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Erupting bore in Darwin rural area . |
Thursday, September 4, 2025
Wednesday, September 3, 2025
DUBIOUS CLAIM TO YACHTING FAME
Due to our Shipping Reporter's age and medication-especially the kickapoo steriods- he is prone to making startling statements .
After recently discovering washed up in Townville the above profusely illustrated The Official Record of Australia 11 , which won the America's Cup at Newport , Rhode Island , on September 26, 1983, described as the sporting triumph of the century , he made the astonishing claim that he played a part in the victory. Please explain!!!
It seems that when he was a pimply copy boy on The Sun , Sydney, in the l950s, he used to work weekends at Halvorsen's Boatshed, Bobbin Head, among the fleet of hire boats and cruisers. The Halvorsens were Norwegian boatbuilders who competed in Sydney Hobart Yacht Races from 1946 to l965.
Once our waterfront roundsman was given the important and smelly task at Bobbin Head of cleaning with creosote the bilge of the large yacht, Lauriana , built in l938 for a member of the Arnott biscuit family , which was a radio vessel from l952 to l964 in the Sydney Hobart Yacht Races.
So he claims his sloshing about in the bilge helped develop the yachting skills that led to Australia blowing the Yanks out of the water in l983.
The Shipping Reporter said he also mixed with veteran sailors when he and other young journos used to imbibe in a Sydney establishment which catered for Norwegian seamen .
The first Aussie 12 metre yacht to challenge for the American's Cup was Gretel ,designed by Alan Payne and built by the Halvorsen Brothers,owned by Sir Frank Packer, who sold it to Alan Bond .
It only won one race against the defender Weatherly .The yacht was also used for Gretel ll's challenge in 1970 and was later sold to Europe and went into disrepair.
There is now a Save Gretel Campaign to return her to Australia and restore part of the nation's maritime history.
(Yachting. America's. Townsville.)
EARLY AUSTRALIAN ISLAND INVESTMENT GUIDE WITH SLAVE LABOUR CONTENT
Discovered tucked away in Brisbane decades ago was the l912 12pp booklet , A Few Impressions of Portuguese Timor , compiled by the Timor Development Syndicate, Somerset House , Moore Street, Sydney . It contained a short summary of the products and investment possibilities .
The cost of labour , it pointed out , was so low, if paid to a seven year old boy in white Australia, he would immediately go on strike . Photos included one of a Timorese planter with his " boys."
There was mention of Port Darwin and Australia's lack of knowledge about the island , some Portuguese Timor stamps from Little Darwin collection . It seems there was a government run vessel named "Dilly", the capital Dili.
There was talk of exporting buffaloes to the Philippines , said to be better than Australian bullocks. Tests had been carried out in Sydney on a native fibre plant regarded equal in quality and strength to the best Manilla hemp. Malaria was rare .
Tied with chord, the booklet stated there was evidence of ethnic tension and that coffee, timber and cotton were produced . People were shown on Timor ponies , with cattle , and at a military station. Women wore dresses with interesting patterns
(Timor. Portuguese . Slaves. )
CLIPPER SHIP ON AUSTRALIA RUN
Our Shipping Reporter spotted this scarce and attractive clipper card in the latest list from Douglas Stewart Fine Books, Melbourne , for $750. It advertises a sailing of the Mindoro, an Australian Line ship, from Boston to Melbourne with United States mail in June 1873. She arrived in Hobson’s Bay, Melbourne on November 5 ,1873 (The Australasian, November 8, 1873).
(Clipper. Boston. Melbourne.)
Tuesday, September 2, 2025
VOYAGE TO TREASURE ISLAND
In his relentless search for oddities, interesting books and collectables , the Shipping Reporter sailed into Australia's largest Vinnies op shop at West End, Townsville, which covers 1900 square metres of floor space.
Not interested in the wedding gown and smart male attire section near the entrance , our scruffy waterfront roundsman pulled out his camera and snapped a small part of the huge emporium.
In the past, the Queen Mother was spotted inside a showcase along with a copy of Poor Fellow My Country by Xavier Herbert, Maori carvings. On this trip there was evidence , below, that there were many collectors of royalty in the north , Lady Di tucked away, plus souvenirs of overseas travel to the South Seas , Britain and Asia.
Large carved trunk followed by jam-packed showcase . |
NORTHERN BOOK NEWS
About to be launched soon is the much anticipated book about the Northern Territory high profile barrister , Jon Tippett , who spent more than 20 years at the bar .The book has been written by Darwin reporter Paul Toohey , former chief northern correpondent of the Australian.
He was previously a senior writer at the Sydney Bulletin and is the author of three books: God’s Little Acre, Rocky Goes West and The Killer Within. He has won the Graham Perkin journalist of the year award and a Walkley award for magazine feature writing.
Toohey also won a Walkley Award for his first Quarterly Essay, Last Drinks: The Impact of the Northern Territory Intervention.
Crowe grew up on Magnetic Island at Nelly Bay and it is said the beauty and strangeness of the island , combined with her brother's former profession as a skydive tandem master provided the inspiration for the book.
(Books., Darwin. Island.)
WOLFING DOWN EXOTIC TUCKER
At a recent visit to Darwin's popular Mindil Beach market ,our correspondent Petros took time out from partaking of the great array of tasty food on offer, including the renowned pawpaw salad ,shown being made above , to photograph an odd cloud formation which looked like the head of a wolf.
(Mindil. Salad. Wolf.)
Monday, September 1, 2025
AMERICAN PRESENCE ON GOLDFIELDS
The bookshop says he was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and grew up in New London, Connecticut. After joining the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as a young man, he accompanied the Mormon pioneers who made their way out west to settle in Utah’s Salt Lake Valley, arriving there prior to the end of 1850. He was re-baptised in Salt Lake City in June 1851 (LDS Church History Biographical Database).
Not long after this, Isaac emigrated to Australia with his young wife Mary Betsey (Cornell) (b.1837) to join the gold rush in Victoria. Evidently his older brother, John Kirby (1828-1900) emigrated as well, as he is probably the ‘J. B. Kirby’ that appears on the invitation card as a member of the organising committee for the Fourth of July event in Woolshed.
By 1855 Isaac had become the licensee of the Eureka Hotel in Yackandandah, east of Beechworth. (This was a highly unusual occupation for Isaac, since the Mormon faith encourages abstinence). No trace of this hotel remains, but it stood on a private allotment on the Yackandandah Creek known as Kirby’s Flat, where alluvial gold had been sluiced from as early as 1853 (Victorian Heritage Database Report).
Presumably, Isaac had initially enjoyed some success at alluvial prospecting which would have helped finance his business activities. He continued to run the hotel until 1858, when it was briefly taken over by George Rowe; he then resumed as licensee in 1859, staying on until 1862. He and Mary had a daughter, Mary Elizabeth (1855-1857), who died in infancy; their son, John Adams (1857-1913), was born around the time of his sister’s death; and a second son – Isaac’s namesake – was born in 1860.
Isaac returned with his family to the United States in 1862. With the Civil War still raging, they settled in Providence, Rhode Island. At the time this was one of the most prosperous cities in the Union, destined to soon become one of the wealthiest in the United States, so it is tempting to speculate that Isaac had perhaps returned to the land of his birth with a small fortune made on the Yackandandah Creek at Kirby’s Flat. Mary gave birth to two more children, Henry Arra (1862-1920) and Mary Elizabeth (II) (1867-1934). After Mary’s death, Isaac married Hannah Marshall Maxfield in 1886. He died in Providence in 1914 at the age of 83.
Although now virtually a ghost town, the gold rush township of Woolshed, situated a little to the north of Beechworth, was a boomtown in the 1850s which boasted its own theatre and racecourse.
There were large numbers of American diggers in the area, and at various sites right across the Ovens goldfield; for example, Joshua Cushman Bigelow, the Woolshed storekeeper whose name (incorrectly spelled “Biglow”) appears as one of the organising committee on the invitation card, hailed from Maine, and he was the first to discover gold a little to the south-east of Beechworth in the district known as Snake Valley (later Upper Nine Mile).
We believe it likely that most, if not all of the other Fourth of July celebration organisers at the Alliance Hotel were Americans, and we can imagine that they circulated their attractive invitations as far and wide as possible amongst the American community in the Beechworth district. For Isaac Kirby, well-known American publican at Yackandandah, to make the trip across to Woolshed to attend the event would have meant a full day’s journey on horseback.
(Americans .Goldfield. Victoria.)
SAINT SUCCUMBING TO GLOBAL WARMING
The Saint was inspired by the figure left behind by Simon Templar in the British detective series written by Leslie Charteris.