ of October 4 states that the King has been
- graciously pleased to signify his intention to confer the
- decoration of the Victoria Cross on Lieut. F. W. Bell, West
- Australian Mounted Infantry, and Farrier-Major W. J. Hardham,
- 4th New Zealand Contingent.
-
- At Brakpan, on May 16, 1901, when retiring through a heavy
- fire after holding the right flank, Lieut. Bell noticed a man
- dismounted, and returned and took him up behind him; the horse
- not being equal to the weight fell with them; Lieut. Bell then
- remained behind, and covered the man’s retirement till he was
- out of danger.
-
- Lieut. F. W. Bell is a Western Australian of the third
- generation. He was one of the handful of men who so
- distinguished themselves at Slingersfontein, when twenty-five
- members of the corps held a body of twelve times their number
- of Boers in check while the main body of troops—to which the
- corps was attached—and the guns retired.
-
- Near Faauwpoort, on January 28, 1901, Farrier-Major W. J.
- Hardham was with a section which was extended and hotly engaged
- with a party of about twenty Boers. Just before the force
- commenced to retire Trooper M’Crae was wounded and his horse
- killed. Farrier-Major Hardman at once went under a heavy fire
- to his assistance, dismounted, and placed him on his own horse,
- and ran alongside until he had guided him to a place of safety.
-
- Farrier-Major Hardham is a blacksmith, of Wellington, New
- Zealand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-ROTTNEST
-
- Steam to Rottnest—The Lovely River—Crawley Point—The
- Island—Boys’ Orphanage—Fremantle Harbour.
-
-
-A very pleasant excursion is to Rottnest Island, twelve miles from
-Fremantle. We left Perth in the morning in the steamer to go down the
-Swan river, and then across the harbour from Fremantle to the island.
-The day was perfect, the scenery exquisite. I do not think the Eastern
-Colonists are aware how beautiful their Western sister is, or they would
-flock over here still faster than they are now doing. Leaving South
-Perth at our back, we had the magnificent stretch of Melville Water in
-front of us. Melville Park Estate is a very valuable property, and is
-rapidly being transformed from the primeval bush into a place of busy
-life; residential areas are being laid out, houses have been built,
-suburbs will soon arise, and land is rapidly going up in value. The
-little steamer for Coffee Point was just ahead of us, and at the Point
-we could see a fine bungalow, which must be a pleasant house to live in.
-Wattle-trees and beautiful flowers were seen in abundance through the
-field glass I had brought, and we decided that Melville Water was another
-beautiful feature of Western Australia.
-
-We steamed past Mount Eliza, with its beautiful terraces of flowers and
-shrubs looking down upon us. The water was shining like a jewel at its
-foot. After rounding Crawley Point, where the handsome residence of Sir
-George Shenton stands, we soon passed into the loveliest little bay
-conceivable (Freshwater), its high cliffs studded with pretty villas, and
-the grand Hotel Osborne in the distance. Then on past Cottesloe, and
-into the Swan river again, down past Fremantle, and across to Rottnest.
-It was a most delightful trip, and I am sure the lovely Swan river is
-without a peer in Australia for rowing and yachting; it is perfect.
-
-Rottnest is an island about 7 miles long and 2½ miles broad, and the
-scenery is very lovely. I do not know when I shall come to the end of all
-the beautiful scenery of Westralia, as the more I travel the prettier
-each place appears. The summer residence of the Governor is here, and
-although not a palatial mansion, yet the situation is so exquisite and
-the fishing on the island so good, that the Governor always enjoys his
-time of residence there. An avenue of Morton Bay fig-trees, a mile in
-length, has lately been planted on the shore of the Serpentine Lake,
-near the viceregal residence. Salt lakes abound on the island. There
-are chains of them, and the salt contains medicinal properties, but at
-present the lakes are only utilised for the manufacture of salt. There
-are some nice gardens, and agriculture is carried on by means of the
-labour of the prisoners on the island, for at Rottnest is the prison
-for aboriginal offenders and juvenile delinquents. There is a splendid
-lighthouse on the hill, with a revolving light visible for 40 miles. A
-most peculiar phenomenon appeared at Fremantle during the extreme heat of
-the summer, namely, a perfect mirage, so that two Rottnests appeared, one
-immediately above the other, and the lighthouse seemed to be of immense
-height. Strangest of all, about half way up the double-edged island there
-appeared a long line of foam, while beyond the island there seemed to be
-a line of rocks—recorded by no chart—on the far-distant horizon. It was a
-most uncommon sight. Rottnest has rich little valleys, and all kinds of
-fruit could be grown there, for the soil is extremely fertile. There are
-some very peculiar rock formations and caves, one particularly fine one
-being called, after our eminent tragedian, “The Henry Irving.” No better
-spot could be found for an invalid in search of health. Many people have
-cause to thank the Western Australian climate for a return to health
-after having been threatened with consumption. A friend of mine came
-from Victoria very ill, and was thoroughly restored after a few months’
-residence here. The long summer, the bright sunshine, the dry warm air
-and pure atmosphere are just suited for delicate lungs. The winter is
-quite invigorating, with just enough rain and cloud to give variety—the
-spice of life. This colony seems to combine all the good qualities of
-the famous health resorts about which we colonials hear and read so
-much—Madeira, Egypt, the Riviera, &c.
-
-After a most enjoyable day we returned to Perth in the moonlight, and
-with the scent of many sweet flowers wafting from the shore, to the
-steamer, arrived all too soon at the end of our charming excursion.
-
-A very pretty drive is to Woodman’s Point, not far from Fremantle. This
-is a great place for camping out and fishing at holiday times. Numbers of
-tents dotted about testified to its being a favourite spot. The boys of
-the Swan Orphanage are taken out every year to the seaside for a holiday,
-and this year Woodman’s Point was chosen. Their happy faces and healthy
-appearance told you how well they were looked after. The poor little
-fellows were delighted at the sweets and cakes taken to them by several
-lady visitors. Their tents were models of tidiness and comfort; the
-dining-room was a floor of bushes under a big gum-tree. With the lovely
-blue sky overhead, the sparkling water of the sea close by, the beautiful
-view all around of ships, steamers and boats, it is an ideal place for
-boys to enjoy themselves, and they appeared thoroughly to do so, playing
-cricket, climbing trees, and pursuing other amusements dear to the hearts
-of boyhood. Some of them sang and recited very nicely, one patriotic boy
-giving “The Absent-Minded Beggar” with much enthusiasm. As we drove back
-to Fremantle the harbour looked splendid. A great deal of money has been
-spent by the Government to make it suitable for large vessels; at one
-time no very large ship could get a safe anchorage. At an expenditure of
-over a million of money, however, Fremantle Harbour has now been made
-able to anchor and berth the largest vessels coming to the colony. The
-trade of Western Australia is now most important, and sums up to the
-big figure of £12,000,000 a year; 50,000 people travel between here and
-the eastern colonies every year, and millions of pounds worth of gold
-produced in the colony have been taken away by sea. The mail-steamers now
-put in at Fremantle in place of Albany as heretofore, thus giving great
-dissatisfaction to the Albanians. However, the change of port is not only
-necessary for trade, as Fremantle is the principal port of the colony,
-but will also give people travelling from the other side of the world a
-better opportunity of seeing the metropolis and goldfields of Western
-Australia, which they were often deterred from doing by the journey from
-Albany to Perth, a distance of 338 miles, so it is an ill wind that blows
-nobody good.
-
-[Illustration: GOVERNMENT HOUSE, PERTH]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-GUILDFORD
-
- Henley Park—Hunting—Mundaring Weir—Sir John Forrest—Darling
- Nurseries—Kelmscott—Armadale—Jarrahdale—Whitby
- Falls—Mandurah—Yarloop Mills—Harvey—Collie Coalfields.
-
-
-One morning I drove to Guildford, 9 miles from Perth. Such a pretty
-drive! The Swan river winds its way so far, and is there joined by the
-Helena. The many farmhouses and crops of this fine agricultural district
-impress one very favourably. About half-way there is a fine hotel and
-good pleasure-grounds, called the Hotel Ascot, overlooking the river,
-where much boating and fishing are enjoyed by the visitors patronising
-the hotel.
-
-Guildford is a pretty place, and, being so near Perth, is likely to
-become quite an important town. There are some good residences near.
-On Mr. Hammersly’s estate, called Pyrton, after the family estate in
-England, is a fine house, standing amongst unrivalled scenery. The
-scented foliage of the big gum-trees casts a grateful shade for the sleek
-cattle, and in the sweet springtime almost every bit of ground is covered
-with wild flowers of exquisite beauty. The Hon. H. J. Saunders’ estate at
-Henley Park is a few miles farther on, with a very quaint-looking house
-70 years old, and built of sun-dried bricks. The walls are nearly covered
-with ivy, and woodbine runs over the fences. All kinds of flowers spread
-their rich perfume around. The orchard is close by, the scented blossoms
-of the various trees mingling their fragrance with that of the flowers.
-Mr. Saunders has a large racing-stable, and takes great interest in
-racing matters. The private training-track, made at great expense, is
-a mile round, and looked like a smooth lawn; the stud flock of Romney
-Marsh bred sheep had been feeding there for the previous few weeks. Mr.
-Saunders’ racing-stables are recognised as the best in Western Australia,
-and he has a small and select breeding-stud, including Leda by Trenton
-and Lady Sylvia by Newminster. His racehorses are likely-looking animals,
-especially Henley and Black Rock, which have some very good records. As
-we drove back to Guildford the sun was just setting, and the country road
-with its red soil contrasted well with the different greens of the trees
-and fields, and with occasional waving crops, vineyards, and blossoming
-orchards. Everything was perfectly peaceful, until, all at once, the
-stillness was broken by a party of huntsmen returning from a good day’s
-sport. One of them turned out to be an old friend, who told me that the
-country around Guildford is excellent for hunting, and that there is a
-very good hunt club. Our Australian poet, A. L. Gordon, writes:
-
- “Here’s a health to every sportsman,
- Be he stableman or lord;
- If his heart be true I care not
- What his pockets may afford.
- And may he ever pleasantly
- Each gallant sport pursue,
- If he takes his liquor fairly,
- And his fences fairly too.”
-
-[Illustration: Hon. H. J. Saunders]
-
-I put up at the Guildford Hotel for the night, and in the morning
-thoroughly enjoyed the fresh fish caught for my breakfast in the river
-close by. Some excitement was one day caused in quiet Guildford when,
-some new works being in progress, some of the quartz boulders forming
-the old foundation were dug up and carted elsewhere; a boulder fell from
-the dray, and was crushed by one of the wheels; a glittering object
-was noticed in the _débris_, and turned out to be gold; the quartz had
-originally been taken from the Darling Ranges.
-
-I went on to Midland Junction, 2 miles away, _en route_ to the Mundaring
-Weir, from which source the much-needed river of water is to be taken
-to the Coolgardie Goldfields. This gigantic scheme will cost two and
-a half millions of money, but what a boon it will be to the waterless
-goldfields, of which far-famed Coolgardie is perhaps the most waterless!
-In spite of the croakings of those who are adverse to the scheme, Sir
-John Forrest will, I am sure, be found right, and when plenty of fresh
-water is obtainable at Coolgardie, so that the millions of tons of ore
-waiting for treatment can be properly crushed, people will see that the
-first Queen of the Goldfields is not yet dethroned.
-
-The reservoir, where the waters of the Helena river will be stored by
-hundreds of millions of gallons and then carried across the country to
-the goldfields, is now in course of construction, and in two years a
-river (so to say) of fresh water, yielding 5,000,000 gallons daily by
-means of enormous steel pipes, 330 miles long and 30 inches in diameter,
-will be flowing, and the Coolgardie housewives will be able to turn on
-their taps for fresh water. A new era will then dawn for that beautiful
-city, and its true prosperity begin. The sum paid yearly by the Railway
-Department for water on its goldfields’ service would more than pay
-interest on the cost of the scheme. The morning that I arrived at
-Mundaring Weir the workmen were in a great state of excitement; their
-residence blocks were being allotted. There were 130 applications, 6
-of which were refused, the applicants not being considered desirable
-residents. The Department will not allow an hotel to be established.
-Work at the weir was progressing well. At the huge quarries masons were
-working up granite into blocks. There is an almost inexhaustible deposit
-of granite, and the chief engineer, Mr. C. Y. O’Connor, intends to form
-the outer face of the wall with granite instead of using concrete, as is
-generally done. One enormous dam, nearly finished, is to hold 10,000,000
-gallons of water. The watercourse has been divested of timber, and the
-appearance of the landscape thereby greatly changed. The weir, when
-finished, will be 560 feet long, and will hold 4,600,000,000 gallons of
-water.
-
-[Illustration: GOVERNMENT BORE, NEAR MUNDARING]
-
-The train that carried us back passed through miles and miles of
-everlasting flowers. The ground on each side was covered with a carpet
-of them. Acres first of white, then of pink, blue, yellow and purple,
-charm the eye, and the kangaroo paw, standing up in its vivid hues of
-crimson and green, added a still further charm to the scene. On we went
-through the country robed in its spring garb of beauty, until we came to
-Smith’s Mill, named after Frederick Smith, a young gentleman explorer in
-1836, who died of exhaustion at this place after having shown courage and
-endurance of hardship worthy of his cousin, Florence Nightingale. Here I
-left the train in order to visit the Darling Nurseries, which, although
-it is only seven years since they were first planted, are remarkable for
-luxuriance. The trees, with their loads of fruit, were weighed down with
-their own excellence. Thousands of citron-trees, 50,000 apple-trees,
-peaches and nectarines in enormous quantities, plums, pears and prunes
-in profusion, persimmons and other Japanese fruits were to be seen; and
-as for the flowers, the scent of them was almost overpowering. The roses
-were especially fine; all possible sorts seemed to be growing here.
-The foliage of the English and Canadian elm-trees and poplars formed
-a pleasing contrast to the forest vegetation around. It is only a few
-minutes’ walk from the station to this charming place, which is but 16
-miles from Perth; and any one wanting a change from the city should take
-an afternoon and visit it.
-
-Five miles from Mr. Hawter’s nursery garden is the Haughton Vineyard, now
-owned by the Mundaring Wine Company. The vines grow at an altitude of
-1000 feet above the sea-level. The wine is delicious. There is a notable
-grape growing there called “Tarbinet Sauvignon,” from which is produced
-the celebrated Lafitte claret. Mundaring seems to be a congenial home to
-the vine, and its productive powers are of a high order.
-
-Another charming place to see, 28 miles from Perth, is Kelmscott,
-nestling in its bed of flowers. Everything looked delightful on the
-morning that I went there. Nature never appeared more beautiful; it
-seemed cruel to pluck the flowers from their beds and crush the sweet
-grass with the horse’s hoofs. I felt almost like Mr. Ruskin, who was such
-a passionate defender of nature that he would never pluck a flower. Two
-miles from Kelmscott is another sweet little village called Armadale. I
-put up at the picturesque inn and enjoyed a few days’ quiet rest among
-the beautiful surroundings. The orchards, gardens, and vineyards here
-are so many that it would take a whole book to describe them. Sir Arthur
-Stepney and Mr. Jull own the largest properties, and have recently
-equipped a vinery. Only a few years ago immense jarrah and cool white and
-red gum trees stood in undisputed possession. Now fruits of all kinds
-are growing in luxuriance. Oranges, lemons, and sub-tropical fruits
-seem to flourish especially well. So do flowers; blue lechenaultias,
-coral creeper, heaths of all colours, heliotrope, primroses, pink, and
-yellow blossoms nestle in the grass. Lovely bouquets can be made from
-the delicate grey smoke-flower and the pink immortelles, and will last
-a long time without water. Six miles farther on we came to Jarrahdale.
-As its name imports, this is the home of the jarrah-tree, and there are
-large timber mills called the Jarrahdale Jarrah Mills, owned by a London
-company with a capital of £300,000. This company have the advantage of
-the fine harbour of Rockingham, where large ships call to convey the
-timber to all parts of the world. There are five mills on this property.
-I stayed at the town one night, and attended a concert got up by the
-employées, which was quite enjoyable, many of them being really good
-singers and dancers. There is a nice hall, built, of course, with the
-handsome jarrah-wood, which polishes so beautifully that it looks like
-mahogany. It never shrinks or warps, so that for a dancing-floor it
-cannot be excelled. There has been a great demand from South Africa for
-this wood, which is almost impervious to the ravages of time. Piles
-that have been driven into the River Swan at the Causeway, and others
-into the sea at Fremantle, have been taken up after 57 years and found
-to be uninjured, having resisted the attacks of the sea worm. This wood
-is one of the best for building purposes, for it resists the white ant
-and is the least inflammable kind known; yet when burning it throws out
-immense heat and makes splendid charcoal. There are many charcoal-burners
-about who are making a good living. Iron bolts and nails driven into the
-jarrah do not loosen from rust, and there is no doubt the jarrah is the
-principal tree of the colony. It has come triumphantly through several
-severe tests, and is now in great demand all over the world. The Golden
-West does not depend on her mines alone, but, as Mr. Zeb Lane said last
-year, “Make no mistake about it, the jarrah of Western Australia will
-yet pave the streets of many of the leading cities of the world.” The
-late Mr. Ednie Brown, Conservator of Forests, told me that there were
-20,000,000 acres of timbered land in Western Australia valued by an
-expert at £124,000,000. At present there are 50 sawmills in the colony,
-employing over 4000 men, and still the demand is much greater than the
-supply, so that there is a great opening for more capitalists.
-
-Whitby Falls Lunatic Asylum is near Jarrahdale, and the poor souls who
-inhabit it must, I am sure, find there a real haven of rest. The asylum
-nestles in a sweet valley at the foot of the Darling Range, and the hills
-make a grand background. Gardens, large fields and paddocks, with cattle
-feeding, stretch all round, and close by is a magnificent orchard. Five
-miles farther on are the famous Serpentine Falls, whose glittering
-cascades falling among the big rocks and boulders, nearly covered with
-scented foliage, then bubbling and rippling down the valley in joyous
-frolic among the sweet flowers and ferns, form an idyllic picture. By
-many this spot is called the “garden of the colony,” and certainly the
-luxuriant ferns and flowers seemed to grow more beautiful at every step.
-The blackboy and red gum trees grew more thickly than in any place I have
-seen, and where those trees flourish everything seems to grow with extra
-luxuriance. The blackboy is a most peculiar-looking grass tree, with a
-rough thick stem and a crown of thick heavy dark green grass, looking
-at a distance, especially in the twilight, like a real blackboy. The
-gum from the tree is eagerly eaten by the natives and cattle. It also
-exudes a resin from the stem, which is used for pitch in thatching the
-native houses, or Mia-Mias, as well as for other purposes; these trees
-burn brilliantly. The falls come rapidly down from the Darling Range
-in picturesque cascades, falling over the crystalline rocks into pools
-below, thence into the river. Twenty-six miles farther on is Pinjarrah.
-To see this quiet little place now, one would not imagine that years
-ago it was the scene of an immense native rising; that the soldiers and
-mounted police had followed the aborigines for miles, and that here the
-climax came, and hundreds of natives fell. Things are changed since those
-days of bloodshed, and the few aborigines left do not seem to bear any
-ill-will to the white fellow. An old native said to me: “I like white
-fellow; he take all my land, but he make my house, and my big railway,
-grow big corn, big potatoes; black fellow do nothing, white fellow know
-everything, so white fellow do what he like—you give me sixpence?” The
-black fellow always finishes up any conversation with that request.
-Pinjarrah is on the Murray river, and the centre of a large agricultural
-district, where plenty of splendid land is available for the selector.
-Some economists say that population is pressing on the earth’s productive
-powers, and that by-and-by there will be a dearth of animal food; yet
-before mankind is starved out he can become vegetarian, as meat diet is
-expensive compared with a vegetable one. It is said that twenty acres of
-land are necessary to feed one man on meat, while the same land under
-vegetable crops would support a great number. One acre of wheat will
-support 42 people; one of oats, 84; of potatoes and rice, 176; so let
-us not despair while the rich land is still wailing for cultivation.
-Cabbages flourish exceedingly at Pinjarrah, and the climate and soil are
-well adapted for English fruits. There is quite a thriving village, with
-good buildings and private houses. From this place I took a drive of 14
-miles through rich fruit-growing country to the charming seaside town
-of Mandurah. Pears, peaches and nectarines loaded the trees, and there
-is a fine fruit-preserving factory, as well as several factories for
-preserving fish. The Brighton Hotel is very comfortable, and you can get
-a vast amount of pleasure at this charming resort. Boating, fishing and
-shooting can be indulged in to your heart’s content. I had a right merry
-time; several people I knew were staying there, and I became quite an
-expert at fishing. Across the ferry from the hotel is the Murray estuary,
-which is really teeming with fish. The goldfields people patronise
-Mandurah largely, and many huge catches of fish have been chronicled
-by them on their return to the fields from their holiday. Very large
-kingfish are frequently caught with hand-lines. Almost any kind of line
-will do; it is amusing to see the greedy things snapping at anything you
-put on the hook. I saw one caught that measured 5 feet in length and
-weighed 38 lb. Black bream weighing 4 lb. are a common catch. Hosts of
-crabs are about, making the fishing more exciting than ever. At one time
-I thought fishing the slowest amusement in the world, but after this
-experience at Mandurah I am convinced that there is some fascination in
-it after all. In two days a visitor caught 17 dozen whiting, bream and
-mullet. The mullet is a delicious fish, more like salmon than anything.
-Some English people staying at the hotel said it was quite equal to the
-English salmon. As you may imagine, plenty of well-cooked fish is always
-supplied at table, and any one requiring a quiet and enjoyable rest from
-city troubles cannot do better than visit Mandurah, where, in addition to
-the splendid fishing, other sports can be indulged in, since plenty of
-good duck, teal and snipe shooting is to be got at the lakes 5 miles out.
-
-[Illustration: LUNATIC ASYLUM, W.A.]
-
-Returning to Pinjarrah, I drove out to a fine orange grove. Some idea of
-its character can be gained from the fact that some well-known fruiterers
-of Perth bought four trees from the owner at £100 per tree, and,
-after ripening and picking, made £50 profit per tree. The Drakesbrook
-Experimental Government Farm is about 12 miles off, and I there saw
-enormous cucumbers, pumpkins, and other vegetables.
-
-Seven miles farther on are Millar’s Yarloop Mills. The export from these
-mills is very large; 21 sailing ships and 15 steamers were employed to
-take away the timber to various places last year. The settlement presents
-a busy appearance. When the train stopped over 100 men came from the
-mills to get their newspapers and see if there was any one they knew in
-the train. I left the train and looked for an hotel to put up at, but
-there is none; however, I obtained comfortable quarters at a private
-house. There are several mills connected with Yarloop, among them Iron
-Pot, so called from a conical hill near to it. Hoffman & Waterhouse’s
-Mills are 13 miles away, and are connected by telephone with the head
-mill. The office is very handsomely built of jarrah lined with polished
-wood, tongued and grooved. Much of the wood of Western Australia is
-suitable for small manufacturing purposes, such as making picture-frames,
-walking-sticks and knife-handles, while the jam-wood, with its aromatic
-perfume, is the very thing for pipe-making. I am sure a large trade could
-be worked up in that business.
-
-Some beautiful artistic work in jarrah carving has lately been done by
-Mr. Howitt, of Perth, and was shown at the Paris Exhibition. One piece
-especially, a font, is most exquisitely carved. Besides these jarrah
-carvings, Mr. Howitt has made some panels from the following Australian
-woods—karri, tuart, redgum, sandal-wood, raspberry jam, banksia, she
-oak, prickly pear, York gum, blackbutt, wandoo and morrell; each of the
-panels is decorated with a carving of the tree’s foliage. I also saw
-at Robertson & Moffat’s furnishing warehouse, before leaving Perth, a
-handsome dinner-waggon made from seventeen kinds of Western Australian
-woods, with which, besides the before-mentioned woods, salmon gum,
-gimblet, castor-oil, swamp gum, and curly jarrah were most artistically
-introduced in the mosaic part, and with the handsomely carved typical
-swan on the top made a very effective piece of furniture.
-
-The Chamber of Commerce, Prague, Bohemia, have recently written to
-Mr. Ulrich, of Fremantle, asking for specimens and samples of Western
-Australian woods to be sent to that place with a view to future business;
-and when the beauty and excellence of the woods become more generally
-known I think they will be put to more artistic uses than wood-paving.
-Outdoor enjoyments are yearly coming into more favour, and the demand for
-outdoor chairs, seats, and tables must increase. The jarrah-wood never
-shrinks, and being of a beautiful dark red colour does not require paint.
-The timber resources of the colony are marvellous, and it is estimated
-that it would take fully a century to exhaust the now matured trees,
-while fresh ones would be growing all the time.
-
-The Harvey agricultural area, 9 miles from Yarloop, comprises 43,000
-acres; of this 19,803 acres have been surveyed into 155 plots. The
-land is splendid for fruit and vegetables, and there are a good many
-selections, 10,000 acres having already been taken up. The soil is
-rather heavy, and expensive to clear and drain. The Korijekup Estate is
-managed by Mr. Asche, and is well under cultivation, the oranges grown
-there being especially fine. There are good paddocks for horses to run
-in, and the next time our family steed is sent out to grass it will be
-to Korijekup. There are about 12 homesteads on the estate, occupied
-by different families. The pasture lands are very good, and the soil
-well adapted for strawberry and gooseberry growing. There are about 10
-acres of these delicious fruits under cultivation. The manager’s house
-and men’s quarters are near the river, the latter a substantially built
-structure of slabs, made 60 years ago by convict labour for Sir James
-Stirling, to whom the land was originally granted (in lieu of payment
-of salary). In the winter time there are a great many trappers about,
-who gain a good living by trapping the native bear and opossum, for
-the skins of which they get 9s. per dozen in Perth. The grey skins,
-when edged with black, make beautiful rugs for a cold climate, but the
-winters in Western Australia are so mild that things of that kind are
-not required. In the early days the old coach-road to Perth from Bunbury
-passed near Korijekup, and where there were formerly only halting-places
-many flourishing farms now stand. The land about there is very suitable
-for dairying, the grass being green all the year round; the soil is brown
-loam, interspersed with rich black swamps, and suitable for intense
-culture.
-
-Another 15 miles brought me to Collie Station, where I took the branch
-train to the Collie coalfields. Until recently these fields have been
-somewhat neglected, but are now coming into great favour, the coal got
-there having been proved to be of excellent quality, and now being
-extensively used. The Government have decided to use it on the railways,
-and many of the shipping merchants trading to different places have also
-signified their intention of using it. The Smelting Works at Fremantle
-are following suit; householders are consuming it largely, and I can
-state from my own experience that it is excellent coal, which never goes
-out, but burns to the last bit, just leaving clean brown dust behind.
-It will in time be a mine of wealth to Western Australia and constitute
-a great industry, making work for thousands of coal-miners, for the
-deposits of coal are almost limitless. Bores have been used in different
-parts of the field, and have proved the existence of enormous bodies
-of coal. The Collie coal-mine has recently been bought from the Collie
-Company by Mr. Zeb Lane, for the British Westralia Syndicate, and is now
-called the Collie Proprietary Coalfields of Western Australia.
-
-Collie is a very pleasant little town, with some hotels, several stores,
-and many snug and pretty dwellings. One usually thinks of a coal-mining
-town as an uninteresting, grimy place, but Collie is nothing of the kind.
-In the midst of a magnificent jarrah forest, at an elevation of 600 feet
-above sea-level, this place has, I imagine, a brilliant future before it.
-The air is delightfully bracing; the sea breeze blows in from the coast,
-and in the near future, when the gardens now being planted by the men on
-their residential plots have come to maturity, the miners will be able,
-after their work underground, to sit under their own vine or fig-tree
-and enjoy the pipe of peace. This is not a mere form of words, but will
-be solid fact, for the ground is so good that, beside containing coal
-underneath, it will grow all kinds of products on its fertile flats and
-valleys.
-
-Many of the men are making very comfortable homes for themselves; they
-can see that the field is permanent, and that they may hope to remain
-here. Collie will, I predict, be in the future one of the principal towns
-of the colony.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
- Bunbury—Exploring Days—The Estuary—Early Times—Whaling—Native
- murder—Mr. Layman—Retribution—Pasture Land—Robert Scott—Old
- Residents.
-
-
-[Illustration: Paper Bark Tree]
-
-Bunbury is 13 miles from Collie, and is the terminus of this line
-of railway. In passing through Picton, 4 miles before you come to
-Bunbury, you can see the homestead of the Forrest family. It is a
-picturesque-looking old house on a little hill with a pretty brook
-running below, and the surroundings are very beautiful. Mr. William
-Forrest, the ex-Premier’s father, who recently passed away at the ripe
-age of 80 years, arrived in this colony by the ship _Trusty_ in 1842, and
-first settled at Australind. Some three years later he erected a mill
-on what has since been called Mill Point, on the banks of the estuary
-near Bunbury, and in 1849 removed to Picton, where he resided until
-the day of his death. Mr. Forrest bore with indomitable courage many
-misfortunes, such as the burning of his flour-mill, the engine and stones
-of which were afterwards removed to Bunbury, and formed the nucleus of
-the well-known Koombanah Mill, now owned by Mr. Robert Forrest, his
-sixth son. The above-mentioned mill was the first water flour-mill in the
-South-West, and was erected in 1849. Mr. Forrest dammed up the Preston
-river and utilised it for the purpose of his business. You may be sure
-that he was particularly proud of his explorer sons, John and Alick, and
-also proud of the fact that one was Premier of the colony, and the other
-Mayor of Perth. Sir John made three exploring expeditions, and it is
-amusing to hear what “Tommy Pierre,” one of the natives who accompanied
-him, said at the banquet held in honour of the explorers’ return to
-Perth: “Well, gentlemen, I am very thankful to get back to Swan river,
-Bunbury, Fremantle; I thought that we never get back again. Many a time
-I go into camp, going through desert places, and say, ‘Master Forrest,
-where the devil are you going to? Master Forrest, I give you one pound
-to take me back.’ Master say: ‘Hush! What are you talking about? I’ll
-take you right through to Adelaide,’ and I hush. I always obey him; I
-only black fellow, you know, but I am all thankful; I always very glad to
-see white fellow around me.” The _South Australian Register_, of August
-27, 1870, says: “On Saturday morning, the band of explorers from Western
-Australia, under the leadership of Mr. John Forrest, reached Adelaide.
-They were escorted to Government House by a number of horsemen, and the
-crowd heartily cheered them as they came up. These men are heroes in the
-highest sense of the term. The expedition, as many in Western Australia
-still remember, was organised through the instrumentality of Governor
-Weld.” The late Premier, who a year before had piloted an expedition to
-search for the remains of the explorer Leichhart, readily acquiesced in
-the suggestions that were put forward by the then Governor of the colony,
-and on March 30, 1870, accompanied by Mr. Alex. Forrest as second in
-command; H. M’Larty, a police constable; W. H. Osborne, farrier, &c., and
-two natives, he set out for Perth. The party followed the course taken
-out by Eyre in 1841, but in an opposite direction, and although they did
-not experience the difficulties that Eyre encountered, the troubles
-were numerous enough. On March 18, 1874, Sir John Forrest led another
-expedition to Adelaide. From Perth his party proceeded to Champion Bay,
-and the wild, untrodden desert was safely crossed. On November 3, the
-explorers reached Adelaide, and at a banquet which was given in their
-honour a few days afterwards, the Premier of South Australia (the Hon.
-Arthur Blyth), speaking of the leader, said: “Here we have the likeness
-of a man who knew not what fear was, because he never saw fear—who
-carried out the thorough principle of the Briton, in that he always
-persevered to the end.”
-
-[Illustration: LADY FORREST]
-
-I have before me as I write a picture of Sir John as he was in 1866, 34
-years ago; also a picture of the third expedition crossing the spinifex
-desert; terrible country to go through. An extract from Sir John’s diary
-says: “Tommy (a native) went on with the only horse not knocked up to
-find water. I followed his tracks, leading the two done-up horses.
-Spinifex everywhere. We can only crawl along, having to walk and drag the
-horses with us.” At some places the aborigines were very troublesome,
-the camp being attacked one night by 60 of them, who could not be driven
-off until some of them had been shot. Sir John Forrest is a man who
-has the colony’s interests at heart. By his wisdom and foresight great
-tracts of land are being opened up. In his own words: “We have a great
-work to do in the great continent of Australia, all of it encircled by
-the sea, and flying the flag of Old England, no other nation having any
-right or part in it. And what a continent it is! The Western Australian
-territory is as big as France, Spain, Italy, Austria, and Germany, and
-contains 973,000 miles (square). If you were to walk round it, you
-would have nearly a 4000-mile walk. The Empire of Australia represents
-nearly one-seventeenth part of the world’s surface. We have great works
-and great responsibilities before us, and we are proud of Western
-Australia. We want to be in the future one of the brightest gems in the
-English Crown.” In 1890 Sir John spoke the following words into Edison’s
-phonograph: “I firmly believe that Western Australia has started on
-a progressive and prosperous career.” Such words bring to mind the
-prophetic words of Cowper’s “Boadicea”:
-
- The progeny that springs from the forests of our land
- Armed with thunder, clad with wings, shall a wider world command;
- Regions Cæsar never knew thy posterity shall sway
- Where his Eagles never flew, none invincible as they.
-
-It was in 1890 that representative government was granted to Western
-Australia, and Mr. Forrest chosen as Premier. In 1891 her Majesty Queen
-Victoria conferred on him the honour of knighthood, and for ten years Sir
-John Forrest remained Premier of Western Australia (establishing a record
-in Australia’s history), a post which he resigned in order to assume
-that of Postmaster-General for Australia; but has since been appointed
-Minister of Federal Defence in the Ministry of the Commonwealth of
-Federated Australia. Not long before her lamented death, our late beloved
-Queen was pleased to bestow on Sir John Forrest the Grand Cross of St.
-Michael and St. George, he being, I believe, the first Australian born
-who has received that honour.
-
-I was quite surprised to find such a fine hotel as Gordon’s Pier in a
-country town. The dinner was excellently served, the meat especially
-tender, the fish sweeter, the vegetables nicer, and the fruit more juicy,
-than usual. Perhaps it was because I had been roughing it a little just
-before that I valued the extra comfort I obtained here. A splendid
-balcony reached right round the hotel, from which was visible the
-sparkling water of Koombanah Bay, with its long pier and beach of silver
-sand. The lighthouse on the hill, with its square tower and grey walls,
-stood like a sentinel against the sky. The light that shines out to sea
-at night is 117 feet above high water, and is visible 12 miles. As it was
-a hot night, most of the guests were out on the balcony. I lay back in
-my comfortable lounge-chair, inhaled the health-giving sea breeze, and
-thoroughly enjoyed a cup of delicious coffee brought me by the attentive
-waiter. From the drawing-room, where some of the guests were passing
-a pleasant half-hour, and while singing for their own pleasure, also
-affording gratification to the visitors outside, came strains of music.
-I retired early, and was agreeably surprised to find my bedroom lit up
-with electric light. The noise from the machinery rather kept me awake at
-first, but I soon passed into the land of dreams. The housemaid told me
-in the morning that a great many people from the goldfields stay here in
-the summer to recoup after the dryness and heat of the fields, and that
-the managers of the mines usually wish to have their bedrooms on the side
-near the machine-room, as the noise is home-like, or mine-like, and lulls
-them off to sleep.
-
-In the morning I took a waggonette and drove out to explore Bunbury,
-going first to the Leschenault Estuary, a sheet of water divided from the
-sea by a strip of land 10 or 12 miles long. The surface was dotted with
-wild fowl and its depths are full of fish. The Collie and Preston rivers
-fall into the estuary. On the shore there are plenty of black swans and
-wild duck which seem to be quite tame. On the east side of the estuary
-is the site of Australind, to which, 57 years ago, many people came
-from England to settle, but finding the place was not what it had been
-represented to them by unscrupulous agents, they disbanded and settled in
-different parts of the colony, so that Australind now is merely a name.
-It is very prettily situated at the junction of the Brunswick and Collie
-rivers. There are large dykes about there not yet explored, which may
-contain wonderful mineral wealth. Manna gum-trees are to be found, and
-yield sometimes as much as fifty tons of gum from one tree.
-
-Bunbury’s history dates from the first settlement of the colony, when New
-South Wales sent soldiers to King George’s Sound in order to circumvent
-the French, who nearly had possession of Western Australia. Governor
-Stirling took up large tracts of country near Bunbury in lieu of salary,
-and settlers were granted 200 and 300 acres of land as an inducement to
-go there. When, 60 years ago, the intending settlers arrived and pitched
-their camps, a few soldiers were stationed for their protection, but as
-the natives were mostly friendly and intelligent, the soldiers had little
-to do, so whiled away the time by helping the settlers, and as many hands
-make light work the little community soon became prosperous.
-
-In those days the post was sent twice a month by an aboriginal foot
-postman. Sometimes he got tired of his work, and would leave the post-bag
-under a tree and decamp. Then scouts had to be sent out to find the mail.
-An old colonist, Mr. R. Scott, related to me many of his experiences at
-that time. Mr. Scott’s father arrived in the colony in 1830, and not
-liking the look of Fremantle, which was merely a sandy beach and wild
-bush, with a few tents scattered about, intended returning to Scotland,
-but Governor Stirling persuaded him to go to Bunbury with some other
-intending settlers. The younger members of the party traversed the 115
-miles on foot, the older people going in the Governor’s ship to the port.
-The tramp was a long one, and young Scott’s clothes were so tattered
-when he arrived that he would not go out to speak to the Governor, but
-hid behind a tree. He was, however, persuaded to show himself, and the
-Governor, seeing the poor boy in such a plight, sent to the vessel for a
-suit of his own clothes and a cap, no others being available. By cutting
-off portions and tucking in other parts the boy was made presentable. Mr.
-Scott’s mother, who died some years ago, aged 88, kept those clothes with
-great pride until the day of her death.
-
-Whaling was a local industry in those days. Mr. Scott and his brother had
-several whaling-boats, and sometimes took as much as 90 tons of whale-oil
-to Fremantle. An American vessel went ashore at that time, and the
-enterprising captain, being stranded, took up a piece of land and started
-a garden, which he fenced in with the staves of olive barrels.
-
-The only native murder at Bunbury was perpetrated in 1840, Mr. Layman,
-a settler at Wanerup, being the victim. He was speared by the king of
-the black tribe then at Wanerup, about 6 miles from Busselton. This
-booka (king) came to Mr. Layman’s camp when a native boy, servant to
-Mr. Layman, was packing up his damper (a kind of large colonial scone
-cooked in ashes) to take with him as rations when he was going out with
-sheep. The booka took the damper from the boy, and throwing him a small
-piece, was going off with the rest. Mr. Layman came up and saw this, and
-taking the booka by the beard forced him to give up the damper. This was
-evidently too much indignity for him, and when Mr. Layman turned his back
-he speared and killed him, then immediately made off into the bush. The
-settlers, about twenty in number, determined to follow and execute him,
-but found many difficulties in the way, as none of the natives would lead
-them to his tracks. They, however, tracked him as well as they could, and
-to frighten the tribe they shot down every native they came across. This
-put such fear into them that an old man called Crocodile was induced to
-show them the way, and they then tracked the murderer to the Capel river,
-to a hollow tree, whence it was some time before he could be dislodged.
-When this was effected he was found to be well armed with spears ready
-to fight. He was, however, summarily shot by Corporal Gill, and his
-head carried back on a pole to the Vasse (now called Busselton). Since
-then the only known murder by natives was that of Mrs. McGowan, who was
-speared by a half-witted native. The shooting of the blacks, although it
-seems cruel, was the means of showing them that the white man was their
-master, and after this no more trouble arose with the various tribes. Had
-it not been done the tables would have been turned, and all the white
-settlers might have been murdered.
-
-The natives are divided into four families or tribes—the Ballarook,
-Deduruk, Donderup, and Gnakerunk. Consequently, if you want to find
-out what tribe a certain native belongs to you must say to him: “You
-Ballarook?” If he does not belong to that tribe he will say: “No, me
-Donderup.” They are all brothers and sisters in each tribe, and bound
-to protect one another. When civilised they make fairly good servants,
-but never quite lose their wild instincts; and when they have a holiday,
-which they frequently take of their own free will, away they go to their
-tribe, and revel in free life until they tire and once more long for the
-flesh-pots of civilisation, when they again return to their work.
-
-[Illustration: BUNBURY]
-
-Thousands of acres of land are available here for purchase. The Mangles
-Estate has lately been opened up for settlement on very easy terms.
-Potatoes, onions and other vegetables grow most luxuriantly. The pastoral
-and agricultural land is very rich, and as many as three crops a year
-are sometimes taken off the same land by Mr. Clarke, who has a farm near
-Bunbury. The forest lands around abound with splendid jarrah and other
-timber. The harbour is very safe and partially protected by a coral reef.
-There are many handsome residences. The Hon. Charles Spencer has a large
-house on a hill in the most beautiful position in Bunbury, and there are
-some splendid vineyards, the soil being specially good for vine culture.
-
-The town has 1200 inhabitants and the district about 3000. It is very
-prosperous, and has many fine public buildings; some of the early
-settlers who went through so many rough times are now in the enjoyment of
-comfortable homes, and passing peacefully down the vale of life. There
-is an exceptionally fine post-office, standing near the spot where the
-barracks were erected for the soldiers in the long-ago days. The hospital
-is an imposing building, on an elevation commanding a fine view of the
-bay, and has very pretty grounds. It would be by no means intolerable to
-be ill in this lovely seaside resort, but, as a rule, people who come
-to Bunbury get well, not ill. The walking, driving, boating, fishing,
-bathing and shooting excursions that are the order of the day give one
-no time to think of being ill. Cycling is a favourite pastime, and there
-is a very good club. The streets are wide and planted with shady trees.
-The Preston river runs into the estuary, its banks are loaded with bright
-flowers, and the golden sunshine shining through the trees, the blue
-water and the massive breakwater in the distance make beautiful Bunbury
-look like a bit of Paradise.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Blackwood River]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
- Dardanup Park—Donnybrook—Bridgetown—The Grange—Dallgarrup—A
- Prodigious Prize—Greenbushes—Tinfield—The Great Forest.
-
-
-The Hon. H. W. Venn has a splendid estate called Dardanup Park, 10
-miles from Bunbury. The dwelling-house is built in old English style
-and surrounded by a garden, where all kinds of beautiful flowers grow
-in profusion. There is an enormous shed, capable of holding large
-quantities of hay. The dairy cows, standing knee-deep in pasture, are
-specially sleek and fat; the milk and cream that I tasted at Dardanup
-seemed exceptionally sweet. I went for a six-mile drive to the Ferguson
-river, passing many pretty farms, nearly all on Mr. Venn’s land. One
-goes for miles down a narrow road like an English lane, except that the
-hedges are formed of the beautiful Australian wattle in place of English
-hawthorn. The grand Australian trees, red gum and jarrah (some of immense
-size), the pretty banksia, the delicate paper-tree, the coral creeper,
-which, as its name implies, is of the colour of pink coral, and in some
-instances, had embraced the banksia-trees and mingled lovingly with their
-broad green leaves, all combined to make a pretty picture. A little Roman
-Catholic church and, farther on, a Protestant one, gave token that the
-spiritual welfare of the people at Dardanup is well looked after. It is
-singular how many native names end with “up.” On to the road to Bunbury
-there is a station called Wagerup. An old settler in the district was
-not satisfied with that name, and wrote to Mr. Venn, the member for
-the district, to say that he was an old settler of 30 or 40 years, and
-thought he ought to have a say in the naming of the railway station.
-Being a loyal Englishman, he wished it to be called Queen Victoria
-Station. I am sorry to say his request has not yet been acceded to.
-Another loyal subject at another railway station, where there are about
-two other dwellings, has recently built a bush public-house, and outside
-is printed, in large letters, “The Palace Hotel.”
-
-Mr. Venn is very much liked by all the farming community. I overheard a
-controversy on politics at the dinner-table between several farmers, and
-they were unanimous in their opinion that Mr. Venn was the man for them,
-and for the country.
-
-Beyond lies Donnybrook, not the great Irish fair of that name, but a
-fertile spot of Western Australia. A mile before arriving there we
-stopped at Baxter & Prince’s siding, 2½ miles from which are their
-well-known sawmills, in which are employed a large number of workmen.
-There are some fine farms at Donnybrook, and the estate of the Hon.
-J. W. Hackett, with its orchards and gardens, is half a mile from the
-station. In these gardens all kinds of fruits, especially raspberries and
-strawberries, grow in luxuriance.
-
-On account of the marvellous fertility of the ground there are a great
-many applications from people wishing to establish themselves on the
-land here, and take up small plots for fruit growing. Two miles out of
-Donnybrook is a goldfield, which may some day turn out to be immensely
-rich. Gold was first discovered in the surface soil by some men searching
-for the alluvial deposit. Further investigations with the miner’s
-faithful prospecting-dish eventually led to the discovery of quartz
-veins. There are several shafts sunk now to a great depth, all of which
-have yielded a profit. Perhaps a new Coolgardie will one day spring into
-existence here.
-
-Mr. Maryanski, the well-known mining expert, is largely interested, has
-purchased property here, and has now gone to Europe for the purpose of
-floating companies.
-
-To drive up the Preston Valley from Donnybrook in the lovely weather was
-pleasant. The roads were certainly not all that could be desired, but the
-forest scenery compensated for a little jolting, and the more one travels
-in the West the more is one convinced of the resources of the colony. The
-soil is a rich chocolate loam, and grass and water plentiful all the year
-round. Hay is principally cultivated here, as a great quantity of chaff
-is required for the horses at the mills in the district.
-
-On my return to Donnybrook, rather tired with my day’s excursion, I
-retired early, and after a refreshing night’s rest started for Bridgetown
-in the morning. The line has only recently been completed, and was
-formally opened on December 2, 1898. It must have been pretty hard work
-to make this railway, for the various cuttings are in some parts so deep
-that 40 or 50 kegs of powder per day were often used in blasting the
-hard rock. There are 178 cuttings and 204 embankments on the line of
-only 42 miles, so no wonder it cost the Government a considerable sum
-of money. Donnybrook is 208 feet above the sea-level, but Needes Hill,
-7 miles farther on, is 770 feet above. After that the road drops down
-again to 400 feet, then it rises again to an altitude of 1000 feet, and
-at this point comes within 10 miles of the now well-known Greenbushes
-Tinfield (of which more anon). A further depression of this elevation
-brings it to Hester’s Brook, and then a further rise ascends to Dalgarup
-Station, landing at an elevation of more than 1000 feet, whence the line
-drops again to Bridgetown, only 510 feet high in the clouds. I quickly
-made my way to Warner’s Hotel, and after an excellent dinner proceeded
-to investigate Bridgetown and the Blackwood river. The orchards around
-this district appeared to be very fine. Sir James Lee Steere, the member
-for the district, gives a handsome silver cup every year as a trophy at
-the annual show for the best-kept orchard. This has been now won three
-years in succession by the Messrs. Allnutt, the Grange. Their orchard
-covers an area of 30 acres. Mr. Allnutt, the father of the present owner,
-planted this fine orchard 30 years ago. One can imagine what a wilderness
-the place must have been then, and what perseverance has been practised
-to achieve such a successful issue. The latest development is a steam
-sawmill on the property for the purpose of cutting up timber and making
-boxes for packing the fruit in. Every kind of fruit one can think of
-is here. As well as fruit, magnificent potatoes are grown, and often
-yield 15 tons to the acre. Now that the railway touches the place, the
-inhabitants say that this will be the chief agricultural centre of the
-south-west district. The people seemed so genial that it was really a
-pleasure to converse with them.
-
-A very beautiful drive through richly wooded hills, the tender green
-grass of which was dotted here and there by clusters of trees and covered
-by the perfumed golden wattle and by many spring wild flowers—appearing
-between an occasional field of newly growing wheat—brought me to
-Dallgarrup, the homestead of Mr. Godfrey Hester, who has over 7000
-acres of land altogether. I found this gentleman engaged in skinning
-and dressing a sheep; he had taken on a Chinese cook, and all the other
-hands, objecting to the introduction of Chinese labour, had left in a
-body. Consequently Mr. Hester had to turn to and do the work himself.
-
-About a mile farther on is Blackwood Park, Mr. Gerald Hester’s homestead,
-with an orchard of 23 acres, 6 of which bear most lovely apples. There
-are 2000 acres, and many cattle and sheep. The house is an old-fashioned
-one, having been built 50 years ago for Mr. Hester’s father, who was
-the oldest settler on the Blackwood river, and came out 52 years ago
-He was the first Stipendiary Magistrate in the district. The house is
-in a charming spot, and many handsome willows grow about the running
-brook close by. The largest grape-vine I have ever seen is here. Mr.
-Hester told me it was planted 40 years ago by his mother. The height of
-this marvellous vine is 7 feet to the first branch. There are 6 enormous
-branches measuring 8 inches round and averaging 100 feet long. The body
-of the vine is 50 inches round. A very large trellis, which from time
-to time has been added to, now takes up 39 feet of ground in length by
-54 feet in width. The kind of arbour thus formed maybe imagined. 2064
-bunches of magnificent black Hamburg grapes, weighing over a ton, came
-off this vine last year, which I am sure breaks the record of production
-of one vine in any of the colonies.
-
-The drive from Bridgetown to Greenbushes Tinfield through forest country
-is most enjoyable. This tinfield has of late been richly developed. Until
-recently it was not thought much of, gold-mining having deadened all
-other kinds of mining in the colony. Now, however, things have taken a
-turn, and quite a large settlement has sprung up, and over 2000 men are
-on the field. A good town has been formed where three months before was a
-dense forest, and solitude reigned supreme. Jarrah growing on the spot,
-and two timber-mills being close by, nearly all the houses are built of
-the handsome dark wood, are thus much more pleasing than the usual tents
-and camps of mining places, and stand out well against the tall green
-forest trees. People have built very nice houses, evidently having an eye
-to solid comfort, and thinking the field a permanent one.
-
-The town of Greenbushes is one long street or avenue. On either side
-tower the enormous forest trees. The ring of the axe and the crash of
-some of these falling giants, together with the immense fires burning
-day and night for the purpose of getting out the tremendous stumps
-of the trees; the energy of the people, and the numbers of visitors
-constantly arriving to see the field, make Greenbushes a lively place.
-The town seems to have sprung up by magic; there are 30 stores of all
-descriptions, 3 hotels, the Court House Hotel being a very comfortable
-one, post and telegraph offices, warden’s court, and other public
-buildings.
-
-Miles and miles of the country contain rich tin. The tinfields are on
-the highest point of the Darling Range, 1100 feet above sea-level. The
-gullies and watercourses are very picturesque being in the heart of the
-green forest. I drove down to Spring Gully, where the men were all at
-work in their claims, and the various workings were most interesting.
-Dumpling Gully is the name of another part of the field.
-
-There have been some rich finds. The Cornwall Mine, on the highest point,
-has been proved to carry 13½ per cent. of lode tin. Another lode tin mine
-is the Yarana, which has given good results. The lode in this mine is
-similar to that found in Cornwall, England, being associated with quartz,
-schist and kaolin. Tin ore is most peculiar-looking stuff. Some lumps
-of it that are called “nuggets of wood tin,” weigh 30 lb. each; another
-kind is like fine sand, and another like gunpowder, and the colours range
-from white to red, yellow, ruby, black, grey and brown. Some of the men
-have sold their claims to the syndicates for £4000 and £5000, and gone
-on their way rejoicing. I was surprised to find plenty of horses and
-cabs at Greenbushes; these are, no doubt, accounted for by the distance
-of the town—three miles—from the railway station, which I passed going
-to Bridgetown. The cabbies were doing a roaring trade, and the whole
-community seemed very well satisfied with things in general. Gold has
-also been found at a depth of 33 feet, the reef being nearly 8 inches
-wide, and comprised of quartz; the formation enclosing it contains free
-tin worth about 3 ounces to the dish.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
- Busselton—Napoleon’s Grave—Cattle Chosen—“All
- aboard”—Karridale—Touring the Forest—King Karri—The Sand Patch.
-
-
-Starting from Greenbushes railway station, I made my return journey as
-far as Boyanup Junction, where I changed trains for Busselton, or, to
-call it by its first name, “The Vasse.” This was one of the earliest
-settlements of the colony, and is one of the most picturesque. It has
-a beautiful bay, which, like Bunbury, was at one time a great whaling
-place. There are about 30 fishermen there, and most of the fish caught
-is sent every day by the Perth Ice Company to the metropolis. The bay is
-nearly always calm, and English people say that it resembles Bournemouth
-in old England. The lovely beach, with its hard white sand, is a
-favourite place for cycling.
-
-In the afternoon I sallied forth to inspect the beauties of this place
-and was quite delighted with this ideal town. Everything is sweet and
-clean; the grass and the trees seemed to me to have a more tender green
-than in other places. The beautiful sky, with white fleecy clouds, was
-reflected in the sparkling sea; dear little boats were dancing on the
-water, and at the jetty, which is a mile long, two ships were moored,
-while another had just spread its white wings to fly to fresh seas. It
-was a perfect afternoon for fishing, which accounted for the number of
-fishing-boats out.
-
-The morning sun shining in all its glory awoke me early. I strolled down
-to the pier, and met some boys coming along laden with fish that they had
-just caught. I wanted to buy some, but the boys would not hear of that,
-and presented me with two for my breakfast, which I took to the hotel to
-be cooked, and no fish, I think, ever tasted sweeter.
-
-Looking one way from the top of the lighthouse at the end of the jetty
-one saw an exquisite carpet of green stretching for miles, white houses
-nestling in shrubberies near the winding river, and sleek cows in the
-pasture, nearly up to their knees in the waving grass; out at sea the
-fishing-boats were dancing on the waves; a big steamer in the distance
-was on its way to the East; a white-winged ship was just disappearing
-from sight on the horizon; and all these, with flocks of birds soaring
-across the sky, formed a picture pleasant enough to charm any eye.
-
-There are some remarkably fine old houses about Busselton; Fairlawn, the
-old Residency, for one. The immense China tree in front of the house was
-a favourite spot with the late Colonel Molloy, when resident magistrate.
-Under its shade he sat many a time transacting the business of the
-Residency, and soldiers of the Queen have often passed beneath its shady
-branches. Colonel Molloy was with Sir John Moore’s army, and also fought
-under Wellington at Waterloo. A magnificent willow-tree, planted by the
-Colonel in 1862, a few years before his death, from a slip growing over
-Napoleon’s grave at St. Helena, is now 12 feet in circumference. I asked
-for a slip as a memento, and it was graciously given to me. Fairlawn
-now belongs to Mr. R. Gale, who has a nice dairy, with all the latest
-improvements, stables and stockyards. As much as 380 lb. of butter,
-from 60 cows, is made weekly by the Laval cream separator, worked by
-horse-power. This part of the beautiful country is so noted for its fine
-milch-cows that there would be great scope for a large butter factory,
-since real nice country butter is seldom to be obtained in Perth at any
-price; and I am sure housekeepers would hail the advent of fresh pats of
-butter from the country with delight.
-
-Mulberry-trees were loaded with their luscious fruit, and the bees
-were hovering around and sipping the sweets from them. Honey is very
-plentiful. In some orchards at Busselton there are as many as 130 hives,
-yielding four tons of the sweet commodity.
-
-Mr. J. Bussell’s estate has a singular name, “Cattle Chosen,” and it
-was a strange chance that named it so. Mr. Bussell, the oldest settler
-in these parts, had taken up land at Augusta, nearer the coast, but was
-not entirely pleased with the place, and while driving some cattle to
-the Swan Settlement lost one of his cows. On his return journey he saw
-cattle-tracks, and following them up found not only the lost cow, but a
-beautiful calf also, on the richest pasture he had seen. Considering the
-circumstance as an omen of good luck, and delighted with the locality,
-he applied to have his grant, 6000 acres, transferred to the Vasse, and
-named the place “Cattle Chosen.” The town was afterwards called Busselton
-out of respect to his name.
-
-The homestead of Cattle Chosen is a pleasant place. Willows grow over the
-pretty brooks and white bridges. An avenue of palm-trees leading to the
-house, and an old cannon in the garden in front of it, add romance to the
-scene. I was shown some marvellous ears of wheat grown by Mr. Tanner near
-here, 12 inches long by 8 inches round; also cabbages 12 lb. in weight.
-Tomatoes grow by the ton, and as to potatoes, 11 tons have been taken off
-one patch of two acres. There is some swamp land near Busselton which it
-is said would produce as many potatoes as the whole of Ireland.
-
-In Mr. Pries’ orchard apples and pears load the trees so heavily—some of
-the trees yielding 16 cases of fruit each—that the boughs actually break
-beneath the weight. Wax models of some of the pears grown here are to
-be seen at the office of the Agricultural Bureau, St. George’s Terrace,
-Perth.
-
-The children on the beach and in the flowery meadows seemed to revel in
-their play, and their healthy faces and merry laughter proclaimed that
-doctors were not required. No wonder they looked so well, with such a
-beautiful place to live in! The summer temperature is never over 100°,
-and the winters are mild. With the ample supply of milk, butter, eggs,
-fruit, and other good things, the lives of these children are cast in a
-pleasant place.
-
-Mr. Locke, the member for the district, has a great racing-stable at
-Lockville, and several horses are training for the coming races. I
-admired the beautiful creatures very much. Several of them have already
-won important races. Mr. Locke has also many dogs, which have taken
-prizes at various shows; he is further well known as one of the best
-judges of horseflesh in the colony, and the breeding of bloodstock is
-carried on extensively on his estate.
-
-The recreation-ground is a very level ground of 20 acres, and sport of
-all kind is carried on there. Near the fine new bridge is the pretty
-English church, covered with ivy, with the peaceful God’s Acre adjoining
-it. St. Mary’s Catholic Church, served by that genial and benevolent
-parish priest, Father Tracey, is near. Busselton, in addition to its
-agricultural capabilities, offers a good opening for the timber business,
-and one gentleman, Mr. Porritt, late of Queensland, who has settled
-there, with the intention of developing this trade, has obtained a lease
-of the Ballarat tramline, and purchased two sawmills, as well as taking
-up 60,000 acres of forest land. Employment will thus be given to a great
-many men, so emigrants will be welcome.
-
-Tin has been found close to Busselton, at Quindalup, and as water is
-plentiful close by, profit to the district is likely to arise from the
-discovery.
-
-The morning sun was shining in all its splendour over the fair River
-Vasse when the driver of the four-in-hand mail-coach cried, “All aboard!”
-I climbed to the box-seat, and with a crack of the driver’s whip off we
-went. The day was beautiful; the air was exhilarating, and after the
-50-mile journey to Karridale I felt inclined for a good dinner. Luckily
-I had supplied myself with sandwiches and sherry, or should not have
-fared too well. As the journey is nearly all through the bush, one must
-not expect to find luxuries in the way of provisions. The scenery and
-country we passed through satisfied my eye and soul, but after four hours
-in the coach I began to feel that the cravings of the material inner
-woman required satisfying also, and was very glad of the little basket
-that had been prepared for me. The peppermint-trees growing by the road
-are very pretty. These graceful trees grow in thickets, are very shady,
-and give a pungent scent. We passed many homesteads on our way, and right
-in the middle of the forest a large brick building loomed up. I thought
-at first it was a church, but found it was the Newtown Agricultural
-Hall. There are no people living about it now, but I suppose there will
-be a settlement some day, and Newtown is evidently taking time by the
-forelock. When I saw the first karri-tree I was surprised. Without doubt
-it is the handsomest kind of tree in the colony. It over-tops all the
-other trees, towering to the sky, with delicate feathery leaves, and the
-huge trunk, as straight as a mast, is covered by white smooth bark. Some
-of these trees are known to reach great heights—as much, indeed, as 400
-feet. Captain Pemberton Walcott is stated to have measured one whose
-circumference was 60 feet. I did not see any quite as large as that, but
-they certainly looked gigantic.
-
-On approaching Karridale we passed the racecourse and cricket-ground,
-where several lads were at play. This spot is singularly picturesque,
-and the district is one of the oldest in the colony. (Augusta, where
-the trees grow to 400 feet high, is 11 miles from Karridale, and is the
-site of one of the earliest settlements in 1826, but it has never been a
-favourite place, and has been abandoned several times.) The magnificent
-forest trees await the woodman’s axe; life and industry are everywhere;
-the people are like busy bees. I was agreeably surprised to find such a
-large township. It is a regular little colony of itself, right away in
-one corner of the continent of which we are so justly proud.
-
-[Illustration: DAVIES’ KARRIDALE TIMBER STATION]
-
-Karridale is the headquarters of Mr. Davies’ Karri and Jarrah Mill
-Company, and 18 years ago was an impenetrable forest. Mr. Davies has
-42,000 acres leased from the Government for 42 years from 1882, and the
-mill was started in that year amid many difficulties that have been
-overcome only by much perseverance. To-day the settlement is a credit to
-Mr. Davies and to the colony, and there is a population of 800 persons
-dependent on the estate for their living. There is a good post-office,
-through which last year the sum of £2340 was remitted; 3700 telegrams
-were sent, and 15,000 letters were posted; all the result of the energy
-and enterprise of the gentleman above mentioned, who is assisted by his
-handsome sons. The Government now derives a revenue of £5000 per year
-from this district. Many of the employées have pretty gardens by their
-cottages, which are dotted about the bush in most picturesque fashion.
-The single men have rows of cottages to themselves, and there is a large
-dining-room built for their use, presided over by a good housekeeper,
-and as house-rent is free, and there are no rates or taxes to pay, this
-seems to me to be a paradise for the working community. Any article
-that a civilised being requires is obtainable here; you might almost
-say, from a needle to an anchor. A large store adjoins the office, and
-although it is a private agency, settlers in the district also can get
-their supplies there. There is a nice hall for entertainments, which are
-often got up by the people, and a ball is one of the frequent recreations
-in the winter-time. A handsome little church has just been built, which
-we observed when coming into the settlement. Moreover, there is the
-unusual institution of a hospital for horses, of which there are 200
-in the place. A hospital for the people is being built, but everybody
-looks so very healthy that I think it will be almost a superfluity. Two
-market-gardens and orchards give one an idea of the splendid productivity
-of the soil. Ten tons of potatoes per acre, and apple-trees that yield
-seven cases each, are quite usual. There is plenty of good grass, and
-the bullocks of the estate, 300 in number, live entirely on it, without
-artificial food, which means a large saving, and they look splendidly
-fat and strong. Mr. Davies was the first man to introduce karri timber
-into the markets of the world, and now the company send supplies of it
-through England, China, Egypt, India, South Africa, Mauritius, and all
-the eastern colonies. Melbourne has patronised karri timber largely.
-For wood-blocks it has great strength, and has been proved by British
-Admiralty tests to be equal to English oak. The floors of the art gallery
-and museum in Melbourne are laid with karri-wood, and in London, Pall
-Mall, Piccadilly, and Regent Street have lately been paved with karri
-blocks. A log cut over 40 years ago was presented by Mr. Davies to the
-Kew Museum. It had been in the ocean 30 years, and is now as good as when
-first cut. Karri-wood has the further advantage of not being slippery,
-a very essential point in wood-blocks. The karri is an exceptionally
-quick-growing tree, and when the matured trees are cut down the young
-trees shoot up at once. All the latest improvements are to be found at
-Karridale, electric lighting and a telephone service running to the port
-and to the lighthouse at Cape Leeuwin. Mr. Davies has a very handsome
-house, built in bungalow style.
-
-[Illustration: Felling the Giant Karri]
-
-Taking a seat one morning, by invitation, in the inspection-car, with
-its comfortable seats, I started for a tour through the forest to the
-adjoining mills at Baranup, where a great many men are employed, and
-where there is another little place, more evidences of happiness and
-prosperity, and more little cottages nestling among the trees. In
-the butcher’s shop I saw an enormous block, the complete section of
-a tremendous tree. Seeing a strange lady on the car, the men looked
-somewhat surprised, but quite pleased. I wished to see the felling of one
-of the kings of the forest, upon which four men were then engaged, two
-at each end of the cross-saw. It takes six to fell one of these giants,
-and when it is coming down one needs to stand “off the grass,” as the
-saying is. When felled, the tree is marked off into certain lengths and
-severed into so many logs, then numbers of horses and bullocks appear on
-the scene and drag the logs to the nearest landing, then they are put
-into the truck and borne off to the mill. At Baranup I was to see the
-King Karri that I had heard about before coming, and now, when I saw it,
-I was satisfied that, although not yet 400 feet high, it is a king of the
-forest; indeed, this giant tree is the largest on indisputable record
-in Western Australia. It stands in its great majesty in one of the most
-picturesque spots of the colony. Its gnarled and weather-beaten roots of
-immense size show that it must be of great age. Its dimensions were given
-to me by Mr. Davies, and are as follows:
-
- Girth 4 ft. above ground 30 ft. 8 in.
- ” 6 ft. 2 in. ” 28 ft. 1 in.
- ” 132 ft. 6 in. ” 20 ft. 7 in.
- Height to top of branches 342 ft. 0 in.
- ” first fork 146 ft. 0 in.
-
-This tree would make 146 loads of timber and cut up into 3000 sleepers,
-enough to lay a mile and a half of railway. Around here are many more
-tremendous giant trees awaiting the woodman’s axe. The demand for Western
-Australia hardwood is now far greater than the mills can at present
-supply.
-
-[Illustration: THE SAND PATCH]
-
-Hamelin Harbour was another surprise. Next morning I proceeded on an
-excursion to that place, the train taking a quantity of wood-blocks for
-Melbourne streets. A mile and a half on our journey we arrived at the top
-of Hamelin Hill. A perfect panorama lay around us; the forest was at our
-back, while in front lay the Southern Ocean in all its grandeur, with
-little bays and headlands falling into its depths. The pier at Hamelin
-Bay, which is seen in the distance, a mile and a half off, is 1800 feet
-long. As we approached the bay, the homes of the people employed there
-and a charming little lake at the bottom of the valley, with Mr. Davies
-yacht and several pretty boats lying at rest on its placid bosom, added
-fresh charm to the scene. Arrived at Hamelin Bay, I took a walk down the
-long jetty, and the salt seabreeze from both Indian and Southern Oceans
-fanned my cheeks with a breath so fresh and bracing that I almost felt as
-if I had wings to my feet. Two large vessels were being loaded; the men
-seemed to be vying with each other in the effort to do the most work. Two
-very large and rather dangerous-looking rocks are not far off the jetty.
-I think one is called Mushroom Rock, and certainly it looks more like a
-huge mushroom than anything else but a rock. The other is Peak Rock. At
-one of the cottages the wife of one of the men was most hospitable, and
-made me a nice cup of tea and some toast, which I enjoyed after my early
-morning’s start.
-
-On my return to Karridale, having some time to spare, I drove out about
-a mile to see the Sand Patch, which is a most peculiar place. It is a
-tremendous sandhill 100 feet high, a few miles from the sea, and has
-slowly moved inland a few inches every year. Tops of trees may be seen
-over the summit, looking like bushes. It is 2 miles wide, and can be seen
-a long way off at sea. Many sea-captains take their bearings from it. An
-attempt has been made to arrest its march by planting 70,000 grass roots
-in the direction it takes, so as to stop its advance, but whether the
-attempt will succeed will only be proved by time.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
- Deepdene Caves—Margaret Caves—A Welcome Lunch—Cape Leeuwin.
-
-
-The Deepdene Caves were my next place of call, Mr. Bruce kindly driving a
-party of us to them, and explaining everything to us in a most agreeable
-fashion. I enjoyed the drive so much that I was almost sorry to arrive.
-The approach to the caves is through a deep dell, where there is a brook,
-called Turner’s Brook. A very quaint old house stood on a slope, and
-the high cliffs in the distance looked picturesque. But I could see no
-sign of a cave, and when we came to a stop I was still looking for one.
-However, Mr. Bruce soon stopped the trap, and we got out and were guided
-by him through some dense bush up the hill until we came to a yawning
-gulf, like a gigantic chasm. I own to feeling a desire to turn back,
-without seeing the caves at all, so forbidding did the approach look,
-but pride came to the rescue. It would never do to say I was afraid,
-so assuming a valour, though I had it not, I followed my guides, who
-had now lit candles and also armed themselves with bundles of blackboy
-rushes. We entered the cavern, and I found the chasm not so terrible as
-I had anticipated. The first large gallery once had a number of fine
-stalactites, but some vandals have torn them away. The path now became
-very steep, and I had to cling to jutting stalactites. It was very dark,
-the candles had gone out, and the vapours we breathed were not exactly
-refreshing; but I had to go on—on—on. I was not sorry when my friends
-set light to the friendly blackboys and lightened the darkness. We were
-now in a splendid hall, roofed with icicles. There was an almost perfect
-opera-box, with lace curtains, carved arm-rest, pillars, and everything
-complete. The ground sounded rather hollow; I did not feel comfortable,
-so we moved on to another vast cavern, called the King’s Council Chamber.
-It was a grand sight. The light, of course, was imperfect, as the cave
-is of enormous size, fully 100 feet high. The stalactites hang from the
-domed roof like huge crystal lights, and shadows play about the walls,
-which look as if festooned with lovely lace. Great seats seem to fill the
-cavern in the middle. One could almost imagine a king and queen holding
-court there, with all their attendants, and being suddenly turned to
-marble. It was all very grand, but I felt glad when I was out in God’s
-sunshine again, with the blue sky over my head and the blue sea at my
-feet. Darkness and gloom, however grand, do not forcibly appeal to me.
-
-Various other beautiful caves have been discovered comparatively
-recently, and named the Margaret Caves, in compliment to Lady Forrest.
-
-No beaver ever made a more artful concealment of the entrance to his nest
-than the lip of the Wallcliffe Cave. Part some peppermints, push aside
-the flowing fronds of ferns and bend low, almost on all-fours, creep
-slowly for 30 feet, eyes bent to ground, and then, what a transformation
-scene! The fairy grotto of a pantomime, the lustrous lair of the King of
-Jewels in the Arabian Nights—these are the only similes that give even a
-prosaic idea of it. A circular chamber, richly bedecked by gleaming white
-stalactites, with mammoth bunches of grapes, fleecy wefts apparently as
-soft as lambs-wool, but solid as marble, and—upspringing from the floor
-of the chamber, as if greedy to clutch the fruit, yet frozen in making
-the grasp—a monstrous hand several feet long—these are just hints of what
-we see.
-
-[Illustration: A WESTERN AUSTRALIAN CAVE]
-
-The Warrawerrie or Blackboy Hollow Cave is about 2 miles south of
-Wallcliffe, and is a mantrap for the unwary, for if you fall in instead
-of using the ladder that the discoverer (Mr. John Bussell) made in order
-to sound his find, and was thoughtful enough to leave behind him, you
-drop 15 feet. This vertical hole will not take in any one of very round
-proportions. So rough and high are the boulders that we scrambled over
-on the floor of this cave by the dim, flickering light of a candle,
-that we called it “Spion Kop.” It was more than worth the scramble,
-however. There is another chamber of this cave that has never been
-entered. A broken column, apparently cut from Italian marble, as pure
-as alabaster, would make a noble monument for a patriot. There are also
-semi-transparent shields which look like snow-white tapestry from an
-Indian loom, but which touch shows to be hard as flint.
-
-While all the caves we saw are worth many times the journey, the most
-beautiful is, in my opinion, that known as Doodjijup, a mile south of
-Blackboy Hollow, and 100 feet above the slanderously entitled “Devil’s
-Pool.” A lady could go through this cave without soiling her dress. You
-enter this lovely “bower” from the side of a high limestone ridge and the
-commanding situation allows a pretty prospect of water and lea, with the
-shimmering streak of the Doodjijup brook in the foreground. The access
-to the cave is rather steep and somewhat rugged, but when once the inlet
-is gained the labour is rewarded, and the visitor can move at ease and
-admire the terraces, the columns like the pipes of a cathedral organ, and
-the pendants that glow like the stars of night in the three chambers of
-this wondrous arcade.
-
-Nearly 3 miles south there is a descent of about 100 feet, first through
-an enormous pit like the excavation of a quarry, and then by the side
-of a limestone cliff, when the “door” of Calgadup Cave is disclosed.
-The floor of this cave is moist enough to show that it is the bed of a
-subterranean creek; it is about 70 feet across. The chamber sides are
-hung with many stalactites of myriad shapes and colours under the rays
-of our artificial light. What would be taken in a lady’s boudoir for a
-very beautiful opera-cloak of swansdown thrown over the top of a low
-pillar stands out in the foreground. This is a stalagmite “growing”
-upwards, while the stalactite is formed downwards like the tendrils or
-fruit of a vine. Here, too, in my opinion, is the gem of all the caves,
-the suspended dome, the delicate tracery of whose splendid and fantastic
-fretwork hangs in mid-air, held by almost gossamer crystalline threads.
-
-A running stream which flows over the bed of Crystal Cave, half a mile
-south of Nannup Caves, gives it its name. This cave, of sandstone
-formation, is almost a ruin owing to the ravages of marauders and the
-falling of karri timber overhead, which have wrought havoc among its
-former grandeur. Ascending some 50 or 60 feet another vast chamber is
-entered; the dome-shaped roof that is set off by colonnades is cracked,
-and to all appearance unsafe. Already this season, although there are
-few facilities for visiting the caves or for enjoying the fishing and
-shooting of Hardy’s Inlet in the cool climate by the seaside, about 70
-goldfield visitors have equipped themselves at special expense for the
-tour, which, I understand, they found highly beneficial, interesting and
-enjoyable.
-
-From the caves we returned to Karridale, and during the pleasant drive
-I somewhat recovered from the fatigue of so much cave clambering. The
-next morning early I was fortunate in getting a seat in a buggy to Cape
-Leeuwin, the first Australian land sighted by mail-boats coming from
-England, and the last seen by those that leave for the dear homeland.
-I was anxious to see this place and to go up the famous lighthouse.
-So off we went, bidding a regretful farewell to the hospitable people
-of Karridale. We had a drive of 16 miles before us, but I am never so
-happy as when seated behind a good pair of horses and spinning merrily
-along. I feel sure that, though thousands of people have seen the cape
-and lighthouse from the sea, very few have been so fortunate as I was
-in being able to visit it by land. So I felt particularly well pleased
-with myself and my trip through the west that day. As we drove along
-for 7 miles nothing particular was to be seen, except perhaps that the
-forest vegetation seemed to grow more luxuriantly than ever, and in
-greater variety; I noticed several kind of trees that I had not seen in
-other parts. Then we got occasional gleams of water shining through the
-foliage, and the hills around loomed in grandeur to the sky. The trees
-seemed to become smaller as we went along; that was because we were
-near the coast. A few miles farther on a pretty house on the banks of a
-lovely broad sheet of water, the Blackwood estuary, came into view. A
-lady, seeing us driving along, came out to meet us, and cordially invited
-us into the house to partake of refreshments in the shape of fruit and
-fresh milk with hot scones, which had just been baked for the family
-lunch, and of which we had arrived in time to partake. The horses were
-glad of a little breathing-time, during which I looked round at the scene
-before me. Over the broad sheet of placid water wild ducks and swans were
-dotted. A fisherman had just come up with a haul of fish, the finest
-whiting I have seen for some time, and a tremendous schnapper. In the
-distance could be seen the white sandy bar, with its long white breakers
-stretching out into the depths of the ocean beyond. What an ideal spot
-for a sportsman, a convalescent, or a pair of honeymooners, so quiet,
-so peaceful, so beautiful! Mr. Ellis has lived in this place for years,
-and will tell you how, 50 years ago, food was almost unobtainable, and
-American whalers were looked to for nearly all supplies. It is most
-interesting to talk to this gentleman. Governor Broome, Governor Weld,
-and Sir Gerard Smith (the late Governor), have visited this place, and
-enjoyed Mr. Ellis’s hospitality. We soon passed through the old and once
-ill-fated settlement of Augusta, and I wondered why fate was so unkind
-to such a charming spot, especially as there is such a natural harbour
-as Flinders Bay close by. On we went and reached Point Matthew. Now we
-were near the corner where two great oceans meet. On we drove to the
-edge of the peninsula and soon arrived at Cape Leeuwin, and its fine
-lighthouse. In 1867 the coast east of Cape Leeuwin was called Nuyts Land
-from a passenger on board the _Guilde Zeepart_, or Good Shepherd, on her
-voyage to Japan. Cape Leeuwin, or Lioness, was so named in 1822, after
-the vessel from which it was first seen, or, as others say, because the
-cape standing at the corner of the two oceans, with the breakers dashing
-round, seemed like a lioness defending her home. Be this as it may, I
-came here, and was delighted. Years ago, during a heavy storm, I was a
-passenger in a sailing barque loaded with pearl shell that was blown out
-to sea 600 miles beyond Cape Leeuwin, but we safely weathered the storm
-and I live to tell the tale. Since that time I have always had strong
-recollections of this particular cape.
-
-As we drove up the lighthouse stood before us like a sentinel guarding
-the seas. We were now on that corner of our continent where the Indian
-and Southern Oceans meet. Right on the southern point at the foot of the
-high bare hills, and 700 feet above the sea, stands the white lighthouse
-and its shining dome, the building of which was an event of national
-importance. It was a solemn and magnificent sight. To-day the sea was
-beautifully calm, but sometimes the breakers roar and lash the strong
-lighthouse in their fury; then mariners have to beware of the Lioness
-and to keep at a safe and civil distance. The base is 70 feet above
-high water-mark, the foundations are deep down to bed rock, 23 feet.
-The building was erected by Messrs. Davies and Wishart, and cost £6000,
-exclusive of the dome and light. The handsome white stone of which it
-is built was all quarried half a mile away. The walls are 7 feet in
-thickness on the ground-floor. To get to the top we had to mount a spiral
-iron staircase, broken at intervals by 7 floors. These breaks give one
-time to breathe and comment on the peculiar sensation of mounting to
-the top of a lighthouse; strange it is certainly, but I would not on
-any account have missed it. A heavy iron column goes down the centre to
-hold the chain and the three-quarters of a ton weight propelling the
-clockwork that causes the light to revolve. It takes 7 gallons of oil
-each night to keep this burning. Mr. Tattersall, the head keeper, was
-most attentive and kind in explaining all this to me. On the fifth floor
-is the telephone connected with the men’s quarters and with the Karridale
-Post Office, from which all messages are forwarded by telegraph. Here
-also observations are taken every two hours and recorded. Down the wall
-there is a lightning conductor. The lighting apparatus is on the sixth
-floor, and is a wonderful piece of mechanical work. The operative power
-is clockwork, and the light reflected is equal to 250,000 candles. The
-flash is sighted fully 30 miles out from land on a clear night. Are
-not the improvements in lighthouses since the days when little Grace
-Darling stood on her bible to reach the lamp that lighted the shipwrecked
-mariners to safety truly wonderful?
-
-[Illustration: LIGHTHOUSE (OLD AND NEW)]
-
-I must confess to feeling very giddy in the head when I stepped on the
-balcony outside the dome, but it was the grandest sight of my tour. On
-the north side was Hamelin Bay, on the east the mouth of the beautiful
-Blackwood, and the many little islands, reefs and rocks, lying at our
-feet; also Cumberland Island; while away on the land side stretches the
-vast forest with its millions of giant trees, combining to form a picture
-not easily forgotten.
-
-The lighthouse-keepers, of whom there are six, work four hours each and
-are then relieved. They report every ship that passes, and wind up the
-clockwork weights every hour. Coming down to _terra firma_ again, and
-before leaving this grand piece of man’s work, I read the following
-inscription on a huge block of stone: “Foundation-stone laid by Sir John
-Forrest, Premier of the Colony, 13th December 1895.” And on the other
-side: “Dedicated to the World’s Mariners, 10th December 1896.”
-
-Outside are some comfortable-looking stone cottages, where the
-lighthouse-keepers live. My only feeling of regret as I left was that
-Leeuwin Lighthouse is not more accessible, so that many people could take
-the same enjoyable tour that I had taken; but time may change even this
-cape’s inaccessibility.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
- Pretty Newcastle—Oranges!—New Norcia—Native Love—The
- Mission—Northam—The Grand Old Man—Ploughing Match—Oat Crop—The
- Show.
-
-
-There is without doubt a great field in Western Australia for workers
-who will settle on the land and cultivate it. Newcastle is a little
-town, nestling at the foot of hills and beautifully situated near the
-Avon river. It is a splendid farming district; the soil will grow almost
-everything. I saw some magnificent oranges and vegetables. The cattle are
-as fat and sleek as can be. Rain had been falling when I was there, and
-now the sun was shining and a beautiful rainbow rose over the hills. The
-pink everlasting flowers—acres of them—surrounded by the green grass, the
-pretty winding river, the white bridges and long good roads made up a
-very pleasant picture. There is plenty of good land around here waiting
-to be taken up and utilised. Newcastle is one of the oldest Westralian
-towns, and the roads and bridges were nearly all made by convict labour
-in days gone by. There is a great quantity of stone lying about, and
-granite is obtainable in large quantities a little way off. There are
-vineyards and orchards, and an elderly woman at the Clackline Junction
-Station seemed to be doing a good trade with an enormous basket of
-splendid oranges and bunches of pink everlasting flowers. She came across
-the meadows and joined the train at Delmore on the way to Newcastle a boy
-helping her with the big basket of oranges just gathered from the trees.
-She told me she came to meet all the trains and invariably did good
-business.
-
-[Illustration: NEWCASTLE]
-
-Gold was found about here in 1887 by Mr. Glass, of Mugakine, who found a
-piece weighing 11 grains while digging a well. The ground about the hills
-is very rocky, but the flats are fertile and favourable for fruit-trees
-and vines, and there is plenty of water in ponds; Mr. Clarkson, in the
-early days, found sandstone ranges rising 1000 feet; small rivers fall
-between these ranges into the sea.
-
-New Norcia, the Benedictine’s Mission settlement, is situated on the
-Victoria plains, about 50 miles from Newcastle by road, and 80 miles to
-the north of Perth. You can also go to New Norcia by taking the train
-to Mogumbur on the Cue line, and thence driving 15 miles to New Norcia.
-Here the late good Bishop Salvado, laboured amongst the aboriginals for
-over half a century, and died at over 85. The religious community numbers
-about 60 monks, most of whom are Spanish. The Abbey is called Abbey
-Nullias, and there are a cruciform church of stone, a monastery, and 51
-other buildings. Over 1000 acres of land are cleared and fenced, 800 are
-under cultivation, and 150 aboriginals are clothed and educated by the
-monks. The object of these good men of the Mission is to civilise and
-christianise the natives. Bishop Salvado describes his first interview
-with the aboriginals thus: “I tried to begin a conversation by signs
-with these poor Australians, so hideous to view, though mild and almost
-timid; but all that they would say was ‘Maragna’ (food).” In 1846, Father
-Salvado and Father Serra, with a few catechists, were guided by some
-natives to the site which is now called New Norcia. Fifty acres of land
-had been granted them by the Colonial Government, and thus was laid the
-foundation of this now well-known and flourishing settlement. In 1848
-the first R.C. Bishop of Perth, Dr. Brady, sent Father Serra to Europe
-to obtain subscriptions and more missionaries for New Norcia, and 1250
-acres of land were purchased by him with the collections obtained in this
-way from Europe. In 1849 Father Salvado went to Europe, taking with him
-two native Christian boys. There he collected large sums of money, and on
-his return a number of missionaries, competent in agriculture and trade,
-returned with him, thus giving new life to the Mission, where they built
-a chapel, cottages, corn and granary mills, wooden houses, workshops,
-and quarters for natives. The land was soon cleared by these good and
-energetic men, assisted by the aborigines whom they had befriended, and
-to-day one can look around the Mission and see happiness, prosperity, and
-contentment on all sides. All the aborigines now there are civilised,
-but, for years before they became so, they looked on the Bishop as a god
-who possessed superhuman knowledge, especially in doctoring the sick. One
-native whom he had relieved leaped and danced, and shouted war-cries,
-and said: “Father, when you die I shall be so sorry that I shall kill,
-not only one man of the enemy’s tribe, but six kangaroo-hunters, to show
-everybody the love I have for you.” Many years have passed away, and
-if you now visit New Norcia you will see 1000 acres of fields, stocked
-with sheep and cattle; a most prosperous agricultural settlement; corn
-in abundance; barley, hay, vegetables, tobacco, and acres of vineyard,
-from which a wine, said by those who have sampled it to be excellent, is
-made. Fine olives are grown; olive oil, pure and clear, is made; candied
-almonds, figs, raisins, grapes, and apples are in profusion. The Bishop’s
-only luxury was snuff, grown at the Mission, which is very aromatic and
-provocative of much sneezing. Almost everything required and used is
-made and produced on the spot. The aborigines learn quickly and are most
-devout Christians. The Mission has a brass band of natives, who have been
-well trained, and their efforts are most pleasing.
-
-Bishop Salvado was in Perth a few months ago, and received a warm welcome
-from all creeds and classes; he was then on his way to Rome, in which
-city he recently passed away.
-
-Progressive Northam, the gateway of the goldfields, in the lovely Avon
-Valley, was the scene of my next visit. The green undulating fields
-through which I passed in the train on my approach to Northam showed a
-perfect blaze of wild flowers in every spot where there was room for
-them to spring between the well-cultivated farm lands. The rich soil
-of this beautiful valley is quite different from the deep sandy soil
-near the coast, or from the loam and ironstone of the ranges of the
-Darling. Quantities of water are always obtainable by shallow sinking,
-should other supplies fail. The fat cattle always seem to be waiting
-to accumulate wealth for their owners, and the comfortable-looking
-farmhouses impress one with the idea of solid comfort within. Northam
-has a population of 2000 people, is increasing fast, and prospering more
-than any other agricultural district in Western Australia; and being the
-starting-point of the Yilgarn, Coolgardie, Kalgoorlie, Mount Malcolm and
-Mount Margaret goldfields, is really the threshold of the fields, as well
-as the great centre of the agricultural industry in this part of the
-colony.
-
-A large staff of railway men is employed in the locomotive department,
-over 400 men being paid every fortnight at Northam. The railway platform
-is half a mile long, and I believe a magnificent railway station will
-shortly further improve the town.
-
-Northam has gone ahead with gigantic strides. On my first visit, a little
-over two years ago, it was a very small place indeed, in fact two places,
-as I found to my sorrow when I got out of the train at the wrong station
-(there are both East and West Northam) and had to walk a mile and a half
-up a desolate country road to get to my destination. Now houses, shops,
-banks, &c., are built nearly all along that road, and omnibuses ply from
-one end of the town to the other. Northam bids fair to become one of the
-most important towns in Western Australia.
-
-There are some charming estates about here, notably that of the Hon.
-George Throssell, late Commissioner of Crown Lands, and now Premier
-since Sir John Forrest relinquished office. Mr. Throssell might almost
-be described as the father of Northam. He has resided in what he so
-poetically describes as his lovely valley home for 36 years, and it is
-chiefly due to his strenuous exertions, the devotion of his energies to
-its development, and his manly spirit of help to all, that Northam is
-what it is to-day. Mr. Throssell goes home to Northam after his week’s
-official work every Friday and remains until Tuesday in the company
-of his wife and numerous and happy family of sons, daughters, and
-grandchildren. This grand old man has a large and important business in
-Northam in conjunction with Mr. Stewart, and branches in different parts
-of the colony as well. The machinery stores are well worth inspection.
-Every possible kind of English and American machinery for tilling the
-soil is here to be seen. The drill and fertiliser now coming into use
-make farming a pastime and pleasure, instead of the weariness and hard
-work of past ages. With these new implements of agriculture, 600 acres of
-land can be drilled with only 20 lb. of wheat to the acre, in place of 75
-lb., as in olden days.
-
-Many new implements were going out to the Jenapullen ploughing-match,
-a few miles away, for trial that day; so, availing myself of the offer
-of a drive there, I started off to see this match. The pastoral country
-appeared very thriving as we drove along by the beautiful River Avon, and
-the richness of the soil gave ample promise of the harvest to come. Bush
-flowers were growing all round, native grasses were flourishing in wild
-luxuriance, healthy green crops were waving in the gentle breeze, giving
-promise of a most abundant yield and adding beauty to the surrounding
-scene.
-
-On arrival at the ploughing-field, I found many kinds of entertainments
-going on as well as the ploughing, which I was sure was very splendid,
-although I did not understand the art. There was a fine collection of
-vegetables, bread, butter, fruit, and many other things; also some very
-splendid horses, bred in the district. After the ploughing-match was
-over, the folks amused themselves with jumping, running, and pony races.
-Every one looked prosperous, happy and contented, and no doubt was so,
-for there are many well established farmers in this fertile district, who
-long ago secured for themselves a position of independence.
-
-[Illustration: AVON RIVER]
-
-What a future lies before this wheat-growing district! One of the most
-prominent townsmen of Northam says that more wheat has been produced
-there than in any other part of the colony. Many farmers are also
-thinking of raising pigs, to be turned into the toothsome bacon. Mr.
-Throssell told me that there are big openings for bacon-curing, as the
-quantity of bacon and ham imported to Western Australia last year was
-very large.
-
-The Department of Agriculture is doing good work, and experts are sent
-out into the different farming districts to teach the benefits of mixed
-farming to persons not already acquainted with them, and any one who
-wants advice on the management of vineyards, orchards and farms can, by
-writing to the Department, have an expert sent at once.
-
-There is also scope for the establishment of a butter and cheese factory
-here. This valley of the Avon is an ideal spot for a large dairy, and
-might have thousands of sleek cows grazing on the rich pastures, and
-hundreds of rosy-cheeked dairymaids turning sweet cream into butter and
-cheese for the dusty goldseekers.
-
-Northam has a fine town hall, some handsome churches, a convent,
-magnificent post-office, and many beautiful mansions and villas standing
-in fine grounds with nice gardens. Many of the favourite English flowers
-flourish here. Roses, honeysuckle, geraniums, and mignonette grow very
-fine in this soil, and the flowers indigenous to the colony bloom in
-sweet and infinite variety. The splendour of Western Australian flowers
-cannot be imagined by those who have not seen it. Their dainty delicate
-odours are unsurpassable, and if people in other lands only knew of our
-glorious wealth of flowers, I am sure they would be anxious to obtain
-seeds and cultivate the lovely blossoms.
-
-Coming from one of the splendid homesteads around Northam, I passed a
-wheatfield in the valley that extended farther than my eye could reach.
-Oats grow to perfection. One farmer in the valley, who has a field of 90
-acres, last year harvested as much as 36 bushels to the acre; barley is
-also grown with great success.
-
-Our young country has a chance of great and lasting prosperity for
-population increases and new people settle on the rich lands to cultivate
-them. Mr. Throssell says: “We look forward to seeing our harbour filled
-with ships laden with not only gold, timber, pearl shell and wool
-products of the colony, but also with golden grain, wine and fruit.” Our
-Agent-General in London, Sir E. Wittenoom, recently said at a dinner in
-Paris: “There is something fascinating in the phenomena of the rise of
-this new colony of Western Australia, which 10 years ago, with an area
-equal to nearly half that of Europe, had only the population of the Isle
-of Man. Gold reefs were discovered, and the population advanced with
-great strides in less than 4 years from 50,000 to 186,000.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Camel Water Train going to Coolgardie]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
- Southern Cross—Early Discoveries of Gold—Heavy Tramps—Walking
- on Gold—Bayley’s Reward—Fabulous Finds—The Potato
- Ground—Bayley’s Death—The 90-Mile—The Treasure House—Great
- Boulder Find—The Londonderry.
-
-
-Lake Polaris, or Southern Cross, was so called by the Phœnix party of
-prospectors, who, owing to an accidental discovery of gold by Mr. Ansty
-at Mugakine in 1887, determined thoroughly to prospect the country from
-Newcastle and the Yilgarn hills. Their first discovery of payable reefs
-was named Golden Valley, and, as would be supposed from the name, the
-reefs were rich. Travelling by night, guided by the Southern Cross, the
-party went on, and 30 miles farther on found reefs still richer on the
-site of what is now called Southern Cross. Two of the prospectors were
-eventually lost in the Bush, and their mates, taking a black fellow for
-tracking, followed their tracks, mostly in circles, for 30 miles, and at
-last found the two poor fellows dead, doubtless from thirst, as they were
-without clothing, which is always a sign of that terrible death.
-
-Southern Cross was destined to become in a short time a most important
-place in Australian history, although it did not become the talk of the
-world, as Coolgardie afterwards did. It was from Southern Cross that the
-news of the magnificent discovery of Bayley’s Reward and the other rich
-finds at Coolgardie came. From the time when Mr. Colreavy, of the Phœnix
-party, first found Golden Valley until now, the finds of gold on the
-Coolgardie goldfields have been without parallel in Australian history.
-Fraser’s Mine, Southern Cross, paid the first dividend received from any
-mine in Western Australia. Captain Oats, one of the most genial men in
-the West, is the legal manager for Fraser’s Mine.
-
-When the train came to a stop on our arrival at the Cross, as it is now
-usually called, I must confess that I was not much attracted by the
-appearance of the place, for anything more dreary-looking one could not
-well see. Imagine a sandy desert, with here and there a stunted-looking
-tree, a string of camels, with Afghan guides, some bare-looking houses,
-and a few mines with poppet-heads standing out like crosses against the
-sky. That is Southern Cross. The train stops at 7 A.M. for 40 minutes for
-breakfast, and, after travelling from five o’clock the previous night,
-one feels inclined for hot coffee at least. I hurried across to the
-hotel, and after partaking of a really excellent breakfast, felt a little
-more friendly to the place, and had my luggage taken off the train with
-the intention of stopping here a day to make inquiries. After a two-hours
-rest I started off to see Fraser’s Mine, and then found that I had to
-walk half a mile in order to reach the town, the part where the hotel is
-being only the railway portion of it. Across flat uninteresting ground
-affording very scanty herbage to a few grazing goats, I came at last to
-the town proper, which is one fairly long street and two cross ones, of
-little houses and shops. I here presented my letter of introduction to
-the mayor, who, with his wife, was most hospitable; and, in fact, I found
-that, in spite of the dreary-looking surroundings, Southern Cross was
-not a bad place after all, and that there were a great many nice genial
-people living there. Fraser’s Mine is another two miles on. Nothing
-much is to be seen, but close to the mine is a small empty house. It
-is the house formerly inhabited by the notorious Deeming (who murdered
-and cemented three wives and four children), in which he had stored
-the cement in readiness for a new grave for his next wife when he was
-stopped by his arrest. I looked inside with a kind of morbid interest,
-remembering well the stir there was in Melbourne at the time when this
-terrible man committed his last awful crime.
-
-When one thinks of the hardships people had to endure when gold was
-first discovered in this desert, and when water was scarce and food
-still more so, one feels that they deserved all the money and gold they
-got.[2] It then took four days to get to the Cross from York and Northam,
-and the Bush roads were terrible. One party of fifty Victorian miners
-started from Albany on foot, on what was known as Holland’s Track, and
-after undergoing terrible privations, 35 of them reached the Cross in
-safety. Holland’s Track is so called from the following circumstances:
-John Holland and party set out from Brown Hill, 103 miles from Albany,
-to reach Coolgardie _viâ_ Southern Cross, the distance being nearly 350
-miles. They paid £50 for three horses and a conveyance. Their road was
-through an almost impenetrable bush. Holland’s way of finding the road
-was to ride ahead, the team having instructions to follow his tracks. He
-then made observations from the highest points, and was enabled to judge
-many miles ahead the nature of the country before him and the probable
-whereabouts of water. In this respect he was singularly successful. He
-would then take his bearings, retrace his tracks, and lead the team
-in as direct a line as possible to the place. The length of the track
-cut was 230 miles. The greatest portion of this was through country
-unexplored, and 130 miles were traversed without encountering tracks of
-any description, save that of an occasional emu. There were many high
-granite rocks in the country, one of such height and extent—200 feet—that
-they named it King Rock. On investigation a splendid supply of water was
-found on the top of this, and at the base there is a salt-water lake 2
-miles in circumference.
-
-Another party started overland from Adelaide to the Western Australian
-goldfields, and went through hardships that can be better imagined than
-described. The course taken was from Port Augusta along the west coast to
-Israelite Bay, thence to Fraser Range and Southern Cross. The track ran
-through dense forests and sand plains, where little exists save stunted
-herbage, which not even a camel could eat, every bush on these plains
-being armed with thorns. The party camped about 6 miles from Southern
-Cross on the only decent patch of pasture for 100 miles.
-
-A Bendigo miner, with his party, started from Narrogin, beyond Broome
-Hill, for Southern Cross. After going 15 miles they got bogged twice
-on the road, the horses being in the bog to their knees and the dray
-to the axle. The second time the men had to carry all their things on
-their backs. Next day they had to cut away with an axe big trees that
-had fallen across the track. Another day they camped 100 miles from the
-Cross, and on getting up early found the horses gone. After a long search
-of 15 miles, during which time they had nothing to eat, they finally
-found them. Next day the party set out again, and after 25 miles the axle
-broke and the dray became a total wreck; they then waited coming events,
-and luckily a teamster came along and took some of their things. The rest
-they had to leave behind. They arrived at Southern Cross after three
-weeks travelling.
-
-[Illustration: TEAMS RETURNED TO SOUTHERN CROSS FROM COOLGARDIE]
-
-These are a few of the experiences of the early days of the Golden West.
-After such experiences Southern Cross, no doubt, seemed an oasis in the
-desert. Who will say these poor men did not deserve success? I truly hope
-they got it. It was five years after the discovery of Southern Cross that
-Coolgardie was discovered by Arthur Bayley, who had formerly been working
-at the Cross, but afterwards went to Nannine and took 1000 ounces of
-gold from a claim there; then returned to the Southern Cross in 1892,
-started from that place prospecting, eventually finding Coolgardie.
-
-People who were here in 1892 tell me that when the news came of Bayley’s
-find the excitement was indescribable. Southern Cross was almost
-deserted. Coolgardie lies about 120 miles from the Cross, and along the
-track were to be seen men in scores, using every means of locomotion
-conceivable. Some were lucky enough to get teamsters to carry their
-swags; others had to carry them on their backs; others, again, had
-pack-horses; some had what is called a “one-wheeler” cart. The wheel is
-fixed underneath, in the centre is a frame or miniature platform, on
-which the goods and swags are placed; four men take hold, one at each
-corner, and a start is made. One enterprising man pushed in front of him
-an ordinary beer cask, which he had rigged up to resemble a miniature
-road-roller. His goods were on top and he was in the shafts. Other
-adventurous spirits had their goods in wheelbarrows, which they drove
-through the heavy sand. Camels sometimes crossed as much as 22 miles of
-sand plain at a stretch, getting one meal at the end. As pack-camels only
-travel at the rate of 2½ miles an hour, such a journey would occupy the
-whole of the daylight, then the Afghan drivers would let the camels lie
-down until the moon rose; then on again in search of food, until at 7 in
-the morning perhaps they were lucky enough to find some salt-bush on the
-shores of a salt lake.
-
-At the stores at Southern Cross in those days you would see all sorts and
-conditions of men coming for their provisions. New chums with white soft
-hands would sometimes appear on their way to the goldfields. Those poor
-hands would look very different after their owners had put in a month on
-the burning sands of the mines.
-
-The railway to Coolgardie from Southern Cross was begun in 1894 and
-opened soon afterwards.
-
-[Illustration: Bakery and Miners’ Camp, Southern Cross]
-
-It was with feelings of curiosity that I viewed the desert-looking
-country as the train approached the world-famed place. It is nearly
-always in waste, arid, and uninteresting places that gold is found. As
-the train drew up at the spacious station and I stepped out on to the
-wide platforms, where some hundreds of people were waiting, I looked
-round me and said to myself: “Am I really at the famous Coolgardie at
-last, the Queen Gold City of the West?” I took a cab—dozens of them were
-waiting—and drove to Summers’ Hotel, where apartments had been reserved
-for me, and with a sigh of contentment gave myself up to the thought of
-thoroughly inspecting this famed place. After a very good dinner, with
-white-waistcoated waiters in attendance, and with every elegance and
-comfort that could be suggested, I took my coffee on the broad balcony
-overlooking Bayley Street. I found several people who were here in the
-early days, and who gave me all the information I desired about the past
-and the present. The first thing that struck me in Coolgardie was, “What
-a splendid lot of men there are here!” They were, indeed, unusually tall,
-stalwart, and good-looking. And why not? The pick of the Australian
-colonies, the flower of our manhood, were here seeking for gold. Next
-I was struck by the fine wide streets, lit with electric light, the
-handsome buildings, and, lastly, the beautiful horses to be seen in cabs
-or carts, or ridden by horsemen. It is wonderful to view this city of
-the Golden West which was so recently a desert of sand, mulga-trees,
-and scrub, where an occasional emu or kangaroo was monarch of all he
-surveyed; where Sir John Forrest and his party of explorers twice camped,
-little dreaming of the wealth of gold lying beneath their feet.
-
-The facts about the finding of Coolgardie are thus given in Mr. Bayley’s
-own narrative: “One morning before breakfast, while going after horses,
-I picked up a nugget weighing half an ounce, and before dinner found 20
-more ounces in the same way. We had left Southern Cross three months
-previously, prospecting, in consequence of the report of Mr. Hardman, the
-Government geologist, who had issued a map showing the places where gold
-was most likely to be found, and had not found any gold of consequence
-until now. The spot where we made the first find was about 200 miles from
-the present Reward Claim. In about a month, by specking and a little dry
-blowing, our gold consisted of about 200 ounces. Our rations ran out and
-we made tracks to Southern Cross, but went back to the old workings, and
-on Sunday afternoon, while fossiking around, we struck the reef. That
-evening we picked up about 50 ounces of gold, and on Monday we pegged out
-a prospecting area on the reef. That morning a party of three men came on
-the scene. They had followed us from Southern Cross. That day we obtained
-300 ounces from the cap of the reef. The party who had followed us stole
-about 200 ounces from our claim, so we had to report it. For that purpose
-I went into the Cross, carrying 554 ounces, which I showed to the Warden.
-The field was then declared open. After another two days we collected
-another lot of gold, amounting to 528 ounces. I conveyed them to Southern
-Cross, and a fortnight after returning to the field had to make another
-trip there, escorting 642 ounces. All we found was right on the surface,
-and all we did was to knock the stuff out and dolly it with a pestle
-and mortar. There were six cartloads of tailings left. After the gold
-referred to had been extracted from the quantity of stuff, we obtained a
-further amount of 298 ounces. We got a little over 2000 ounces altogether
-out of the claim. We only had a five-acre lease of the Reward Claim.”
-
-The news of the unprecedented richness of Bayley’s Find had long ere
-this found its way over the entire world. Shortly after the goldfield
-was proclaimed, and when the enormous richness of Bayley’s Reward Claim
-was flashed all over the Australian continent, Mr. Sylvester Browne, of
-Melbourne, a brother to Mr. T. Browne (better known as Rolf Boldrewood,
-author of the famous Australian book, “Robbery under Arms”), travelled
-to Coolgardie and, after making an examination of the property, bought
-the Reward Claim from Bayley and Ford for £6000 and a sixth share in the
-mine. The bargain completed, Mr. Sylvester Browne and some three or four
-other gentlemen (mostly connections of his) set to work with their own
-hands, and with no other tools but picks, shovels, hammers, and an iron
-dolly, extracted the enormous quantity of 9000 ounces, or £36,000 worth
-of gold, in a few weeks. On April 8, 1893, a parcel of 2500 ounces, worth
-£10,000, arrived in Perth, and was lodged in the Union Bank. Then, on
-June 7, 3185 ounces more were received by this bank and exhibited, and
-on September 6 a third lot of 3605 ounces were deposited by Mr. Everard
-Browne on behalf of Bayley’s Reward Company, and, finally, during the
-Christmas holidays, a trophy, valued at £30,000, was gazed upon by
-admiring crowds at the office of the bank. The trophy is a stirring
-sight. It consists of 7000 ounces of smelted gold and 600 or 700 ounces
-of rich quartz specimens, and everybody, from the Governor downwards, has
-been to see it. This gold was taken from a depth of only 40 feet, while
-some of the biggest nuggets at Ballarat, Victoria, were found more than
-1000 feet below the surface. It is now placed beyond all doubt that our
-golden reefs are what is termed “permanent,” a fact which pessimists,
-both in and out of the colony, have until now been loath to admit.
-
-[Illustration: BAYLEY’S REWARD MINE—UNDERLAY SHAFT]
-
-Facts are stubborn things, and an ounce of experience is worth a ton of
-theory. Here was a mine which in a few months yielded over,£80,000. The
-following is an extract from a Perth newspaper:—
-
-“The cry from Coolgardie is still of astounding discoveries of such rich
-gold-bearing rock as mankind has never known before. There is actually
-being exhibited at Counsel’s Stores a lump of gold and stone weighing a
-little over two hundredweight, in which, it was estimated by experts,
-there was nearly a hundredweight and a half of the precious metal. It
-looks as if the time were within reasonable distance when _Punch’s_ old
-prophecy would be realised, and the Cheapside hawkers be seen going about
-with gold snuff-boxes and a ha’porth of snuff for a penny.”
-
-One of the prospectors wrote thus: “I left the field at the end of
-January last, when things were at their earliest stage, and even then
-phenomenal finds were of daily occurrence. I remember one evening
-particularly when the whole camp was thrown into a furore of excitement
-owing to three men coming in with a gunny sack full of quartz some 60 lb.
-in weight (I saw and handled the stone myself), and before the evening
-they had dollied 150 ounces from it. At Adams’ Reef, 25 miles north of
-Bayley’s, I saw tons of stone on which the gold was sticking in small
-nuggets. There was one place we christened the Potato Ground, owing to
-the large size of the nuggets picked up there.
-
-“On Sundays, by way of rest, picks and shovels were abandoned, and almost
-every one in the camp went out for an afternoon’s specking (looking on
-the ground for nuggets). Before leaving Coolgardie I had the pleasure of
-seeing over Bayley’s Reef. I shall never forget the sight; it settled my
-career, and I do not think I shall ever follow any avocation but that
-of a miner; for there on this reef, instead of, as one usually sees in
-an ordinarily rich reef, specks and perhaps here and there nuggets of
-gold—on Bayley’s there were veins, in fact, literally outstanding bars of
-gold. So much so that if Mr. Bayley had given me leave to do an hour’s
-work on it and take the results, my trip to the old country and back to
-Western Australia would have cost me nothing, and I warrant I could have
-had a pretty good time too.”
-
-Arthur Bayley did not live long to enjoy the wealth he acquired through
-his discovery, as he died at Melbourne in 1897, at the early age of
-34 years. Gold-mining will trouble him no more. The handsome city of
-Coolgardie remains a monument to his memory.
-
-Many other reefs had by this time been discovered by various parties at
-different distances from Coolgardie, one notably big and rich one at the
-90-Mile, called the “Roaring Gimlet.” No stores or provisions lay that
-way, consequently great privations had to be endured. However, those who
-managed to remain got surprisingly rich stone on the surface. Here the
-quartz was quite white and barren looking, but, on sinking, rich alluvial
-gold was found at the rate of 250 ounces to the ton. Half-way to the
-90-Mile, at what they call the 45-Mile, surprisingly rich results were
-also obtained.
-
-The camp at Bayley’s was at this time a scene of intense excitement; 3000
-men were on the field. Such a collection of habitations was never before
-seen—blanket-shelters, bush-humpies, and tents covered the ground; men
-were digging, specking, dry blowing, and knapping every bit of available
-quartz. Then provisions and water got scarce; famine was feared, and many
-of the miners had to move on. “Water, water, everywhere, but not a drop
-to drink.” Many a poor parched prospector on the weary tramp has said
-this, and many explorers in this vast country have given the same cry. No
-water—this is the terror of the Australian desert, more deadly than wild
-beasts or savages in other countries. As the dragon in olden days guarded
-the gate of the Hesperides wherein grew the golden apples, so thirst,
-famine and fever seemed at first to guard Nature’s treasure-house.
-Civilisation and engineering have now greatly diminished these terrors,
-and in the new Eldorado large cities have arisen where once was an
-inhospitable desert.
-
-The marvellous City of Kalgoorlie stands on the site of Hannan’s Find.
-
-Twelve months after the finding of Coolgardie an important discovery
-was made 24 miles away in a north-easterly direction. About 150 miners
-had set out to search for some lost prospectors near Yerilla. They were
-compelled by lack of water to halt, and actually camped on the spot
-where the find was afterwards made! Rain fell and the main body went
-forward and continued their search, but two of the party, named Hannan
-and Harrigan, remained, and stumbled on what has since proved to be the
-richest field the world has ever known. They had begun specking, and
-obtained nearly 100 ounces in a few days. As gold is worth nearly £4 per
-ounce, that was good work. They returned to Coolgardie, reported the
-find, and secured an area equal to 10 alluvial claims. Nearly 2000 men
-followed them on their return to the find, most of whom remained there.
-It would be impossible to tell in words the value and marvellous richness
-of this new Eldorado. Nine thousand ounces of gold were taken from 4 tons
-of stone at Hannan’s mine, and other claims of 50 feet square yielded 400
-and 500 ounces of gold each. Some of the prospectors were new chums, and
-had never been on a goldfield before. One who knew nothing of mining sunk
-his shaft by sheer luck fair on the gold. Hundreds of practical diggers
-had walked over the ground before, little thinking that the ironstone
-gravel was so rich in the precious metal and that they were passing over
-thousands of ounces. Another man dollied (that is, crushed by hand labour
-with a heavy weight) 650 ounces in three weeks, the only implements
-being half a bottle of quicksilver and the head of a pick. Many a time
-these prospectors of the gold country have felt that a spring of fresh
-water and a few loaves of bread would be more welcome to them than all
-the gleaming gold they were getting. Under what trials did they work! No
-water to wash the dirt, and yet the ground so moist that they had to dry
-the dirt before they could blow it to find the gold; yet they persevered,
-and many found fortunes by hard work and persistence. No wonder many
-miners say that gold-mining is not so easy as falling off a log.
-
-An Adelaide syndicate at this time sent Messrs. W. G. Brookman and
-Pearce, with a capital of only £150, out of which passages, camels, and
-rations had to be found, to prospect around this marvellous new find,
-which they did with such success that they discovered a still more
-wonderful place 3 miles from Hannan’s Find, and now called the Boulder.
-Their find has since proved the greatest of all. The first claim was
-called the Great Boulder, and the property included two ironstone hills,
-one 100 yards long by 50 feet wide; the other twice that size. These
-hills were covered with rich stones, the prospectors picking them up from
-all parts, and Mr. Pearce picked up several large slugs (nuggets) at the
-foot of the hill. They afterwards took up several more claims, and soon
-found these to contain enormous gold-bearing reefs. Messrs. Brookman and
-Pearce, by keeping to the old adage, that “a still tongue makes a wise
-head,” remained undisturbed, and were able to take up all the ground they
-wanted. Lake View Consols, Ivanhoe Associated, and other rich mines were
-taken up by this little syndicate, and are now valued at £21,000,000. Mr.
-Brookman, as you may suppose, is now one of the millionaires of Western
-Australia.
-
-The next great find was the Londonderry, in May 1894, when thousands of
-ounces were dollied out from the surface. Lord Fingall bought out the
-claim for an interest and £180,000 cash. Then followed the Wealth of
-Nations, from whose first find was taken an enormous quantity of gold
-and specimens worth £20,000. This claim was soon bought up for £150,000.
-The inevitable rush to both these places followed. The men all seemed
-to run mad in their thirst for gold. It was at this time that almost
-everything showing gold was snapped up and put on the London market.
-Stories savouring of the Arabian Nights were in free circulation, and
-thousands of people from all parts of the world began to flock to
-Western Australia, which from comparative obscurity has now become the
-greatest gold-mining country the world has ever seen, and, no doubt, the
-interior of this vast country holds an almost inexhaustible quantity of
-gold-bearing quartz, which in years to come, when railways and other
-appliances have made it easier to reach the far-off fields, will be
-discovered and used. We may see such marvellous discoveries of gold
-that “Golden Western Australia” will be the fitting name for the once
-neglected Cinderella of the colonies.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Bayley Street, Coolgardie, 1897]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
- Coolgardie—The Camels are Coming—The Landlord’s Record—Meeting
- a Friend—A Goldfields Camp—“Nap”—The Reward Mine—Bonnie
- Vale—Londonderry—Nearly Lost—King Solomon’s Mine—Hampton Plains.
-
-
-At 9 o’clock in the morning after my arrival in the Golden City, I stood
-gazing in amazement at a string of 135 camels, with numerous baby camels,
-such funny-looking creatures, walking by their mothers! The Afghan
-leaders came crying “Hoostah,” and their Indian dresses and huge turbans
-made a most picturesque sight for eyes that had before only seen the
-like in pictures, or, yes, one, I think, at the Melbourne “Zoo.” Then
-another camel came trotting or galloping with a European on its back, who
-seemed as much at home as on a horse. I am told camel-riding gives one
-a sea-sick feeling. I have never tried the experiment of a ride, though
-several ladies on the fields have done so. To look at the camel you would
-think a step-ladder required to mount one, but it is not so, as the camel
-kneels down and allows you to get on his back; you then cling on tight,
-while he proceeds to get up, which he does with an awful jerk, at the
-same time making a peculiar bellowing noise, which sent me away to a good
-distance. When I tell you that a camel’s hind legs will reach any part
-of him, over his head, round his chest, and on to his hump, and that he
-has the unpleasant habit of shooting out his legs without warning, and
-also that his neck is of the same pliancy, you will not wonder that the
-“ship of the desert” has no charm for me. The camel is the great beast
-of burden of Western Australia; the first were brought as an experiment
-to the West by two Hindoo traders; these animals quickly came into
-favour in the waterless districts, and now there are thousands of them
-carrying supplies to the different parts of the colony. They are very
-obedient to their Afghan masters, but it is difficult for a white man
-ever to obtain great influence over them; they never seem to take kindly
-to white people. A string of these useful but ungainly animals is led
-by one of their own species, a string passing through a peg in the nose
-of every camel in the train, and keeping them in a line. The headgear
-of a leading camel is a gay affair; a network of fancy coloured wool
-with many a bright-hued tassel and white shells, finished off with blue
-and red beads. The Afghans are very careful and proud of their “leading
-gentleman.”
-
-[Illustration: EARLY DAYS, COOLGARDIE]
-
-Taking a drive round Coolgardie I was much surprised at the size of
-the place. It is four miles square. Driving out to the racecourse we
-passed the recreation-ground. As it was Saturday, many of the boys of
-the town were playing cricket. We passed through the suburb of Toorak.
-Certainly there are no fine mansions; for the most part the places
-are Hessian camps with occasional tents, but there are also some very
-comfortable-looking wooden cottages, many with praiseworthy attempts at
-ornamentation, painted light green, and not at all unpleasing to the eye
-in this sandy and desert-looking country. There are no large trees here
-at all, a few medium-sized ones, and plenty of mulga scrub and salt-bush,
-which looks most dry and uninviting, but contains much nourishment, so
-that sheep and cattle thrive well on it, and mulga is almost the only
-food of the camel. Returning to Coolgardie, we passed through the town
-again and crossed the railway bridge to the other chief suburb, Montana.
-Here we saw the fine residence of Warden Finnerty, and the hospital,
-called John of God. On we went past the suburb along the road to the
-famed Londonderry. The country just here was very pretty; there is a deep
-gully on one side with a good deal of vegetation, which, after all the
-sand and mulga, was most pleasing to the eye. The sun was just setting,
-and the brilliant red of the sky seemed to cast a reflection on the
-earth. The mines in the background, with the tents scattered round, a
-camel-train along the bush, and the town in the distance, formed a unique
-picture. Returning we took another direction, past the oldest part of the
-town, and past the Afghans’ camp. The day’s work was done and hundreds of
-camels were lying down or munching the mulga. The Afghans were preparing
-their evening meal and chattering to one another in shrill voices. I
-soon saw quite enough of this part, and was not sorry to return to my
-comfortable quarters at the hotel.
-
-The population of Coolgardie and the immediate neighbourhood is at the
-present time about 13,000; a few years ago there were more than twice
-that number, most of whom have gone to the Kalgoorlie and other fields,
-as the enormous richness of Coolgardie is now a thing of the past,
-although many mines are still yielding well.
-
-There is a really splendid post-office, also a court-house and warden’s
-offices, recently finished. These are three of the finest public
-buildings in Western Australia. There are many other fine buildings,
-notably the Grand Hotel, Union Bank, and Beaconsfield Chambers. The
-Chamber of Mines is another handsome building on a splendid site, and a
-most valuable place for the mining community. The Chamber of Mines keeps
-the people of the world well informed concerning the great gold-mining
-industry, and communicates statistical information of a trustworthy
-character to every member interested in the mines of the colony, as well
-as information concerning the fairness and justice of legislation dealing
-with mines. One half of the building is occupied by the Coolgardie Club.
-Looking at these magnificent buildings in the wide and spacious streets,
-all lighted up by electricity, and supplied with every luxury, one can
-scarcely realise that a few years ago Coolgardie was a sandy desert;
-where many men went through hardships almost beyond imagination; where
-fever reigned supreme; where the bare necessities of life were daily
-longed for in vain; where comforts were the things to be only dreamed
-of and the isolation was terrible; where tinned meat, the only kind
-obtainable, became almost hateful, and received the name of “tinned dog”;
-where one could almost cry, “Water, water everywhere, but not a drop
-to drink,” since the pioneers often found themselves in a wilderness
-with nothing but salt water, quite unfit to drink, and refused even by
-the camel, who is supposed to drink almost anything obtainable. Camels
-would stray away seeking for water, and then the owners would return
-to their camps disheartened, saying that they had no time to look for
-gold, it took all their time to look for water and camels. The terrible
-longing for home news, and the uncertainty of getting any; the wall that
-seemed to divide the miners from the rest of the world, together with
-the feeling that there was untold wealth of gold lying beneath their
-feet if they could only hold out and keep up strength to get at it, made
-their lives almost intolerable, and many of those first prospectors have
-gone under, poor fellows! leaving others to reap the reward and to make
-Coolgardie the wonderful place it is to-day.
-
-Then came better times, when sufficient food could be obtained, and
-water condensers were brought, which, by a certain heat process, made
-the salt water more fit for use, although it was still sometimes so bad
-that the rich prospectors often performed their ablutions in champagne by
-preference to it.
-
-Going down Bayley Street that morning there was quite a stir outside one
-of the smaller hotels. Of course, woman’s curiosity prompted me to stop
-and look, and I found a wedding-party just returned from church. The
-landlord of this hotel, Mr. Faahan, has really had a unique experience
-in servants, for this is the twenty-second of his women assistants,
-presumably in the bar, who has entered the bonds of wedlock while in
-his employ. The hotel is one of the oldest in Coolgardie. I have since
-entered it and met the genial Mrs. Faahan, who took me outside and showed
-me an old tree beneath which the first drink under licence was served in
-Coolgardie. The place that is now the kitchen was then the bar, gold-dust
-was plentiful, and champagne ran like streams of water. Opposite to Mr.
-Faahan’s is the Cremorne Theatre, a very large place now, but in the
-first days it was a shed with a stage made of rough planks laid across
-beer-casks, and no accommodation for visitors to sit down, and it is said
-that the miners used to pass the time between the “turns,” as they call
-them, by calling out the favourite players and throwing nuggets or screws
-of gold-dust at them. Good old days!
-
-[Illustration: WATER CONDENSER—FILLING THE WATER-BAG]
-
-Taking my bicycle I went for a tour of inspection around the various
-streets adjacent to the town, where I found many very nice houses, and
-to my surprise saw a lady in a very nice carriage drawn by a pair of
-greys. Truly, I ought to be surprised at nothing in wonderful Coolgardie.
-The roads here are the most level and the best for cycling I have ever
-ridden on; not only are the streets remarkably wide, but the footpaths
-also. The town is on quite a plain. Riding merrily along I was overtaken
-by a man cyclist, who did not favour me with more than a passing glance,
-lady cyclists being no rarity here. I, however, recognised him as an
-old friend and called out, “Jack, don’t you know me?” He stopped in
-astonishment at seeing me riding about Coolgardie on a bicycle, as we
-had last said good-bye in New South Wales, three years since, before
-his leaving for the Golden West, whither I then had no intention of
-migrating. After a little chat, in which I discovered that Jack had not
-struck a gold patch or “made his pile yet,” he invited me to the camp to
-dinner with himself and the boys (his mates), and feeling quite anxious
-really to see for myself what the inside of the camp was like, I did not
-require a second invitation. We accordingly rode off side by side, past
-endless rows of tents and hessian camps, all alive with the miners now
-home for their dinner. Some of them had wives in the camp to cook their
-dinner, but the majority of the campers had to cook for themselves. “We
-must hurry up, for I am cook this week,” said my friend, and pointing to
-a parcel on the bicycle, remarked, “Here is our dinner that is to be.”
-No tinned dog now, as it used to be, but real, genuine steak. On arrival
-at the camp we found two of the boys anxiously awaiting the arrival of
-the steak, and somewhat surprised at seeing Jack accompanied by a lady
-cyclist, whom, however, they greeted with much heartiness. Poor fellows!
-here were four of them all away from home and mother; all had given up
-good appointments on the other side to come over and search for gold.
-They were all very jolly, however, and said that they had no cause to
-complain of Coolgardie. My first anxiety was to inspect the camp, which
-was a neat one. It consisted of five little Hessian houses: four of
-these were the sleeping apartments of the four mates, and two of them
-especially were models of comfort, as far as the boys could manage it.
-One was lined with bright cretonne, a shaded lamp by the side of the
-bed, a rough bookcase with the owner’s favourite books and photographs
-of various friends opposite; a nice cosy chair and a wooden table, made
-by my friend Jack, completed the furniture. Then another had his camp
-lined with green baize, very nice in winter, but too hot, I imagine,
-in summer-time. Here was a nice little table, two shelves painted with
-white enamel paint, and some sketches done by the owner; many little
-presents that had been sent from home were being proudly shown to me
-when we heard the welcome sound, “Dinner is ready.” We then adjourned to
-the fifth tent, which proved to be dining-room, parlour, and card-room
-in one. A table down the middle covered with oil-cloth, a bench at each
-side, with a side shelf and rustic dresser, formed the furniture. The
-steak was cooked splendidly. My thoughts went back to the time when I
-had seen Jack last, quite a swell young man at Newcastle, N.S.W., and
-now here he was in a wide hat and shirt-sleeves, cook to the camp, and
-looking, I must say, all the better for his roughing experiences. They
-had brought out the man in him. Before he was somewhat inclined to be
-effeminate, now he had become a fine fellow. But I am wandering away from
-the dinner-party. The butter was good, although it was tinned butter,
-and the bread as light as a feather. “The baker calls every day,” they
-told me, “and if we are all out we pin up a memo. on the door and tell
-him how many loaves to leave.” “Now,” said Jack, “I must go out and
-get the pudding.” I felt I ought at least to assist, and was also a
-little curious to see how it was being cooked, so getting up in spite of
-protests that I was the guest and must do nothing, I went out to quiz. I
-found the fireplace consisted of two iron spikes in the ground with a bar
-across, from which hooks were hanging, and on the hooks were two billies
-(tin cans with wire at top to hang by), one with tea and the other with
-pudding. I was presently to have what we call in the colonies “billy
-tea.” I could see no pudding-cloth, but presently Jack fished out a
-shining tin which proved to contain one of Swallow and Ariel’s Melbourne
-plum puddings, and a delicious one it was. Mothers in the colonies and
-in England need never fear that their boys away on the goldfields do
-not get nice puddings or cakes while Swallow and Ariel are to the fore.
-Returning to the dining-tent pudding laden, I found the boys had just
-extracted from a tin a sweet cake and also a preserved pineapple. This,
-with tinned Viking cream and the billy tea, finished up a dinner fit for
-a Princess of Coolgardie, as indeed I felt myself to be that evening,
-with those four boys doing me homage. I found out afterwards that they
-had all these nice things in the camp in reserve for Christmas, but they
-were only too glad to open them all in my honour. Apropos of tinned
-articles, the piles of discarded tins on the fields make one open one’s
-eyes; there must be millions of them. One of my friends told me that in
-earlier days, when everything in the palpitating heat-waves and fearful
-grilliness of the camps got destroyed with heat and dust, they used to
-come home to their meals feeling almost inclined to fall down and worship
-the tinned vegetables and meat that they had buried in holes to try and
-keep cool, and that these were the only eatable things to be got. Canned
-apples were a special luxury for Sundays, and took them back to orchards
-and gardens where they had wandered in the past. “Those apples, with a
-lump of plum pudding, full of good things, sustained our waning energies
-and brought us up smiling out of our then dreary camp life, and,” said
-another, “it brought back happy recollections of civilisation and home.”
-
-After dinner we played a game of Nap on the camp-table, and I was the
-winner of nine shillings, after which they all escorted me back to
-my hotel, calling in on our way to see some other friends at another
-camp, which proved to be a more pretentious place than the first, and
-consisted of one of the pretty cottages before spoken of, the tenants
-again bachelors. The inmates, a mining manager, his secretary, and clerk,
-are attended by a Japanese servant; a very nice piano was in the pretty
-drawing-room. One of the boys sang “Queen of my Heart,” in compliment he
-said to me, and after a friendly glass of wine we resumed our bicycles
-and rode gaily into the town, where I bade them good-bye, after spending
-a most enjoyable afternoon in a goldfields’ camp.
-
-[Illustration: Burbanks Grand Junction Mine]
-
-I went next day to see Bayley’s Mine, where those wonderful first
-finds were made. As I drove down broad Bayley Street and looked at the
-stately buildings, I could not but think of those early days and of the
-excitement of that time.
-
-Of course I did not expect to pick up lumps of gold as people did then,
-but I certainly intended to keep my eyes very wide open, for I knew it
-was not an infrequent occurrence for men to find good slugs of gold about
-Coolgardie still. There are always a lot of men fossicking (looking for
-gold at the surface) about Bayley’s, and recently a man found a specimen
-of quartz weighing 144 ounces, and containing 97 ounces of pure gold;
-later on he found several smaller pieces near the same place. The country
-around Bayley’s is not very striking. Beyond the mines working and the
-smoke from their batteries there is nothing to be seen except miles of
-holes where the prospectors have been at work seeking for gold. It must
-have been a busy scene when they were here. Thousands of miners digging
-away, and then washing the stuff in tin dishes to see if there was a show
-of gold; and if one hole showed nothing, away they turned to another. The
-manager of Bayley’s took me round and told me that the mine is still very
-rich.
-
-[Illustration: Vale of Coolgardie Mine]
-
-I think the people of Coolgardie ought to erect a memorial pillar to mark
-the wonderful spot which may well be called the Mother of Coolgardie.
-Little did the pioneers think, when they camped on this spot a few
-years ago, that the arid desert would turn into a fine city, with more
-golden country farther out, and other cities, with tens of thousands
-of people earning good wages, and many amassing large fortunes. Such a
-transformation in so short a time the world has never known.
-
-After leaving Bayley’s I crossed through a network of poles until I
-struck the main road, and drove off to Bonnie Vale, which deserves its
-name, the country being very hilly and quite surprisingly fresh and
-green. Here many fine mines, viz., the Vale of Coolgardie, New Victoria
-Consols, and others, under the control of Mr. A. E. Morgans, the member
-for the district, are in full swing, and only wanting plenty of water
-to give big results. A very nice little town lies close to the mines.
-In another direction are the Big Blow and the Flagstaff; then come
-Burbanks and Burbanks Birthday Gift. Burbanks Birthday Gift is really
-a splendid mine. The main shaft, with its steel poppet-heads, is well
-worth a visit, and so are the interesting models of different parts of
-the mine, which were sent to the Paris Exhibition. Lady Charlotte Mine is
-well worth inspection; a fine new battery has lately been erected, and
-operations are now in full swing. The gold I saw from this mine—what they
-call “coarse free gold”—was very splendid, and the quartz with the gold
-showing through was exceedingly rich.
-
-I next visited the famous Londonderry Mine, some five miles farther on
-through the bush. I had some difficulty in finding my way, as, after
-leaving the last mine a few miles behind, there were several tracks, and
-I did not know which to take. However, I took the one to the right, and,
-after going on another mile, came across a party of five prospectors,
-who looked somewhat surprised when I drove up and asked to be directed
-to the Londonderry. They were, however, most civil, and gave me the
-requisite directions, one even offering to accompany me. That, however,
-I thought unnecessary, so I drove off, and soon came in sight of the
-big poppet-heads of Londonderry, and none too soon, for I had just
-discovered that a portion of the buggy I was driving had given way and
-I could not have gone on much farther. The mine and its surroundings
-gave one a very favourable impression. Everything looked bright and
-nice. I drove up to the manager’s office, who immediately sent a man to
-take the buggy to the blacksmith’s shop for repair, the horse to the
-stables for a feed, after which he kindly invited me to his house, and
-giving instructions to his housekeeper to attend to all my wants, had
-to leave me, as it was time to go down the mine for inspection. I was
-not at all sorry for a rest in a cool room, with a cup of tea and some
-excellent cakes made by the housekeeper, for after the drive of ten
-miles in the hot sun through the Coolgardie bush I felt that there are
-drawbacks to travelling. When the manager came up from below he escorted
-me over the mine and showed me everything of interest. Londonderry was,
-after Bayley’s, the richest find near Coolgardie, and held a wonderful
-record. The mine is the brightest-looking I have seen. Everything about
-it seemed spick and span; the manager’s house was a model of comfort.
-There was a store, a blacksmith’s shop, offices, and, indeed, every
-appurtenance that could be desired for a mine. The manager unlocked the
-great iron safe and showed me such gold that I had never seen before. I
-felt like Shakespeare’s Benedick, “I did not think that I should live to
-see such gold.” It was really the most brilliant and beautiful sight I
-had ever seen. One large block of white quartz was thickly studded with
-gold in nuggets all over it. I wanted to pick one off, but on trying to
-do so found it firmly imbedded in the quartz. Over a dozen magnificent
-specimens came from one rich pocket. Down below in this wonderful mine,
-at the 200-foot level, a huge case is fitted up with iron doors for the
-reception of the rich surplus ore that the safes cannot hold. I admired
-some peculiar-looking specimens that I was told were felspar, which is
-valuable for glass-making, and is found here in large quantities.
-
-[Illustration: JUBILEE AT RED HILL MINE]
-
-After all the kindness I had received from the manager I bade him a
-reluctant farewell, as it was getting late and a ten-mile drive through
-strange country to Coolgardie lay before me, but I knew there was a moon
-that night, and did not fear the Australian bush at all, so I refused
-the offer of an escort, and drove off by a different road from the one
-I came for I wanted to see the township of Londonderry before I left.
-This is about half a mile from the mine, past the tidy camps of the men,
-who all came out and bade me a cheery good-bye. I stopped long enough
-in the town to see that it is remarkably well laid out, with a very wide
-principal street, a few very nice buildings, viz., post-office, store,
-hotel and church; also a nice recreation-ground, where a number of the
-miners and other townfolk were playing cricket. But I had to hurry away,
-so, turning round a corner and following the telegraph-line, I started
-for Coolgardie. The sun was just going down, the heat of the day was
-over, and with the evening a refreshing breeze had arisen. I drove on
-quite happily. Nothing happened, except that I met two swagmen in the
-Bush, who looked at me so hard that I must confess I whipped up the horse
-and got on as quickly as I could. I was now on quite a different road
-from the one I came by. Everything looked strange, and I began to wonder
-whether I was lost, but consoled myself by looking at the telegraph-line,
-which I knew must lead to Coolgardie. The Wealth of Nations Mine lies in
-this direction, one of the Western Australian golcondas of early days,
-where discoveries of gold, frequently in pockets—small holes containing
-comparatively large quantities of gold—such as had not previously been
-known, were made near the surface, and caused the wildest excitement. It
-was, however, too late to go there now, so I continued on the same road.
-Another mile brought a big mine in view, and to my relief I found myself
-at Burbanks again, and on the main road, so I was all right, and drove
-merrily along, meeting only a carter or so walking by the side of their
-teams, who, seeing a lady driving alone, said, “Good-night, missus,”
-and went steadily on. As we got to the rise of the hill at Montana the
-presence of hundreds of lights gave me welcome to the Queen City of Gold,
-so there was a safe ending to that day’s journey, and both myself and
-horse were quite ready for a good supper when we arrived at the hotel.
-
-Next morning I started for Hampton Plains, which is a large area of
-ground taken up many years ago by an English syndicate at 2_s._ 6_d._ per
-acre for pastoral purposes. However, when the rush of ’92 broke out at
-Coolgardie, the news travelled to England that the great rush was only a
-few miles from their territory. No wonder that they then immediately sent
-out an expert, Mr. Lapage, M.I.E.C.E., to reconnoitre. On Mr. Lapage’s
-arrival he found that a considerable number of alluvial surface holes had
-already been struck, and 1000 ounces of gold had been taken out within
-their boundary. Going over the land he found shows of gold in various
-places; owing to the scarcity of water, nothing much, however, had ever
-been developed there until recently, when the estate was thrown open to
-prospectors. Large brickworks are now started on one part of the plains,
-and the demand from Kalgoorlie for bricks is so great that the company
-have lately duplicated their plant in order to make bricks enough to meet
-the orders they receive.
-
-On my way to Hampton Plains I called at Bayley’s South, which are
-yielding up very good gold. I saw a lot of ore come up out of the mine
-that showed gold distinctly. I felt myself becoming quite an expert now.
-The ore brought up here is in part hornblende schist, carrying very
-visible gold. The manager told me the gold had evidently been shed from
-the reef into the surrounding country rock, where there are cross reefs.
-I also saw some ironstone, which I was told was very rich, but the gold
-in it was so fine that one required to use a magnifying-glass, with the
-aid of which I could distinctly see it.
-
-I next visited King Solomon’s Mine—not Rider Haggard’s famous one but
-an exceedingly interesting namesake. Here there are quantities of the
-diorite mixture of felspar and hornblende, with gold distinctly showing
-through. This is an unusual and peculiar geological formation, and the
-best specimens found on the field are at this mine. The gold has been
-found impregnated in the diorite at a considerable distance from the
-reefs, probably deposited there by water. I presently passed the Golden
-Queen, and thought this such a nice name for a mine that I had to get
-down and inspect it. I was lucky in just being in time to see two bars
-of gold come up from the smelting works, and felt very covetous. The
-manager told me that if I liked I could take them. I tried to do so and
-found they were too heavy for me to carry, so perforce had to leave them,
-much to my regret. I now approached Hampton Plains, a very flat part
-of the country, as its name indicates. I looked around in vain for a
-hostelry where I might put up and refresh myself and horse, but no sign
-of anything of the kind appeared; about a dozen nice-looking houses in a
-line were all I could see, the rest was plain, plain, plain. I summoned
-courage to open the double gates of one of the houses and drove up to
-ask for a drink for my poor horse, who seemed almost overcome with the
-heat of the day. A man seeing me came to inquire what I wanted, and while
-I was speaking to him a lady appeared on the broad verandah and kindly
-invited me to enter. I was really glad to do so. Mrs. Ridsdale—for such
-was the lady’s name—kindly told the man to put the horse up and go and
-try and find enough water for a drink for him. They were really without
-water on this dreadful hot day, waiting for the water-carts to come with
-supplies. However, I was hospitably entertained with soda-water and
-claret and biscuits, and after a rest, finding that my horse had been
-refreshed with water, and also with some food, the carts having arrived,
-I started off to investigate Hampton Plains. I did not find a great deal
-to see. Several claims have been taken up, with no very great results so
-far, except at the Italians Reward Claim, where some very rich stuff has
-been got from the mine. There I was shown some handsome specimens, which
-were kept in pickle-bottles, and very much admired one large nugget,
-weighing 15 ounces. The land around here seemed suitable for pastoral
-pursuits, if it were not for the scarcity of water, a difficulty which
-will be overcome when the river of fresh water arrives at Coolgardie, and
-there will no doubt in time be plenty of gardens and orchards, for the
-soil is most productive. I saw a finger-post marked, “To Red Hill.” That
-is another goldfield likely to be rich in the future.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
- The Golden Butterfly—Norseman—Gold Exhibits—Coolgardie—Alluvial
- Treasures.
-
-
-Before leaving for England Mr. St. John Winne, the manager of the
-Butterfly Leases at Red Hill, showed me some marvellously rich gold
-specimens that he was taking with him to show the English investors. One
-particular piece from which the mine derives its name is in the shape of
-a butterfly—wings, body, even the little horns are perfectly like one. I
-have read the “Golden Butterfly,” and have seen many golden butterflies
-careering in the air, but never thought to have one of natural solid gold
-in my hand. Mr. Winne has now returned from England, and I believe the
-English shareholders’ eyes were fairly dazzled with the samples of the
-prospective wealth before them.
-
-[Illustration: Golden Butterfly Nugget]
-
-It is 40 miles from Coolgardie to Red Hill and Lake Lefroy, and the
-journey is anything but pleasant; the “Brumbies,” however, knew their
-way, and the manner in which they got through the bush was astounding.
-There was no road, only a track, but they took us safely over fallen
-trees, &c., for which we were duly thankful. There were several camps
-of prospectors about and the men seemed to be quite contented, and were
-getting gold; they were, however, like all alluvial miners, rather
-reticent about the quantity. Water is very scarce; it was a good thing we
-had provided ourselves with water-bags and a good hamper of provisions,
-otherwise we should have fared badly, for the only bush hotel we came
-to was made of the proverbial tin, and everything inside was nearly at
-boiling-point, so we preferred camping out under a tree. Water-bags are a
-great institution in Western Australia. They are made of canvas, and have
-a metal spout; as you drive along they swing in the air, which makes the
-water delightfully cool. Lake Lefroy is a beautiful-looking lake, and I
-longed for a bathe after the intense heat and dust of the day; but, alas!
-the water was but a mirage, and you could only look and long. It was,
-however, a beautiful sight; the white salt on its surface, stretching
-for miles, seemed to reflect the blue sky with the sun shimmering on it.
-There are a great number of lakes in Western Australia, but they are
-nearly all dry and salt; no water can be obtained except by boring, and
-then it has to be condensed before it is usable. After being condensed it
-is quite palatable, and many fortunes have been made on the goldfields by
-people owning condensers.
-
-[Illustration: The Main Shaft, Butterfly Leases.]
-
-Red Hill is not a bad little place. The accommodation of the Bush
-“hotel” was very primitive, but we were in the “back-blocks” of the
-West, and felt that we must not be too critical. There were several
-mines and numbers of alluvial miners at work getting good results,
-and very sanguine of making a big find one of these days. I saw the
-stope (excavation) where the Treasure Chamber was, in which all the
-before-mentioned gold at the Butterfly Mine was found, and I wished a
-similar rich pocket might be struck while I was on the spot. Thirty miles
-from Red Hill is Wigiemooltha, and 65 miles farther on is Norseman, a
-rich mining town in the Dundas Goldfield. In the future there is to be a
-railway line through these places, and, the people hope, to Esperance,
-a seaport 200 miles from Coolgardie and 237 miles from Albany. Norseman
-is a very flourishing goldfields town of over 1000 people. There are
-some good mines there, the foremost one, The Norseman, turning out
-considerably over 1000 ounces of gold per month. The Princess Royal and
-Break o’ Day Mines have also given splendid results, sensationally rich
-gold having been recently found at the latter mine.
-
-The clergyman at Norseman performs the tying of the marriage-knot for
-many hundred miles around, and it is recorded that two couples were so
-anxious for connubial felicity, and wrote so many pressing letters for
-the minister to come and unite them, that he started on his bicycle for a
-150-mile ride through the desert country, and that when within 20 miles
-of the place the bicycle broke down and he had to push it the rest of
-the way! Had this not happened he had intended going on another trifle
-of 100 miles or so to make another couple happy! The breakdown, however,
-put a stop to his travels, and the couple are perhaps still watching and
-waiting for the parson, who returned to Norseman per camel.
-
-An exhibition was being held at Coolgardie during one of my visits
-there, and was very interesting on account of the many magnificent gold
-exhibits. As well as the gold, there were many splendid exhibits from the
-agricultural districts, which opened the eyes of the goldfields people,
-most of whom had never been in any other part of the colony but the
-goldfields, and who had an idea that gold was Western Australia’s only
-product. Many of these people have been so much impressed that they have
-taken up agricultural land with a view to having a country residence,
-to which they can retire after the heat and dryness of the goldfields
-and recruit while planting their gardens. In the Agricultural and Fruit
-Court bunches of grapes, weighing 8 lb. each, apples, pears, and quinces,
-2 lb. each, pomegranates, oranges, and other fruits, were shown in rich
-and tempting profusion. A trophy of pumpkins, marrows, and cucumbers of
-all hues, shapes, and sizes was displayed. The crown of the trophy was a
-huge brown pumpkin weighing 165 lb.! A vast array of watermelons, some
-weighing 50 lb. each, mangels and other sorts of homely vegetables, of
-immense size, were to be seen. All kinds of cereals were represented. It
-is a fact that no less than 32 distinct varieties of wheat can be grown
-in the colony. The wool I thought very good, considering what a small
-quantity is grown here yet. The collection certainly demonstrates the
-fitness of certain parts of the colony for raising flocks. One fleece of
-330 days growth weighed 13½ lb. I was also surprised to see some cotton
-that was grown on the East Murchison at Mount Warragi.
-
-The row of gilt pyramids representing the output of gold from each field
-struck my eye as soon as I entered the exhibition. It is interesting to
-remember that, when the Colonial and Indian Exhibition was held at South
-Kensington, London, Western Australia was not known as a gold-producing
-country, and was represented principally by wild flowers. In this
-exhibition the collection of auriferous ores was simply marvellous. There
-were many bags of rich gold ores from all parts of the country, as well
-as curious beautiful and interesting specimens of tin, iron, copper,
-asbestos, mica, and coal; in fact, samples of almost everything found
-beneath the earth’s surface in this wide colony. Then the gold: gold in
-granite, gold in quartz, gold in diorite, gold in telluride, gold in the
-wash, gold in the pug, gold in all kinds of alluvial deposits—in fact,
-gold, gold everywhere. A section of the calcite vein from the Block 45
-Mine, where the telluride was first discovered, is interesting. The
-auriferous breccia from Nullagine, in the North-west, was shown to me
-by my guide, who explained that the stuff was of similar formation to
-the gold deposits of the Rand in South Africa, in which diamonds are
-sometimes found; and, speaking of Nullagine, there is now a syndicate
-there looking for diamonds. The mine is called after Lady Forrest, some
-small diamonds have been found, and from the latest reports fresh wonders
-are expected there soon.
-
-There was a splendid specimen of fine flake gold, and a magnificent large
-piece of quartz with gold all through it. This was from the Brown Hill
-Mine. The Golden Horseshoe showed such wonderful specimens of richness
-that my eyes were fairly dazzled, and it is impossible to enumerate them.
-Free gold, mustard gold, and the sparkling sponge gold that really shone
-like diamonds were shown me, and a part of the rich finds that were
-discovered when the shares went up to £45; it nearly took my breath away
-to look at them. The Associated Mines had a wonderful exhibit, the finest
-of its kind in the world. It consisted of a block of ore showing massive
-telluride gold of different kinds. A dark mineral in the centre of the
-block when analysed proved to be sulphide of copper. By way of contrast,
-a small piece of ore containing telluride has been placed in front, and
-acid employed to dissolve the tellurium, and this helps one to comprehend
-the value of telluride.
-
-The Boulder Perseverance had a very fine collection of different kinds
-of ore and gold and also some diamond drill cores which I had not seen
-before. The magnificent collection of the Lake View Consols, consisting
-of 68 specimens, showing telluride of gold, 34 valuable samples of
-sulphide ore, and 32 pieces of oxidised ore, showing immense quantities
-of gold, besides many others showing the various stages of oxidisation,
-really ought to be seen, words cannot describe their beauty. The Great
-Boulder Mine showed 14 splendid specimens of rich oxidised ore from the
-100-foot level, containing sponge and free gold, and 15 specimens from
-the 200-foot level. In the centre of these was a block of ore with a
-hole right through it full of sponge gold; there were 12 specimens of
-rich sulphide ore from the 300-foot level, 10 very interesting samples
-of tellurides of gold, mercury, and silver, and saucers with chips of
-telluride of gold. Kalgurlite, which is a new mineral, a telluride of
-gold, silver, and mercury, containing 35 per cent. of gold, 10 per cent.
-of silver, and 46 per cent. of tellurium, was also exhibited, and a very
-unique collection of sponge gold occupied a case in the centre of the
-court. This was found in a very large vugh, and 60lb. weight was obtained
-from one spot in the oxidised ore. It was composed of a mass of minute
-crystals, and is the most brilliant form of gold found upon the field.
-From the 400-foot level came some marvellous samples of ore showing
-telluride of gold and free gold, and from the hanging wall of the lode,
-and the foot wall of the same level, more rich specimens were shown.
-
-[Illustration: The Miners’ Holiday]
-
-There were some splendid exhibits from the Ivanhoe Mine, and from
-hundreds of other mines on the field. Those I have first mentioned were
-from Kalgoorlie alone. There were splendid exhibits from Coolgardie,
-Kanowna, Menzies, and Murchison Mines, and from many other parts of the
-colony, whose unparalleled richness called forth the following remark
-from an American mining-man, who was visiting the court at the same time
-as I was, and who had come from Cripple Creek in Colorado: “Wal, I’ve
-seen a big lot of specimens in my time, but I must take off my hat to
-these; they lick creation!” I returned next day to have a look at the
-alluvial gold from the famed Kanowna. The court of alluvial diggings
-was attracting a great deal of attention, not because of its richness
-but also on account of the stir made in 1897 by the rush there, when the
-rich alluvial gold was first struck by George Sim. Not only has Kanowna
-proved itself a mine of wealth for thousands of hard-working alluvial
-miners, who chiefly worked the claims themselves, and consequently
-had all the gold “on their own,” as their saying goes, but it also
-produces a very fine building stone. There was in the exhibition a most
-remarkable-looking perfect crystal 17½ inches long and 9 inches thick,
-which was discovered in the alluvial wash at Shand and party’s Claim. The
-display of alluvial matter in all its varied forms shown in this court
-was almost enough to spur on any one to become a prospector. A golden
-harvest has been reaped by thousands of men in a few short months, for
-the rush to Kanowna began in November 1897, and at that time the town
-of Kanowna was virtually dead; three months later it was estimated that
-there were 2000 miners in the field and 20,000 people in Kanowna all
-told. In twelve months the field was virtually worked out, and although a
-few parties are still getting a reward for their labours, there are not
-now more than 1000 men on the field. The stuff called “pug,” from which
-they get very fine gold, is a most peculiar greenish, soft, putty-looking
-substance, and there was a fine show of it from Hampton’s Claim in the
-Golden Valley. This was found 61 feet down, and the deposit is 7 feet
-thick. Some splendid specimens of lode material showed crystalline gold
-extremely rich, worth 40 ounces to the ton. The Red, White and Blue
-Claim, owned by Pratt and party, displayed rich ironstone alluvial
-wash. This claim yielded 4500 ounces of gold, worth £18,000, and only a
-few partners divided it. Some green alluvial wash which has given rich
-results was from the Moonlight Lead, which also showed flake gold; and
-from the Magpie Claim there was rich alluvial ore shown worth 9 ounces
-per ton.
-
-Rich treasures similar to these were sent from the mines to the Paris
-Exhibition, and the Western Australian Court was universally said to
-have the finest collection of minerals the world had ever shown. The
-Bobby Dazzler nugget, weighing 413 ounces of solid gold, valued at £1500,
-was a surprise to many beholders; among the hundreds of other solid lumps
-of the precious metal sent to Paris was the large nugget that was cut in
-two by one of the two men who found it, and who then drew lots for the
-sections and found that there was only a difference of 30s. in the value
-of them. Another slug of gold, worth £639, had the distinct mark of a
-pick on it. I suppose the man who found it could hardly believe in his
-good luck until he struck it a second time. Another strange lump of gold
-is shaped like the map of England, another like a camel’s head. The last
-“clean up” of the Westralian Mount Morgans Mine was sent in bars of gold
-worth £11,600. The Westralian Government purchased from the owners of
-various mines I mention in these travels over £100,000 worth of gold for
-the exhibition, and this, supplemented by quantities more since won, will
-be shown at the Glasgow Exhibition this year. The pearl-shell exhibit,
-was composed of 600 enormous gleaming shells, which, when lit up by
-electric light, looked like a fairy grotto. During last year there were
-179 vessels engaged in the pearl-shell fisheries in Western Australia,
-and their aggregate tonnage was 2707. The number of men employed was
-1165, of which total 991 were Asiatics. The pearl-shell raised amounted
-to 720 tons, valued at £80,479, and the value of pearls found was
-£15,529. Also our colony took four first prizes for timber, wool, wheat,
-and minerals, at the Paris Exhibition, besides eight gold medals, five
-silver ones, and five bronze for other productions.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Hannan Street, Kalgoorlie, 1898]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
- Kalgoorlie City—The Six Great Mines in the Golden Mile—Mr.
- Kaufman—Early Predictions Verified—Associated—Lake View Consols
- and Great Boulder.
-
-
-Hannan’s, or Kalgoorlie as it is now called, is 24 miles from Coolgardie,
-and as I took my comfortable seat in the railway carriage, sped along
-the once forsaken desert and arrived at the now famous City of Gold,
-with its broad streets and splendid buildings, it seemed incredible that
-such a transformation should take place in a few short years. It would
-be difficult to point to any place in the world that has developed so
-rapidly. During their short existence Kalgoorlie and the Boulder City
-have turned out over 31 tons of gold, and Coolgardie has been quite
-outstripped by her younger sister. I think, when gold is measured by the
-ton, the colony from which it comes may be fairly considered marvellous.
-It is only seven years since Hannan and Harrigan threw themselves down
-to rest on the ground at the eastern corner of what is now Kalgoorlie,
-and, fortunately for thousands of lucky people, discovered gold, and
-now, as far as that precious metal is concerned, Kalgoorlie is the hub of
-Australia. Kalgoorlie is a well-laid-out city. Bicycle tracks are laid
-down on the 30-foot wide paths, electric lights are everywhere, trees
-have been planted in the broad streets, and by-and-by will afford shade
-in the hot days for which Kalgoorlie is noted. The new post-office is a
-splendid building, and has cost £40,000. The warden’s and other public
-offices are also on a grand scale. There are several magnificent hotels,
-especially the Railway, opposite the station, and the Palace, covering
-half an acre of ground, which I have made my headquarters. This hotel
-is far the best on the goldfields of Western Australia; every luxury
-is obtainable; it has a spacious dining-room with electric fans always
-going, exquisite drawing-rooms, and good attendance.
-
-There are several newspapers, the chief of which is the _Kalgoorlie
-Miner_, edited by Mr. Kirwan, who identifies himself in every way with
-the interests of the people as well as with his editorial duties;
-the miners have a staunch friend in him. There are many fine shops,
-especially jewellers, where gold nuggets of all shapes and sizes
-made into handsome ornaments may be bought. Land at Kalgoorlie is
-daily increasing in value. An offer of £100 a foot was refused by
-an acquaintance of mine for a plot she is lucky enough to own. Some
-mining-men, including the well-known Mr. Zeb. Lane, were dining at the
-next table to myself on one occasion, and one of them remarked that he
-was sure that in a few years there would be 300,000 people in Kalgoorlie.
-You may be sure, holding that opinion, that the gentleman was looking
-out for investments. A handsome new theatre is being erected in Hannan’s
-Street. At present the Miners’ Institute supplies the entertainments. The
-suburbs of Piccadilly and Mullingar stretch far beyond the town site, and
-the three miles to Boulder City are fast being built on, and will shortly
-form one continuous busy road. Three fine breweries supply the needful
-refreshment to thirsty souls, and altogether Kalgoorlie is a splendid
-goldfields city, but the summer weather is almost indescribable. One of
-the days had been unbearably hot and oppressive; but dark clouds were
-overhead, and I said, “Soon we shall have a rain storm, which will cool
-the air.” My friends whom I was visiting laughed, and one of them, with
-a merry twinkle in the eye, said, “There will probably be a storm, but
-you will soon get accustomed to this kind of weather; _wait awhile_.” In
-the evening Fitzgerald’s “Great World Circus” being in town, we decided
-to risk the “storm,” make up a party, and go to the performance. All
-went well until about nine o’clock, when suddenly came “the dreadful
-thunder”—the clouds had broken; then came, not the rain, but dust, dust,
-_dust_—red, stifling, blinding, and terrible; for the roof of the “Great
-World Circus” had been completely lifted off by the red-dust fiend, while
-with his breath he had extinguished almost every light in the tent.
-Crash! whiff! whirl! and the “willy willy” had madly danced far away. One
-minute’s terrified silence and then through the remaining red haze could
-be seen the circus performers bravely continuing their entertainment as
-if nothing had happened; and blended with the echo of the distant din
-could be heard the strains, “Gaily the music go-o-es, so gaily.” But
-the vast audience of upwards of 3000 people, who, though the roar had
-been so strangely “hush,” had witnessed enough excitement for one night,
-gradually filed out through the rent of the swaying canvas wall, my
-friends and I amongst them, arriving home very white-faced, underneath
-the brown-red war paint so cunningly and weirdly distributed on us by the
-fiend. After wiping the dust out of my own eye, I remembered the twinkle
-that I had seen in some one else’s, and I laughingly exclaimed, “Was that
-the ‘thunderstorm’ you recommended me to ‘wait’ for?”
-
-[Illustration: Palace Hotel, Kalgoorlie]
-
-“We had a narrow escape,” tersely and grimly (I had almost written
-grimily), remarked my friend; but he must have rubbed the twinkle out of
-his eye and the dust into his temper for he declined to see the joke;
-however, as mirth is catching, we were soon a merry party once more,
-and I was regaled with “willy willy” stories of roofs being carried
-for miles, and of houses being torn down by these huge “dust spouts,”
-and, as at intervals I heard the “thunder” in the distance, I could
-well believe the dancing, whirling devils capable of anything. Many
-good theatrical companies now visit the goldfields, but the expenses of
-a travelling company are very large, the railway fare from Perth being
-about six pounds each return ticket first class, and four pounds second
-(there is no third class in the colonies). The hotel tariff is from
-twelve shillings per day (Palace sixteen), the smallest drinks (a big
-item in such a hot and thirsty country) are a shilling each, and half a
-crown is the usual price for a bath, as before said. There are no large
-theatres on the fields, but the managers make the prices for admission
-high, the community not caring how much they spend if they really wish
-to see anything; in fact, that is one of their little worries, they are
-always looking out for something to spend their money on. Horses, yes,
-the best procurable, and they are a very high price. Champagne is from
-twenty-five shillings a bottle, and that is the first drink the lucky
-miner calls for; his great mania is “shouting,” as they call it, that
-is treating wine to everybody they know. “Wives and families to spend
-it on?” “Oh, yes; but they are on the other side,” meaning the Eastern
-colonies; “I always send them plenty to live on, and when I’ve made my
-pile (fortune) I’ll go home with it; in the meantime I must do something
-to make life endurable here,” and the Hebe at the bar smiles sweetly,
-and for it receives perhaps a diamond bracelet. I am not speaking of
-the miner who earns his weekly wages, but of the man who is lucky in
-his speculations of shares, or who owns part of a mine, and when they
-strike rich, as they call it, spends his money lavishly. I sat on the
-Palace Hotel balcony in Hannan Street one afternoon and watched the crowd
-passing up and down; I was surprised to see the women so richly dressed,
-elegant Redfern tailor-made gowns and Worth carriage costumes (although
-no carriages were to be seen, but plenty of buggies with dust-covered
-hoods) were much in evidence; many of the rich women send to London and
-Paris I am told for their gowns. Occasionally a plainly-dressed woman in
-a tweed or Assam silk costume with neat sailor hat would pass, probably
-a mine manager’s wife or English visitor, but the majority of the women
-of the goldfields spare no expense in the style and richness of their
-dresses. At the present time the population of Kalgoorlie, its suburbs,
-and Boulder City is nearly 60,000. In a very short time electric tramways
-will be running, and extensive swimming baths are now being built. There
-are many good churches, which shows that in the rush for gold the welfare
-of the soul is not neglected. Goldfields places are usually looked on
-as somewhat lawless. I can assure my readers, however, that those in
-Western Australia are an exception.
-
-[Illustration: Hannan Street, Kalgoorlie, Early Days]
-
-Over the hill, not to the poorhouse, but to the rich Mount Charlotte
-Mine, I one morning took my way. From the hill a splendid view is
-obtained, and for three miles beyond nearly all to be seen is mines,
-their poppet-heads and batteries showing distinct against the sky. The
-manager of the Mount Charlotte Mine was away, so I could not get much
-information, and so, like Jo in “Bleak House,” I had to move on. The
-next mine is Hannan’s Reward, where gold was first struck (found) at
-Kalgoorlie; and although such wonderful results came from this place at
-first, the mine has now been outpaced by many others. I passed dozens
-more of mines, but did not stop until I got to the Brown Hill Mine, under
-the control of Messrs. Bewick, Moreing & Co., one of the finest on the
-field. This mine, as its name indicates, is on the top of a hill, and is
-a most imposing-looking one; wealth seems to speak from the buildings
-around it. The manager’s house is a splendid bungalow style of place,
-replete, I believe, with every modern comfort. Outside is a tennis court
-and other evidences of the manager’s tastes. The offices are large and
-convenient. The manager, Mr. Feldman, being away in England, I did not
-go down the mine, therefore cannot tell you anything about it; but Dr.
-Diehl, who represents the London and Hamburg Gold Recovery Company in
-connection with the Brown Hill Mine, has lately made a most interesting
-discovery _re_ the treatment of sulphide ore, likely to be of much value
-in the mining world. From this place I went to the Crœsus, thence to
-Block 45, another mine that has given big results. Of course there are
-many mines that have not proved as rich as those mentioned. Mining seems
-to be like fishing: there may be any number of fine fish, but it does not
-fall to the luck of all anglers to catch them.
-
-Away again past more mines, down through Golden Valley, now past
-the Oroya, North Boulder, Bank of England, and Coolgardie Mint—all
-splendid mines; then up the highest hill at the Boulder, as this part
-of the goldfield is called, where I came to the great Australia mine
-(Associated). From this place one has a glorious view of the other great
-mines on the Golden Mile, so-called on account of the marvellous quantity
-of gold that has been and is still being extracted from its depths—Lake
-Mew, Great Boulder, Ivanhoe, Boulder Perseverance, and Golden Horseshoe.
-They present a magnificent spectacle. It is almost impossible to describe
-in words the wonders of the golden hills on which these wonderful mines
-are placed.
-
-Close to the Golden Mile is a small square of business places—hotels,
-stores, different kinds of little shops, and a brewery; this was the
-beginning of Boulder City, but in consequence of the influx of people
-and the increasing prosperity of the mines, it was found necessary to
-establish the Miners’ City, a mile farther away, the intervening ground
-being required for mining. According to mining laws any ground taken up
-for that purpose cannot legally be built on, but miners are allowed to
-camp there on sufferance, and the area is therefore dotted over with
-mushroom-like tents and canvas houses.
-
-The Australia is the largest of the Associated Mines. Everything seen
-is of the latest date; every appliance that man’s ingenuity can devise
-is here. To convey the stone along the open cut to the mill there is a
-wonderful aerial tramway composed of wire cables, on which the trucks
-run high up in the air; it is a marvellous way of conveyance, but more
-peculiar still is what is here called the “Flying Fox,” which has an
-iron bucket on a single rope of twisted wire. Machinery on the top of
-the shaft and above the crushing mill conveys it to its destination;
-then the bucket empties as if by magic, and flies back to the bottom of
-the open cut, a quarter of a mile journey, to be again replenished. It
-seems almost incredible that a girl ever had the courage to take that
-journey, and yet one actually performed the perilous feat. The manager in
-jest had dared her to do it on her visit to the mine, and she, being a
-strong-willed Scotch girl, took him at his word, got into the new aerial
-car, flew through the air, and arrived quite safe at the bottom of the
-cut, while every one present held their breath with amazement; and I
-believe that all the workmen, on seeing a pretty girl deposited at their
-feet in place of the usual prosaic empty bucket, stood in consternation
-and amazement, wondering what the clouds were going to rain next. The
-underground workings of the Australia are brilliantly lit with electric
-light, which shows up the gleam of the rich gold through the ores so
-beautifully as you peer through the light into the magnificent chambers
-of oxidised or sulphide ore, you can almost imagine yourself in Aladdin’s
-Cave. On the 300-foot level there is a magnificent chamber or stope, 16
-ft. high and 40 ft. wide, from which thousands of tons of ore have been
-taken, returning 8 oz. to the ton. A specimen weighing 1½ cwt. had just
-been broken off. It was studded and seamed with rich telluride. Owing to
-the telluride lodes, mining presents wonderful possibilities. There is
-no knowing what marvels may any day come to light. The rock-drill, whose
-motive power is compressed air, had pierced down 550 ft. There was a
-large gang of men down the mine timbering, enormous great poles, almost
-tree trunks, were being put in position, propping up the earth to make it
-safe. It made me shudder to think of the dangers of a miner’s life, and
-yet, comparatively speaking, there are very few accidents in the mines
-here. The genial underground-manager told me that every precaution was
-taken in all the mines nowadays. We emerged from the shaft once more into
-the light of day. The first thing to strike the eye on the top were the
-enormous looking cyanide tanks, then the amalgamator’s rooms, where we
-saw all the modern appliances for extracting the gold, wonderful vats of
-chemicals where the rich tailings were lying waiting for the chemical
-action to take place, ripple beds, then ball mills, pug mills, rock
-breakers, and enormous stamping batteries in their various houses; then
-last, but not least, the new roasting furnaces with their huge boilers,
-and other parts looking like some immense military fortifications; these
-are used for smelting, and cost £100,000. There were 20,000 or 30,000
-bags of ore waiting for treatment, full of gold. It is wonderful to see
-the gold being smelted. To stay in the furnace-room for a minute or two,
-even before the furnace-door was opened, was like taking a Turkish-bath.
-I was quite content to stay on the outside when it was opened, and to
-see the man, dressed in an asbestos suit from head to foot, pull out
-with a great iron hook the red-hot pot full of molten gold and pour it
-like golden sunshine into a mould. After seeing this man at his work I
-thought him a kind of hero, and wondered what he weighed in the asbestos
-suit. About 200 yards from the mine are the large and commodious offices,
-and the quarters of some of the managers of different departments. The
-gold produced from this mine up to the end of November 1901 was 214,485
-ounces, and the dividends paid amounted to over £258,750.
-
-[Illustration: A Boulder Mine and Offices from Lake View Consols]
-
-Driving over to the Lake View Mine was not altogether pleasant, as, when
-nearly half-way down the steep and stony hill, my horse stumbled and
-nearly fell; however, a kindly pedestrian seeing my difficulty came to
-my assistance, and, much to my relief, led him down to the foot of the
-hill. I then crossed over to Lake View, which is said to be the greatest
-gold-producer of this marvellous field, outrivalling even the famed Mount
-Morgan in Queensland, which was almost a mountain of gold. Mr. Charles
-Kaufman purchased this wonderful mine for a company when he was on a
-visit to Australia; seeing the wealth and magnitude of the Kalgoorlie
-mines, he did not hesitate to pay the sum of three-quarters of a million
-sterling, and to take a quantity of shares for himself, and since that
-time he has also purchased other large mines. There is a very large
-and efficient staff of experts in their different departments on high
-salaries. Lake View Consols, to give the mine its full title, was, until
-the advent of Mr. Kaufman, a mine that seemed fated to bad luck. It was
-at that time owned by an Adelaide company. The first manager pronounced
-it a failure, the second died of typhoid, and the third, Mr. O’Neill,
-managed to pay out a dividend of 3_d._ per share! This was the first
-dividend ever paid on the field. Since then many dividends of £1 per
-share have been made. When Mr. Kaufman purchased Lake View he soon had it
-equipped properly and started on a new basis. Now, in place of the meagre
-poppet-heads and small shafts, a gallows-frame towers 120 ft. into the
-air, and immense shafts, sending up their continuous supply of splendid
-ore, give token of the change that has taken place. When you go down the
-mine in the “cage,” as they call it, you need only close your eyes and
-fancy you are in an elevator. When you get down 100 ft. you step out to
-a drive running 1700 ft., then on the north side you go 450 ft., and
-must not go any farther, because you are near the Boulder Perseverance
-ground, which is another rich mine close by. Here is an immense body of
-rich high-grade sulphide ore, 51 ft. wide. Teluro sulphide (in which
-telluride is found) and sulphide ores differ from oxidised ore, which
-is usually of a light colour and shows the gold freely; the other ores
-have a silvery-grey appearance, seldom showing gold, but when treated at
-the mills and smelting works they frequently yield a large percentage of
-it. Down again the visitor goes in the cage to 500 ft., the mine growing
-richer and richer to the bottom. Coming up again, the stope[3] at the
-300-foot level,[4] from which such phenomenally rich telluride, assaying
-150 ounces to the ton, has been taken, shines like a star-bespangled
-sky on a dark night. The shares in this great mine have been sold at £28
-10_s._ At that time the production was one hundred and twenty thousand
-pounds worth of gold per month. The immense quantity of huge timber down
-below is astounding. I am sure there must be enough used in timbering
-this great mine to build a town. The level at the 100-foot is quite
-large enough to give a ball in; the electric light and electric bells
-are all ready, and the air is so beautifully cool that this would be an
-ideal place for a ball on a hot summer’s night. The production from this
-wonderful mine has been enormous, and when one has been down and seen
-all I saw below, one does not wonder at it; it is a perfect marvel of
-richness. I went over all the drives, stopes, cross-cuts, &c., and saw
-everything. In place of men pushing the trucks of ore below, as is the
-case in other mines, horses were drawing 8 or 9 trucks at a time. One
-of the horses is a real pet with the miners, and at crib-time (mid-day,
-dinner-time) he is unfastened and allowed to walk about the drive. He
-always finds out where the men are, and comes up for bread or cake, which
-he eats with a relish. He is lowered down the mine every morning in a
-net, and is as quiet as a lamb now; at first, when he was very young,
-he did not like the lowering process at all, but he has since got quite
-used to it. Such bodies of rich ore have been opened up that years will
-be occupied in treating it, the plant belonging to the mine not being
-yet large enough to cope with the quantity. After the magnitude of the
-under workings, nothing surprised me on the top, although the rumble and
-stamping of the batteries, the hum of the mighty machines, the beautiful
-bright engines that seem to work with perpetual motion, the enormous
-furnaces, the magnificent cyanide plant, with its wonderful machinery
-for extracting the gold, the electricity that seems to fill the air and
-almost takes one’s breath away, are all so vast and wonderful that a
-sense of something like awe came over one, and I was not sorry to get
-into the open air again and see the blue sky above me.
-
-Only five years ago a miner returned to Adelaide, South Australia, from
-the West, and called on a sharebroker, giving him 500 Lake View shares to
-sell at as high a price as possible. They were sold for a few shillings,
-and when the miner got his cheque he remarked “he was sorry for the
-‘bloke’ who bought them, as he had been working on the mine and knew she
-was no good.” Those 500 shares would now be worth several fortunes to
-that miner had he kept them. The biter was bitten; I wonder how he feels
-at the present day about it?
-
-[Illustration: Overlooking the Great Boulder]
-
-That Mr. G. Brookman, of Adelaide, was certain five years ago of the
-great future of Lake View Consols is shown by a piece of paper with his
-calculations on it, now in the possession of Mr. Fotheringham, also of
-Adelaide, which reads as follows:—
-
-“Reef on Lake View, 3000 feet long, 100 feet deep, equal to 300,000
-feet, 6 feet wide, equal to 1,800,000 cub. feet, equal to 140,000 tons;
-3 ounces to the ton, equal to 420,000 ounces; £4 per ounce, equal to
-£1,680,000; allow £420,000 for cost of raising and crushing, &c., leaves
-£1,260,000 available for dividends.”
-
-This great mine stands first in the field as a gold-producer, the total
-yield in 1900 being 528,368 ounces, and dividends at the time of writing
-having been paid to the amount of £1,187,500 (one million one hundred
-and eighty-seven thousand five hundred pounds). When Brookman and Pearce
-arrived at Coolgardie where Bayley found his Eldorado, and not finding
-much there, went on to what was then called Hannan’s, now Kalgoorlie,
-to look at Cassidy’s Claim, they saw plenty of the golden metal to
-gladden their eyes. They began to work upon a reef, but Mr. Pearce, in
-his wanderings around the then Bush in spare time, was attracted to some
-ironstone hills. He prospected about, and was so well satisfied that he
-and his mate shifted camp and began to work on what is now the Ivanhoe
-property. Not keeping exactly within the pegged ground, they discovered
-a rich leader (a small lode running into a large one) not far from the
-camp. This was the first gold found on the Great Boulder. They then
-pegged out 20 acres around each find, and keeping their good fortune to
-themselves (knowing that a still tongue makes a wise head), soon pegged
-out what is now Lake View Consols. The present value of these syndicate
-holdings, if realised, would be about £30,000,000! So little was thought
-of the leases at first that they were called “Brookman’s Sheep Farms.”
-
-I have a few pieces of really fabulously rich telluride that were
-given to me from the same place, the 300-foot level, which yielded the
-magnificent specimens sent to the Glasgow Exhibition. The veins of the
-precious stuff were nearly four inches thick. They are so handsome that
-it seems almost a pity to break them up and turn them into what is called
-“filthy lucre.”
-
-After coming from the mine I, with the rest of a party that I had been so
-fortunate as to meet on my visit here, was hospitably entertained by the
-manager. I then resumed my journey. This time I thought myself growing
-so clever, and beginning to know so much travelling alone, that, seeing
-an opening between two large heaps of what I afterwards discovered to be
-rich tailings (from the crushings of the ore from which all the gold has
-not been extracted, and when treated by cyanide, which is a solution for
-extracting every particle of it, often gives good returns), I started to
-take a short cut through. I had, however, not thought of the air-tram
-going along with its freight of ore overhead, and just as we were going
-through the opening whirl it went along, frightening the poor horse,
-who nearly upset the trap. But a second time that day I was saved to
-continue my journey, this time by two miners, who were just emerging from
-a shed close by, and who said, “Private road, missus.” However, on seeing
-my look of distress, and on my mentioning my business as a lady explorer,
-they let me pass on my way again rejoicing. From the side of Lake View
-on which I now was, a totally different view presented itself. The large
-buildings of the mine completely block the township of the Boulder, and
-for a mile ahead nothing can be seen but mines, mines, mines, and on the
-flats tents, Hessian camps, offices, and mine-managers’ houses. Many
-good-sized places about here are boarding-houses. The majority of the
-men camp and cook for themselves, but some of them merely sleep in their
-tents and take their meals at the above-mentioned houses, usually looked
-after by two or three women, who do the mending and washing required.
-They speak in highest terms of the conduct of all the men; indeed, from
-what I saw and heard, the camps are very well conducted, and I am sure
-I have met with the greatest kindness and politeness from the mining
-community in general. I drove all round these mines and camps, but only
-stopped once to get a cup of tea at one of the houses, where I found the
-housekeeper most kind and communicative.
-
-[Illustration: Hannan’s Star Mine]
-
-Hannan’s Star, Boulder Main Reef, and Chaffer’s are the mines adjacent to
-the one I next stopped at—the Golden Horseshoe. Here I interviewed Mr.
-Sutherland, the manager, at the office, who sent for the underground boss
-(as he is termed), Mr. Morgan, to show me over the mine. To give an idea
-of the wealth of this famous mine I must tell you that, when shares were
-£8 each, such magnificent finds of gold were made that they went up in
-value to £51! On going below, Mr. Morgan courteously showed me all over
-the golden mine which has proved so profitable. He also showed me some
-of the most magnificent gold, and specimens I have ever seen. These were
-some of those that were found when the shares went up to the tremendous
-price before mentioned. Sometimes the gold is found in solid pieces;
-when mixed with quartz, the pieces are called “specimens.” We went down
-to the 200-foot level, and saw the wonderful place where the finds ran
-for weeks at a rate of 80 ounces and 90 ounces to the ton; 2000 ounces,
-valued at £8000, were won in a few days. This was oxidised ore, and at
-the same level is still abundant, but not quite so rich as the above
-quotations. We then proceeded to the 400-foot level, where more rich
-ore and wonderful workings were seen. Then along a drive down another
-shaft to the 700-foot level, through stopes and cross-cuts, picking out
-more specimens until I was fairly bewildered. Coming up we stopped at
-the 400-foot level, where the rich sulpho-telluride ore showed free gold
-quite plainly. Mr. C. D. Rose, the chairman of this mine, estimates that
-the monthly production from oxidised ores alone will reach 14,000 ounces,
-and will be maintained at that. This estimation has been more than
-reached, one month’s production of the mine since that time having been
-15,280 ounces of gold.
-
-[Illustration: The Ivanhoe Mine]
-
-When the mine’s great richness was first becoming apparent, a very
-jovial meeting of the shareholders was held. The shares had then made
-a big jump to £17. Previous to the time when the shares in the Golden
-Horseshoe were £7 10_s._ a strong “bear” attack was made on them. (A
-“bear,” in mining parlance, is a speculator who sells stock he does not
-possess, with the idea of being able to purchase at a cheaper price
-later on.) The mine was at that time “jumped” on account of some legal
-technicality; but, instead of this producing the desired effect of a
-fall in prices, the shares shortly afterwards rose, and the “jumpers”
-made a hasty retreat, sadder but wiser men. A director of this mine told
-me of the time, not very long past, when he advised his friends to buy
-shares up to as he had himself done. Some of them acted on his advice,
-but shortly afterwards the shares went down to £2 10_s._ He was then
-overwhelmed with inquiries as to what was the matter. After making a
-strict examination of the Golden Horseshoe properties, and seeing the
-large bodies of valuable ore below, this gentleman’s advice was to stick
-to the shares. Shortly afterwards they rose to £5 and £6, and now, as I
-before said, they have been as high as £51 per share, and up to 19 ounces
-of gold to the ton of ore has been got. This speaks for itself, and no
-doubt it is one of the best mines in the world. I was told a story about
-this mine, which at first I thought too incredible to be taken seriously,
-but which I am assured is a fact. It is stated that an old lady recently
-entered a London broker’s office and produced the certificates for
-various shares which she said she wanted to dispose of, saying she would
-take £5 for the lot. The broker found most of them to be shares of a
-valueless kind, but one represented 500 Golden Horseshoes, which he sent
-into the market and sold at £40 each, so that the old lady, instead of
-getting £5 for her entire collection, was credited with £20,000 for one
-slip of paper alone!
-
-I made my next move onwards along a narrow road between two hills. On
-one side is the Ivanhoe, and on the other that marvellous mine the Great
-Boulder. This is the second on the list as champion gold-producer, having
-produced over 449,726 ounces. If each ounce of gold were to be coined
-into four sovereigns, these ounces would represent over a million and a
-half of money, of which £910,000 has been distributed in dividends. Mr.
-George Inglis, well-known in England and on the Continent, was one of
-the foundation members of the board of the Great Boulder Mine, and was
-instrumental in finding some of the working capital of the company, and
-has been deeply interested in it ever since its inception. The offices of
-this great mine are close to it. I had to wait some little time before
-seeing any one who would conduct me round, everybody seeming to be up to
-their eyes in business. I accordingly mounted a hill to the open door of
-a large building, which I found to be the amalgamators’ room. Here was a
-feast of gold in bars, in ingots, in oval shape. It had just been brought
-from the smelting-room, and the police escort was waiting to take it into
-the bank at Kalgoorlie. I was fortunate in arriving at the time I did.
-I had seen gold before, but never to this extent in its newly smelted
-state; it was a revelation.
-
-The manager, Mr. Hamilton, was very courteous to me, and on my telling
-him I wished to go underground at once acceded to my request. It was
-hardly necessary to show him the letter I carried with me from the
-Minister of Mines, Perth, asking all managers to extend their courtesy
-and help to me in my travels on the goldfields. On arrival at the shaft,
-a crowd of men had just come up, and another crowd were waiting to go
-below; they were changing “shift,” which is the term used to denote
-their working time of eight hours. During the week the mines never
-stop working, consequently relays of men are required. In these shifts
-their hours of labour are changed at certain times, and so the men are
-sometimes on what is termed day shift or night shift.
-
-[Illustration: Mr. Zebina Lane]
-
-When I descended the 800-foot level the men who were there were taking
-their mid-day meal, most of them sitting down on the great stones. Their
-bright dinner cans, which contain three compartments, one for tea, one
-for bread and meat, and one for sweets, looked very clean and nice, while
-the many candles that lit up the otherwise gloomy cavern, the picks,
-shovels, and other mining implements lying about, helped to make up a
-characteristic scene of underground life.
-
-The diamond drill was at work. It was wonderful to see how the diamond
-penetrated the hard rock, for the quartz must be nearly as hard as the
-diamonds are themselves. Mr. Hamilton gave me a piece of the core of the
-drill, which I shall place among my treasures from the mines. I peered
-down the 300 feet below where I was, as the mine went down to 1100 feet,
-but it was so dark and wet that I had no wish to descend any farther, so
-mounting the cage I again ascended, stopping at two of the other levels
-and climbing all around them, and seeing all the wonders beneath the
-earth, and collecting more specimens.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
- The Ivanhoe—The Famous Stope—Climbing the Ladders—Boulder
- Perseverance—The Rock Drill—Down 500 Feet in a Bucket—Blasting
- the Rock—British Westralia Syndicate—Mr. Frank Gardner and our
- own Zeb. Lane—Kalgoorlie again—Wages on the Mines—Yield of the
- Goldfields.
-
-
-The Ivanhoe Mine is quite close to the Great Boulder, and next morning
-I set out to take a look at that, although I must confess I was getting
-weary, having walked many miles underground in the last few days.
-However, I was determined to go over the 6 biggest mines of the field,
-so away I went. The manager received me in the kindest manner, and
-offered me his room to prepare in, and told everybody to do everything
-I wished, as he had important business at Lake View, and could not take
-me down himself. The important business afterwards turned out to be that
-he was taking over the charge of the Lake View Consols as well as the
-Ivanhoe. Accompanied by three gentlemen visitors and the underground
-manager, I descended the great Ivanhoe Mine. I had a particular wish
-to see an enormous stope, 1500 feet long, about which I had heard; so
-at the 600-foot level we got out and went along a long drive until we
-came to what looked like a hanging ladder. If I wanted to see the famous
-stope I had to mount this ladder. It was very narrow, and I felt rather
-dubious of my climbing powers; however, it was only about 60 feet high,
-so I ventured. I climbed up very carefully and got into the stope quite
-safely. After walking along for a few feet I found we had to bend down
-to get along; next we came to a small aperture through which we had to
-creep; then we could not walk any more, but had to go on our hands and
-knees, like our Darwinian ancestors. I had not bargained for this, but
-having come down below to go over the 1500-foot stope, I went on. So,
-gradually creeping and sometimes walking doubled up, we got to the end
-where the men were working. They all threw down their picks and spades
-and looked in amazement at me coming along that stope; they never did
-it. There was a ladder over 100-ft. long by which they went up and down
-to their work. I had been told about this ladder, but I felt afraid of
-the 100 feet ascent, and preferred walking, as I thought, through the
-stope. I must here explain that the stope was originally quite deep
-enough for any one to walk comfortably in, but after the lodes—mineral
-veins containing ore—have been taken out, the stopes are filled in with
-refuse tailings, which have been treated by cyanide, and later thrown out
-for refuse and used as filling-in stuff. Of this I had traversed 1500
-feet, bumping my head innumerable times against the hanging wall. Oh!
-I was tired, and the worst of it was that I had to go back, or else go
-down in mid-air on a 100-foot ladder. After sitting on a boulder for a
-few minutes’ rest, and accepting many compliments from the miners about
-my courage, I decided to descend the ladder, which I did in fear and
-trembling, but got safely to the bottom, for which I felt duly thankful;
-and we went down to another level, and saw much more rich stone waiting
-to be taken up; then up to the 400-foot, where the sulpho-telluride ore,
-worth 10 ounces to the ton, was being taken out; then to the 200-foot
-level, where the rich oxidised ore is. There is a million’s worth of ore
-at sight here, and yet in the first year of the mine’s existence many
-shares were forfeited for non-payment of 6_d._ calls. The market value is
-now over £2,000,000; production of gold, 304,848 ounces.
-
-[Illustration: Roll-up at the Boulder Perseverance Mine]
-
-After coming up from the Ivanhoe Mine, a telephone message was given
-me that the underground manager, Mr. Flynn was waiting at the Boulder
-Perseverance Mine to show me over that. So, hastily untying my horse, who
-had been taking his food under the shade of the offices of the Ivanhoe,
-I hurriedly drove over to the Boulder Perseverance, and after making a
-change in my toilet, such as was necessary, jumped into the cage and went
-swiftly down to the 300-foot level. Here we stopped and walked through
-the long drive to the stopes, where much richness was to be seen; it was
-a veritable jewellers’ warehouse. Mr. Flynn gave me a pick and told me
-I could knock out some sulphide ore for myself, which I did, and many
-beautiful specimens from this mine are in my collection. While here I
-heard a tremendous rumbling noise, and thought the mine was falling in.
-On inquiry I found that the miners were blasting rock 200 feet below us
-at the 500-foot level. I expressed a wish to go there, and Mr. Flynn said
-it would not be safe for half an hour, and then I should have to go down
-in a bucket, as the cage only went to the 300-foot level. After walking
-all over the stopes on this level we went up to the 200-foot level, and
-I saw all the wonderful oxidised ore. I learned much during my travels
-underground. Oxidised ore is always found on the top levels. At a depth
-of 300 feet the sulphide ore, which contains telluride, is reached.
-
-Going through the various drives we often met miners walking along to
-different parts of the mine. We were all carrying candles, so could
-peer into each other’s faces, and the look of surprise on some of them
-at seeing a strange lady rambling about underground was quite amusing.
-Then we would come on a group of workmen at a stope; then sounds of the
-rock-drill would make me curious to go in its direction. The heat is
-fearful in places where the rock-drill is at work making holes for the
-dynamite charge which is to blast out tons of rock. The men were just
-going to begin a new hole, so I asked to be allowed to start it. The
-sensation was like an electric battery; I held the drill too tight, I
-suppose. However, I persevered for fully five minutes, and when we looked
-at the machine I was told I had drilled quite a quarter of an inch of
-rock, so I felt very proud, especially as they told me no lady had ever
-touched the rock-drills down here before.
-
-[Illustration: Lane’s Shaft, Boulder Perseverance Mine]
-
-By this time I was ready to go down in the bucket, so we took another
-walk of about a quarter of a mile along the drive to another shaft called
-Lane’s Shaft, named after Mr. Zebina Lane. In this shaft was the bucket.
-Never having been in a bucket before for the purpose of a downward
-journey of 200 feet I felt a tiny bit nervous. However, the journey was
-perfectly safe, and when I arrived at the bottom I saw a grand sight
-which I shall never forget. There was still much smoke hanging about from
-the blasting. Some 20 men with candles alight were waiting about in the
-gloom, some of them partly black from handling powder. Over 70 tons of
-sulphide ore had just been blasted out, and lay about in great pieces
-and boulders. The cave—for such it looked—fairly sparkled with richness,
-the different minerals in the sulphide rock shining like diamonds. I
-climbed over the great boulders and went all over the stope, picking out
-any sparkling bits that took my fancy, and a miner was sent on ahead to
-try the sides for fear of any loose rock falling on me. The lode here is
-41 feet wide, and very rich indeed. It was pretty rough climbing, I can
-assure you, but I would not have missed it on any account. On the return
-journey I went up the entire 500-foot shaft in the bucket, and although
-deeply interested by all I saw, I was not sorry to breathe once more in
-the sunshine away from dynamite and rocks.
-
-Some idea of the wealth of this mine may be given by the fact that the
-last shipment from the western lode averaged 17 ounces per ton. The
-high-grade oxidised ore in the upper levels, of which I spoke before, is
-an immensely rich body of mineral, continuing in richness for an eighth
-of a mile. Another lode, on a lower level, near the Lake View Consols,
-is nearly three-quarters of a mile long, and so phenomenally wide and
-rich that even Americans, who are generally apt to throw cold water on
-our mines, admit that its equal is unknown in the world; in fact, the
-Boulder Perseverance shows every sign of becoming the richest mine on the
-field, for the more it is opened up the better it looks and the richer it
-becomes.
-
-Mr. Zebina Lane and Mr. Frank Gardner, besides controlling the Boulder
-Perseverance, the Boulder Bonanza, Great Boulder South, and other rich
-mines in Western Australia, have more recently taken over Hannan’s Public
-Crushing Company, Central Australian Exploration Syndicate, and Collie
-Coalfields, lately floated with a capital of £150,000. At the banquet
-given to Mr. Lane last year previous to his departure for London, he said
-that on this coalfield there was enough coal at sight to last the colony
-for 20 years. It was Mr. Lane who in 1893 placed the now wonderful
-Great Boulder Mine before London investors. The Boulder Perseverance
-Mine shares could at that time be bought for a few shillings, now they
-are of high value, and Mr. Lane has made a large fortune out of his
-various mining transactions. Among the properties in Western Australia
-turning out among them the enormous quantities of gold of which we know,
-the properties partly controlled by Mr. Lane have turned out nearly
-half. Western Australia has no truer friend than he; he battled on
-behalf of the colony for years before prosperity came; went all over the
-goldfields, endured all kinds of hardships on the arid plains, and earned
-his success fairly. The other two gold mines on the Kalgoorlie field
-belonging to the British Westralia Syndicate, and under the part control
-of Mr. Lane, namely, the Great Boulder South and Boulder Bonanza, are
-lower down the field, over the Golden Hill, and near the Great Boulder
-and Lake View Consols. The aforesaid mines join each other, and no
-doubt the continuation of the famous lodes of these great mines will be
-eventually picked up by the Great Boulder South and Bonanza. The diamond
-drill is being used to advantage, and great things may be looked for in
-the future from its developments.
-
-The British Westralia Syndicate was formed by Messrs. F. L. Gardner and
-Zebina Lane in October 1894, and registered on the 6th of that month
-with a capital of £80,000 fully paid-up shares, the Syndicate really
-consisting of only four members, the other two being the late Mr. Barney
-Barnato and Mr. Woolf Joel, who was assassinated in Johannesburg.
-
-Since the incorporation of the company, regular dividends of 50 per
-cent. per annum have been paid, and last year a 50 per cent. bonus was
-divided in addition. As I said before, the shares now stand high in the
-market, and show every likelihood of rising to £20. The Syndicate’s
-palatial offices in Moorgate Street are, if not the finest, one of the
-finest suites in the city of London. Mr. F. L. Gardner is the chairman
-of the company, and Mr. Z. Lane the managing director and superintending
-engineer.
-
-In addition to the above-mentioned mines, Mr. Lane has recently taken in
-hand three properties in the Nannine country, Upper Murchison, all of
-which have developed into paying properties and are making good returns.
-
-Mr. F. L. Gardner, chairman of the British Westralia Syndicate and
-its offshoots, has long been associated with Australian mining, but
-was drawn into West Australian ventures by his old friend Zeb. Lane.
-His speculations in Great Boulder, Perseverance, Lake Views, Crushing
-Company, Boulder South, and the ever-increasing dividend-paying British
-Westralia Syndicate, have amply repaid him for his courage.
-
-An American by birth, with all the strength of mind and will of a big
-investor, he is a tower of strength in the market, known as a man
-of strict integrity and sound financial position, being in fact a
-millionaire, he has now the strongest following in London, and with Mr.
-Zebina Lane to engineer the mines which he controls, will soon be, if he
-is not already, the biggest man in the Western Australian Market, which
-more particularly concerns this book and this colony than any other
-market in which he may operate. Pity it is, for the sake of Western
-Australia, that we have not more combinations of such straight-going men
-as these two have proved themselves to be; then the investing public
-would have more confidence in mining speculations, and would certainly
-have, in horse-racing phraseology, a run for their money.
-
-[Illustration: _Frank Gardner_]
-
-Mr. Z. Lane, generally known as “Zeb.,” may be described as the pioneer
-of successful gold-mining in Western Australia. Born, brought up,
-and educated to the mining industry, he for many years successfully
-managed the great silver mines of Broken Hill, New South Wales, and was
-unanimously elected the first mayor of that city when it grew into a
-municipality. He left Broken Hill in 1893, and paid an extended trip
-to Western Australia, where, after careful examination, he fixed on
-what is now known as the Golden Mile; but as Western Australia was then
-so little known, he had difficulty in getting working capital for the
-various holdings and had to drop some of them, but pinned his faith to
-the Great Boulder and the Perseverance (certainly two of the best), and
-floated them both in London amongst his own friends. He started the first
-10 stamps on the Boulder on April 10, 1895, afterwards increasing them
-by degrees to 30, and has since that date been instrumental in shipping
-over 15 tons of gold from the mines under his individual control—surely
-a wonderful record in a new waterless country, with so many difficulties
-to be contended with! He is a man of few words, but of iron will
-and determination, and is one of the most popular men in Western
-Australia—has been repeatedly asked to allow himself to be elected to
-Parliament and to the Mayorial Chair of Perth, but prefers to look after
-his mining interests. Perhaps he is quite right in doing so. He is a
-Justice of the Peace for every colony in Australia, is a good public
-speaker and debater, and will be greatly missed in Western Australia
-should he decide to settle down in London, as many of his co-directors in
-the various companies are anxious that he should do.
-
-[Illustration: Hannan’s Public Crushing Company]
-
-Crossing another road I came to the Brookman Boulder, a very fine mine.
-Mr. Brookman has amassed a large fortune and settled in Perth, and is
-spending his money where he made it, instead of going away to other
-countries to live, as most of the lucky people do. Mr. Brookman and
-Captain Oats recently paid a visit to Ballarat, the Queen Gold City of
-Victoria, and at a banquet given in his honour, Mr. Brookman said that in
-a few years Kalgoorlie would, no doubt, be as fine a city as Ballarat, an
-opinion with which I most emphatically agree. I must mention that this is
-one of the places that caused such a stir in the world fifty years ago,
-on account of the wonderful goldfinds there.
-
-Two of the largest nuggets found in the district were the Welcome in
-1858, weight 154 lbs., value £8872; and the Welcome Stranger in 1869,
-weight 190 lbs., value £9000. I trust this digression will be pardoned.
-
-[Illustration: Central Boulder Mines and Manager’s House]
-
-There are two large and splendidly furnished clubs here, namely, Hannan’s
-and Kalgoorlie for the well-to-do, and several institutes, affording
-opportunities for reading and recreation to the miners. I must not forget
-to mention the fine park, cricket ground, and racecourse.
-
-Having finished my journey round the wonderful mines, I feel how poor
-has been my description of them. It has been almost impossible even to
-mention half the important discoveries that have been made in these
-marvellous chambers of the earth. I have tried to explain some of the
-developments that stand out most strikingly. The rapid progress that is
-being made in all ways makes it quite safe to say that what has already
-been done is as nothing to what will be done in the future, and that
-by the time the new century is a few years old, and all the latest
-processes of extracting gold from the ores are in full swing, we may hear
-of such great returns as will amaze the most incredulous. As I go along
-the three miles between Boulder City and Kalgoorlie, and think of the
-wonders I have seen, it seems quite safe to say that very soon the whole
-three miles will be covered with buildings and the predicted population
-of 300,000 an actual fact.
-
-The scale of wages on the field is as follows:—
-
- MINE MANAGERS’ ASSOCIATION SCALE.
-
- OCCUPATION. RATE PER DAY.
- _s._ _d._
- Timbermen 13 4
- Rock-drill men 13 4
- Miners (wet) 13 4
- Bracemen 11 0
- Truckers 10 6
- Blacksmiths 15 0
- Labourers 10 0
- Carpenters 15 0
- Millmen 13 0
- Batterymen 11 8
- Battery boys 8 4
- Engine drivers, 1st 13 4
- Pitmen 16 8
- Assistants 12 6
- Miners (dry) 11 8
- Plattmen 11 0
- Tool sharpeners 13 4
- Strikers 11 0
- Draymen 11 8
- Fitters 15 0
- Masons 15 0
- Feeders 10 0
- Cranide labourers 11 8
- Engine drivers, 2nd 11 8
-
-There are more than 6500 men working in the Kalgoorlie mines, and over
-£28,000 weekly is paid in wages. The cable from the Government to the
-Agent-General for Western Australia, London, October 1901, gave the
-crushing returns of the colony for that year as 1,580,950 ounces, valued
-at £6,007,610, making a total gold production of £27,726,233 sterling.
-Several millions of money have been paid to the shareholders of the
-various mines in dividends since the Adelaide and Coolgardie Syndicate
-took up the ground at the Boulder, and that ground, which was chaffingly
-alluded to by the prospector’s friends as a “sheep farm,” has certainly
-produced many “golden fleeces.”
-
-The Kalgoorlie field has yielded in its short life over thirty-one
-tons of gold, Western Australia’s total output since it first entered
-the world’s list as a gold-producer in 1886 is sixty-two tons of solid
-gold; now, with the new machinery that is being erected, with the latest
-methods for extracting gold from ore, it will not be surprising if the
-output from each of our golden giant mines should shortly be doubled.
-In all the mines I have been down there is enough amazingly rich ore at
-sight to keep the crushing stamps going for years. Miners should be proud
-of having brought Western Australia into the position of the greatest
-gold-producing country in the world.
-
-The Witwatersrand, South Africa, has but a narrow belt of gold-producing
-country, thirty miles long. In Western Australia the auriferous belt is
-over one thousand miles in length, and three hundred miles in width, and
-out of a territory of 975,920 square miles, the area of the goldfields is
-324,111 square miles. Bear raids and slumps may come and go, unscrupulous
-speculators may cause depression in the share market through bad reports
-for their own gain, “but the gold is here,” and energy, pluck, and
-perseverance, will overcome all the difficulties there may be to obtain
-it, in this truly golden West.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Saturday Afternoon at Kanowna]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
- Kanowna—The Great Alluvial Rush—Big Nuggets—“The Joker”—Father
- Long’s Golden Sickle—Nobility Represented—Bulong.
-
-
-Looking at the town of Kanowna, White Feather, at the present time, one
-can hardly believe that two years ago there were 20,000 people there. It
-is now a quiet settled little town, the outskirts riddled with holes,
-like an immense rabbit warren. Even what was once the large cemetery is
-now dug up in all directions, with just a little plot fenced in where
-burials had really taken place. The other portion, which, owing to the
-richness of the surrounding ground, was thrown open for digging, had, of
-course, not been used for burial purposes. I first went to Kanowna in
-November 1897, at the commencement of the great rush. I wanted to see
-a rush on the spot, and accordingly started one morning by coach from
-Kalgoorlie. On arrival at Kanowna, quite a stranger, I had to carry my
-own portmanteau around and look for a hotel to stay at. There was no
-sign of a man about the little town. I afterwards found that all the
-men were up at the Lead, as it was called. At this time there were only
-three hotels in the town, now there are more than twelve. I was fortunate
-enough to secure the only vacant room in Donnelon’s Hotel; so, after
-getting off some of the red dust of the 12-mile coach ride I started
-for the said Lead, about half a mile from the hotel. When I first saw
-it I was amazed, not only at the number of tents and bough-houses, the
-thousands of windlasses at work, the thousands of men with tin dishes
-washing the ore for gold, the thousands of cradles (not babies’) being
-rocked for the same purpose, but at the thousands of men rushing about in
-all directions in a state of wild excitement. People at that time came
-from all directions to see the wonderful alluvial field—miners to take
-up claims, speculators to buy out claims, men to buy gold, men to buy
-ore, and plenty of people only as spectators, who wanted to see the gold
-as it was washed off. In this, however, they did not always succeed, for
-those men who had time to do it had made bough-sheds and pitched tents,
-and had their cradles inside, where they could wash their ore in privacy,
-and not let everybody know how many ounces would go to the dish. It was
-my good fortune to make friends with many of the mining-parties and to
-see the gold washed off, often 8 and 10 ounces to the tin dish. Many
-nice little slugs were given me by those kindly miners as a souvenir of
-my visit. Many days in succession I visited the Lead, as it was called;
-much kindness did I receive, and many a billy of tea was boiled for my
-refreshment.
-
-At the beginning of the Lead the first claim was held by Sim and Gresson;
-the latter joined the second Australian Contingent, and has since been
-fighting for our Queen in Africa. George Sim, the original finder of the
-rich cement ore, told me that he had worked there for 18 months, with
-very poor results, and yet felt sure of ultimate success, so that he was
-not surprised when one day he “struck it rich,” as the miners’ saying
-goes, and since then he and his partners have been taking out cement,
-full of rich gold, as fast as pick and shovel can dig, and have taken
-over £10,000 worth of gold out of their ground. The next claim, held
-by Morris, Long, and party, also turned out very rich. From 60 tons of
-cement they obtained 555 ounces of gold, 200 ounces of this being taken
-from the dish, that is, obtained merely by washing the stuff in the
-dish and picking out the gold; the rest was treated at the battery. The
-cement is a greenish-looking stuff, more like pipeclay than anything I
-have ever seen. Most of it crumbles up in the hand when touched, and the
-gold is plainly visible, but there are occasionally some hard lumps as
-well. There were hundreds of other claims around here, notably that of P.
-McManus, Huntington, and party. Poor Paddy McManus has since joined the
-great majority. He was one of the best and kindliest of men on the field
-and was regretted by all. This claim yielded an enormous quantity of
-gold. Then Tassy O’Connor, Doyle, and party’s claims, called the Arctic
-Circle and Klondyke, yielded the partners a fortune each. Ninety tons
-crushed for Jackson and party yielded the handsome return of 497 ounces
-of gold. At Casey’s Claim, the day I was there, they had just washed
-off some wonderfully rich coarse gold. They had about 40 ounces of the
-precious metal in a frying-pan, no other article being available to hold
-it since all the tin dishes were required for gold washing purposes. Some
-nice pieces of gold, running to about 27 dwts., are often found in these
-dishes.
-
-[Illustration: Deep Lead, Kanowna]
-
-These claims, with numbers of others just as rich, were on the Main,
-or Fitzroy Lead; on the right, and to the north, was the North Lead,
-where more riches have been found. Eaton and party refused a large sum
-for a ninth interest in their claim; they were making hundreds a week,
-and none of them felt disposed to sell out. Close to this claim was the
-famous Donegal. While I was there four buckets of ore were brought to the
-surface thick with gold, and when washed were found to contain nearly
-300 ounces. There was great excitement on the Lead that day, although
-the miners keep things of that sort as much as possible to themselves.
-It is reckoned that £12,000 worth of gold has been obtained from this
-claim alone. The Red, White and Blue Company have also taken phenomenal
-quantities of gold from their claim near the Donegal, about £600 or £700
-worth of gold having been taken from the earth every week. Many of these
-men who had now struck such wonderful good luck had previously worked for
-years for what in mining parlance is called “tucker” (food). No doubt
-pluck and perseverance are the two essentials required, and if everybody
-could see the 12,000 miners on Kanowna field as I saw them, and could
-hear of all the hardships that the majority of them had endured prior
-to striking this rich field, no one would deny that their good fortune
-was deserved. Another very rich lead was called the Golden Valley. Here
-the ore chiefly obtained was that called “pug”; it proved very rich, but
-there was great difficulty in extracting the gold from it until a special
-process was discovered. The Death Valley and Cemetery Claims also proved
-to be very rich. Enormous quantities of gold were taken from Kanowna
-in 12 months; but it is difficult to obtain really accurate returns of
-an alluvial field, as many miners keep quantities of their gold, while
-others carry it away and sell it at different places; but I saw with my
-own eyes the enormous richness of the field, and, if I never see another
-alluvial rush, shall consider I was in luck when I saw Kanowna, not only
-because of the information I received, the money I made by being advised
-in what to speculate, but for the mere sake of seeing the place as it was
-in the full tide of its golden glory. There were no very large nuggets at
-this rush, but about two years before, at a place called Black Flag, one
-weighing 303 ounces was found; it was called “The Joker.” In company with
-it were four other nuggets and a piece of quartz containing 60 ounces of
-gold. The Joker was an exceptionally bright piece of gold, three-cornered
-in shape, with a bit out of one base. The other nuggets weighed 73
-ounces, 51 ounces, 37 ounces, and a little over 10 ounces respectively.
-All of this gold was found at a depth of 6 feet, and in the course of one
-week’s work, the total weight being 537 ounces. One day all Kanowna and
-the surrounding country were roused to a state of tremendous excitement
-by the report spread by Father Long, the parish priest, that an enormous
-nugget, weighing 1636 ounces, valued at £6500, had been found close by,
-and had been named the Sacred Nugget, or the “Golden Sickle.” When the
-news reached Koolgarlie and Coolgardie, parties were organised, horses
-and buggies, cabs, carts, bicycles, and every other available vehicle
-taken possession of, and thousands of persons started for Kanowna field.
-In the meantime no authentic information could be obtained in Kanowna
-as to the place from which this tremendous lump of gold had come, the
-lucky finders keeping that a profound secret. However, search-parties
-were organised, and set off to look for the spot whence the nugget came,
-some one having given the slight clue: “It was near the Dry Lake.” Off
-the parties went to the neighbourhood indicated, and a very lively drive
-they had. It took an hour to reach the Lake, and there a consultation
-took place. It was decided to skirt along the Lake, but nothing came in
-sight except a boundless track of low bush. Another halt took place, when
-a journalist among the search-party, more venturesome than the rest,
-climbed a steep hill, and at once gave a loud “Hullo!” Every one thought
-the object of the journey had been attained. The spy had discovered
-tents some distance away. Off went the horses and vehicles at a hard
-gallop. The tents were all a dream, however. There were no tents, and
-there was nothing in sight. It was resolved to turn round and try in
-another direction. At another likely spot a halt was again made, and here
-occurred the most amusing incident. One of the vehicles had been left
-by all its occupants except a lady. Everybody was engaged in individual
-searching when a loud cry from the lady recalled every one to the drag.
-Perhaps she had been more fortunate. “Look there!” said she; “look at
-all these men running and shouting;” and lo and behold, about 200 men
-were seen rushing down an adjacent hill toward the party, each with a
-branch of a tree. It appeared, however, that the newcomers had only been
-following the conveyances. Off went the vehicles again, down the Lake,
-up the Lake, and round the Lake. Everywhere did these parties go, but
-no gold or signs of habitation were seen. Father Long was besieged by
-people, over 300 visiting his camp to find out where the lucky spot was,
-but the priest said it was told to him under the seal, and he could not
-divulge the spot. After searching all over the country near to Kanowna
-no discoveries were made, and the searchers returned sadder but wiser
-men. You may be sure Father Long came in for no small share of abuse from
-thousands of disappointed people. The truth of this remarkable story has
-never come to light, but it is quite certain that no such nugget was ever
-found, no official notice of it having been recorded, and no bank ever
-having had charge of it. Father Long has since passed away from earth and
-nuggets, dying of typhoid fever in Perth Hospital in May 1899, and what
-was his share in reporting the find will never now be known. Many people
-are inclined to think that Father Long really thought he did see the
-nugget, and therefore spoke of it in good faith. A version of the affair
-given me by a good authority at Kanowna, after it had all blown over, was
-that a certain party of men, who owned one of the richest claims in the
-neighbourhood, had all the gold they had collected for some time at one
-of the hotels and that one of the partners, an Irishman, placed all the
-lumps and pieces of gold together in the form of a sickle, and called it
-the “Golden Sickle,” the collection of pieces looking exactly like a huge
-lump of gold. Father Long, being near at hand, was invited to see the
-splendid specimen, which he immediately blessed and called the “Sacred
-Nugget.” The partners did not undeceive him, but bound him to secrecy
-concerning the names of the party who found it and the alleged locality
-from whence it came. This promise poor Father Long faithfully kept,
-thereby gaining for himself the condemnation of the multitude. None of
-the partners were brave enough to own what they had done, and Father Long
-had to bear the burden to the last.
-
-[Illustration: Alluvial Diggings, Kanowna]
-
-In those times Kanowna was a place never to be forgotten. At night, after
-work was over, thousands of men used to flock into the little town,
-and the three hotels being quite inadequate to their wants, grog-shops
-existed in dozens and plied a big trade. I must say, however, that,
-considering all things, Kanowna was in general strikingly orderly and
-peaceful. Of course there were occasional fights. We witnessed several
-from the balcony of the hotel, the only place where we could sit in the
-hot summer evenings. The hotel was crowded, hundreds were unable to get
-served, and men were waiting five deep in the bars; all drinks cost
-1_s._ The hotel-keepers made rapid fortunes from the bars, and were,
-besides, partners in claims on the Lead. Two hundred and thirty thousand
-ounces of gold have been obtained from this great alluvial field. It
-is well known that miners, more especially the prospectors, are very
-kind-hearted and resourceful men. If they “strike it rich” they spend
-money freely, and are generous to a fault to any old mates they may
-meet who have not been so fortunate as themselves. It cannot be denied
-that, for strong and able-bodied young men, life in the West, with its
-freedom and many chances of good luck, is one not to be despised. Men
-from surprisingly different classes are to be met on the goldfields, and
-yet, so to speak, all classes are alike. I met during my travels on the
-Lead several university men who were trying their luck with the pick and
-shovel, and were not ashamed of their clay-stained moleskins. There are
-a good many new chums (arrivals), easily recognisable. The nobility is
-also represented; one trooper who was there belonged to a noble family
-in England. Another, a sprig of Scotch nobility, was on one of the
-large mines adjacent to Kanowna, and was said to be a fine fellow and
-universally liked. One meets quite a large proportion of men and women
-recently arrived from the old country, who seem always to make for the
-goldfields by preference, while most Australians seem to love the towns
-and want to stay there. There are several deep-level mines within a short
-distance of Kanowna, none of them, however, calling for special mention,
-with the exception of the White Feather Main Reefs, which occasionally
-gives a good yield, and the managers of which look on it as having better
-things still in store; recent crushings have been highly satisfactory,
-and future ones are expected largely to increase the profits of the
-shareholders.
-
-Bulong is a mining township 12 miles from Kanowna, and as several good
-finds have been made there, one of 500 ounces of gold, I should not be at
-all surprised to hear of a more sensational find some day, followed by
-the inevitable rush. The Queen Margaret Mine has given good returns, and
-there are a number of men on the alluvial ground who make a good living,
-and a little to spare, all the year round. The ground has not been
-thoroughly prospected yet, and its worth remains to be decided. Sixteen
-miles from Bulong, at Black Hills, two men, who had been prospecting,
-lately came across a nice little find of 2000 ounces of gold from a few
-tons of quartz. The usual subsequent rush to rich finds of course took
-place. In October 1900 a large nugget weighing 13 lb. was found by a man
-named Eddy, at Kurnalpi, about 40 miles from here, not 200 yards from
-the place where the nugget weighing 168 ounces was found the year before
-by John Symonds. Kurnalpi has been one of the richest districts of the
-goldfields, and who knows how soon some still more sensational finds may
-startle us all!
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Hill End Mine—Broad Arrow]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
- Broad Arrow—Menzies—Rich Mines—Lady Shenton—Luncheon in the
- Caverns of the Earth—Hon. H. J. Saunders—Welcome Tea and
- Cake—Native Murder—A Lost Prospector—Cake of Gold—Box-seat of
- the Coach—Mount Malcolm—Gold Escort—Windmills and Fresh Water.
-
-
-I went back to Kalgoorlie this time by train, the railway having now been
-open over twelve months; stayed at Wilkie’s Hotel, opposite the station,
-and found it most comfortable as well as convenient. Wilkie Brothers, who
-were the successful tenderers for the Coolgardie Railway (which brought
-them a profit of £300,000) own this hotel. The next morning I set out for
-more goldfields, and arrived at the Menzies after an interesting journey
-through various small townships, Paddington and Broad Arrow being the
-best. There are some large mines at Paddington giving excellent returns.
-Broad Arrow, a very nice little place, has lately been the scene of an
-alluvial rush, and the usual population of 300 was quickly increased
-to 3000. There are a post-office, four hotels, several stores, and a
-good many shops, as well as some nice dwelling-houses. It is now a very
-thriving place of some importance and a scene of bustling activity.
-Shops which a short time ago would not let at any price now command such
-rents as their owners scarcely dreamed would ever be possible. There
-are several very rich claims which have bottomed on rich gold; in fact,
-gold is everywhere. The extent and value of the golden ground can only be
-conjectured. One claim, called the Blue Duck, was exceptionally good; so
-is the Maltese Cross; while the Bird’s Nest is a veritable golden hole.
-The names of these claims struck me as being very peculiar; another rich
-one, owned by men who, until they struck this, had had a continued stream
-of ill-luck, is called the Battlers’ Reward, and indeed they richly
-deserved their splendid find, the gold from which stands out to the wash
-in halfpenny-weight pieces.
-
-Farther along the line is Bardoc, from which place much rich gold has
-been won. It was at Bardoc that an accident recently happened in one of
-the mines, a poor man being killed by five tons of rock falling on him.
-
-Twenty-six miles before we reached Menzies was Goongarrie, which a few
-years ago made a great sensation in the mining world.
-
-[Illustration: Part of Lady Shenton Battery]
-
-Menzies was the nicest small mining town I had seen. There was a
-wonderful air of prosperity about it. As I walked up the principal
-street it seemed almost to say, “This is a good place,” and the people
-were extremely kind to the stranger in their midst. Until quite recently
-Menzies was one of the “back-block” towns, only accessible by coach from
-Kalgoorlie, a distance of 90 miles. The people in what we Australians
-call coach-towns always seem more genial and warm-hearted than those
-who can pop into a train and be whirled along to the metropolis, and
-Menzies only having had the train service recently has not had time to
-get spoiled. I think it is because of their isolation that people in
-these places, as a rule, hail strange faces with more pleasure than
-others do. There are some very nice houses in Menzies, and the hotels
-are especially good. The Grand Hotel (I can speak from experience) is a
-model of comfort. A very well-built post-office and court-house adorn the
-town, and there are many other substantial buildings in the place, which
-is, no doubt, a most important centre of business and industry, and
-which has made great strides during the last twelve months, especially
-since it received a new impetus from the advent of the railway. The
-town is literally surrounded by mines, not only of gold; copper has
-been found near in lodes of 50 feet wide, that bear 5 dwts. of gold as
-well as 60 per cent. of copper. Menzies is quite a young town, and is
-named after Mr. Menzies, the explorer, who, in 1894, went prospecting
-from Kalgoorlie to see if he could discover any more Kalgoorlies. After
-travelling some weeks he discovered some rich “shows,” and telegraphed to
-the syndicate, of which Sir George Shenton and the Hon. H. J. Saunders
-are head, to that effect. Application for ground was made and accepted,
-and works afterwards commenced, with what success may be imagined from
-the results of that noble mine the Lady Shenton, which, since 1897,
-has paid 12 dividends of over £88,000, besides expending large sums of
-money on machinery, &c. The Lady Shenton Mine occupies 36 acres of land.
-There is a splendid electric-light installation, both on the surface and
-underground, at the main shaft as well as in the crushing-sheds, and
-in many other places where it is useful. The total output of the mine
-is 97,278 ounces of smelted gold, exclusive of gold from tailings and
-concentrates, the latter sometimes giving a very high percentage of gold,
-since as much as 327 ounces had been taken from 73 tons when I was there;
-14,000 tons of tailings were awaiting treatment. Some time ago, when Sir
-Gerard Smith visited the mine, luncheon was served to the visitors in the
-300-foot level. I happened to be at the Lady Shenton Mine at “crib” time,
-and after “crib” the miners went out with their football to have a game
-before beginning work again. They were fine looking specimens of colonial
-manhood, and seemed thoroughly to enjoy their friendly game.
-
-The sleeping tents of the miners are some little distance from the mine,
-but there were several dinner tents close by. The men form themselves
-into little parties of five or six, taking it in turns to act as house
-boy, or, as I should say, tent boy. In the day time the menu is cold, and
-looking at the stock of tins of preserved meats (elegantly termed tinned
-dog), fish, jam, milk, cake, and vegetables, it is easy to see that
-they do not neglect their meals. Why should they, since they are in the
-receipt of high and regular wages?
-
-The next large mine is the Queensland Menzies, from which there have
-been large returns. There are some other first-class mines from which
-great things are expected. Four miles from Menzies is Kensington, where
-there are more good mines, also two splendid breweries. I next travelled
-across the country for about four miles, all alone, with only the pony
-I was driving for company; but happening, with my usual luck, to strike
-the right track and not get lost, I came to the Four Mile, where there
-is a little township (small settlement), and a magnificent mine called
-the Menzies Consolidated. There are 120 men engaged on this mine, who
-form quite a little colony by themselves. There is a fine tennis court,
-where several of the officials of the mine were enjoying a game. Mrs.
-Strickland, the sub-manager’s wife, insisted on getting tea and cake for
-me, and seeing that my horse also was refreshed after the heat of the
-day. On my way back to Menzies by another road, a metalled one this time,
-I passed many prospectors and dry-blowers, who all seemed quite satisfied
-with what they were getting. When I got in sight of Menzies I took a
-short cut through the Bush, and found I had to pass through abandoned
-alluvial diggings and several shut-down mines. I was glad to get back
-again on to the hard road and to Menzies, for the shades of night were
-falling fast. Next morning I learned from the paper that a murder had
-been committed by natives and the body found near Kensington the day
-before. I must have passed quite close to it, and am very glad I did not
-see it. Many crimes are committed in these remote parts, the perpetrators
-of which are never discovered. A long-standing mystery has just been
-solved: a man named McInnes disappeared about two years ago; he was known
-to be a thorough Bushman, and fora few days no notice was taken of his
-disappearance. However, as he did not return search-parties went out to
-look for him, but he was never found. Shortly after his supposed death
-his brother came from Victoria, took charge of his affairs, and vowed
-that he would never leave the colony until he had solved the mystery of
-his brother’s disappearance. This has apparently been done by a blackboy
-named Tiger, who found the skeleton of a man at the Bullarchi Rocks, 12
-miles off, and Mr. McInnes, the brother of the missing man, being sent
-for, identified the remains as those of his long-lost brother. The poor
-fellow had evidently, in Western vernacular, “done a perish,” like so
-many others, in the course of searching for gold.
-
-An extraordinary meteor was witnessed here a short time ago. A
-magnificent ball of fire shot across the heavens from the north-west to
-the north-east, leaving an almost straight trail of light behind it. At
-the head of this trail of light appeared a ball of fire, which became
-gradually diffused around the luminous trail or meteor in convolutions
-resembling the movements of a serpent. For some moments the display
-bore a likeness of a pillar of light with a serpent twined around it.
-Gradually this semblance was transformed into the figure of a man
-standing upright, with his arms partly spread and his hands clasped.
-This form grew gradually into an attitude as if the figure were about
-to spring, the head and shoulders being inclined forwards and the legs
-slightly drawn up, and in this attitude it remained till the luminosity,
-gradually becoming paler, was absorbed in the silver light of the
-breaking day. Altogether the phenomenon lasted from 10 to 15 minutes.
-
-[Illustration: MESSRS. A. FORREST AND J. DUNN ON A PROSPECTING TOUR]
-
-To the west of Menzies is Mulline, where there are some very rich mines.
-Mr. De Baun, of Perth, has a mine there from which he recently brought
-to Perth a very nice little cake of gold weighing 447 ounces, valued at
-£1700. Then on the east side there are Yerilla, Pendinnie, and Eujidine;
-here the Nita Mine, lately called the North Fingall, has recently had a
-fine crushing. At Pendinnie, 120 miles from Menzies, a find lately took
-place, and the scene along the road was a repetition on a smaller scale
-of the rush to the Boulder a few years ago. Camel and horse teams crowded
-the way, and everybody was smitten with the feverish race to get to the
-promising spot; nothing stupendous has yet been found, but the place is
-good and fair results have been obtained. The Waihi Mine, about 32 miles
-from Menzies, is one of the latest sensations, and promises to be of
-great value. Much of the stone is being broken out, showing rich gold,
-and, on being tested, gave results from 6 to 20 ounces per ton. Although
-only discovered in October 1900, the lucky prospectors in November were
-offered £20,000 for the mine by a syndicate, and since then a company has
-been floated and over a hundred thousand shares taken up.
-
-I went on by coach to Mount Malcolm from Menzies. Certainly there was not
-much but sand and scrub to be seen in the way of scenery. We arrived at
-Niagara, the end of the first 30-mile stage, quite ready for dinner at 1
-o’clock. This little place did not present a very attractive appearance;
-in fact, it was most remarkably dull looking. The mining district of
-Niagara is scattered, but there are some good mines about. After the
-60-mile coach drive I was very pleased to see the lights of the little
-town of Mount Malcolm appear, which is the most typical mining place I
-have ever seen. As I strolled down the one street in the morning I said
-to myself, “I am indeed getting away from town life, and shall now see
-real mining business to my heart’s content.” The coach journey is indeed
-terrible, the road being almost one sand patch, and the horses having to
-walk a great part of the way, so the sooner the railway comes the better
-for all parties concerned. There seemed to be some grass growing about
-Malcolm, which was quite a fresh sight for me, and I am sure a boon for
-the horses and their owners in these parts, where fodder is so expensive.
-Then the beautiful supply of fresh water is a blessing to every one,
-and a great aid to the development of the country, the work of digging
-for gold being rendered so much easier than in the sterile wastes of
-country where water is scarce. Mount Malcolm might almost be called
-Windmill Town, on account of the windmills over the wells; nearly all
-the public-houses and many private places have their own water supply.
-The gold escort had just gone down, taking the month’s gold to Perth.
-I saw it start from the post-office, which is quite a nice large one
-for a mining township. The warden’s offices, or court-house, are nearly
-opposite—such a funny place!—just two Hessian tents with bough-sheds
-built over to protect them from the sun. (A new warden’s office has
-since been built.) There is no lock-up here, so any one who misbehaves
-is chained to a small tree not far from the court-house and left there
-all night. This seemed to me a custom more fit for the barbarous dark
-ages than this enlightened century. A little while ago a man was chained
-up for being intoxicated. It appears he woke from his tipsy sleep in the
-night and felt very thirsty. He tried to get the chain off his leg, but
-could not. The tree they had chained him to that night did not happen to
-be firm enough in the ground, for he pulled and pulled until he got it
-uprooted, and then made his way down the street to an hotel, dragging
-chain and tree after him, and with his blanket fluttering in the wind
-made night hideous with his cries and woke the whole town with his noise.
-As the authorities could not give him a month under the tree for this,
-they packed him off in the coach next morning to the nearest gaol.
-
-There are not many mines in the immediate vicinity of Malcolm. The
-Richmond Gem was under exemption, also at that time under a cloud, but it
-had been a good mine, and will, no doubt, recover itself. Another large
-mine about half a mile out is the North Star, where very good results
-have been obtained. There are many men employed here, and on Saturday
-nights they come into Malcolm and make the little township lively. A
-novel procession passed up the street while I was there; it was a new
-engine for the Malcolm Mohr battery, drawn by 14 horses, and caused quite
-a flutter of excitement. Malcolm was comparatively quiet, as there was a
-rush to Mertonville, 18 miles off.
-
-The ex-Premier, at a recent visit, said that when he was last in the
-district, 30 years ago, he stood on and named Mount Malcolm, and in
-those days never thought that it would be the centre of a great mining
-district. On the earlier occasion he was at the head of a small exploring
-expedition sent to see whether the reports of the natives that white men
-had been murdered there were true; it was thought that these white men
-might be members of Leichhardt’s expedition.
-
-During my stay at Mount Malcolm I was shown many really beautiful
-specimens by the managers of some of the principal mines. Many of these
-were from deep levels, and would, I am sure, much surprise many people
-who are sceptical about the richness of the mines in these parts. I
-received some very pretty little specimens, souvenirs of my visit,
-which I shall always value very much. There is no lack of money; every
-one appeared to be well off. The following story may serve to show
-what a lucky miner will sometimes do after he has had a good crushing
-or found some good specimens. A man who had unearthed a nice slug—30
-ounces—in the Lake Way district came into Malcolm for a spree, and on
-one occasion, while drinking “not wisely, but too well,” he upbraided
-the Hebe behind the counter for wiping the glasses with an old towel.
-The delinquent pleaded poverty as an excuse, and straightway the accuser
-threw down ten sovereigns and suggested the purchase of a new towel.
-Another man at another township, who had a splendid claim, and had taken
-over £2000 worth of gold from it, has now not a penny, because every
-time he realised on his gold he immediately spent the whole sum in the
-hotels. As there are but two of these in the township, they have made
-good profits from this man’s mine. When he has spent all his money,
-the hotel-keepers put him into a cart and drive him out to the mine to
-recover himself. After he has done so, he usually sets to work for a
-month or two, and unearths some more nuggets for another spree (drunk).
-
-Shortly after breakfast a few friends and myself drove to some nice
-gardens a little way from town. Although the weather was very warm,
-everything was delightfully fresh and green, the flowers were smelling
-sweetly, and the vegetables a perfect picture. What a blessing is
-plenty of fresh water! Any quantity can be got here by digging a
-well, and the experts from the Goldfields Water Supply Department,
-who were here recently, say that the country between the hills is
-really a subterreanean reservoir extending for miles. We drove on to
-the Mount, which is five miles farther away. A splendid view of the
-surrounding country for fully 30 miles is obtained from the Mount. The
-Trigonometrical Station here is very interesting. We had lunch on the
-very top of the hill, and returned to Malcolm in good spirits, having
-passed a most enjoyable day.
-
-Daseyhurst, 35 miles from Menzies, is a coming goldfield, and North’s
-Consolidated Blocks, owned by Mr. J. H. North and Mr. W. E. Millar, may
-yet rival the fame of Great Westralian Mount Morgans, of which mine these
-gentlemen were the pioneers. Mr. North has recently successfully floated
-a company in London to further develop the North Consolidated, and we
-expect to hear great things in the future from this promising mine.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Merton’s Find, Mertondale]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
- A New Field—Mertondale—Stupendous Richness—Gold, Gold
- everywhere—A Lucky Prospector—Garden in the Bush—Murrin!
- Murrin!—A Welcome Surprise—Western Australian Mount
- Morgans—Golden Hills—Blackfellows on the Trail—The Lagoon.
-
-
-My investigations at Mount Malcolm took me some days, so, after a good
-rest and pleasant time at that very lively little township, I started one
-Friday, at 7 o’clock, for the new goldfield of Mertondale, to which there
-was a rush. One morning Malcolm folk woke up to the startling news that
-a new and phenomenal rush had begun 18 miles off. Soon everybody was on
-the _qui vive_ to see it. All the vehicles in the township were loaded,
-and the male population started _en masse_ for the new find. It turned
-out to be a great one, and many stories have been told me concerning
-the richness of it. There was nothing of great interest on the road to
-Mertondale. A bough-shed off the road in the distance, pointed out to
-me as the place where a prospector had lately chosen to shuffle off
-this mortal coil by cutting his throat, and that just as his claim had
-struck gold, was about all that varied the monotony of the journey. The
-Australian Peer Mine was the first seen on the road. It was the one at
-which Merton and Gallagher were working when Merton went out one day on
-his bicycle to look for a lost horse and found the lucky hill which has
-since yielded so much gold. Mr. Merton said that when he discovered it
-he did not think it was so good, until he commenced breaking the stone
-he picked up on it, and found in every instance that it contained gold.
-After discovering the reef he applied for a lease, and put on two men to
-work at carrying out the quartz. The stone had to be taken two miles to
-the Waitekari Battery, but in the short space of two months £3206 worth
-of gold was crushed. A short time afterwards, Mr. Merton, who was a poor
-man at the time of the find, purchased a 20-head battery, and now crushes
-the stone on the spot where it is found. The reef of solid quartz is 100
-feet wide, and traverses the whole of Merton’s area of 36 acres. He said
-that he would want a higher price, cash down, for his holding than has
-ever been paid for any mining property in Western Australia; so, from a
-poor man, a few months have made this lucky prospector a millionaire.
-On arriving at Mertondale the sound of the battery waked the stillness
-of the morning. The township is very small as yet, merely a few Hessian
-houses and tents, but I saw before me the hill, with the battery in full
-work, in which I was interested. So I asked the driver of the coach to
-take me there, which he did as a very great favour, for he was carrying
-the mail and had not yet been to the Bush-house post-office. However, as
-it was a very hot day, gallantry to the fair sex prevailed and the mail
-had to wait. I got down from the coach at the foot of the hill, and at
-the battery-house found Mr. Robinson, the manager, who kindly took me
-round and showed me everything of interest. First he went to the spot
-where Merton picked up the first rich stone. Plenty of it was still lying
-about. We went down into the open cut (or quarries) where the men were
-digging out the stone. I took a pick and dug out a piece myself, striking
-rich gold at the first stroke. Several other pieces followed, and I keep
-them as specimens. We then went down the underlay shaft, on the western
-side of the big quarry. It was 12 feet deep. I got down by means of a
-rope, two of the men at the bottom holding their spades against the sides
-of the shaft for me to put my feet on. I managed to make a successful
-descent and began to use the pick again with much success. I could see
-the gold running through the rock quite plainly, so, having permission to
-do so, dug out several nice pieces, after which I essayed to climb the
-rope to the surface again, and, assisting myself by sticking my feet upon
-the jutting pieces of rock on the sides of the shaft, I soon got out of
-the rich hole. I then walked all over the hill and found many pieces of
-quartz lying about, all containing gold. Mr. Robinson afterwards took me
-to the battery and showed me the plates into which the gold and amalgam
-run after being crushed by the mill. I scraped some of the rich stuff off
-the plates; to my disappointment it looked like silver, but Mr. Robinson
-explained to me that this colour is caused by the action of the mercury
-used in the process, and that when smelted pure gold appears. Some idea
-of the power of the mercury may be given by this fact: I put in paper
-the piece which I had scraped off and placed it in my purse, in which
-was a gold ring that I had just put there to take to be repaired. Next
-morning, when I went to take it out, the gold ring was gone, but a silver
-one remained. The jeweller had to retort it (put it in fire) to regain
-its colour. Merton’s Hill is, no doubt, a perfect mine of wealth, and,
-so far, all on the surface, as the deepest digging then was the 12-foot
-shaft I have mentioned. Over £40,000 worth of gold had been taken out in
-the few months since the beginning of the rush, besides fully 20,000 tons
-of rich stone that will give 7 or 8 ounces to the ton, and as every ounce
-is worth nearly £4, a nice little sum is looking at lucky Merton out of
-the stone.[5] There are many other claims on the field, but the one on
-the hill is the most valuable. It gives gold, gold everywhere. I was so
-much taken with this wonderful place that I pegged out an 18-acre lease
-for myself, and am hoping to strike a rich patch on it at some not far
-distant day. In the Golden West one never knows when luck may come to one.
-
-It was great fun and hard work pegging out that lease. To enable one to
-do so, in the first place one must be provided with a miner’s right,
-which costs ten shillings per year; this document enables the holder
-to take up any ground he or she desires (not previously taken) in
-mining country; after the lease has been approved by the Warden of the
-Goldfields, one may start and dig or put men on to dig, and the gold
-found would be private property; if, however, any one dug and found gold
-without these preliminaries, the precious metal would have to be handed
-over to the Warden as the property of the Government.
-
-Behold me then (knowing all this, and having secured a miner’s right
-before I left Perth) accompanied by some kindly miners and the lady under
-whose roof (canvas) I was domiciled, with my sleeves tucked up and a
-spade in my hands digging holes for the pegs to be put in, which must
-be done personally; as it was an 18-acre lease the distance between the
-four pegs was considerable, and required some walking to be done in the
-hot and dusty morning. However, I successfully planted my pegs, marked my
-number on them, and after paying the fees in the Warden’s Court at Mount
-Malcolm on my return, I became a leaseholder.
-
-Another rich find had lately been made at Wilson’s Creek, 30 miles from
-this place, by two prospectors named Paddy Crowley and Dick Donovan. Over
-twelve months ago they found some alluvial gold there, but until a few
-months since nothing phenomenal; then they found a lode at a depth of 10
-feet, with rich leaders running in all directions. One of the partners
-went into Malcolm the other day with a bagful of specimens weighing 372
-ounces, and the other partner is digging out more as fast as he can.
-Mr. Hamilton, of the Great Boulder Mine, Kalgoorlie, recently visited
-Mertondale, and gave it as his opinion that the place would turn out a
-second Great Boulder and the Flying Pig Mine a second Golden Horseshoe.
-As yet all the gold obtained has been found near the surface, and if the
-deposit continues down lower the possibility of incredible wealth lies
-in this wonderful spot. As yet Western Australia’s surface seems only to
-have been scratched in a few places. If the bodies of ore prove to go
-down, Mertondale bids fair to outrival the Boulder, Kalgoorlie.
-
-[Illustration: MR. ALICK FORREST INSPECTING DUNN’S SHAFT NEAR MOUNT
-MORGANS]
-
-The weather being intensely hot—109°—I decided to return to Malcolm in
-the moonlight, and a friend succeeded, after a great deal of trouble (for
-horses and vehicles are not yet very common here), in borrowing the only
-horse on the field, and managed to get an old buckboard buggy to drive me
-down. Camels are the usual mode of transit in this district, but I refuse
-to ride these animals.
-
-Starting the next morning by coach from Malcolm at half-past five for
-Westralian Mount Morgans, I was fortunate in having the box-seat of the
-coach. A cool breeze had sprung up in the night, no doubt accompanied
-by a willy willy, which, as I told you before, is a terrific whirlwind
-of dust that sweeps along everything before it, and frequently carries
-verandahs away bodily and deposits them on the roofs of adjoining houses,
-besides removing tents as it passes. On arrival at a little hotel at 8
-o’clock I felt quite ready for breakfast, and wondered what kind of fare
-we should get in these remote parts. Nearing the place, which rejoices
-in the name of Bummer’s Creek, a fine vegetable garden surprised me. It
-looked very refreshing to see the nice green garden after nothing but
-sand and mulga-trees for 10 miles. On going into the hotel (a tin one)
-evidences of comfort out of the usual order of “back-blocks” travelling
-appeared. Many little dainties were on the table, and we were served with
-an excellent breakfast, fresh eggs, fresh milk, and hot scones coming
-on us as a complete surprise. There were two lady passengers besides
-myself: Victorian girls who were on their way to an engagement at the
-next hotel, where one of them was to be a “companion” at a weekly salary
-of £2 10_s._
-
-Twelve miles farther on we reached Murrin Murrin, where I stayed for a
-day. Here I visited the Malcolm Proprietary, and was much interested in
-the works and management of the mine, a fine one, giving good returns.
-An interesting feature is the tailings hoist, worked by a compressed-air
-plant. Returning to the Murrin Hotel for dinner, I was surprised at the
-delicate way in which it was served, at a table with beautiful napery,
-elegant silver, and glass ware. On becoming acquainted with the little
-landlady, I was no longer surprised, for I found her a cultured lady, who
-invited me to stay a few days as her guest, and I thoroughly enjoyed the
-quiet change from the roughness to which I can never accustom myself.
-
-There is a great deal of copper about Murrin, and many copper mines are
-being worked with good results, the Anaconda taking the first place.
-
-On arrival at Mount Morgans I found it quite a flourishing township.
-Twelve months ago there were no houses, but now the place is increasing
-wonderfully. The Westralian Mount Morgans Mine is less than a quarter of
-a mile from the township, and is on a hill overlooking the surrounding
-country. The large machinery on it made it look very imposing. From the
-hill Mount Margaret is visible, a township now quite deserted, all the
-houses having been bodily moved to Mount Morgans, and the hospital to
-Laverton, another rising mining place, the former name of which, British
-Flag, was changed to Laverton in compliment to Dr. Laver, who has been
-mainly instrumental in bringing the place into prominence and attracting
-an inflow of British capital.
-
-There are some very valuable mines here, as well as the Westralian Mount
-Morgans, Guest’s Mine being the next in importance, and rapidly coming
-to the fore as a gold-producer. A company in England has recently been
-floated with a quarter of a million of money to deal with this mine. The
-reefs are very large, and known to extend over 20 miles. The Westralian
-Mount Morgans, which bids fair to be one of the biggest gold-producers
-of Western Australia, is named after Mr. A. E. Morgans, the Member for
-Coolgardie, the largest shareholder. There was an enormous quantity of
-ore waiting to be crushed, and, although the gold is too fine to be seen
-by the naked eye, it realises from ½ ounce to 3 ounces per ton. Thousands
-of tons of this ore, sufficient to keep the battery going for five years,
-are visible, waiting to be taken out. Occasionally some rich pockets of
-gold are found, the rock simply glistening with the precious metal. The
-output of this mine is very large, and nearly 200 workmen are employed.
-Water for crushing purposes not being abundant, a pipe-line was laid
-to an extensive lagoon 6 miles away, and now brings an ample supply.
-The cyanide plant can treat 2500 tons of tailings monthly. Two thousand
-cords of wood are neatly stacked by the mine ready for use, and more is
-obtainable at a short distance.
-
-[Illustration: Westralian Mount Morgans Mine]
-
-The working-men’s club and library, a very nice building, built of
-mud-bricks in their spare time by the men, who are very proud of it,
-faces the mine. The term “mud-bricks” may need explanation: the bricks
-are made from a kind of reddish soil found here, and when moulded into
-shape look very well.
-
-The first hotel in Mount Morgans had just been opened when I was there. I
-had great difficulty in getting accommodation, and was obliged to share
-the room of the landlady’s daughter. The proprietor was doing a roaring
-trade. There was a large dining-room, which was turned into a dormitory
-at night. Visitors were constantly coming and going, so much being heard
-on the lower fields of the recently wonderful finds. The post-office is
-as yet a very primitive place, merely a canvas tent with a bough-shed
-over it; but new buildings are going up in all directions as fast as
-they can be built. Land brings a good price, plots now fetching as much
-as £300 (which six months ago could have been got for the pegging out).
-When a goldfield is proclaimed, the warden of the place gives permission
-for people to take up ground for residential areas. Then comes a wild
-rush to get in the first pegs. These pegs are to mark the ground which an
-applicant desires to take up. When the warden’s permission was given, at
-a court held at Mount Margaret, numbers of men hurried to Mount Morgans
-to peg the best plots of land. Some went on bicycles, some on horses, and
-those who arrived first of course got the best choice. One well-known
-man had an old racehorse which he had “kept dark,” as they say, and he
-outpaced them all and got the choicest plot on the township. He has since
-erected the second hotel there, and sold it, I am told, for a very large
-sum before it was completed.
-
-Very few women are yet on the field, and as I sat writing in the only
-little parlour, all the male population seemed to walk past the open door
-(the room being too small and hot to shut it) and to gaze at me as if I
-were something rare and remarkable.
-
-With the exception of the few golden hills, the country was very flat,
-and cyclists were constantly arriving. The country around Morgans is very
-pretty in some parts, and there is plenty of nice grass growing. Every
-coach coming up from Menzies was crowded with miners and prospectors,
-who, having heard so much of this wonderful district, where a plentiful
-supply of water is to be obtained, were getting out as fast as possible.
-Not far from Mount Morgans, a mine, which is reported very rich, has
-lately been discovered by Mr. Dunne, who found the Wealth of Nations Mine
-at Coolgardie. Mr. Alick Forrest is largely interested, and lately paid
-a visit of inspection to it.
-
-It is a very pleasant drive of six miles to the now deserted township
-of Mount Margaret, and three miles farther on is the Mount itself, from
-which a grand view of the country is obtained. The enormous Lake Carey
-(salt) stretched far away in the distance. This is one of the innumerable
-salt lakes of Western Australia, and with the glorious sun shining on it
-it looks like a lake of gold. Sir John Forrest was the first white man to
-set foot in this district, and stood on the Mount 30 years ago, when he
-named it Margaret after his mother and his intended wife.
-
-As I returned to Mount Morgans in the cool of the evening, a very large
-tribe of blacks (natives) appeared on the scene, but they were very
-peaceful, and asked me for “bacca” and sixpence, which the king having
-obtained, they all appeared satisfied. They were dressed in civilised
-clothes, and looked quite fat. “White-man’s tucker,” as they call it,
-and which they beg for as they go along, seemed to suit them. They
-had just lit their camp fires. The aborigines’ means of fire lighting
-is by wood friction, and as it takes a long time to get a spark they
-usually carry fire-sticks, which keep alight a long time and save them
-much trouble. They often bring into the townships or camps pieces of
-gold which they have found in the bush, for they know they will receive
-something, although they do not know the real value. They know, however,
-the superior value of silver to copper, being aware that they can get
-much more “bacca,” or food, for a silver piece than for a copper one,
-and when they take their finds to any one, asking “how much this fella?”
-meaning “what is it worth.” If it is a small find, and they are told the
-value in pennyweights, they will say “Bael (no) pennyweight, that fella
-shillingweight.” (The native, in his attempt to talk English, terms
-nearly every person place, or thing “fella.”) They told me in their
-broken way that this tribe had travelled from Kalgoorlie, and was going
-to the Murchison, looking for a renegade blackfellow called “Kangaroo,”
-who had transgressed their laws, and whom they meant to kill. Let us
-hope, for “Kangaroo’s” sake, that they never found him.
-
-Mount Wilga is a very rich property which lies on the other side of Lake
-Carey, is in a country that might almost be called undiscovered. But Mr.
-G. W. Hall has discovered its richness, and sent up a manager and gang of
-men, who are working away with great vigour. The lode is as big and rich
-as any one could desire. Some of the ore from a good depth that has been
-assayed has yielded 20 ounces to the ton; how much equally rich will be
-got remains to be proved.
-
-Although the supply of water for mining purposes at Mount Morgans is not
-adequate, there is plenty for domestic purposes, the wells sunk in many
-parts of the township giving a good supply. In the rainy season, which,
-however, seldom comes, the lagoon that supplies Westralian Mount Morgans
-Mine with water is a huge lake, and teems with waterfowl. Kangaroos and
-wallabies sport around its banks, and give great opportunities to the
-sportsmen, who during other parts of the year have to let their guns lie
-idle.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Mine at Laverton]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
- Laverton—Excitement among the Miners—Bachelors and Grass
- Widowers—More Souvenirs—Lucky Discoveries—Erlistoun—Lost—Eagle
- Nugget—Euro Mine—Hospitality in the Bush.
-
-
-The coach to British Flag, or Laverton, turned out to be a large kind of
-conveyance with three open seats and no cover; consequently, as the day
-had been hot, I was glad when we drove into the township at 8 o’clock
-in the evening, for I was fairly tired out. Every one in the place was
-looking out for the mail, which only goes up three times a week. Several
-gentlemen whom I had known in other parts of the colony were here, and
-having heard that I was to arrive by this coach, were waiting to receive
-me, and three pairs of stalwart arms were held out to help me down. I was
-escorted into the hotel, and from the time I arrived until I left was the
-recipient of so much attention from the numerous and kindly fellows as to
-be almost bewildered.
-
-The very comfortable hotel was kept by three bachelors, one looking after
-the hotel business and the other two after the store which they also
-own. Wages up here are very high: cooks get £3 10s. per week, and two
-young women, one of whom acts as housekeeper, while the other attends in
-the bar, were receiving £5 per week! Another young woman was making a
-small fortune by washing and mending the clothes of the gay bachelors,
-who, having plenty of money, do not mind what they pay for work done
-for them. The whole of the country seemed to be a vast auriferous area,
-and thousands of miles of rich country higher up yet are absolutely
-unprospected.
-
-Horses being very scarce, I was indebted to Mr. Campbell Shaw for the
-use of his horse and buggy during my stay. Mr. Shaw drove me out to the
-Augusta Mine, of which he is manager. This little mine is very rich,
-and had just been bought from the three original prospectors for £2500
-in cash and 1300 shares. There was no battery there as yet, and so the
-stone raised was taken to the Hawkes Nest Battery, 9 miles away, every
-morning by a 60-camel train, the camels returning at night for their next
-morning’s load. The country around is really pretty, and from the hill on
-which the Augusta Mine stands you can see the houses at Mount Morgans,
-20 miles off, through the clear air. Some very fine specimens have been
-sent from this admirable little mine to the Glasgow Exhibition, and I was
-fortunate to get some myself. The camps here were all very neat and tidy,
-and yet there was not a woman on the mine, all the men being bachelors
-or grass widowers. I intended to go down the shaft, but there had been
-an accident the day before, and two young men had been injured—happily,
-however, not very seriously—so I thought discretion the better part of
-valour and did not go down. As no women were at the mine I volunteered to
-do a little nursing by putting cold bandages on the injured men’s arms,
-and making them nice cool lemon drinks, for which the poor fellows were
-very grateful.
-
-Going back to Laverton, just as the sun was setting, I thought the
-little township looked very flourishing. It is wonderful how quickly
-these places spring up! A few months ago only a few tents marked the
-spot which then was called British Flag. We stopped at Dr. Laver’s old
-camp and surveyed the little township with wondering eyes, and two lucky
-prospectors coming up gave me a pretty little nugget they had found that
-day. These men had previously struck a patch in an abandoned shaft near
-where they were camped a few miles out. They thought they would go down
-and look all over it, and did so with such perseverance that they found
-a leader. Following it up, they discovered it to be 18 inches wide, and
-eventually came across a rich pocket from which they afterwards took
-£4000 worth of gold.
-
-Driving into the township we went down to the post-office, not a Bush
-one, but really a nice building. As it was the mail night all the folk
-were there waiting for their letters. Most of the shops and houses are
-built of galvanised iron, and are very hot during the day; but this
-drawback has to be endured, for the place is in the Mulga country, where
-the trees are very small and only fit for firewood, and the distances are
-too great to bring timber from elsewhere. The Western Australian Bank had
-a very nice place; it was one of the best buildings there.
-
-I was now over 600 miles from Perth, the capital, and had reached the
-very last township in the Mount Margaret district.
-
-Erlistoun is another rising mining place, where there have recently
-been some rich finds. It is 60 miles from Laverton. Several old
-prospectors have been there for years, and have quite lost the customs of
-civilisation, so much so, that one old man called Jack, on hearing that
-one of the miners had brought his wife to the Erlistoun, and that she,
-having a goat, had brought it up with her (at a terrible inconvenience,
-as you may imagine), in order to have fresh milk in her tea, remarked:
-“I shall pack my swag and go farther back, now that women and goats are
-arriving here; this is no place for me.”
-
-I saw some marvellous specimens, more gold than quartz, from the
-Erlistoun, and should not be surprised to hear any day of a tremendous
-rush there. Consignments of plump wildfowl from beyond Mount Black and
-the Erlistoun are frequently sent to Perth, and the country about is said
-to be very fine.
-
-The Craig-i-more was the scene of my next mining visit. This mine
-belongs to Sir Donald Currie, and, like most in this district, is worked
-at the expense of the owners without the aid of the outside public
-as shareholders. The machinery is very fine. I found the people most
-hospitable; they made tea for me, and one of the managers presented me
-with several valuable native weapons and curiosities, which I was proud
-to add to the already fine collection in my pretty home at Claremont.
-
-Next day I set out to drive myself to the Euro Mine, about 12 miles
-from Laverton, and refused all offers of escort, wishing to explore
-the country myself. All went well for about seven miles, then I came
-to two roads, did not know which to take, and of course took the wrong
-one. After going on for about a mile the track grew very indistinct; I
-found I was on the wrong one, and presently lost it altogether. However,
-knowing by the sun that I was now going quite in the opposite direction,
-I turned round, found the track, and determined to trust to luck and keep
-to the left. When I had gone on for about a mile the track began to get
-very indistinct, again being woven into others in a most confusing way.
-The wind having risen made it also very dusty and disagreeable. I now
-felt completely lost, but drove on hoping to strike a road once more.
-Presently, a few yards to my right, there appeared a huge “willy willy.”
-It interested and amused me at first, but presently it whirled nearer,
-too near for my fancy and also to suit my horse, who needed no urging on.
-Surely I heard a shriek. No! it was only the horrid “willy willy”; then
-began a race, and “willy willy” was edging nearer. I turned my horse’s
-head and let him gallop in the opposite direction; “willy willy” had
-turned too _and was following us_. Half mad with fright I gave my horse
-his head, who, by-the-by, took a small rut as if he were out with hounds,
-the buggy and poor I taking it also. But where was “willy willy?” Right
-away back, slowly dying (perhaps of laughter at giving us such a fright).
-I slackened speed, and, looking around, was surprised to find that we
-were nearly back at the Junction. We had struck the road again somehow,
-the horse, perhaps, knowing his way better than I did. After all, “willy
-willy” had done us a good turn. “It’s an ill wind that blows nobody
-good,” I said to myself as I straightened my hat and drove sedately down
-the road.
-
-[Illustration: MINERS’ CAMP, LAVERTON]
-
-Seeing smoke rising amongst the trees, I drove over to the place, hoping
-to find a camp where I might get water for my horse. I found the camp
-and one solitary man working by it, who had been in the neighbourhood
-prospecting for months. He asked me to give my horse a rest, offering to
-attend to him and also to make some tea for me, which hospitable offer I
-gratefully accepted. While the “billy” boiled he told me much about the
-hardships he had endured for many months. “But now,” said he, “luck has
-turned; look here, ma’am.” At the same time he unearthed from the ground
-an old jam tin, which proved to be full of little lumps of gold. For
-months, he told me, he had been fossicking (that is, searching the top
-ground), and looking for shows of gold, and one day had struck a patch.
-Picking out one little piece he said, “That’s the first bit I found, and
-you are the first white woman I have seen for months, so I’ll give it to
-you for luck.” The piece was almost exactly in the form of an eagle, and
-is now one of my gold treasures. He said that he had often been without
-food, or the money to obtain it, but had subsisted on the kindness of
-other prospectors, who had helped him from their often scanty store, and
-of the storekeepers who had given him tick (credit). (I have since heard
-that the man afterwards struck an immense find, and is now thoroughly
-successful.) Bidding my hospitable entertainer “good-bye,” I again
-started on my journey and soon found myself at the Euro, not having met
-even a solitary kangaroo on the road.
-
-In the early days this mine was known as Quartz Hill, and the company
-owning it was unlucky. Thousands of pounds were spent, but nothing much
-was got, and the mine was finally abandoned; but some prospectors, who
-often have a liking for fossicking on an abandoned spot, thought that
-it had not had a fair trial, and two men, named Champion and Mason,
-determined to give it another. Knowledge or chance led them to continue
-a costéen, and they were not long coming on stringers (thin courses) of
-rich quartz. Mr. G. W. Hall eventually came upon the scene in company
-with Mr. A. W. Castle, and these well-known gentlemen were not long
-in making a proposition to the prospectors, from whom they shortly
-afterwards bought the mine for a considerable sum and renamed it the Euro.
-
-There is every appearance of a brilliant future for the Euro. There is
-a large body of ore in sight. The reef is 10 feet wide, and some of it
-gives assay equal to the rich Kalgoorlie claims. Many nice houses are
-being built for offices, manager’s house, and stores. Farther on is the
-Sons of England, another rich property acquired by Mr. Hall.
-
-At the Euro I was most hospitably entertained by the manager’s wife.
-There were two other visitors at the mine that day, and we made quite a
-merry party in the cool Bush-house, where we were invited to a very nice
-lunch.
-
-Mount Weld was the object of my next day’s journeying. I did not lose
-myself this time, but on the way came across some prospector’s camping,
-and stopped to have a talk with them. They showed me a bottle full of
-gold that they had recently got. One of them, the old man of the camp,
-went very mysteriously into the camp and brought out something tied up
-in a piece of an old bag. It turned out to be a nugget which must have
-weighed 60 ounces. A small piece of gold was given me as a souvenir, and
-I was bound to secrecy for a month about the big nugget; but, as the
-month will be long past when this is published, I may now safely speak.
-
-At Mount Weld the miners seemed amazed to see a lady drive up alone,
-and all work was suspended for the time by the hands on top. At the same
-time an “Hallo” was given to those working below, with the message, “Come
-up; a lady visitor.” The reply came, “You’re codding” (joking); but
-when I went to the top of the shaft and called down, “It’s quite true,”
-they came up the rope (dispensing with the bucket) with great alacrity.
-Several claims here were yielding splendid returns, notably the new find,
-7 miles from the Mount, where Bates and Whelan have recently struck a
-rich patch.
-
-Another new place is called Bett’s Find, and 150 men were working there;
-but, the heat having been terrible and water rather scarce, a good many
-of them had left the place. The North Country, as this part is called,
-has the advantage of rock not nearly so hard as on the fields lower down,
-consequently the ores can be more easily treated.
-
-The time came when I had to bid farewell to Laverton and to its many
-interesting mines. As time goes on the now modest little township will,
-no doubt, develop into a fine city, for it is the centre of a very rich
-district, although almost up in the Never Never country (where there is
-no white population). Many mines of which I cannot speak are full of
-golden promise, and many more will yet be discovered. The country around
-is mountainous, and it is near mountains and hills that all the rich
-reefs are found.
-
-It was on a lovely morning that I started for my return journey to Mount
-Malcolm. As I had 70 miles to go, and as I was on the front seat of the
-coach, I was thankful that the weather was cool. At first some difficulty
-was experienced in getting the off-side leader to go. He was a young
-horse, just broken in, and had never been in harness before; the way he
-stood on his hind legs and curvetted around put terror into my heart, for
-I am not strikingly brave where horses are concerned; with a great effort
-I controlled myself and sat still, for I could see that the coach-driver
-had full command, and, after about ten minutes of fear to me and fun
-to the crowd who gathered round, we got away, the unmanageable animal
-behaving admirably for the rest of the journey.
-
-There was only one other passenger (a gentleman) besides myself, and he
-kindly got down and gathered Australian quondongs,[6] and some very rare
-flowers new to me. Farther on the spinifex was very plentiful. I begged
-some of that, not knowing its terrible prickly nature. It is a deceitful
-plant that grows in pretty green grasslike clumps, with a flower—out at
-this time—that looks almost like golden wheat, but is, oh, how wiry and
-prickly!
-
-About 12 miles from Laverton was Hawke’s Nest, where the coach stopped
-for a while at the store. This is a flourishing alluvial place, where
-many nuggets are often found by dry-blowers and prospectors. A man came
-into the store while we were waiting there with a nice piece, which the
-storekeeper weighed; it was 14 ounces, and he had another of 7 ounces. A
-little while ago a man found a piece weighing 27 ounces, and these good
-finds are not of unfrequent occurrence.
-
-On arrival at Mount Morgans we changed coaches and found the new one
-crowded.
-
-By the time I got to Murrin Murrin I was pretty thoroughly tired, and
-decided to stay at the nice hotel and once more see silver and pretty
-glass-ware on a table, for Mount Morgans and Laverton, although rich with
-gold, are not exactly rich in comfort.
-
-I wanted to get to Malcolm the next day; there was no coach going, but
-I was determined, and, my little landlady providing me with a horse and
-spring-cart (the only conveyance obtainable), I made a start the next
-morning like a veritable Bushwoman. I had no adventure beyond seeing a
-long camel-train with three Afghan drivers, before getting near whom I
-made a détour into the Bush, for horses are invariably afraid of camels.
-I then resumed the road and got safely into Malcolm.
-
-A railway is soon to be begun to the Mount Margaret goldfields, and,
-considering that this field is producing at the rate of 13,000 ounces
-of gold per month, almost double the output of any other colonial field
-except Kalgoorlie, it is to be hoped that the line will be finished with
-as little delay as possible.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Sons of Gwalia Mine, Mount Leonora]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
- Leonora—The Gwalia Mines—In a Gingerbeer Cart—More Nuggets—Gold
- Blocks—Pastoral Land—Swampers—Scarcity of the Fair Sex—Saturday
- Life—Alas, poor Prospectors!
-
-
-From Mount Malcolm to Leonora I drove 12 miles through very pleasant
-country spread with wild flowers of all colours. About 2½ miles before
-reaching Leonora lie, a little off the main road, the great mines called
-the Gwalia Group, which seem likely to develop shortly into a second
-Kalgoorlie. Leonora is a new place, and its great importance has not yet
-been fully realised, but some managers told me that there are belts of
-richness there similar to those in Kalgoorlie and Boulder City, so that,
-when the railway is finished, no doubt thousands will flock to Leonora,
-which by coach is now at a distance of 80 miles from Menzies. The Gwalia
-Group occupies about a mile of ground, and is a leasehold of some 477
-acres. Over that expanse all the miners’ huts, camps, and tents are
-scattered. I stopped at several and found a great many women and families
-there, and some of their places were very comfortable inside, although
-the outside was not much to look at. The men who work in this mine
-are chiefly from Victoria, and they are bringing over their wives and
-families every week. As the mine is evidently likely to be permanent,
-and the men see a prospect of years of work before them, the people
-there are very happy and have quite a little township of their own. The
-principal mine of the group, the Sons of Gwalia, is on a hill, from which
-place you look down over a mile of Bush dotted about with various camps.
-The smoke rising from the chimneys, the poppet-heads of the other mines
-lying beyond, with a blue haze of hills behind them, combine to make up a
-good picture of life on the goldfields.
-
-There are 500 men working on this mine who turn out some thousands of
-ounces of gold per month, independent of the tailings, which are almost
-sure to give 1½ ounces to the ton. No doubt in a short time there will be
-a tremendous boom here.
-
-The small town of Leonora very much resembles Mount Malcolm, except that
-the main street is longer, and that there are a few more buildings. It
-boasts of three hotels, one made of wood and two of mud bricks, but
-withal not ungainly looking, and tolerably comfortable. Expenses are
-heavy but wages are good, and there are so many lucky prospectors that
-there is always plenty of money there. On Saturday nights a great deal
-of business is done, especially on the pay Saturday, which at the Gwalia
-mines arrives once a month; then most of the men come in and have some
-amusement in the way of visiting the hotels and playing billiards; there
-is nothing else for them to do. There is no good hall for amusements yet,
-and if there were the men would have to provide their own play, for no
-company of any calibre has yet ventured so far into the “back-blocks.”
-A handsome semi-grand piano had just arrived at Thompson’s Hotel from
-Perth, and the son of the landlady, who was an excellent musician, played
-a selection from several new operas for my pleasure, as well as that of
-the crowd who thronged the place. There is not much music to be had in
-Leonora, but the inhabitants are quite able to appreciate it when it
-comes. There is one luxury here, however, which is generally denied to
-the people on the fields lower down towards Kalgoorlie—the luxury of
-bathing at the public shower-baths. The men can have three baths daily
-by paying the weekly fee of 2_s._ 6_d._ There are three splendid wells
-in the town, with windmills, giving good supplies of fresh water. Horses
-are very scarce; I had great difficulty in getting a horse and trap in
-order to drive out and see the different mines; in fact, I had one day to
-enlist the assistance of the local baker to take me out to one mine that
-I wished very much to see, while another day the driver of the gingerbeer
-carriage gallantly gave me a lift.
-
-Another day I had quite an adventure. I started in a cart, but the animal
-called a horse, after jog-trotting for a mile or so, refused to go any
-farther. The driver explained: “You see, ma’am, he’s an old ’un, and
-knows at this time he ought to be going towards home, so he won’t go any
-farther away from it.” All coaxings and persuasions were vain, so I had
-to get out and walk. The day was intensely hot, and after walking some
-distance I had to sit down on a log, feeling that I could go no farther.
-At last in the distance a conveyance appeared coming from the place to
-which I wanted to go, and proved to be that of the butcher. I stopped
-the cart, and, with the sweetest smile I could call up, asked the young
-man to take me to the mine. “But I am just going away from there.” “Oh,
-never mind, turn back; I will pay you any money to take me there.” After
-much hesitation he consented to do so, but would not accept payment. I am
-glad to say that from the mine the manager sent me back in one of their
-own buggies. The only people who kept horses for hire had let theirs
-out to graze during the night and could not find them in the morning.
-At last, in desperation I telegraphed to Mount Malcolm for a buggy and
-horse, which were brought down to me, and I finished my inspection in
-comfort. However, on my second visit to Leonora I found that the place
-had advanced with great strides, and that now I had no difficulty in
-obtaining a nice horse and buggy in the township to take me to the
-different places I wished to visit.
-
-Going into one of the banks (there are two there), I collided at the door
-with a rough-looking man carrying a canvas bag. This he emptied out upon
-the counter. It proved to contain some splendid nuggets of gold and a
-quantity of gold-dust. Seeing my eyes full of admiration, the man, rough
-as he was, picked out a pretty little piece, and holding it towards me,
-said, “Will you accept this, ma’am, from a rough miner who hasn’t spoken
-to a lady for two years, and may I shake hands with you?” You may be sure
-I did not refuse either of these offers, made in a most kindly spirit.
-
-We were now nearly 600 miles from Perth in a different direction to
-Laverton.
-
-The Great Boston Reward Claim is only two miles from Leonora. Here
-O’Brien and party made a vast profit out of the gold and nuggets they
-obtained from their rich claim. The same party have another claim at a
-place called Savannah, where they are also getting great results.
-
-Farther along the same road, which is the main road to Diorite and
-Lawlers, is the Trump Mine, which has a small battery of its own, for
-which the proprietors paid out of their first crushing of 10 ounces to
-the ton. There are dozens of working-parties of men about this particular
-part, which is exceptionally rich. Close to the Trump are the Leonora
-Gold Blocks, which for richness have not been surpassed in the district.
-This mine also has its own battery, bought and paid for out of its first
-profits, so now the lucky owners have nothing to do but raise the stone
-and extract the gold on the premises, independent of everybody. The
-ample water supply makes work here comparatively easy, and I came to the
-conclusion that this was an excellent place to look for gold. When one
-looks back and thinks of the difficulties miners have had to contend with
-at Hannan’s, I should say that a man would rather work in the Leonora
-district, even for lower pay, than down below, where there is no fresh
-water and few vegetables; and the fact is that wages are higher here.
-There can be no doubt that a very great future lies before the Leonora,
-or, I should say, Mount Malcolm goldfields, and probably in two years
-from this time, instead of 1000 there will be 10,000 people on the field.
-There are now scores of mines there, about which nobody hears anything.
-Steady work is in progress everywhere in the district; there are no
-unemployed men, the country, all the way from Menzies, is being rapidly
-opened up, and so many improvements have been decided on by the various
-mining companies, that thousands more men will shortly be required to do
-the work. There is, therefore, nothing to prevent this rich field, which
-has the advantage of being extensive, consistent, and well watered, from
-developing shortly into a great community. Mr. Morgans, who should be
-a good authority on mines, says that he sees no reason why the Gwalia
-Mine should not shortly turn out 10,000 ounces of gold per month, and
-that there are fully a dozen mines in the neighbourhood of Leonora with
-striking lode formations which in the future will be as rich as any in
-the district.
-
-On the road to the Diorite King, which is about 40 miles from Leonora,
-there was nothing much to see except a good many swampers. A “swamper”
-is a man tramping without his swag, which he entrusts to a teamster to
-bring on his waggon. Arrived at the camping-place, which is recognisable
-by the old fires, the swamper awaits the teamster’s coming, recovers
-his swag and spends the night at the camp. While on foot the swamper
-will generally leave the track, and prospect, and shows wonderful skill
-in recovering the track again, after these deviations. The country,
-however, was certainly prettier than that of the Coolgardie district.
-I was somewhat surprised when the coach pulled up at a small-looking
-hotel, called the Kurrajong, with a few houses about it, to find that I
-was at Diorite King township. It is certainly the smallest place I ever
-stayed at. However, I was not sorry to get to my journey’s end, for the
-heat and red dust had made me long for a refreshing cup of tea, which I
-got at the hotel. I was fortunate in getting a nice comfortable room,
-which, however, I was told was reserved for the manager of a mine who
-was expected soon, but I was allowed to have it until he came, and I am
-thankful to say he did not arrive while I was there, so that I remained
-for a few days in undisputed possession.
-
-At Diorite the township consists of one hotel, one store, one baker
-and butcher’s shop combined, one blacksmith’s forge, a few mud houses,
-and two galvanised-iron ones, the house of Mr. Williams, the manager
-of the Diorite Mine, and a post-office. My readers may perhaps wonder
-why I stayed so long. Certainly of all the uninviting desert-looking
-places I ever saw, Diorite is the worst, but mines of wealth lie close
-to it. There are only four women in Diorite, the landlady, the barmaid
-of the hotel, a shopkeeper, and the wife of one of the men on the mine.
-Women, being so few, are looked upon in these parts as goddesses, and
-are treated with reverence, and I was made quite an object of adoration.
-Of course there was no chance of getting a horse and vehicle here (how
-I regretted leaving my bicycle at Menzies because I would not pay full
-coach fare for it!) so one mine was explored by the medium of the
-grocer’s cart. However, the day after, Mr. Williams kindly lent me his
-horse and buggy, and safe transit to the other mines was then assured.
-
-[Illustration: Camels at Diorite King]
-
-The Diorite King Mine is about two miles from the township, and lies
-between two hills. A great deal of gold has been got there. I found
-myself most hospitably entertained, as the men were all at their “crib”
-when I arrived, and being invited into their dining-room, a bough-shed
-with two benches and long table, I took the mug of “billy” tea offered
-me, but did not feel disposed to partake of the corned beef, cabbage,
-and potatoes, although everything looked very nice and well cooked, and
-also well served up by the cook of the day. This mine, and another called
-the Middlesex, have both turned out good results, and while I was there
-I saw some of what is called “surface stone,” freely splashed with gold
-all over. On the way back to Diorite a long string of camels, over eighty
-passed on their way to Lawlers with stores. What would the people in
-these remote places do if it were not for these “ships of the desert”?
-
-On one of them, in a kind of wicker basket, was a poor little lamb,
-looking wonderingly around with its head out of the cage. I thought,
-perhaps, it might have been a pet of one of the Afghans. “No fear,
-ma’am, it’s to be killed at sundown; they won’t eat any meat killed by
-Europeans, drat them,” said the grocer, for like all Westralians he had a
-hatred of the wily Afghan.
-
-The Calcutta Mine is not far from Diorite, and has a splendid reef. It
-adjoins the Little Wonder, owned by Doyle and party, who a few years
-ago had a find of gold so rich and phenomenal that thousands of pounds
-worth of gold were taken in no time, and the men are working in daily
-expectation of cutting a rich leader again.
-
-Mount Stirling is another mine held by a Perth syndicate. Very rich ore
-was lately struck there, and the syndicate have now erected their own
-crushing battery. Plenty of fuel and water is available in the vicinity.
-Hundreds of tons of the valuable ore lie on top waiting to be crushed,
-and thousands more are plainly to be seen below waiting to be dug out.
-This is the richest stone that has ever been found near here, and is
-causing much excitement on the lease adjoining Mount Stirling. A lode was
-being worked by some miners at a depth of 90 feet, a pocket of some of
-the stuff assaying the immense value of 100 ounces to the ton. A great
-many more men have claims about the vicinity of Mount Stirling Mines, but
-it is almost impossible to know what is being got, as they keep silence
-over their findings. The manager of the store says that a large quantity
-of alluvial gold is sent away from the district of which the warden knows
-nothing. His firm, being buyers of gold, often purchase from the men as
-much as 100 ounces a month, £390 worth, sometimes more.
-
-[Illustration: AUCTION SALE GOLDFIELDS (TIN HOTEL)]
-
-Last, but far from least, I went to the King of the Hills Mine. The
-farther I got away from Diorite the nicer the country looked. When I
-came to the King of the Hills the surroundings were really pretty.
-The wonderful gold got there has been obtained by sinking to no great
-depth. The main shaft was only 25 feet deep at the time when I saw it.
-Many rich quartz veins have been found in the workings, the finds being
-occasionally most sensational. A small parcel of 18 tons of stone was
-treated for a yield of 280 ounces of gold; 14 tons yielded 276 ounces,
-and since then a further sensation has been caused by 1 ton of quartz
-which yielded 116 ounces of gold. On one of the shafts large sacks of ore
-were stacked which fairly glistened with gold, and were expected to give
-as high a result as that just quoted. The mine was owned at this time by
-Read and party, but has since been sold to Mr. Raymond, of the Harquehala
-Company, for £6000 cash. After pegging out their claim, Reid and party
-obtained over 1600 ounces of gold, worth about the nice little sum of
-£6200. That, with the sale of the mine, makes a fortune of £12,000 for
-four partners.
-
-Saturday afternoon brought all, or nearly all, the miners from the
-surrounding country into Diorite, where, as you can imagine, the
-hotelkeeper was kept busy. The hotel proprietor, no doubt, has made a
-fortune out of these Saturdays, the men having no other means of spending
-their money; there is no bank where they can change their gold into
-coin, but the storekeeper does that necessary kindness for them, or the
-landlady notes a score on her little slate. All the time that I was
-there one lucky claim-holder was falling about the place intoxicated.
-Some of the scenes witnessed are by no means pleasant, but I suppose the
-four women of the place had got quite used to them, for they did not
-seem to take any notice of anything that went on. Many of the men on
-the Saturday night become incapable of going back to their camps, and
-there being no sleeping accommodation at Diorite beyond the one hotel,
-they take shelter in any empty hut or under any cover they can find. The
-men are all very kind to one another, only a few fights occur, and the
-fighters soon shake hands and make friends again. There is no police
-protection, and not even a tree lock-up, so every one does pretty well as
-he likes at Diorite King; but when one thinks of the life these men lead,
-shut off in a desert country from almost every trace of civilisation,
-one feels that their faults should be looked on with a lenient eye. One
-man seemed terribly drink-sodden, and I was told he had taken thousands
-of pounds worth of gold as a partner in a certain claim, and his friends
-had tried to get him away to reclaim him, but he would not leave the
-place, and preferred to spend the money as he got it in the desert.
-Occasionally some poor miner gets lost in the Bush and is never heard
-of again. The blacks were very troublesome at one time about here, but
-there are now very few. Mr. J. Leyland, one of the original owners of
-the Little Wonder Mine, was killed by them about two years ago. He had
-gone out to look for two horses that were lost, and having found them had
-camped for the night at Doyle’s Well, about 20 miles off, and was boiling
-his billy when he noticed a bush in motion close by, and before he could
-arm himself two blacks sprang upon him and hit him on the head with a
-waddy, and then speared the horses, leaving Mr. Leyland, as they thought,
-dead. They then, having satisfied their thirst for blood, decamped. On
-the poor man’s return to consciousness he dragged himself to the horses
-and found one poor beast dead but the other not severely injured. He
-managed to mount it, and horse and rider, covered with blood, managed to
-make their way back to the mine. The horse dropped dead on their arrival
-there, and poor Leyland only lived long enough to relate his terrible
-night’s experience. Two men were lost in the Bush a little after this,
-and parties went out searching for them. One poor fellow was found dead
-under a tree, with his billy beside him, on the smoked part of which was
-scratched: “Dying from thirst; Jim tried to go on, follow him.” A horse
-lying dead close by mutely told a dreadful tale. The search-party, going
-on for many miles, at last came across a hut near a well. The hut-keeper
-told them he was awakened by a noise at daybreak, and on looking out saw
-a dark object leaning over a rough hollowed-out tree trunk (used for
-giving his horse a drink) and ravenously gulping down the water like a
-thirsty wild animal. It was hardly daylight, so he could not distinguish
-what it was, but knowing there were no wild animals about he ventured out
-to see, and found it was the other poor lost man in the throes of death.
-He took him into the hut and cared for him as well as he could, but it
-was too late, so all the search-party could do was to dig a grave and
-bury the second poor mate as they had done the first.
-
-About 62 miles from Leonora is the splendid goldfields’ pastoral station,
-called Sturt’s Meadows, which belongs to Mr. Manuel, and consists of
-570,000 acres of land. There is an abundance of water, and wells have
-been sunk in many parts to supply the enormous herds of stock which Mr.
-Manuel sends to the southern markets. The boundary of the station lies
-20 miles away, and we drove 18 miles, during which we were always on
-the property, before coming to the homestead. Here we were hospitably
-received, and tasted “Brownie,” a currant loaf peculiar to this station,
-of which I can personally speak in the highest terms. Mr. Manuel drives
-four and sometimes six brumbies, and the way he gets over the ground is
-simply amazing.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Off by the Coach to Lawlers]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
- Lawlers—Splendid Vegetables—Waiting for a Samaritan—Mount Sir
- Samuel—While the Billy boils—The Kangaroo—Lake Way—Across the
- Country—The “Back-blocks”—Camping out—Arrival at Nannine—Bed
- once More—Splendid Mines of the Murchison—Peak Hill—The Gold
- Patch—An Old Friend—A Hearty Welcome.
-
-
-Another coach journey of 50 miles brought me to Lawlers. I was now out
-of the Mount Malcolm and Mount Margaret districts, and in the East
-Murchison. Mount Magnet, which is on the Cue railway line, is almost
-in a direct line with Lawlers, and it is 130 miles from Lawlers to
-Menzies. Lawlers is a nice little town; all the people so friendly and
-pleased to see a strange lady on the field that many of them came into
-the hotel to see me. The buildings are creditable, and a great amount of
-business seemed to be doing. The gold output is steadily increasing, but
-although much good ore is realised, there is great difficulty experienced
-in getting it crushed, the batteries being too small. The people seem
-unusually healthy. They say no one is ever sick at Lawlers, and the
-soil is magnificent for growing fruit and vegetables, despite the small
-rainfall. Mr. Homann has a very fine garden, watered by the surplus
-water from the Great Western Mine, and from a well with a windmill.
-Melons, tomatoes, and cabbages are fully equal to any I have seen. There
-are also some vines that have borne beautiful grapes. If there were
-only a plentiful fall of rain, which unfortunately seldom happens,
-Lawlers could compete with any place in the matters of agriculture
-and viticulture. Everything has to be carted to the place by team or
-camel-train, consequently things of all kinds are very dear, the actual
-cost of carriage from Mount Magnet being £12 per ton by team and £8 by
-camel-train. The coach fare to that place from Lawlers, 192 miles, is
-£5, and to Menzies, 130 miles, £4. Until the railway went to Menzies
-from Kalgoorlie, most of the supplies came from Mount Magnet, but now
-that the traffic of Lawlers is going to Menzies, since the train service
-commenced, instead of Magnet, it increases daily. This, of course, will
-naturally benefit both places, since Menzies will now also obtain some
-of the splendid vegetables grown in Lawlers. Previously there were only
-tinned vegetables to be had there. The people of Menzies have no desire
-to see a railway line extended past that place, but as the Government has
-now decided to build a railway speedily to Leonora, the Lawlers people
-are hoping that at no distant time the line may be extended to their town
-also; Lawlers will then be the pivot between the Murchison (Cue line)
-and East Murchison goldfields, and with its excellent soil, its rich
-mines, the Great Eastern for instance, will probably become one of the
-principal towns in the goldfields. When the railway reaches Lawlers there
-will be only 192 miles of this part without train service, through which
-a railway could soon be made to Mount Magnet, completing a belt of rails
-from Perth right round the Yilgarn, Coolgardie, Mount Malcolm, Margaret,
-East Murchison, Murchison, and Yalgoo goldfields.
-
-[Illustration: Lake Way Gold Mine]
-
-I next prepared for a long journey through the Western Australian Bush.
-My destination was Lake Way and Wiluna. How I was to get there I did
-not know, as there were no coaches even for the mails, which were only
-taken once a week, and then by bicycle, over a distance of 120 miles,
-a journey too long and too lonely for me to take alone. However, I was
-cheered by the news that some miners were expected at Lawlers in a day
-or two for whom horses were waiting. So, never doubting that they would
-be gallant enough to offer me a seat, I rested quietly and waited for
-their arrival. When they came they proved to have two friends with them,
-who proposed to travel on what is called the “buckboard,” that is the
-kind of ledge, about three feet long, for carrying luggage at the back
-of the buggy, and as there was only room for two persons in front there
-seemed to be a difficulty about conveying the whole party. However, the
-pleasure of having a lady to drive with them for 120 miles was great
-enough to make the party alter all their arrangements. One of them
-borrowed a bicycle, and two of us in front of the buggy, a lad and other
-friend on the buckboard, and four brumbies in hand, we gaily started off
-one fine morning. We reached the first stopping-place, Mount Sir Samuel,
-31 miles off, at 4 o’clock, and put up there, as I wished to see this
-little place, where there are some very good mines—one, the Bellevue,
-being a first-rate property. Another, called the Sulphide King, is very
-promising. Mining here is not so hard as in some places, owing to the
-softness of the ground and the plentiful supply of water.
-
-Lake Darlot is about 20 miles from here, and there is now a very
-promising goldfields township in the district. A wild rush occurred a
-few years ago. This was one of the places where great hardships were
-endured by the diggers on account of the terrible scarcity of provisions;
-the price of flour, when procurable, was at that time £5 for a small bag!
-
-Every one at Mount Sir Samuel was very kind and hospitable, and I felt
-quite sorry to leave next morning, as we did at daybreak, for we wished
-to make a long journey that day. We should have, we knew, to camp out. I
-looked forward to this unusual experience with great eagerness.
-
-As I was watching the camp making I heard “Coo-e-e! Coo-e-e!” the
-Australian bush cry, and presently a party of four miners rode up.
-They had just sold their mines for £17,000, and were on their way to
-Melbourne, _en route_ for New Zealand to see their parents. They told me
-that, five years ago, they landed in the West with £200 between the four
-of them, and are now leaving with the above-mentioned sum; but they hope
-to come back to the Golden West after a six-months holiday. As you may
-imagine, they were very jolly; they took off their kits (bags), which
-contained provisions, we combined forces, and made a very pleasant meal
-under the shade of some pretty kurrajong-trees. At night, attracted by
-our fires, some natives appeared, but I felt quite safe with so many
-protectors. They made up a bed of bushes for me under the buggy, and put
-branches all around it. I felt as if I was in a Mia Mia (native hut), and
-was as comfortable as possible. I heard the natives saying, “Mimi lubra,”
-which means, “Woman in a tent.” They thought the men would not trouble to
-make a place like it for themselves, and their conjectures were right;
-they are not such a stupid race after all!
-
-Early in the morning we parted company and started off again. An
-adventure shortly after stirred us up. A kangaroo, pursued by an emu,
-came on the scene, but, being so fleet, both were soon out of sight.
-After the excitement was over the boy on the buckboard repeated to us an
-essay he said he wrote at school, on the kangaroo, which struck me as
-being so funny that I give it you verbatim:
-
- “The kangaroo is a quadruped, but two of his feet is only
- hands. He is closely related to the flea family, an’ jumps like
- him, an’ has the same kind of resemblance. He is Australian by
- birth an’ has a watch-pocket to carry his children in. There
- is two or more kinds of kang’roos, but they are mostly male
- an’ female, and live on grass, cabbage, and curren buns. The
- kang’roo’s tale is his chief support; it is thick at one end,
- and runs to the other end; it is good to jump with, and the
- kang’roo when it’s cut off don’t know his way home, and has to
- walk on his hands. The kang’roo is good for makin’ soup and
- bootlaces and putting in zoos, and sometimes he is presented to
- the roil Family to represent Australia.”
-
-We reached Wiluna, the township of Lake Way, next day, and found it a
-very nice little place. There are three hotels and stores, and I was
-surprised to find everything so nice away up in the wilds of the West.
-There is plenty of fresh water in this district and several nice gardens.
-Watermelons grow splendidly, and, with the thermometer at 114°, are very
-welcome. Tomatoes also grow in profusion, and several people are growing
-fruit and vegetables as a business, so that Lake Way is not a bad place
-in which to find oneself. There are many good mines, turning out handsome
-yields, and companies have recently been floated in London to take over
-several properties here. The chief characteristics of the reefs are
-evenness of quality, great wealth, and permanency. A very nice cake of
-gold, weighing 145 ounces, from one of the claims was shown me; it came
-from a claim called The Brothers.
-
-The people about Wiluna are, in spite of the heat of the climate, very
-fond of dancing. It really is almost their only amusement. The evening
-of our arrival a ball was held; it might truly be termed a Bachelors’
-Ball, for so few of the opposite sex are in the district; however, the
-boys, as they are termed, arrived in great force, their dancing costumes
-being riding breeches and coloured shirts, with turned down collars
-and broad hats, real “back blocks” costume. As it was a very hot and
-bright moonlight night, they danced on the open plain, and seemed to
-enjoy themselves thoroughly. At about 9 o’clock a terrific shouting and
-native yabber, yabber (talk) from a part of the Bush, where a tribe of
-aborigines were encamped, gave token of rival amusement. The natives were
-holding a Corroboree. They had camped at Wiluna, but were travelling to
-some particular part of the country, where a favourite large grub, which
-they used for food, was to be found in quantities. Natives always travel
-from place to place in search of food, and they know the parts in which
-the different kinds will be plentiful or in season.
-
-[Illustration: KANGAROO
-
-_Copyright—Gambier Bolton_]
-
-Wishing to see a Corroboree dance, I, with some of the onlookers of
-the Bachelors’ Ball, migrated to the camp. The black fellows, who had
-ornamented their heads and kangaroo-skin garment with what feathers and
-tufts of grass they could obtain and coloured their faces and bodies
-with wilgey, were leaping up in the air, with a spear in one hand and
-a shield in the other, and contorting their bodies in most grotesque
-fashion to the accompaniment of native music supplied by some of the men
-of the tribe, who squatted on the ground chanting strange sounds and
-beating sticks, while the lubras (wives), gins (girls), and pickaninnies
-(children) sat or lay around, making a fearful noise and clapping their
-hands vigorously. In the light of the camp fire it was a novel and weird
-sight, but a little of it sufficed me. Before leaving, the head man of
-the tribe threw the boomerang, which is a native weapon shaped like a
-quarter-moon, and so constructed that it assumes a return motion at the
-will of the native who throws it. It really was wonderful to hear it
-whirr as it started through the air to a great distance and height, and
-then come back to exactly the same place it started from. The boomerang
-is not so unique as many people think; a weapon almost the same was used
-by the Abyssinians hundreds of years ago, and still earlier by the people
-of ancient Egypt.
-
-The journey from Lake Way to Nannine, over 120 miles of rather barren
-country, was one to be remembered. No coach having yet been started on
-this route, I was fortunate in being able to join a party of people,
-including two ladies, who were going there in their own conveyances;
-they had been in the “back-blocks” for four years, and thought it time
-to take a holiday, especially as their husbands had made over £6000
-each from their mines, and had given them £500 each to go to Victoria,
-see their friends, and have a good time, as I have no doubt they did.
-We camped out for four nights, but the weather was fine, and it was
-very pleasant to be under a canopy of stars, although towards morning
-it got pretty cold. The two ladies took it in turn to do the cooking,
-and would not hear of my doing anything, saying it would be a pity to
-roughen my hands, which, by the way, were becoming almost as brown as
-theirs. I quite enjoyed the bush-cooking. Johnny cake or “damper,” as it
-is called here, cooked in the wood-ashes, is very nice, especially with
-good butter, which we had in tins. Then there were plenty of wild turkeys
-about, some of which were shot for us. My companions had brought some
-tinned asparagus also, so, taking it altogether, our manna in the desert
-was not to be despised. We met a few aborigines during our journey, but
-they were generally very quiet and only asked for bacca and food. The
-lubras were carrying their pickaninnies in a coota (bag) on their backs
-(this is their usual custom except in the colder parts of the colony,
-where they are supplied with blankets and also with rations); they were
-also carrying sticks and some freshly killed birds. The women always have
-to carry all the burdens, their lords and masters stalking on ahead with
-their spears, no doubt on the look-out for game.
-
-[Illustration: A Well near Lake Way]
-
-One night, as we were sitting round the camp-fire, several of them again
-appeared and demanded more bacca and food, which was given them, and they
-were told to go away, but they would not do so until the men of our party
-fired off several shots, which soon caused them to disappear, as they
-are very much afraid of fire-arms.
-
-[Illustration: LUBRA AND PICKANINNY]
-
-Another night we camped in company with two teams. Each team had ten
-horses and splendid large waggons, one of which the teamster gave up
-to us three ladies, and we had quite a luxurious bed on sacks of chaff
-that night. The teamsters were educated men; one had received a college
-education, but had been eight years in the “back-blocks.” He said he
-had not been in a lady’s company for years, and the poor fellow seemed
-delighted to talk to me about his mother and sisters, who, he said, were
-in dear old England, but he never wrote home, as he was the black sheep
-of the family. I made him promise that when he got to Nannine he would
-write to his mother, who, no doubt, in her heart was thinking, “Where is
-my wandering boy to-night?” I do hope he kept his promise. On our arrival
-at Nannine I bade a reluctant farewell to the party, who took the coach
-to Cue, _en route_ for Fremantle, there to take the steamer to Victoria
-to spend their well-earned holiday.
-
-We were now in the Murchison district. Nannine is a nice little place,
-and everything seemed to be flourishing. The people form a very happy,
-lively community. Several good buildings adorn the town, and I considered
-myself fortunate in getting very comfortable quarters, for I was
-really tired after my journey and late camping-out experiences. It was
-delightful to rest on a nice soft bed and to have my breakfast brought me
-in the morning. There are two good hotels at Nannine, which do a splendid
-business. There are over 80 mines in the district—the first in which
-gold was discovered in Western Australia. This first discovery dates
-from 1854, when Robert Austin was sent by Governor Fitzgerald to explore
-the country in the Gascoyne district above Peak Hill for agricultural
-and pastoral land for settlement. Mr. Austin was accompanied by the
-sons of some of the early settlers, and the little band of explorers
-underwent many hardships. Most of their horses were poisoned by the
-Bri-gastrolobium plant, and the party had to travel on foot for many
-weary months. It was owing to this circumstance that the gold discovery
-was made, for while reconnoitring for grass and water Mr. Austin came
-across some likely looking stone, which he broke, and found it contained
-gold. The only prospecting tools available (except a tomahawk, a small
-hatchet always carried by explorers and prospectors), being a knife and
-a pannikin, much progress could not be made. On Mr. Austin’s return to
-Perth from the expedition he informed the Government, who did not think
-it worth while to make further inquiries. Had they done so, the colony’s
-prosperity might have dated 35 years earlier than it has done, as Mr.
-Austin correctly described the auriferous nature of the belt of country
-around Mount Magnet, Lake Austin, and Mount Kenneth, and also predicted
-that the Murchison would become one of the greatest goldfields in the
-world. The little party were the first white men who ever set foot in
-that part of the colony, and I do not think that their efforts were
-ever recognised. Mr. Austin is now a very old gentleman, and last year
-was mining surveyor at the Mines Department, Hodgkinson Goldfields,
-Queensland, from which place he wrote to the papers in Perth asking that
-his claims as the first discoverer of gold should be recognised by the
-present Parliament, and giving interesting particulars of his travels.
-In 1856 gold was discovered at Kojânup, but little attention was paid to
-gold in Western Australia in those days. It was not until 1884 that Mr.
-Hardman, the Government geologist, discovered rich gold at Kimberley in
-the far north of Western Australia, and this was followed in 1887 by the
-find of gold at Mugakine while a man was digging a well. Golden Valley
-and Southern Cross followed, and an era of prosperity for the colony
-opened which I hope will never be closed.
-
-At the Aberfoyle Mine, to which I went from Nannine, I saw some beautiful
-quartz thickly encrusted with gold. Twenty-two pounds of this stone
-contained over 62 ounces of gold, valued at £230. This rich piece of
-quartz has been secured for the Glasgow Exhibition. There are seven
-shafts on this really amazing mine, from each of which the ore taken is
-so marvellously rich that they are watched at night. Splendid machinery
-is being put up, but sufficient masons cannot be got to do the work,
-consequently the progress is slow. The Nannine Mine has shown wonderful
-results during the year. In six weeks 1371 ounces were crushed from 285
-tons of stone. The chute (opening) from which this was taken improves
-still richer as the mine opens up. The Champion is another group of
-mines, from which excellent returns have been taken. At the Royalist,
-another mine owned by the oldest mining resident of Nannine, as much as
-300 ounces in two weeks have recently been obtained. There are many other
-mines, but I cannot specify them all. Mount Yagahong is also a rich part
-of the field, and Meekatharra, 25 miles away, is rapidly forging ahead
-as a gold producer. Then 14 miles from Nannine is Burnakura, from which
-place 71 lb. of specimens, containing 700 ounces of gold, some of the
-pieces being nearly pure gold, were recently brought into Nannine and
-lodged in the Western Australian Bank. Previous to this, £2000 worth of
-gold was taken from the same claim, called Jewett’s United Lease, and
-still more recently a Perth paper records that “A small parcel of stone,
-weighing 4¾ cwt., from Jewett’s Union Mine at Burnakura, and crushed
-at the Nannine battery, yielded 494½ ounces of gold. Nine hundred tons
-of stone lie at grass—that is, on the top waiting to be crushed—on the
-property.” This magnificent mine is owned by a local syndicate of seven
-people. Gabanuntha is a rich mine near Nannine, and Star of the East
-another. A leasehold with a peculiar name is “After Many Years,” which
-gives every indication of turning out rich. This district, and Peak Hill,
-owing to their remoteness, have not attracted speculators much, but must
-eventually become prominent, for they are as rich as any part of Western
-Australia, and after many years will, no doubt, fully verify Robert
-Austin’s prediction.
-
-To drive another 120 miles through the Bush to Peak Hill did not seem to
-me a very agreeable undertaking, but the advent one day of a spanking
-four-in-hand at Nannine, bringing three gentlemen, one of whom I was
-fortunate enough to know, and who gallantly offered to take me to Peak
-Hill, altered the case completely. One of the party was an Englishman
-inspecting Western Australian mines with a view to large investments.
-Relays of horses had been sent on to the different stages along the road
-and sleeping accommodation arranged for. I am afraid I put out these
-arrangements considerably, but the gentlemen did not seem to mind giving
-up the best to me, gallantly saying that my company compensated for
-any discomfort. I felt at first that, as they were on mining business,
-they did not want womenfolk around, but they soon found out that I took
-as much interest in mining matters as themselves, and we became _bon
-camarades_. Knowing that the _menu_ at these places would not be of the
-best, the party had sent ahead supplies of everything necessary for table
-comfort, also a man cook and waiter, so you may well understand that the
-journey to Peak Hill was a most enjoyable one to me.
-
-As we approached the famous Peak Hill, which is a nice little mining
-town, endowed with wonders of which you will presently hear, we passed
-several dry-blowers working. These men fossick (look) over the old
-workings, and by aid of a tin dish, in which they place any earth
-they think contains gold, and a coarse riddle with which to sift it,
-afterwards blowing away the fine dirt, they frequently find gold at the
-bottom of the dish. The ground is remarkably rich in gold, and I find
-it impossible to describe the magnitude of this golden country, which,
-like other fields, seems only to have been tested in a few places, those
-places being so rich that one wonders what the country will be when the
-hundreds of miles of good ground that I have passed have been opened out
-by miners. We were now far, far away from Perth, and the country looked
-different from any I had seen before in Western Australia. Peak Hill lies
-very high, 2000 feet above the sea-level. The ascent is steep and very
-rocky, four miles of it going through the Robinson Ranges. An interesting
-sight is found at the top, which has the appearance of a wide plain,
-with shafts and dumps of the thrown-up earth all over it. The manager of
-the principal mine here has a very comfortable residence, and the miners’
-camps give the place the usual prosperous appearance. There are over 600
-men on this field. The whole of the leases of Peak Hill have been taken
-over by a syndicate, which has formed a company in London. The finds
-have been marvellously rich. I went down one shaft, and saw some very
-interesting specimens being dug out. The gold is in a kaolin formation,
-and in some parts the kaolin is of all kinds of colours, and with the
-gold shining through looks really lovely. In other parts of the mine the
-kaolin is quite white, and the deposit easy to dig out. The results from
-the Peak Hill reef have been as high as 2621 ounces 15 dwts. of gold
-from 331 tons of this ore. Some of the mines have given as much as 21
-ounces of gold to the ton, which is a wonderful record. The Christmas
-Gift is a rich mine, and many others have had such phenomenal crushings
-that the Peak Hill district is unsurpassed in wealth of gold. When Sir
-Gerard Smith, late Governor of Western Australia, visited Peak Hill, the
-mine-owners had a solid gold plate and a cup, to use at dinner, cast for
-him.
-
-[Illustration: DRY-BLOWING IN THE GOLDEN STEW]
-
-There are some really fine public buildings, and the hotels, especially
-the Peak, are very comfortable. A nice Miners’ Institute, for meetings,
-entertainments, &c., has recently been finished. Land for building sites
-realises splendid prices, nearly £1000 having been paid for different
-allotments. The private houses seem very comfortable habitations. Many of
-the people have made fortunes, and everything seems prosperous about the
-place.
-
-A very original character, called “Tom the Rager,” sold his interest in
-one of the leases some time ago for £15,000. This man, an old Irishman,
-made a memorable journey from Kimberley, in the North-West, across the
-greater part of Western Australia, accompanied only by his faithful dog
-“Paddy,” and subsequently got an interest in some of the richest claims
-at Peak Hill, as the sale mentioned may testify. The Golden Patch, as
-it is called, in which all the rich mines are, covers about a square
-mile of ground of quite a different nature from that in other parts.
-This mile of ground is formed by a mass of rich veins of quartz, and the
-wealth contained there is unsurpassed in any part of Western Australia.
-Were Peak Hill not such a tremendous distance away from the capital,
-its growth would, no doubt, be as quick as that of Kalgoorlie, which it
-so much resembles. Some of the wonderful crushings from a few of the
-golden mines may interest you. The Peak Hill Reef, from 331 tons of stone
-crushed 2621 ounces of gold; Daisy Bell, 82 tons, gave 1245 ounces;
-Golden Chimes, 195 tons, gave 1402 ounces. The Horseshoe and the Golden
-Patch are supposed to be the two richest spots in the colony. Some of the
-specimens taken from the Patch are not only rich but vastly interesting
-in other ways, some of the pieces being not gold held together by quartz,
-but _vice versâ_; the small pieces of quartz, if tapped by a hard
-substance, vibrate like a tuning-fork. The gold is very brilliant, and
-positively sparkles in the light.
-
-I drove out to the Horseshoe Mines, a distance of about 20 miles. There
-were over 50 men working there, and getting a great deal of gold; some of
-them gave me some pretty pieces. I have now got enough nuggets to make
-any other collectors envious. While there I met a young man who knew me
-in Melbourne when he was quite a boy. I did not recognise him, as he had
-grown up and had a moustache; but he came to me almost with tears in his
-eyes, so pleased was he to see me so far away from home. For the moment
-I could hardly realise that I was nearly 800 miles in the interior of
-Western Australia, and felt inclined to cry with sympathy. He gave me a
-very pretty little nugget, which cheered me considerably. Alluvial gold
-often takes most singular forms; it is usually found on the surface,
-or not far below, while reef-gold is got in a quartz lode, or vein, at
-some depth underground. Some magnificent nuggets have been found in this
-part; one weighing 132 ounces, worth over £500, was found in one of the
-gullies which we passed when driving to this spot. The name of Horseshoe
-is taken from the long range of hills shaped almost like a horseshoe, and
-the gullies between them have made many of the miners wealthy. There are
-two very rich reefs here, which have been proved for six or seven miles.
-The specimens are very massive, gold predominating to a large extent in
-the quartz, and the ironstone fairly glistening with richness. I was
-now getting so much accustomed to looking at and handling gold that I
-began to fear I should look coldly on the common articles of everyday
-life. The miners, with the usual hospitality of their class, would boil
-the billy and give me tea, and all the best that their “back-block”
-larder afforded. Times are much changed now, since the early days of the
-fields, and the miners can live very comfortably. I said good-bye to them
-all with regret, wishing I could stay longer in this grand part of the
-country, the scenic beauty of which is also great. I enjoyed the drive
-back very much, and could not help thinking what store of wealth must lie
-beneath the ground we were driving over. The great bulk of this part of
-the country must contain untold gold.
-
-Revelstone is another rich mining camp a few miles from Peak Hill, where
-a public crushing plant has been erected, at which the miners of the
-neighbourhood can have their ore crushed as soon as they raise it.
-
-Farther on still is that wonderful Nor’-West country, to which I hope
-some day to go. The biggest nuggets the colony has produced have been
-found there. “The Bobby Dazzler,” which I was fortunate enough to see,
-and tried to lift, before I left Perth, and which is to be shown at the
-Glasgow Exhibition, came from Marble Bar, Nor’-West. It weighs over 400
-ounces of gold, and is worth over £1600. Another large nugget was found
-in that district a few years ago, which weighed 334 ounces; so that
-people wishing to pick up the precious metal in large lumps had better
-try their luck in the far North.
-
-After spending some days at Peak Hill, I started, with my kind friends,
-on my return to Nannine, and passed through acres and acres of the
-finest everlasting flowers I have ever seen. The beautiful cream-coloured
-starry flowers were as large as a florin; the country looked like a foamy
-sea. Then, in other parts, bright-coloured flowers surrounded us, like
-patterns in a huge kaleidoscope.
-
-We came to Abbot’s Find, some miles before reaching Nannine; the locality
-is very rich; it was near here that last year a lucky prospector, named
-Campbell, found some splendid specimens. The stone was creamy-white,
-thickly permeated with gold, and was obtained from near the surface.
-The place is full of outcrops (likely places for gold), leaders, and
-reefs, it is wonderful that no rush has yet begun; but the rich spots
-are so many, and the men comparatively so few, that they cannot prospect
-them all. There are several important mines at Abbot’s, notably the New
-Murchison King, White Horse, Abbot’s, and others, which have all given
-good returns.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Mine at Cue]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
- Tuckanarra—The Lights of Cue—Surprising Vegetation—Sweet
- Flowers Again—High Wages—Splendid Meat—The Island—The
- Mirage—Jolly Faces—Mount Magnet—Donkeys—A Tasteful Camp—The
- Morning Star—Windsor Castle.
-
-
-After a good rest at Nannine, which is 50 miles from Cue, we started off
-for Tuckanarra, where I stayed for a day to see the much-talked-of spot
-where so rich a find was lately made, my friends going on meanwhile to
-Cue. The country around here is much broken and there are many large
-caves. It was at the head of a huge gorge that the big find was made,
-right on the surface, and many hundredweights of rich specimens were
-quickly dug out. The lucky prospector communicated with Mr. Zeb. Lane,
-in Perth, who went up, inspected the find, and took an option of the
-mine for the British Westralia Syndicate, taking 4 cwt. of the rich
-stuff home to England with him. However, the find proved to be a pocket,
-and all the gold had centred there; consequently Mr. Lane surrendered
-the option, as not being valuable enough for flotation. (He has since
-floated in England the Anchor Consolidated Group, which includes several
-good mines at Tuckanarra.) The original owners, Messrs. Taylor and Co.,
-have now retaken the work of opening up the mine with much success, and
-have recently struck a rich reef, a parcel of 34 tons of stone from
-which have yielded 138 ounces of gold. Boyd’s Claim is the best one
-here, over 3000 ounces of gold having been taken out of it by crushing
-and dollying, while the tailings, concentrates, and blanketings brought
-the yield up to a considerably larger amount. At present Tuckanarra is a
-quiet little place, but there is no knowing at what moment the colony may
-be electrified by more finds. It was Warden Dowley’s blackboy who first
-discovered gold in the Tuckanarra district. Whilst travelling with the
-warden to Nannine he showed a piece of gold to his master and pointed
-out the place where he found it, on which the warden marked the spot and
-afterwards circulated the news. The usual rush ensued, and many claims
-were pegged out.
-
-Only 25 miles of Bush travelling now lay between me and the town of Cue.
-The coach driver favoured me with the box-seat, much to the disgust of
-a male passenger, who wanted the seat and did not feel inclined to give
-way to a lady. But the driver of the coach is always the boss (master) of
-the box-seat, and this one, being fond of ladies’ society, gave me the
-preference, not resembling in this point the driver in one of the other
-districts, who said he “didn’t want no women sitting alongside of him.”
-
-At last I saw the lights of Cue. Electric lights in the streets, horses
-and carts, the shrill whistle of the railway engine, boys calling out the
-evening papers, and the stopping of the coach to deliver the mails at the
-brilliantly lighted and splendid post-office, told me that I had emerged
-from the “back-blocks” and was once more nearing the metropolis.
-
-[Illustration: Inclined Shaft, Cue One Mine]
-
-I had heard a good deal about this centre of the Murchison, Cue, and, now
-that I was here, found it an agreeable place to spend a few days in. The
-living is in many ways immensely good, fresh milk is abundant, eggs are,
-it is true, 5_s._ a dozen, but are obtainable. The meat is the finest I
-have seen in the colony, and the vegetables are equally good. Passing
-the door of the kitchen one morning I saw a pile of cauliflowers, the
-outside leaves of which were 4 feet high, and the white flower on the
-same scale. The cabbages were as hard as a rock and over a foot and a
-half in diameter. Turnips and other kinds of vegetables were equally
-surprising. The cook told me that they were grown at Mr. Rickett’s
-garden, two miles out of town. To look at the barren country one would
-think that nothing would grow, but it justifies the words of Sir
-Frederick Weld, one of the first Governors, who, when people described
-Western Australia as a sand heap, said, “If it be only sand, it is sand
-that will grow anything if you give it water.” I was agreeably surprised
-one morning to receive a lovely bunch of mignonette and a few violets,
-the first of the season. I did enjoy the gift; no garden flowers ever
-smelled sweeter or looked prettier to me, for it was a long time since
-I had seen any. It was a perfect Sunday morning, and picnics and drives
-were the order of the day; several parties were just setting out. The
-people seem to be very happy, and, though so far away from their old
-homes, have got quite used to goldfields life and get plenty of enjoyment
-out of it. I drove out to some of the gardens and was surprised at the
-green spots in the desert. Plenty of water is got by sinking wells and
-the gardens are well irrigated.
-
-There are two newspapers published at Cue. At a dinner given to the Press
-while I was there, one of the toasts was as follows: “Woman, second only
-to the Press in disseminating news.” Are we ladies to take this as a
-compliment, or otherwise?
-
-It is proposed to carry the railway from Cue on to Nannine. The Cue
-people do not want this, as it would make Nannine the centre and spoil
-Cue. A splendid court-house and warden’s offices are here, as well as
-many other fine public buildings, shops, dwelling-houses, and hotels.
-
-There are some good mines, but a great many of them are under exemption
-at present; that means, allowed to stop working for a specified time
-named in their application; consequently many men are out of work and
-the town is comparatively quiet, because these men have to go out
-back-prospecting, to keep their wives and children.
-
-There are many families in Victoria and elsewhere who bless the day when
-the goldfields of Western Australia were discovered, and a great many
-miners in these districts have brought over their wives and families and
-have made humble but comfortable homes for them. They all seem happy, and
-I have talked with many of the women, who tell me that, though the life
-is rather rough, yet they have money always regularly coming in, while,
-on the other side, they had nothing to keep themselves with the failure
-of the banks and general crash in Melbourne having ruined so many people.
-
-Coming back from a drive I passed the racecourse, with such a funny
-little grand-stand, perched on top of a rocky hill. There was to be a
-wild-flower show soon. The ladies were working hard to make it a success.
-There seemed to be a great many of them here, and yet it is only a few
-years since the arrival of a fair lady in Cue was an event of importance,
-in which almost the entire population showed their interest by crowding
-round the coach. Wages are still very good. A housekeeper will get £3 a
-week; barmaids, £3 10_s._; housemaids and waitresses, £2 10_s._; and a
-lady to whom I was speaking told me she was extremely tired, from having
-had to do all the washing for the family herself, as the laundrywoman
-wanted £1 per day for doing it, or 15_s._ for half a day! Chinese are
-sometimes engaged as servants, and, as a rule, give satisfaction. No
-Chinaman or coloured man is allowed to mine; in Western Australia they
-are tolerated as gardeners or servants only.
-
-Mr. A. W. Walder has a large station called Coodardy, 20 miles from Cue.
-It extends nearly 100 miles up towards Lake Way. There are always 1500
-head of cattle and 4000 or 5000 sheep on it to supply the necessities of
-the Cue and Mount Magnet districts. This number is supplemented by drafts
-from the far north, even as far as Gascoyne and Kimberley. The feed is
-good, as may be supposed from the beautiful quality of the meat. It is
-chiefly salt-bush, of which the stock are very fond, and which does not
-grow very high, but is most nourishing. The water supply for them is
-drawn from wells by blacks kept for that purpose.
-
-Day Dawn, where the largest mines are situated, is four miles from Cue.
-One of these is called the Consolidated Murchison Gold Mines, Limited.
-The machinery on these mines is magnificent, and has cost an enormous
-sum of money. The cyanide process, all of which the assayer showed me,
-was most interesting. The various articles used in assaying are very
-delicate—scales that will weigh a breath and little wee china basins
-the size of a doll’s cup. The splendid laboratory was full of different
-chemicals; there were three immense rooms for the cyanide and assaying
-processes.
-
-Coming back to Cue, I called at the Lady Forrest Mine, which is in quite
-a picturesque spot, and I was not surprised at the beautifully arranged
-collection of wild flowers and ferns that the manager had picked around
-the mine and dried. The mine not working, he had plenty of time to pursue
-his favourite pastime of botany. He also showed me a fine collection
-of choice orchids; these are found at the Granites, a few miles out.
-Parrots, with brilliant colouring, and cockatoos, are to be seen about
-here, especially when you are near a soak (well). Occasionally an iguana
-glides along, looking like a tiny land-alligator. Iguanas, though not
-agreeable to the eye, are considered almost sacred in the Bush, because
-they destroy snakes.
-
-The Island is a wonderful little place, a real treasure-house, 16 miles
-from Cue. It is in the centre of the salt lake Austin (called after
-Robert Austin, the explorer), from which it is separated by channels 1000
-yards wide. The lake, like all Western Australian lakes, is dry; but when
-the sun is shining on it it looks like a sheet of glistening gold.
-
-The Mainland, dignified sometimes by the name of Salt Lake City, is
-a few miles farther off. I do not know whether there are any Mormons
-settled there or not. There are several good mines at the Mainland and
-the Island. The reefs are highly auriferous. The Golconda is the largest
-mine, giving very rich yields, and is now owned by an English syndicate.
-The representatives of this mine are very careful not to let outside
-people know too much about it; they keep the doors of the battery locked,
-and no one is allowed to go in to inspect. The Island Eureka is a small
-but rich mine owned by a syndicate on the Island. Mrs. Hurfit, who is
-part-owner of the mine, lives close to it. This lady who is the first
-white woman that came to these parts, showed me a fine collection of
-specimens of all kinds of minerals found here. The gold quartz is very
-beautiful. The jewellery Mrs. Hurfit has had made from it by Streeter, of
-London, is unique, some of the polished quartz with veins of gold showing
-through it being the handsomest I have ever seen.
-
-[Illustration: COLONEL NORTH’S EXPEDITION TO MOUNT MAGNET]
-
-Seeing a peculiar-looking place on a hill, I climbed up to see what it
-was, and found a large hut composed of big flat stones. These stones were
-lying around in great quantities. Some men were working near, but they
-were Italians, and as they could not speak English and I could not speak
-Italian, our conversation was nil. The view from the hill was charming;
-the salt lakes shimmering in the sun, the flat country with the grass
-and wild flowers, the low-lying purple hills in the background, a lovely
-and most peculiar colouring in the sky, the rising stacks of the mines,
-and the high metaphoric rocks in the distance, formed an uncommon and
-pretty picture. Just as I was leaving, the sun came out with unusual
-brilliancy, casting exquisite reflections on the glistening golden sand,
-which seemed to crystallise into various forms. I almost felt as if I had
-dropped into fairyland, but in a moment the sun hid behind a cloud and
-the beautiful scene was gone.
-
-There are about 150 people at the Island and Mainland, and they all
-appear to be in comfortable positions. On the day I left it was raining
-heavily, and I had to wait an hour at the station for the train, which
-was late in arriving. This brought to my mind the story of a gentleman
-who had promised to attend at a certain place and make a speech, but
-found himself unable to do so on account of the heavy rains having
-destroyed a section of the railway line. Accordingly he wired, “Cannot
-come; wash out on the line.” The reply came: “Come any way; borrow a
-shirt.”
-
-At last the train made its appearance, and I took my seat and went to
-Mount Magnet (not to be confused with Mount Margaret, which is in quite
-a different part of the country), about 32 miles farther on. On arrival
-there the railway station was so crowded that I could scarcely get out.
-There were about 300 young men of all sorts and sizes, and with such
-jolly smiling faces that I began to feel quite hilarious myself. They
-turned out to be the successful footballers just returned from a match at
-Cue. Several buggies and horses were waiting at the station, and I had no
-difficulty in being conveyed to an hotel, which bore the significant name
-of “The Oasis.”
-
-My first impression of Mount Magnet next morning was that there were a
-great many donkeys—I mean, of course, of the four-footed variety. They
-seemed to perambulate the town in dozens, and a team of about 20 going
-out of town with a wagon was a novel sight. I can assure you that, while
-I was writing these words, two inquisitive donkeys put in their heads at
-the door and almost said “Good-morning,” recognising a friend, perhaps.
-The outlook from this place was very dreary, as nearly always seems to
-be the case where gold is found. Several nice specimens had just been
-brought into the hotel by a lucky prospector, some of the pieces weighing
-several ounces. The Mount is about four miles from Magnet township, and
-was named Mount Magnet in 1854 by Mr. Austin, because the stone was so
-mineralised that it attract the compass to an extent which rendered it
-useless. Despite the barren-looking country, there are many varieties
-of wild flowers growing in the neighbourhood, and the desert octopus or
-tiger-plant is most remarkable. It bears a fairylike pink flower, and
-seems almost to be a living thing. The leaves of the plant are remarkably
-sensitive, and there are numerous little caplike flowers fringed with
-tentacles and filled with a sweet substance; any insect that approaches
-is seized, and the plant, which grows only a few inches in height, and is
-also known as “Rainbow” or “Fly-trap,” absorbs the life of it.
-
-Five miles away is Boogardie, or Jones’ Well. A singular discovery was
-recently made there. Portions of underground rock, on being broken, were
-found to contain a living frog at a depth of 40 feet! Many of these have
-been found. Query, how did they get there?
-
-There are many tidy houses in the little township; one Hessian camp,
-containing three separate rooms, was most tastefully arranged with pretty
-art-muslin and cretonne, a nice carpet on the ground, and cane furniture
-beautifully draped. The bedroom was quite elegant, and the kitchen had
-cocoanut matting on the ground; there were, as usual, no floors. A bright
-Peerless Cooker stove and spotlessly white dresser and crockery finished
-as natty a little home as a man and woman could wish for. The men out
-here all work their own claims, and are very comfortably off.
-
-A few miles from Magnet is the Morning Star, a low-grade mine, but
-still a paying one. Mr. Bryant, the manager, made me most welcome, and
-explained to me very conclusively that, to make a mine pay, it is not
-necessary to find gold in occasional very large pieces, and that a steady
-quantity, though small, will, if the supply hold out, prove profitable.
-The mine is worked almost entirely by men from Clunes, Victoria, where
-Mr. Bryant formerly was; they have quite a camp of their own, and with
-their reading-room and recreation-ground, where they play cricket and
-football, they pass a very jolly life and seem quite contented. Total
-abstinence is the rule of this mine. Before the train service was started
-they had to cart all the machinery and stores 200 miles to the mine.
-Farther on is Lennonville, another important mining centre, where rich
-finds have lately been struck; and farther still, what is called the
-10-Mile. There are many good mines in these localities. The Long Reef is
-a fine mine, and with its magnificent new machinery looks imposing. The
-plant is one of the finest in Western Australia, and there is enough good
-ore to show profitable results for years to come.
-
-[Illustration: Donkey Team, Mount Magnet]
-
-Coming back from these mines I stopped at the Lennonville Hotel (to have
-dinner), the landlady of which was the biggest woman I had ever seen, she
-weighed over twenty-one stone.
-
-The scenery of this district is far more pleasing than the barrenness
-of Magnet township. There are plenty of enormous emus scudding through
-the scrub, and occasionally a few kangaroos enliven the scene. Some of
-the big hills are completely riddled with enormous holes made by the
-earthworm. It must have taken centuries to make these tunnels. I thought
-they must be mining excavations, but one of the mining managers, who is
-a mining expert and engineer, and who ought to know, told me they were
-the work of earthworms.
-
-In another direction from Magnet is the New Chum Mine; farther on the Two
-Chums, and others; all giving good results.
-
-There is a fine hospital, with a skilful surgeon, such skill being very
-necessary where mining accidents ate liable to occur. The country is by
-no means unhealthy, and there were only four patients in the hospital
-on the day I visited it. The nurses seemed to be very kind women, and
-the patients said it was like being nursed at home to be in the Magnet
-Hospital.
-
-East Mount Magnet is about 50 miles away, and the coach journey to it is
-tedious. There is a tidy little township, and some of the mines are very
-rich. Mr. Zeb. Lane, before going to London last year, paid a visit to
-this place, and took over the Windsor Castle Mine, a fine property, upon
-which Mr. Lane estimates that there are 25,000 tons of good ore at sight
-ready to pay handsome dividends. The Havelock Mine has given splendid
-results, and a wonderful collection of specimens was recently lodged in
-the Bank. Christmas Gift is another good mine, and not far off is another
-rich find called Payneville. Several rich patches have been found and
-hundreds of ounces of gold taken out of them. The district seems to have
-a bright future before it. I was glad to return to Magnet, and to have
-made my last coach journey for the present. One of the miners to whom I
-was speaking looked so fearfully cadaverous that I asked him what was the
-matter. He told me he had once been poisoned by lead in a mine, and had
-never got the poison out of his system. I told him about the new cure by
-electricity lately discovered. He seemed very thankful and said he would
-see the mine doctor about it at once. Over 30 experiments with this cure
-have lately been carried out successfully in England, and I hope it will
-soon be generally known, and many cures made in the colonies.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
- Yalgoo—A Cold Welcome—Native Shepherds—Geraldton—Pearls—The
- Abrolhos—Dutch Navigators—Aborigines—Finis.
-
-
-I reached the uninteresting township of Yalgoo at 2 o’clock, very
-cold, tired and hungry. I stepped from the train with my portmanteau
-and sallied out of the station to look for a vehicle to take me to the
-hotel to which I had been recommended; but, alas! there was no sign of
-a conveyance. A drearier-looking place I never saw. So disheartened did
-I feel that I returned and got back into the railway carriage again,
-intending to resume the journey and go on to Geraldton; but on looking
-out of the now open window I saw so many nice and jolly-faced people
-on the platform that I thought it might not be so bad a place after
-all, so I took a second thought and got out of the carriage once more.
-Approaching the gate I discovered a small boy in charge of a cart, on
-which I placed my belongings, and told him to take them to the Emerald
-Hotel, I walking behind. When we arrived there he put out my luggage
-and left me. Not a soul was about the hotel or the street. I felt like
-a sailor in a desert. I essayed to reconnoitre the place, and went in
-and out of several rooms, with no result. I then tried the kitchen,
-and found every one out there also, except the fire, which luckily was
-in, so I took possession and sat down on a box to warm myself. Looking
-out of the window, I saw two enormous emus stalking about and peering
-into everything. I was afterwards told that they are the most curious
-birds in existence, and their prying ways often cause them to be taken
-captive. Presently the cook turned up; strange to say, a woman cook, as
-most cooks in these parts are Japanese men. I asked her for some dinner;
-she said she had none in the hotel, it was all at the railway station.
-I may as well here explain that the proprietor of the hotel also caters
-for the railway station, and his staff goes down there to attend to the
-train passengers at the dinner-hour, everybody who requires dinner being
-supposed to get it there. The whole male population of Yalgoo goes to see
-the train come in; it is the event of the day. However, the cook made me
-a nice cup of tea and some hot toast, and boiled some fresh eggs, after
-partaking of which I felt myself again. Taking a look out of the front
-door I saw the street just as deserted as ever, so, going into a bedroom,
-I took a siesta until 4 o’clock, when sounds about the neighbourhood
-told me that the townsfolk had returned from the railway station. I
-accordingly went forth to make their acquaintance, and having done so I
-am able to speak of them in the warmest terms.
-
-The township being such a barren-looking place I was surprised, on
-driving around, to find very beautiful environs. The rains had brought
-up millions of wild flowers of all colours, and the grass and trees
-were exceptionally green. There are a great many sheep stations in this
-district, and the mines are a considerable distance away, so I did
-not go to them. The exception was the Emerald Mine, which is almost
-in the township, and which has returned its owners a large fortune.
-Fifteen thousand pounds worth of gold was dollied out of it before it
-was sold to an English company, who then erected machinery and crushed
-large quantities of rich ore with big results. It was on this spot that
-Yalgoo’s first find was made by a native shepherd and his lubra, who
-told some prospectors that they knew of a quartz-heap with bright stuff
-on it. You may be sure the prospectors lost no time in finding the heap;
-other finds followed, and the Yalgoo rush commenced. Aboriginal shepherds
-are almost the only ones to be had in the West, and they are not very
-reliable; yet if any animal is lost they can always find it; they are
-wonderful trackers, and can follow up the track of anything alive; this
-power has been cultivated in them by hunting for food from infancy.
-
-[Illustration: MARINE TERRACE, GERALDTON]
-
-The next day I left Yalgoo, longing ardently for a breath of sea air
-once more. After a journey of eight hours in the train I arrived at
-Geraldton, on the shores of Champion Bay; the town nearest the point at
-which the history of the colony really commences. It is a shipping port
-for a large agricultural and pastoral country, although as yet only 2000
-acres are under cultivation. I went for many beautiful drives, and one
-night to a “social” given by the footballers, to which I was invited;
-but as I did not dance, and contented myself with being a “wallflower,”
-my participation in the enjoyment was not very keen; I consequently
-returned early to my comfortable parlour at the Club Hotel. The new
-public buildings here are quite an ornament to the town, and the people
-may well be proud of them. There are also some other fine buildings and
-many nice shops. Altogether Geraldton is a very jolly place in which to
-spend a holiday. It can be reached from Perth by boat instead of the long
-train journey of 297 miles, for the steamers going to the far north of
-Western Australia and Singapore every fortnight always call; there are
-also several coasting-boats. The extensive and rich goldfields of the
-Murchison make Geraldton a very important place, and in course of time,
-when the North is more known and visited, it will, no doubt, become one
-of the most important towns in Western Australia.
-
-Some beautiful pearls were shown me by a trader from Sharks Bay in the
-North-west district of Western Australia, and I wished I were a queen
-who could order a necklace of them. As it was I had to content myself
-with one for a ring. They were really exquisite gems, especially three
-pink ones. The trader also had two black ones, which are rare and very
-valuable, but I prefer those of delicate hue.
-
-Pearls to the value of £285,000 and pearl shell valued at £1,000,000
-have been raised from the North West Fisheries during the last ten
-years. Nearly two hundred luggers, with over a thousand Malay, Japanese,
-Chinese, and Manilla men, with whites for officers, are engaged in the
-pearl industry. For diving, natives are chiefly employed, they being
-such wonderful swimmers and divers. Occasionally dissensions take place
-between these mixed people and their masters. Not long ago a terrible
-tragedy occurred on a pearling vessel, the _Ethel_, and the captain, his
-son, and the first mate were cruelly murdered by some of the Manilla
-and Malay crew. The offenders escaped at the time, but were afterwards
-captured (chiefly by the instrumentality of a poor Chinese cook, who was
-loyal), and have since paid the penalty of their terrible crime.
-
-There is a pretty river near this place, called the Chapman, which falls
-into Champion Bay. Garnets are found in the sand near the mouth of it,
-and you may be sure that any one who visits the place spends some time
-looking for the jewels. I was no exception to the rule, and found a few
-small ones, but until they are polished they are not very beautiful.
-
-The orange groves are exquisite, and produce quantities of splendid
-oranges. Mr. Jupp, one of the growers, had just sent into Geraldton some
-immense loads, the whole of his golden crop. The rainfall having been
-exceptional in the previous season, the country was bright with grass and
-flowers. It seemed quite a pity the fine grass should not be feeding more
-cattle.
-
-The view from the top of the lighthouse, where we stopped on the way back
-from a river picnic, is very grand. The rocky Abrolhos, 35 miles away,
-with the surrounding agricultural country, Champion Bay, and, farther
-out still, the grand rolling Indian Ocean, make up a most impressive
-scene. The lighthouse has a revolving white light, brilliantly flashing
-every 40 seconds, and visible for 16 miles; two other lights, lower
-down, showing red rays, visible from the north and south. Another day
-I drove to Greenough Flats, a level and fertile plain, with many fine
-crops, principally wheat, under cultivation. These flats were, no doubt,
-in former days vast lagoons, which accounts for the unlimited supply of
-good underground water. The grass is very nutritious, and the sheep and
-cattle looked fat. At Minchooka, Mr. Redhead’s station, the stock was
-looking exceptionally well, and a fine crop of wheat returned 26 bushels
-per acre from 11 acres. Mr. T. McGuiness, of Greenough Back Flats, lately
-had a peculiar experience while cleaning out his well, which is 96 feet
-deep, and was dry. In the hope of obtaining a fresh supply, Mr. McGuiness
-sank the well 13 feet deeper, and, when driving down his bar, struck
-water, which spouted up so quickly and with such a rush that he had
-hardly time to escape drowning; the water rose 30 feet in a very short
-space of time.
-
-The Greenough river runs between the flats, and there is a nice little
-township, with public offices, hotels, churches, and many comfortable
-dwelling-houses; there are also several large farms in the district,
-which is a magnificent grain-producing one.
-
-Newmarracarra Station, 20 miles from Geraldton, was formerly the property
-of Mr. Maitland Browne, the resident magistrate, who at one time used
-his land exclusively for horse-breeding. Thirty thousand acres of the
-station are now utilised for sheep-farming at great profit, there are
-24,000 sheep on the run in splendid condition, as well as many beautiful
-high-bred cattle. Mr. McKenzie Grant, the owner, manages this station
-himself, and has spent £55,000 on improvements. A grand water supply
-comes from the Greenough river and also from twelve springs in different
-parts of the land, which is very picturesque, with its hills and rich
-flats, covered with waving grass, and, in some spots, is brilliant with
-wild flowers. All kinds of native trees add beauty to the scene.
-
-Mr. Broadhurst, to whom I am indebted for all the information relating
-to the Abrolhos, 35 miles from the mainland, gave me, as a great favour,
-a copper coin from the _Batavia_, wrecked there in 1629, also a part of
-a pair of scissors that have nearly lost their form, and other relics of
-the past. A very interesting curiosity is a pair of large silver buttons
-with links, in splendid preservation and very slightly tarnished. The
-figures on these buttons represent Joseph and Potiphar’s wife. The
-Abrolhos are the abode of countless millions of birds, principally the
-noddy and sooty tern, which in the breeding season congregate there
-in such numbers that the sky is quite obscured by their flight, and
-everything is in almost total darkness. The group of islands have been
-leased from the Government since 1883 by Messrs. Broadhurst and McNeill,
-who command a very large trade in guano. The main stations in the group
-are Rat, Pelsart, and Gun Islands, on each of which there are commodious
-managers’ quarters and laboratory, besides kitchen and quarters for 48
-hands. No Australian should neglect to see the relics of the wrecks on
-the Abrolhos that are in the Perth Museum. Mr. Broadhurst showed me a
-book, printed in the Dutch language, that he accidentally came across
-on a London bookstall in 1895, being then on a tour and engaged in
-collecting information concerning early Australia. The book bore the date
-of 1647, and has since been translated into English by Mr. Siebenhaur, a
-Dutch gentleman in Perth, and proved to be, strange to say, a complete
-narrative of the wreck of the _Batavia_ and the massacre of the people,
-in 1629, at the Abrolhos Islands. The _Batavia_ was the commodore’s ship
-of a fleet of eleven vessels sent from Amsterdam in 1628 to the East
-Indies in search of treasure and to form a colony on one of the islands.
-Storms arose, the commodore’s vessel was separated from the others, and
-finally got down among the perilous banks of the Abrolhos, where the
-vessel became a wreck. After much danger, the people, numbering several
-hundreds—soldiers, sailors, women and children—were landed on two of the
-islands, several trips having to be made between the ship and the shore
-before this could be effected. Some water and bread was also got ashore,
-as well as some cases of treasure, jewels, and gold-laced clothing
-belonging to the Dutch Government that the commodore was anxious to save.
-The ship shortly afterwards foundered and the hardships of the seafarers
-commenced. It was found that there was very little fresh water on the
-island, so the commodore, Pelsart, and several of the men set off in
-the sloop, which had been saved, to the mainland to look for water for
-their fellows. After much difficulty six of them succeeded in landing by
-swimming, the shore being stony and rocky, and great breakers beating
-violently against the rocks so that it was not safe to take the sloop
-in too near. They saw smoke rising, and going towards it, saw four dark
-figures creeping on their hands and knees, who, on the approach of the
-sailors, leaped to their feet and fled away at full speed. Each carried
-a stick, no doubt a boomerang. Around the fires were the bones of birds.
-The savages were naked, and were the first ever seen on Australian
-soil by white men. The sailors dug holes, trying to find fresh water,
-but could find very little, and returned to the ship disconsolate. The
-commodore then, knowing that by returning to the islands he could do
-no good for his fellow sufferers, determined to return to Batavia for
-assistance. On arrival there he obtained speedy help from the Government,
-and provided with all necessaries and a good crew, at once set out again
-for the Abrolhos to succour the shipwrecked people. On arrival there they
-saw, close to where they had been wrecked, smoke from several fires, and
-were much rejoiced, hoping to find all or most of the poor people alive.
-Having cast anchor, the commodore, taking with him a cask of water, bread
-and wine, went in his boat to the highest island, but on arrival there
-found no one, at which he was much astonished. Jumping ashore, they saw a
-little boat coming round the northern point with four men rowing; one of
-them jumped ashore and welcomed the commodore, but begged him to return
-to the ship, as there was a party of miscreants who intended to seize the
-vessel. He then told the terrible story of the massacre. These miscreants
-had murdered 120 people on the island, now called Pelsart Island, or
-“Batavia’s Churchyard.” The commodore then sorrowfully returned to the
-ship. The man who told the commodore all this was named Webbey Hayes,
-and he with forty others had tried their best to save their comrades,
-and were then on what they called Long Island. The commodore took some
-boats and men and brought them away, arming them with muskets. With
-these he proceeded to Batavia’s Churchyard and captured the mutineers.
-They found them all dressed in the beautiful clothes trimmed with gold
-lace belonging to the Government, and jewels were scattered about in
-all directions. The mutineers were divested of their gay clothes, put
-in irons and conveyed to Seal Island, to remain there till they should
-be tried, which was afterwards done, and they were then executed for
-their crimes. This is a very short and crude synopsis of the interesting
-translation of the Dutch book of which I have spoken, but may serve to
-give some idea of the Abrolhos. The many curios of this time that are
-spoken of on page 51 are well worth seeing. Previous to this, in 1540,
-Portuguese vessels had been driven on to the coasts of the Great South
-Land, as it was called. Houtmann, a Dutchman who had served with the
-Portuguese, had sighted the cluster of rocky islets and called them
-Abrolhos, a contraction of the Portuguese “Abro vos olhos” (“Keep your
-eyes open”). In far-back ages Chinese junks used to sail down to the Gulf
-of Carpentaria, and the natives of that part of Australia are now said to
-have a distinctly Mongolian cast of countenance. Marco Polo, at the close
-of the thirteenth century, alluded to the Great South Land. Allusions
-to this unknown land are also met with in writings dating as far back
-as Alexander the Great in the fourth century; Strabo, Pliny and Ptolemy
-also make mention of a mysterious territory, which was probably the
-continent of Australia. Dampier is said to have been the first Englishman
-to land on the coast of Western Australia, which was then, in the reign
-of William III., called New Holland. His report was so unfavourable, that
-Australia was left to itself again until 1770, when Captain Cook landed
-at Botany Bay, New South Wales, and not until 60 years afterwards was
-Western Australia found to be suitable for colonising. In 1829 the first
-governor, Captain (afterwards Sir James) Stirling, with his family and
-over 60 settlers, arrived at the Swan River and founded the settlement
-which is now the city of Perth; two years previous to this, Captain
-Fremantle had hoisted the British flag at the entrance of the river, and
-the port of Fremantle is named after him.
-
-[Illustration: Four generations of the Western Australian Native]
-
-For some time past I have been collecting all the facts of interest
-that I could concerning the natives of Australia, and have gathered a
-really fine collection of the native weapons, boomerangs, nulla-nullas,
-spears, waddies, womerahs, shields, &c. There are a good many aborigines
-about Geraldton at present, but civilisation has made them lazy, and it
-is not easy to get many of their weapons. Mine have chiefly been given
-to me by friends who have gone to the trouble of collecting them for
-years. The blacks are not a very pleasant race, still we ought to have
-a kindly feeling for the poor creatures, whose chief capacities seem
-to be hunting, fishing, and tracking. Their own laws, and the way they
-keep them, are somewhat remarkable, especially those relating to the
-affinities and the division of the people into families.
-
-There are four tribes or clans amongst the aborigines of Western
-Australia, namely—Booranggnoo, Banagher, Kimera, Palgarie. A Booranggnoo
-man may marry a Banagher woman, their children will be Kimera; a
-Banagher man may marry a Booranggnoo woman, their children will be
-Palgarie; a Kimera man may marry a Palgarie woman, their children will be
-Booranggnoo; a Palgarie man may marry a Kimera woman, their children will
-be Banagher.
-
-Children take the name of the mother, and intermarriage between the same
-tribe is not allowed. Polygamy is permitted. A native may have several
-wives and various families, but each family incurs the responsibilities
-of the mother, and all such relations become involved in the guilt of any
-crime; if the offender cannot be reached, any other relative may have
-to suffer instead. In case of death by violence, the nearest relative
-of the slayer is found and punished. Homicide in obedience to law is
-therefore common among them. Their law is blood for blood, an eye for
-an eye, a tooth for a tooth. Girls are betrothed when they are young,
-and may be claimed at any time. A blackfellow must take his lubra (wife)
-from the clan or tribe which alone is eligible to give a wife to him,
-otherwise he becomes an outcast. The women are severely punished by the
-men even for trifling offences. On the death of the husband the wives and
-children pass to his brother; all property in land is held for hunting
-and obtaining food. They are very fond of music and dancing, their songs
-being chiefly extempore. The dances, or corroborees, are adapted to the
-various circumstances of their lives—marriage, birth, death, war or
-hunting. It is not usual for the women to take part in these dances, but
-on rare occasions they do, and they carry a peeled stick tufted at one
-end, as was the custom of the ancient Bacchantes. Songs are composed
-by musical natives of the clan, and are soon learnt: every blackfellow
-knows the songs of his clan, and if one is composed for any special
-occasion it is soon learned. The food of these natives is very varied and
-peculiar, one kind being the knomat, the gum of the swamp mimosa. There
-are also six kinds of kangaroo eaten, two kinds of opossum, twenty-nine
-sorts of fish, three kinds of turtle, emu, wild turkey, and many kinds
-of waterfowl; frogs, seven kinds of lizards, four kinds of grubs,
-twenty-nine roots, seven fungi, four gums, two kinds of manna, four
-fruits, four nuts—two of the zamia, which are poisonous without proper
-preparation—the seeds of many plants and the flowers of the banksia.
-Cannibalism is not common, but has been known in the North and East.
-The weapons employed are suited for the chase as well as war. These are
-the codja or hatchet, the dabba or knife, the meera or throwing-stick,
-the guicka or spear, the dowark or club, the womerah or digging-stick,
-and the killy or boomerang, which they throw with great skill. Their
-skill in hunting is remarkable, weirs are made for fish, stakes driven
-to intercept the kangaroos at their watering-places, and the fish are
-commonly speared by day and by torchlight. Their mias, or huts, vary
-in construction from a light shell made of brushwood to a dome, large
-enough to contain several persons, of logs covered with clay, and in size
-according to season and locality. From the Murchison northward, and also
-in the interior, the natives go naked; but southward, near the coast,
-the dress is the “booka,” a sort of cloak made of kangaroo-skins, that
-of the men being longer than that of the women, who use bags of skin,
-coota or boka, and mats of vegetable fibre, for carrying their children
-and domestic necessaries. They have many ornaments, and work opossum fur
-with yarn to make girdles for carrying things and bands to twine round
-the head to stick feathers in. They tattoo their bodies, and during the
-operation of tattooing, other natives swing round small curved pieces of
-wood, producing a whirring noise. They cover themselves with wilgey, a
-sort of red ochre, charcoal, or white clay. They send messages by marked
-sticks or bomar, the markings being quite intelligible to them, but to us
-just looking like a number of jagged chips in the sticks. They are not
-deficient in gratitude, but rather treacherous, although they will offer
-themselves up for punishment, a thing which very few white men ever do.
-They are very superstitious; the power of evil is a constant source of
-terror to them. They have their karakats, boolga-men, or medicine-men,
-able to inflict as well as cure diseases. They greatly fear an evil
-spirit, Jingie, and an imaginary monster, Wangul, inhabiting the fresh
-waters, and chiefly making victims of women. Each family has its kobong,
-or cognisance, some animal or vegetable for which they have a reverence,
-and which, therefore, is not used as food by the family who adopt it.
-Some of the domestic and personal habits of the natives resemble those
-inculcated by the laws of Moses. Their social intercourse is regulated
-by very strict and ceremonious customs. There are forms of meeting,
-also forms of parting. Mrs. Canfield, who had charge of the school at
-Amesfield, Albany, especially reports their fondness for music. One girl,
-sent to Sydney, played the harmonium in St. Philip’s Church for some
-time. Several other native scholars have become good housewives; some are
-now employed as school-teachers. Mrs. Canfield also notes the fondness of
-the boys for mechanical arts. The native Mission home is near Guildford,
-and another is in the Vasse district, but there are only about 40
-children in each place. The natives around Geraldton are half-civilised;
-in fact, some speak quite good English. I suppose the heavy fine of
-£50 for supplying drink to natives keeps them sober, as they find it
-difficult to obtain strong drink, of which they are very fond. They have
-been known to go to a large heap of bottles, and taking one, empty into
-it the dregs of all the others, until they get sufficient to take a
-drink, which they seem to relish exceedingly.
-
-[Illustration: Aborigines with Spears]
-
-Native wells or “namma-holes” have saved may a prospector from death by
-thirst, and men well used to the Bush soon know how to find them. Some
-of the wells are not more than two feet deep; others go down to ten or
-twelve feet, and are usually found by rock-holes, or certain trees that
-are near them. Some wells have a small drive at the bottom, so arranged
-by the blacks that, when the water gets shallow, it cannot be seen from
-the top of the hole. The old prospectors have learned from the blacks
-how to find these oases in the desert, but “new chums” might pass dozens
-while parched with thirst and never find one.
-
-After saying good-bye to the numerous friends I had made in Geraldton, I
-set out for the south in the Perth mail-train, my destination, however,
-being Dongarra, a little station 24 miles from Geraldton. On alighting
-there I found that the hotel was some distance off, and I regretted that
-I had got out of the train at all. However, a good-natured boy with
-a cart solved my dilemma by saying: “Get up, missus, I’ll give you a
-lift.” I accepted his invitation with much pleasure, and drove on through
-wonderful grass lands. I thought, as it waved in the wind, that this must
-be a cultivated crop, but found it to be common wild grass. A great deal
-of the land about here is rented to the farmers at 10_s._ per acre, and
-they have an average yield of 16 to 25 bushels of wheat and 30 bushels
-of barley. Wheat can be grown at a large profit, as the cost of growing
-it is not more than 4_d._ a bushel, and the timber being light in the
-district, the expense of clearing the land is small.
-
-There are a number of farms about Dongarra, which is one of the prettiest
-little country places I have seen in the colony. The township is situated
-near the mouth of the Irwin river, and so there is no lack of water.
-There is a small and safe harbour at Dongarra, formed by a reef at the
-river’s mouth, which is the outlet to the valley of the river. There are
-many early settlers living here. The following notice that was fastened
-on a tree I thought very comical: “If any man or woman’s cows or horses
-get into this paddock, his or her tail will be forthwith cut off, with no
-respect to persons.” This is on a par with a letter written by a justice
-of the peace in one of the places that shall be nameless:—
-
- “To J. murphy: thars 5 kows of yourse runnin in mi paddock and
- if they aint tuk out be Frida nite ime goin to sit the lor agen
- yer; ime on the binch and ile make it warm for yer.”
-
-The little hotel at Dongarra proved very comfortable, and next morning I
-resumed my journey in the train, which took all day. In the afternoon we
-stopped for awhile at a place called Watheroo. I gathered a pretty bunch
-of wild flowers while waiting; some red ones especially took my fancy.
-They smelt very sweet, something like honeysuckle. I found that they were
-of the “verticordia” species, and that they grow in great profusion near
-the Irwin river. In the evening, at seven o’clock, I left the train at
-Gingin, for I wanted to see some of the famous orange and lemon groves
-there. After quite a pastoral supper at the little inn where I put up I
-retired early, feeling somewhat fatigued after my long journey in the
-slow train. In the morning I set out to see some of the groves. The
-forest scenery through which I passed looked particularly grand after
-the monotony of the goldfields, and the beautiful orange groves further
-enhanced the scene. I have seen oranges growing in various parts, but
-the fruit hanging here in golden clusters was the finest I had seen
-in Western Australia. In returning I stopped at a large garden, where
-strawberries and other fruits were growing; some children were picking
-the ripe fruit, which looked so tempting that I went to the door of the
-little homestead and asked whether I could buy some. “Oh, certainly, and
-cream, too,” replied the mother of the children, who had now come in with
-their spoils from the garden. After I had finished my unexpected treat,
-the mother put on her big white sun-bonnet (the usual head-covering in
-country parts), and, with the children following, showed me all over
-her selection and farm (which was a very fine one), and, with true
-Australian hospitality, pressed on me many gifts of fruit and flowers.
-There are about 350 people in the district of Gingin, mostly gardeners
-and graziers; all kinds of cereals are grown, as well as the fruits I
-have mentioned, and grapes of the finest quality are produced. Fat cattle
-and horses are also raised for export; a splendid clear stream of water
-runs near the township; sportsmen can have good shooting, for kangaroo;
-wallaby and wild duck are abundant in the vicinity of this pretty little
-place, which is 50 miles from Perth.
-
-[Illustration: FREMANTLE]
-
-In the morning I took the train for Perth and Fremantle, and on arrival
-at the Perth railway station there, waiting for me, were my own horse
-and Ralli car. Didn’t we spin along through the park? I thought of
-the Mulga scrub and red dust “out back”; here the roads were red, but
-“with a difference,” and the grass and the trees delightfully fresh and
-green; surely the water never looked so sparkling. In and out through
-the trees along the winding road we drove, past the little villas, with
-their sweet gardens, up the hill, around the bend to the dearest spot on
-earth, “Home, sweet home.” The house and verandah were almost hidden by
-the glossy green leaves of the “Canadia” and passion vines; through the
-lattice of the fern-houses peeped the delicate pink blossoms of the tall
-ivy-geranium twined with the ever-flowering purple runner. The gate-porch
-and garden fence were embroidered from end to end with blue and green.
-Blue sea beyond, blue sky above. The gate was open, and thus my journey
-of two thousand miles came to an end. I hope that my record of it may
-help the reader to gain an idea of Western Australia.
-
-Our hands are outstretched to our brothers and sisters across the sea.
-We want them to come and work _with_ us. Energy and courage are the best
-cards to bring out to this big land. Should they wish to see the country
-for themselves, as I have done, I trust that my efforts will help to make
-their tour as easy as possible.
-
-Like all new countries, it has its rough uncultivated tracts, but I have
-also tried to show that it has its “meadow sweet” as well. Hundreds of
-thousands of acres of the soil are waiting to be tilled by strong willing
-hands and to yield richly of its fruits, while underneath the earth is
-“golden,” “golden,” overhead the glorious sun is shining, and the Austral
-sky is blue.
-
-[Illustration: MAY VIVIENNE]
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] These are names given to each other by the Australian-born people of
-the then separated colonies.
-
-[2] For most of these particulars of the early days of the goldfields I
-am indebted to Mr. Calvert’s book, “The Coolgardie Goldfield,” 1894.
-
-[3] A stope is the part of the workings in a mine between the levels.
-
-[4] The levels are the drives, or excavations, at different depths in a
-mine.
-
-[5] Since the above was written the mine has been sunk over 100 feet, and
-Mr. Merton has now gold valued at over a hundred thousand pounds.
-
-[6] The nut of the tree that, when polished, makes pretty ornaments.
-
- Printed by BALLANTYNE, HANSON & CO.
- London & Edinburgh
-
-[Illustration: The Golden Butterfly]
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRAVELS IN WESTERN
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