Wednesday, October 31, 2018

THE DOTS , DASHES AND KISSES OF AN ADVENTUROUS LIFE

It  was   sad  to  receive   news  from  Darwin  about  the  recent  death  of  another  remarkable Territory  woman ,  "Scottie " Penhall , seen above with her husband, who at  the age of  18   began   work  as  a  wireless  telegraphist   in   the RAAF  communications  headquarters  in  an   old  Toorak  mansion , Melbourne, during  WWll . 
 
By Peter Simon
 
It was a busy, exciting   centre, the   staff sworn to secrecy ,  with encoded messages flying backwards and  forwards to  the islands and  London . She developed the skill  to rapidly take down  morse code , which  enabled the  decoding  of  a   romantic   message   on  an  old postcard   more  than  60  years   later.   
 
 Named  Effie Scott ,  she  explained  it  was  the  RAAF way to call   everyone by their  surname , so  she became  Scottie ,  which  stuck   for  the  rest of   her  life .
 
After the war , she returned to  the  tame routine  back home with her parents  in Adelaide . However , she  was sent  to Alice Springs to  help her sister   who  was expecting   a   baby. It  opened   up a  new and  exciting   chapter in  life's journey, which   included working on the  Centralian Advocate newspaper , owned   by colourful  Charles " Pop" Chapman , who had made  a  fortune  at The Granites  goldfield in the l930s  and  lived  in  a  house called  The   Pearly Gates  , with his own swimming pool . At times he would answer  the telephone, say it  was The Pearly Gates ,  Saint   Peter  speaking .

During his goldmining days he transported valuable amounts of gold in jam tins ; a driller ,  he  strongly  believed oil would  be  found  in  Australia .    
Recent view  of   Centralian  Advocate, another  pearl in the Murdoch empire . 

At  the age of  18,  her  eventual husband ,  Les Penhall , also   had a dramatic change  in  his   career-he   moved from Adelaide to Darwin  in  late 1941  with the Native Affairs Branch.  On Boxing  Day  he and  fellow NAB officer  Bill Harney , later an  author and  first  keeper  of  Ayers  Rock , Uluru ,    travelled by canoe to an Aboriginal  settlement across the harbour . Not long after ,  February  19,  he  witnessed    the  Japanese  attack  on   Darwin.  From  cover , bullets  zipping about him ,  huge explosions   heard ,  he  watched as the USS Peary sank, still  firing .


On instructions  from police, Penhall helped  load  Department of  Works  files on a truck and travelled  with  it  to Alice Springs . There  he drew up a list of  names of  crewmembers   from  ships sunk  in   Darwin , many of them Chinese and Malays , who  wore  name  tags ,  evacuated  south  in  convoys .

During   his time in Alice , Les stayed in the  Stuart Arms Hotel , where  General Douglas MacArthur , his wife and   son , who had  fled the Philippines , came . The  boy , about four,  had " made  a nuisance of himself " by riding   about the hotel on  a three-wheeler bike  , running into people's legs  and  sideboards.  

He then saw   service on  Horn Island  in  the Torres Strait  as a signaller in the 74th Mobile Anti-Aircraft  Searchlight  Battery. The island was the furtherest north operational  airfield , said to have been the second most bombed  place after  Darwin . After the war, still not demobbed ,   Les  was  flown back to Alice Springs  and became  a  Patrol Officer  and Protector  of Aborigines . In 1947, he was stationed at the new  Yuendumu Aboriginal  settlement .

While Les and Scottie  were on their honeymoon  a driller  struck water near Yuendumu  and the supply became  known as Penhall's BoreScottie thought it wonderful  the Penhall  name , on pastoral maps , had  been  immortalised  by  a  bore .
Les ,on the left ,  took part in the last police camel  patrol in  Central  Australia  searching  for  an Aboriginal man who fled  after  murdering a woman .The others in  the party  were  Constables  Tony  Kelly and A. J. Millgate.
 
 I had contact  with  Les from 1958  to the early   l960s  when I worked  for the  Northern Territory News  in   Darwin .  In 2010 ,  Scottie    and Les provided me with details of their  lives  for  an  article I wrote   for  the  Northern Territory Police Museum  and Historical Society newsletter, Citation . On learning of Scottie's  skill at  morse  code,  she  able to take  down  25 words  a minute,Les less proficient ,  I dragged  out a  Welsh  topographical post card  I had  collected on which there was a message in   dots and dashes  addressed to Dear Selma , from  amorous  Jack , who, it was revealed ,  told  her   she  could  expect  six extra kisses   from   him . Kisses  galore were  displayed at   the  top  of  the Tuck's post card.
UPCOMING : The  Penhall papers .