1917 – Shunting driver Alfred “Leonard” Breeding was working at Cockburn on the border of NSW and SA, when he got the heel of his boot stuck between two rails and was run over. That is what initial newspaper reports of his death claimed. But there was no mention of his foot being stuck in theContinue reading “Step of fate killed driver”
Author Archives: Sharyn Moodie
Death advised by letter after remote car accident
It must be immeasurably sad to learn of your only son’s death by letter, but in the early days of Australian history, it was the way it was sometimes done. It’s hard to imagine in these days of instant telecommunications. This is the only account I could find of Charlie Buswell’s death in the QueenslandContinue reading “Death advised by letter after remote car accident”
Hats found floating after playdate
1913 – Eight-year old Mary McDermott was visiting her friend Penelope Bowdler, 10, in East Cobar, New South Wales on a Saturday morning in October. Mrs Bowdler saw them playing about 11am and at noon went to check on them again. Their hats were found floating in a six-foot-deep waterhole only 30 yards from theContinue reading “Hats found floating after playdate”
Newspapers make history harder
Digging out headstone history can be a real brain-teaser. This West End, Townsville cemetery gravestone is for an Emile Gustav Cravino, whose headstone reads that he was killed on the jetty works, but there were no newspaper reports for such a death. There were, however, reports for a man variously named “Carandist” and “Cavanagh”, withContinue reading “Newspapers make history harder”
Drain dies in bath
1907 – There is a sad irony in a man named Drain breaking his neck in a swimming bath. Thirty- year-old Charles Drain was visiting Central Queensland’s Gladstone from the nearby copper mining region of Nanandu, now known as Many Peaks. The copper from the mine was used as a flux in the Mount MorganContinue reading “Drain dies in bath”
Step into open hold was John’s last
1874 – John Clerke died when he fell into the hold of the ship under his command, during the dark of night. He was the chief officer of the steamer Lady Bowen, which had just arrived from Rockhampton to Gladstone, a settlement which was only about 20 years old. It was a long slow trip,Continue reading “Step into open hold was John’s last”
Accidental shot kills policeman
1890 – Police sergeant Richard Troy, 33, may have shot himself during a raid on an Aboriginal camp in remote north-western Australia. It was June 16, 100 miles east of the Kimberley town of Wyndham, when Troy and fellow policemen charged the camp. They were trying to catch men thought to have been cutting telegraphContinue reading “Accidental shot kills policeman”
Too young to fight, but not too young to die ready
Sixteen-year-old Vincent O’Farrell was too young to go to war, yet it was not enough to save his life. He drowned when washed off his horse while crossing Little Gin Creek, in the Longreach region, central Queensland, in 1917. Newspapers reported a ‘black tracker’ unsuccessfully dived for the body. Little Gin Creek is aContinue reading “Too young to fight, but not too young to die ready”
Cyclone kills grandma, while child survives
“I am afraid I am going. Good-bye.” Marion Currie, 84 years old, and her young grandson, age unknown, were pinned under a piece of timber in the midst of the worst cyclone Townsville had known. It was March 9, 1903 and as Cyclone Leonta intensified, Marion had made two attempts to reach her daughter’s homeContinue reading “Cyclone kills grandma, while child survives”
Time travel through TI cemetery
To wander through the Thursday Island cemetery is to take a 135-year time travel journey through the complex and fascinating history of the region. With a population which from 1890 comprised Europeans, Chinese, Torres Strait Islanders and Aborigines, South Sea Islanders, Malays, Filipinos, Japanese, Singhalese, Indians and a few Thais, Arabs and Africans, visits toContinue reading “Time travel through TI cemetery”