Sunday, November 2, 2014

100 years ago this week - Patriotic Concert

Here's an account of a Patriotic Concert held at Koo-Wee-Rup on October 30, 1914.  The school children put on the concert, well trained by Mr and Mrs Eason and Mrs Morrison. Lots of familiar Koo-Wee-Rup names mentioned including  Colvin, Hudson, McNamara, Johnson and Mickle.

South Bourke and Mornington Journal November 5, 1914

Saturday, October 25, 2014

100 years ago this week - Rabbit Inspector resigns

A report in the Bunyip Free Press of October 22, 1914 said that Mr Kelleher, the Rabbit Inspector had resigned,


Bunyip Free Press October 22, 1914
I believe that Rabbit Inspectors were first appointed under the 1884 Rabbit Suppression Act. The Department of Crown Lands and Survey was the overseeing Government Department. The duties included rabbit extermination on Crown Land and serving notices on land owners who failed to eradicate rabbits on private land.   Rabbits were first introduced into Australia in 1859, when 24 wild rabbits were released near Geelong. They soon became a major problem throughout Australia and in 1950 there were 600 million rabbits in Australia.

Michael Kelleher was officially appointed on December 17, 1912 and his resignation dated from November 15, 1914 according to the State Government Gazette, where all Government appointments were listed.

State Government Gazette December 27, 1912


State Government Gazette  November 4, 1914



It appears that the life of a Rabbit Inspector was not  always a happy one and some land owners were against them and their methods as this article from the Pakenham Gazette attests.



Pakenham Gazette November 11, 1914
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article89082964

Friday, October 24, 2014

An overview of the drainage of the Koo Wee Rup Swamp

This is an overview of the history of the drainage of the Koo Wee Rup Swamp. I must acknowledge  From Swampland to Farmland: a history of the Koo Wee Rup Flood Protection District by David Roberts (Rural Water Commission, 1985);  the chapter Draining the Swamp in The Good Country: Cranbourne Shire by Niel Gunson (F.W. Cheshire, 1968); and Swamp Reclamation in Victoria by Lewis Ronald East, published in the Journal of the Institute of Engineers, Australia, March 1935, in the preparation of this history.  

The Koo Wee Rup Swamp originally covered about 96, 000 acres (40,000 hectares) is part of the Western Port sunkland. Very non-scientifically, the land sunk thousands of years ago between the Heath Hill fault and the Tyabb fault, and the streams that originally drained straight to the sea, such as the Cardinia, Toomuc, Deep Creek, Ararat, Bunyip and Lang Lang now descended onto the flat sections of the sunkland, flowed out over the land and created the swamp conditions.

Small scale drainage projects on the Swamp began as early as 1857 when William Lyall (1821 - 1888) began draining parts of the Yallock Station to drain the excess water from the Yallock Creek. In 1867, Lyall and Archibald McMillan, owner of Caldermeade, funded a drain through the Tobin Yallock Swamp and created a drain to give the Lang Lang River a direct outlet to the sea. Lyall also created drainage around Harewood house (on the South Gippsland Highway Koo Wee Rup and Tooradin).

In 1875, landowners including Duncan MacGregor (1835 - 1916), who owned Dalmore, a property of over 3,800 acres (1,500 hectares) formed the Koo Wee Rup Swamp Drainage Committee. From 1876 this Committee employed over 100 men and created drains that would carry the water from the Cardinia and Toomuc Creeks to Western Port Bay at Moody’s Inlet. The Cardinia Creek outlet was eight metres at the surface, six metres at the base and 1.2 metres deep, so no mean feat as it was all done manually. You can still see these drains when you travel on Manks Road, between Lea Road and Rices Road - the five bridges you cross span the Cardinia and Toomuc Creek canals (plus a few catch drains)

It soon became apparent that drainage works needed to be carried out on a large scale if the Swamp was to be drained and landowners protected from floods. The construction of the Railways also provided a push to drain the Swamp. The Gippsland railway line, which straddled the northern part of the Swamp, was completed from Melbourne to Sale in 1879. The construction of the Great Southern Railway line through the Swamp and South Gippsland, to Port Albert, began in 1887. These lines, plus a general demand for farm land bought the Government into the picture.

The Chief Engineer of the Public Works Department, William Thwaites (1853 - 1907) is almost forgotten in Swamp history, and should get more credit than he does. Thwaites surveyed the Swamp in 1887 and his report recommended the construction of the Bunyip Main Drain from where it entered the Swamp, in the north, to Western Port Bay and a number of smaller side drains.


Plan showing flood protection and drainage works for Cardinia and Kooweerup Swamp lands: also watershed areas affecting same. State Rivers and Water Supply Commission, c. 1920s. 
State Library of Victoria  http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/115251

There was a scientific background to this scheme - Lewis Ronald East, engineer with and later Commissioner and then Chairman of  the State Rivers and Water Supply Commission (SRWSC), in his 1935 paper Swamp Reclamation in Victoria in 1935 writes that the drainage plan was based on the formula Q=CM3/4 - where Q was the discharge in cusecs, C a coefficient and M the area of the area of the catchment in square miles. 50 was adopted as the value of C for ordinary floods and 100 for extraordinary floods. The Scheme was worked out in detail to deal with ordinary floods, but for some unaccountable reason - possibly shortage of funds - it was recommended that the drains be constructed in the first instance to only 1/3 of the designed dimensions, but the reserves were to be of sufficient width to allow future enlargement. East says that the intention of the “Swamp Board” was to merely facilitate the removal flood waters and thus permit the use of land between floods.

A tender for works was advertised in 1889. In spite of strikes, floods and bad weather by March, 1893, the private contractors had constructed the 16 miles of the drain from the Bay to the south of Bunyip and the Public Works Department considered the Swamp was now dry enough for settlement. At one time over 500 men were employed and all the work was done by hand, using axes, shovels, mattocks and wheel barrows. 

In spite of what seemed to be good progress - the Public Works Department had been unhappy with the rate of progress and took over its completion in 1893 and appointed, their engineer Carlo Catani (1852-1918) to oversee future works. I write about Carlo Catani, here.

The 1890s was a time of economic depression in Australia and various Government Schemes were implemented to provide employment and to stop the drift of the unemployed to the city. One of these schemes was the Village Settlement Scheme. The aim was for the settlers to find employment outside the city and to boost their income from the sale of produce from their farms. It was in this context that Catani implemented the Village Settlement Scheme on the swamp. Under this Scheme, all workers had to be married, accept up to a 20 acre (8 hectares) block and spend a fortnight working on the drains for wages and a fortnight improving their block and maintaining adjoining drains. The villages were Koo Wee Rup, Five Mile, Vervale, Iona and Yallock.  The first 103 blocks under this scheme were allocated in April 1893.

Many of the settlers were unused to farming and hard physical labour, others were deterred by floods and ironically a drought that caused a bushfire. Many also relied on the wages they received for working on the drains, however this work finished in November 1897, so unless they could find other employment, or their farm was enormously successful they chose (or were forced by circumstance) to leave the Swamp.  The Village Settlement Scheme on the Swamp was abandoned in 1899 and the land was opened for selection in the regular way.

My great grandfather, James Rouse, a widower, arrived on the Swamp with his nine year old son Joe, in 1903. James, who had been a market gardener in England, was part of a second wave of settlers who were granted land as they had previous farming experience.  By 1904, over 2,000 people including 1,400 children lived on the Swamp. By the 1920s, the area was producing one quarter of Victorian potatoes and was also a major producer of dairy products. In fact, as we know, Koo Wee Rup remains an important potato growing area and the importance of the potato was celebrated by the Annual Potato Festival during the 1970s and 1980s. Today, 93% of all Australian asparagus is produced on the Koo Wee Rup Swamp.

The existing drainage works that we see on the Swamp today are really the result of a reaction to various floods. As East wrote in 1935 it was soon evident that the drainage provision made was quite inadequate.  There was a flood in 1893 and according to East the drains were enlarged by at least 50% in 1895 and then enlarged again in 1902, the catalyst being the 1901 flood.  The 1902 work had the objective to remove all floodwaters from a maximum flood within three days

There were some additional drains created in 1911 and by 1912 East says that the drainage scheme had cost £234,000 and the Government had recouped only £188,000. There were arguments over who should fund the scheme - many land owners were opposed to being charged for any work and it was not until after more floods in 1916 and 1917 they agreed in principle to an annual flood protection charge and the ‘Lower Koo Wee Rup flood protection district’ came into being. 

The State Rivers scheme provided for substantial remodelling and enlargement of existing drains, new channels and additional drains next to the Main Drain to take the water from the converging side drains. Other work carried out at this time included giving the Lang Lang River a straight channel to the bay and at the western end of Swamp tapping the Deep Creek into the Toomuc Drain created in 1876. 

Before I go on to the devastating 1934 flood I am going to tell you briefly about the Lubecker Steam Dredge, which I have written about in more detail, hereApparently Catani was interested in using machines on the Swamp in the 1890, but as this was a time of depression the Public Works Department felt that this would take away jobs so it wasn’t until 1913 that Catani could import his first dredge. It was the Lubecker Bucket Dredge, costing £4,716 which arrived in 1913 and started work on the Lang Lang River. When it finished there in 1917 it started on the Koo Wee Rup Swamp on the Yallock Creek and other drains.



Looking down Rossiter Road, in the 1934 flood.
Image: Koo Wee Rup Swamp Historical Society

None of the existing works could prepare the swamp for the 1934 flood. In October of that year, Koo Wee Rup received over twice its average rain fall. November also had well above average rainfall and heavy rain fell on December 1 across the State. This rainfall caused a flood of over 100,000 megalitres or 40,000 cusecs (cubic feet per second) per day. This was only an estimate because all the gauges were washed away. The entire Swamp was inundated; water was over 6 feet (2 metres) deep in the town of Koo Wee Rup, exacerbated by the fact that the railway embankment held the water in the town; my grandparents house at Cora Lynn had 3½ feet of water through it and according to family legend they spent three days in the roof with a nine, five, three year old and my father who was one at the time. Over a thousand people were left homeless. This flood also affected other parts of the State, including Melbourne.

There was outrage after the 1934 flood, directed at the SRWSC and it was even worse when another flood, of about 25,000 megalitres (10,000 cusecs) hit in April, 1935. After this flood, 100 men were employed to enlarge the drains.

As a result of the 1934 flood, the SRWC worked on new drainage plans for the Swamp and these plans became known as the Lupson Report after the complier, E.J Lupson, an Engineer. A Royal Commission was also established in 1936. Its role was to investigate the operation of the SRWSC. The Royal Commission report was critical of the SRWSC’s operation in the Koo Wee Rup Flood Protection District in a number of areas.  It ordered that new plans for drainage improvements needed to be established and presented to an independent authority. Mr E. G Richie was appointed as the independent authority. The Richie Report essentially considered that the Lupson Report was ‘sound and well considered’ and should be implemented. Work had just begun on these recommendations when the 1937 flood hit the area. The 1937 flood hit Koo Wee Rup on October 18  and water was two feet (60cm) deep in Rossiter Road and Station Street. The flood peaked at 20,000 cusecs (50,000 megalitres) about half the 1934 flood volume.

The main recommendation of the Lupson / Ritchie report was the construction of the Yallock outfall drain from Cora Lynn, cutting across to Bayles and then essentially following the line of the existing Yallock Creek to Western Port Bay. The aim was to take any flood water directly to the sea so the Main Drain could cope with the remaining water. The Yallock outfall drain was started in 1939 but the works were put on hold during World War Two and not completed until 1956-57. The Yallock outfall drain had been originally designed using the existing farm land as a spillway ie the Main Drain would overflow onto existing farmland and then find its own way to the Yallock outfall drain. Local farmers were unhappy at this, as the total designated spillway area was 275 acres (110 hectares). They suggested a spillway or ford be constructed at Cora Lynn so the flood water would divert to the outfall drain over the spillway. The spillway was finally constructed in 1962. There is more on the Yallock Outfall drain, here


Construction of the Spillway at Cora Lynn, October 1962 - the Main Drain is on the right, 
separated by a soon to be removed levee bank from the spillway which is 
ironically underwater, due to a flood. 
Photo: Rouse family collection

There is on-going work on the Main Drain all the time - recreation of levee banks, removal of vegetation etc but the opening of the spillway was basically the last major engineering works to happen on the Swamp.

Today we look at Swamps as wetlands, worthy of preservation, but we need to look at the drainage of the Swamp in the context of the times. Koo Wee Rup was only one of many swamps drained around this time; others include the Carrum Swamp and the Moe Swamp. To the people at the time the drainage works were an example of Victorian engineering skills and turned what was perceived as useless land into productive land and removed a barrier to the development of other areas in Gippsland.

Monday, September 29, 2014

Koo-Wee-Rup Brass Band

From Mickle Memories by David Mickle - April 1919: An Enthusiastic meeting in the Koo-Wee-Rup Hall resolved to form a band. Mr G. F. Hopkins presided as Chairman. George Wain was elected President, H.D Mills as Secretary and the following signified that they would join the band - Vernon Mills, A. Purnell (the railway stationmaster), W. Ellett, Billy Ellett, Jack Dalley (injured in the level crossing smash later), D. Blackwood, H. Ellett, F. Boag (Frank or Fred they had  a boarding house in Rossiter’s road near Keighery’s old store) Alf Jeremiah, H. Legge, L. Poole (either Lawson Poole of Tooradin or his cousin Lawson Poole of Cranbourne) 

Others who volunteered for the band were A. C. Colvin (Froggie), Harris D. Mills, Tom Jack, W. Holt, W. Dyer (probably the potato inspector) Ray Mills (Vern’s brother), E. and B. Coates,  Bill Petters and Jim Gardiner (mentioned as the Scottish lamp lighter).

Patrons elected were Cr D. MacGregor, Shire President at the time; J.T. O’Brien, a Councillor who lived at Yallock;  W. C Greaves,  A. Cameron, E Simpson Hill,  a Councillor from Tooradin way; D.J Bourke of the great Bourke Brothers of Monomeith and  J. A Mickle, my uncle.  Quite a turn up of local enthusiasts to work and assist the band.       

I don’t know how long this band went for - they were still going in 1923. In 1923, Mickle also mentions the Koo-Wee-Rup Choral Society. In July that year they performed the play Robin Hood, conducted by Madame Bredin.  Dave Mickle recalled that at the full dress rehearsal he took his first flashlight photograph. The flashlight consisted of magnesium paper that was set alight by a match - the flash paper was on a metal tray and went off with a great flash. Dave was doubtful that the first flash worked so he decided to take a second photograph using two sheets of magnesium but many of the Choral Society were so frightened by the first experience they refused to take part a second time!

I was also interested to find that in 1932 Koo-Wee-Rup had a Mouth Organ band, with five performers and with Miss Mavis Colvin as pianist.

Cranbourne had Brass Band, which was founded in May 1899 and we have the Minutes book of another Cranbourne Brass Band which was established on March 24, 1928 - the Minutes book ends in 1934; I don’t know how long the band went on for after that. At the other end of the Swamp, the Iona Brass Band was formed in 1909 and disbanded about 1916 when half their members enlisted in the War.  


   
Koo-Wee-Rup Brass Band 1919


Koo-Wee-Rup Swamp Historical Society photograph

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

100 years ago this week - Royal Melbourne Show

Local farmers were preparing their exhibits for the Royal Melbourne Show - 100 years ago this week - as this article from the Bunyip Free Press of September 10, 1914 tells us.


Bunyip Free Press September 10, 1914

I wonder what 'up to date potatoes were?

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Bunyip Magistrates Court

The establishment of the Court of Petty Sessions at Bunyip was ‘gazetted’ in the State Government Gazette in an announcement dated February 14, 1905. (1) The first court session took place in Kraft’s Hall which was a privately owned hall operated by William Kraft, of the Gippsland Hotel. The Mechanics' Institute Hall opened on June 15, 1906, on the site of Kraft's Hall, Mr Kraft having donated the land. This 1906 building burnt down March 14, 1940 and the existing hall opened October 8, 1942. (2) 


The Court at Bunyip is established.
 Victoria Government Gazette, February 22, 1905, p. 834.

The first sitting of the Bunyip Court was held on Wednesday, March 15, 1905.  The South Bourke and Mornington Journal reported - 
As reported in my last, a court of petty sessions was held in Kraft's Hall on Wednesday, March 15. Naturally, being the first, some little speechifying was looked forward to, which however did not come off. Mr. Cresswell, P. M.,(3) and Messrs. Ramage and a'Beckett. J's.P., occupied the bench. Only two cases were listed. Myrtle Morris was charged by Constable J. Ryan with having no visible means of support, and was remanded to Prahran for further hearing.

John Mannix, aged twelve, was charged with endangering the property of R.McAllister by setting fire to some scrub whereby a quantity of grass and fencing was destroyed. After hearing the evidence the Bench stated its unwillingness to record a sentence, and on the father entering into a recognaissance for the boy's future good behaviour, the case was dismissed.
(4)

This article shows how the legal system has changed, for better or worse depending on your view point, as a 12 year old would never have his name mentioned in relation to a legal trial today (if it even made it to Court)

In another case, heard on March 16, 1910 before Presiding Magistrate Harris (5) and Justices of the Peace, A’Beckett and Pearson, George Nicklen, a farmer of Iona was charged with inflicting grievous bodily harm on his 15 year old niece, Elizabeth Bidwell. This report was in the South Bourke and Mornington Journal - 
Evidence was given by Mesdames Gully and Robinson two neighbours, that Nicklen was in the habit of beating the girl unmercifully, and the case had been brought under the notice of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.

Dr. Withington said he had examined the girl, who was covered with welts and bruises. She had apparently been subjected to a severe handling. Lizzie Bidwell, the girl in question, said her uncle, Nicklen, had chained her to her bed for days at a time, and on one occasion threatened to hang her with a rope. She was compelled to run away to Mrs. Gully's place, and that lady took her to the doctor. Nicklen denied giving the girl more than she needed. He was fined £10, with £3/5 costs, or three months in gaol. (6)

Ironically, on the same day the Court fined a man £8.00 for stealing four heifers or three months in gaol, if he didn’t pay. I don’t know what happened to poor Lizzie Bidwell but it’s sad to think that the Court valued her suffering at about the same rate as the theft of four cows.

Parents who did not send their children to school often faced court, here are two cases - 
In August 1910 Constable Ryan proceeded against J. Mannix for neglecting to send his child to school the required time. The constable stated that the teacher's report was that the child had played the truant. There were two charges against defendant The P.M. warned parents against future occurrences, as the new Act empowers the Court to deal with children by sending them to a reformatory or other suitable place. A fine of 5/ was imposed in each case. (7)

March 1914, Frank Gallagher was charged with neglecting to send his child to school - 
Constable Anstee said the boy in question had not attended school from 7th Nov. till January, and had evidently been kept at home to weed onions. The police magistrate said the case was a bad one, and defendant would be fined 5/- or three days. (8)

The Bunyip Free Press of January 15, 1914 reported that the court was crowded  when four charges of sly grog selling  were launched against an aged Assyrian with the very Anglicised name of  John Ellis. Ellis was represented by Mr M. Davine and had brought his own interpreter as he didn’t speak English. A Revenue Detective, Joseph Blake, had been working undercover in the area and he had visited Ellis  on a number of occasions as Ellis had a little shop, at Iona, with general stock; Ellis also did hair cutting.  Blake alleged that Ellis sold him alcohol, Ellis denied this.  Patrick McGrath, who leased the house to Ellis and had known him for nine years, called Ellis one of the best and straightest men on the Swamp. Mr Davine presented evidence that Joseph Blake was a professional liar and an informer.  In the end, the case was dismissed with the payment of costs; the Presiding Magistrate said we will give Ellis the benefit of the doubt if he will pay costs.  The costs were just over £17.00 but were reduced to £15.00 after some haggling; a report a few months later said the costs had been paid and the case was withdrawn. (9)

In April 1916, Ellis was back in Court -
Mr. W. W. Harris, P.M., presided at a special sitting of the Bunyip court yesterday to hear a charge of attempted murder which was preferred against a Syrian named John Ellis. The evidence of two young immigrants named Cyril and Frank Borwick showed that Ellis brought a revolver from Melbourne with him on 30th March. He was drunk, and told them he intended to shoot Constable Anstee. During the night Ellis consumed about half a bottle of whisky, and the brothers alleged that Ellis fired at both of them whilst they were asleep in bed. Cyril was shot in the hand, and Frank was shot in the left cheek. Accused was committed for trial in Melbourne. (10)

Ellis' trial was held in May 1916 and at the sentencing, Mr Justice Cussen, was reported as saying - 
said prisoner appeared almost to have been temporarily insane owing to certain charges made against him which he said were false. At the same time prisoner ought to consider himself lucky that he was not standing in the dock on a capital charge. Sentence, two years' imprisonment. (11)

Another case  involving a revenue officer was this gambling case from Garfield, heard in July 1914.
Bunyip - A young man named Frederick Carpenter in January last was convicted of conducting a common gaming house, at Garfield, and was mulcted in fines and costs totalling £15. The alternative of two months imprisonment was also imposed, but as Carpenter, who is an ex-jockey and a cripple, promised not to offend again, time to pay the fine was given him. That time was extended, but the fine was not paid. To-day Carpenter was ordered to pay £18 11/2 (fines and costs imposed previously), and was also fined an extra £10, in default two months' imprisonment, for failing to comply with the previous order of the court. Carpenter fainted in court when the decision was given, and lay across the barristers' table, but was carried out bodily by two constables and the revenue officer. The P.M. remarked that it was more "drink" than "faint." (12)  I had never come across the term mulcted before, but have discovered that a mulct  is a fine. 

In March 1915 a case concerning Cora Lynn farmer, John Rutter was heard at Bunyip and was reported in The Age and picked up by some rural newspapers -
A case of great importance to farmers was heard by Mr. W. W. Harris, P.M., at Bunyip police court, when a Cora Lynn farmer named John Rutter was proceeded against by Constable Anstee for having failed to produce a book showing the records of cattle slaughtered by him. The charge was laid under section 32 of the Butchers and Abattoirs Act. Superintendent Fowler, who conducted the prosecution, stated that on 24th February Constable Anstee and Thomas Garrett, an inspector of Berwick shire council, visited defendant's farm. Rutter told them he kept a book containing his general business transactions, but refused to let either Anstee or Garrett see it. 

For the defence Mr. Dunn contended that no offence had been proved. Every farmer was allowed to slaughter one beast weekly for his own use. Mr. Harris, P.M.: But he is not allowed to sell portion, and he must keep a book. Mr. Dunn contended that it would prove a great hardship to farmers if they were deprived from killing one beast a week for their own use. If a conviction was recorded it would probably open up many legal points. Mr. Harris, P.M., reserved his decision. (13)

Mr Harris made his decision a month later, and this was also reported in The Age
The police magistrate held that where a wrong construction was placed on the wording of the Government Act injustice should not be meted out to any defendant. He therefore dismissed the case without costs. Some months ago two young farmers were fined at the same court for slaughtering several calves on their farms and sending them to market for sale. Since then farmers have been afraid to kill beasts for fear of a prosecution. The decision given on Wednesday will relieve them of much anxiety. (14)  The two young farmers referred to were Victor Little and Thomas McGuire who were found guilty of slaughtering without a license in October 1913,  see here.

The sitting times for Courts were set by the Government, and they were on occasions altered, with the new hours published in the Government Gazette, but it did appear to sit weekly on a Wednesday from 1911 (15)


Sitting times in 1911
Victoria Government Gazette, November 15, 1911, p. 5528 


Sitting times from January 5, 1938
Victoria Government Gazette, November 24, 1937, p. 3852 

 
The newspaper reports of Court cases at Bunyip show that the Bench dealt with the whole range of legal matters including murder, theft, assault, arson,  traffic matters, incest, debts, using bad language and having no visible means of support.  I presume that the Court met at the Bunyip Hall, so I would be interested to know if that was the case.

The Bunyip Court officially closed on May 1, 1981. The announcement  in the Victoria Government Gazette stated that the  books and other records of the said Court and of the Clerk thereof be delivered to the Clerk of the Magistrate’s Court at Warragul. (14)


Closure of the Bunyip Court
Victoria Government Gazette, April 15, 1981, p. 1207.


Having said that, last case I could find in the newspapers concerning a hearing at the Bunyip Court was from May 1953 when the Dandenong Journal reported that Berwick and Cranbourne Shire rate payers will be pleased at the success Health Inspector K. N. McLennan is having in his war against roadside rubbish dumpers. Mr McLennan successfully prosecuted at the Bunyip Court,  J. Lyon, grocer, of Boronia, fined £3, with £3/6/6 costs, for depositing rubbish on the Princes Highway near Tynong. He also had four cases at the Pakenham Court. (17) The same paper noted in August 1953 that Mr Tom Drake was the chairman of the local Bench at the Bunyip Court. He had been appointed as a Magistrate on November 8, 1949. (18)


Tom Drake appointed as a Magistrate to the Bunyip Court
Victoria Government Gazette, November 16, 1949, p. 6120. 


When I first researched this in 2014, my parents, Frank and Wendy Rouse, said they had no memory of the Bunyip Court at all, in spite of the fact that Dad had been at Cora Lynn for his entire life, having been born in 1933 and Mum had been there since she was married in 1956, so perhaps it didn't sit on a regular basis after the mid 1950s (or perhaps they just didn't know anyone who was involved in Court cases).


Footnotes
(1) Victoria Government Gazette, February 22, 1905, p. 834.   https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1905/V/general/24.pdf
(2) Nest, Denise Bunyip Mechanics' Institute 1906-2006: a place of learning and entertainment (The Author, 2006)
(3) Charles Alfred Costley Cresswell - Traralgon Record, March 17, 1908 see here.
(4) South Bourke and Mornington Journal, March 22, 1905, see here.
(5) Walter William Harris - West Gippsland Gazette, June 6, 1916, see here.
(6) South Bourke and Mornington Journal, March 23, 1910, see here.
(7) South Bourke and Mornington Journal, August 17, 1910, see here.
(8) Bunyip Free Press, March 12, 1914, see here.
(9) Bunyip Free Press, January 15, 1914, see here. Bunyip Free Press, March 12, 1914, see here.
(10) The Age, April 27, 1916, see here.
(11) The Age, May 27, 1916,  see here.
(12) The Age, July 16, 1914, see here.
(13) The Age, March 16, 1915, see here.
(14) The Age, April 16, 1915, see here.
(15) Victoria Government Gazette, November 15, 1911, p. 5528
https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1911/V/general/171.pdf 
 Victoria Government Gazette, November 24, 1937, p. 3852
https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1937/V/general/328.pdf
(16) Victoria Government Gazette, April 15, 1981, p. 1207.   https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1981/V/general/33.pdf
(17) Dandenong Journal, May 6, 1953, see here.
(18)  Dandenong Journal, August 26, 1953, see hereVictoria Government Gazette, November 16, 1949, p. 6120.      https://gazette.slv.vic.gov.au/images/1949/V/general/901.pdf