This blog is about the history of the Koo Wee Rup Swamp and surrounding areas, including Garfield, and Western Port as well as some of my family history. It's my own original research and writing and if you live in the area you may have read some of the stories before in the Koo Wee Rup Swamp Historical Society newsletter or the Koo Wee Rup township newsletter, The Blackfish, or the Garfield township newsletter, The Spectator. Heather Arnold.
Monday, December 5, 2022
Bayles Football Club - a poem
Tuesday, November 22, 2022
Ernest John Lupson (1888-1967)
Tuesday, November 15, 2022
Snakes Tales
These are accounts of close encounters with snakes on and around the Koo Wee Rup Swamp. Just remember, killing snakes is now illegal and most of the snake bite remedies mentioned here are no longer recommended. Having said that, all the people in this post survived, so something must have worked. Chloride of Lime was applied in one of these cases; it was injected. An article in the Korumburra Great Southern Advocate of December 20, 1894 (see here) on the topic and had this advice - No one in the country should be without his bottle of lime, and his hyperdermic syringe ready at hand.
Snake-bite at TooradinOn Monday a case of snake-bite occurred at Tooradin to a man named Gliffen. He was stalking some ducks, and while creeping through the undergrowth and ferns, he was met by a black snake of large dimensions. Instead of scurrying away, as this species generally does, it gave fight, and fastened on to the man's arm. Gliffen immediately asked a companion to help him to cut a piece of the, flesh away, and then rode to Dandenong, where Dr. Hodgson completed the cure, and next day Gliffen was able to return home. (The Argus, February 10, 1892, see here)
The cool headed Nellie Costello.
Iona - On Friday last considerable excitement was caused in the settlement by a case of snake-bite, and only for the plucky behavior of the young sufferer it is highly probable fatal consequences would have ensued. It appears that Nellie Costello, aged 14, daughter of a settler on the main drain, on the above date was sent down the paddock to drive some cows out of a crop of maize, and whilst performing this duty she trod upon a snake which turned and bit her just above the knee, she immediately formed a ligature with her handkerchief and made her way home, and requested her mother to take the carving knife and cut the piece out. Mrs. Crudden, a neighbour, performed the operation and the patient was conveyed with all speed to Bunyip, when shortly after arrival Dr. Cowan arrived in answer to a telephone message, and later on pronounced the patient out of danger. (South Bourke & Mornington Journal, January 29, 1902, see here)
Tiger Snake’s Bite. Young Man’s Escape.
A young man, named Thomas Kennedy, had a narrow escape from losing his life this week through being bitten by a tiger snake whilst engaged hewing timber on Mrs Smethurst’s farm at Yannathan, Gippsland. Kennedy was in the act of turning over a log, when a tiger snake, which had been hidden under it, seized and bit the thumb of his left hand. So tenacious was the grip of the reptile's fangs that all efforts to shake it off were futile, so Kennedy promptly seized his axe and chopped the snake in two. Using his pocket-knife, he then made a series of incisions all around the bite, and sucked the wound. Next he tied several ligatures about his hand and arm and hurried to the farm, where, securing a vehicle, he drove to Drouin, a journey of fourteen miles, and consulted Dr Cowan. Kennedy was by this time in a very drowsy state, which signified that the poison had affected him. Restorative measures were quickly and successfully administered.
An antidote was then injected into Kennedy's veins, and after about 36 hours' suspense, during which time all manner of methods were resorted to in order to prevent the patient from falling into a dangerous sleep, the patient was pronounced out of danger. The young man then left for his home at Muckleford, where he will have to remain for some days until his lacerated hand is healed up, and the effects of the shock and medicine have passed away. (The Herald, October 25, 1902, see here)
Yannathan - About 7 o'clock on Friday a young woman named Lily Mannix, in the employ of Councillor Cameron, of "Fassifern," was bitten on the finger by a snake. She was taken to the Yannathan Store, where Mrs. W. R. Currie rendered first aid, and injected chloride of lime. The patient was then driven to Lang Lang and attended to by Dr. Harkness, and is now out of danger. (The Argus, June 3, 1907, see here)
The Snake Season. Harvesting Experience
Pakenham - A resident of McDonnell’s Drain, Iona, named W. Webster, was working a reaper and binder on a flax crop at South Pakenham on Friday. Hearing a squeal he stopped the machine, and found that he had cut three legs and the tail off a hare, the balance of the animal could not be found. Later, he had occasion to tighten a nut under the machine, and there being very little room he had to be on his back. While in this position he suddenly felt something cold on his throat, and found that a snake was crawling over his neck. As the head of the reptile was disappearing through the spokes of the wheel he caught it by the tail, but was forced to let it go as it turned to bite him. It then got away. (The Argus, November 30, 1909, see here)
[McDonnells Drain is actually McDonalds Drain and it isn't at Iona, it is at Pakenham South/Koo Wee Rup North.]
Garfield - The daughter of Mr. Young was bitten by a snake on Saturday evening. After first aid had been applied the child was taken to the Bunyip private hospital. She is now out of danger. (The Age, March 2, 1926, see here)
Wound Scarified by Motorists
Albert Chapman an employee of Mr C. Cam, farmer of Lang Lang East, was bitten on the leg by a brown snake 3ft 6in in length. He killed the snake, tied a ligature above the wound, and rode four miles into Lang Lang to a doctor. Before he reached the doctor he met some motorists who had a snake bite outfit. They scarified the wound, and Chapman is now out of danger. (The Argus, January 15, 1929, see here)
Arthur Stevens, aged 19 years, employed by Mr. W. Parker, of Caldermeade, was stooking hay yesterday when he was bitten on the ankle by a tiger snake. He killed the snake and scarified the wound. He was then driven into Lang Lang for medical treatment. He appears to be out of danger. This is the second time he had been bitten by a snake. (The Argus, December 31, 1930, see here)
Mr M. Murton, while engaged on Mr W. Goble's farm, Kooweerup, last Thursday felt a sharp sting on the arm, but went on with his task. Later he found his arm beginning to swell and punctures from a snake bite were found. Immediately a ligature was applied and the usual measures taken to counteract the poison, after which he was conveyed to the surgery of Dr. Hewitt. Mr Murton quicky recovered form the effect of the bite. (Koo Wee Rup Sun, February 5, 1931, p.1)
Snake Caught Eating Bread
Koo Wee Rup - For several weeks a resident of the district has found that bread left in a box outside his house by the baker has been nibbled and he has blamed mice for it. But when a tramp was passing the box today he saw the tail of a snake protruding from it. He crept towards the box and found that the snake was eating the bread. He killed the snake. (The Argus, March 18, 1933, see here)
Dropped live snakes in solicitor's office. “Mischief” Charge Fails.
A man who had terrified a solicitor's stenographer by releasing six live snakes in her office was acquitted in the Criminal Court yesterday. A bottle of "pickled" snakes was an exhibit in the case. William Connelly, 53, farmer, of Lang Lang, was charged with assaulting Miss Gwendolyn May Gilchrist, stenographer, of Hill St, Thornbury, by throwing six venomous snakes at her feet, thereby putting her in fear of injury, and doing an unlawful act tending to cause, or effect, a public mischief by releasing live snakes in the office of A. L. C. Flint and Marrie, solicitors, of Queen st. Accused pleaded not guilty to both charges, and after a short retirement the jury found him not guilty. He was discharged.
Connelly said that the snakes were harmless, as he had "milked" them for venom on the way to Flint's office. They would not hurt a two year-old child. The Crown alleged that Connelly had gone to the office of Messrs A. L. C. Flint and Marrie, solicitors, on December 6 last after a land sale had fallen through. He had paid a deposit of £100 and the solicitors had deducted £6/6/ costs, returning the balance to accused. Apparently accused did not like having the £6/6/ deducted. Gwendolyn May Gilchrist, stenographer, said that when accused called at the office she told him that Mr Flint was not in. He said he wanted to leave a parcel in Mr Flint's room. Witness then asked him to leave the parcel in her room.
"You had better see what I am putting in Mr Flint's room," replied accused. He then took a package from a gladstone bag, and six snakes fell to the floor. Witness ran into another room, and accused then left the office. "I had a small attack of hysterics," added the witness. Accused, in evidence, said he brought the six snakes to the city in an oatmeal bag. At Flinders Street station he put the snakes in a wash basin and extracted venom from four of the snakes. The other two were too young to have venom. He took every precaution against hurting Miss Gilchrist. He intended to frighten Mr Flint and to bring up the scandal of land sales. Accused said he found the snakes in the bush and kept them, as they would probably have died because the swamps were drying up. He fed the two big copperheads and four little ones for about three months. They were very quiet around his camp and were around when he and his family were having their meals.
Accused then related an incident of a visitor having a cup of tea at his place while the snakes were hanging around. "I could see by the look on his face that he wasn't comfortable, so I put the snakes in a biscuit tin so that he could enjoy his cup of tea," added accused. "My dog got on well with the snakes," Connelly said. "I could coil a copperhead around the dog's neck and the dog would not worry about it."
Mr W. S. Sproule, KC, prosecuted, and accused conducted his own defence. (The Argus, August 26, 1947, see here)
Friday, October 28, 2022
State Primary Schools called Koo Wee Rup
School No. 2629
In 1884, School No. 2629 was built on the corner of Bayles Road and Bethune’s Road. It was originally known as Yallock, but changed its name to Koo Wee Rup in 1903. The school officially opened on November 1, 1884 and the first Head teacher was Eva Hurst with an initial enrolment was 22 pupils. Miss Hurst was replaced by Mary Dodd, who was in turn replaced by Mrs Grace MacKenzie in 1888. There was agitation, from as early as 1891, to have the school location moved closer to the town of Koo Wee Rup, which was growing due partly to the arrival of the railway in 1890.
The school population moved into the Public Hall in Rossiter Road in 1909 and in the September of 1910 classes moved to the original school building, which had been shifted into town to the site where the Secondary College now stands. Mrs MacKenzie left the school in 1911 to take up a new appointment at Moolort. The original school building became redundant when a new building was opened in February 1915 and this old building eventually became the Island Road School. In 1953, the Higher Elementary School was completed. This school included both primary and secondary classes (Forms 1 to 3 or Years 7 to 9). The school became a High School in 1957 and shared the building with the primary school students until November 1960 when the Primary School opened in Moody Street.
School No. 3198
On July 7, 1894, the Koo Wee Rup South School, No. 3198, opened at Five Mile, on the corner of Main Drain Road and Five Mile Road. The building was previously located at San Remo School. This school has the distinction of starting its life called Koo Wee Rup South and then having its name changed to Koo Wee Rup North.
Peter Norris was the first Head Teacher. At one time the school population was over 100 but in July 1954 when the school celebrated its 60th anniversary there were only 20 children enrolled. However, the anniversary celebrations were a great success with over 700 people attending, including three original scholars - W. Gilchrist, W.G. De Vries and Tilly Freeman (nee O’Shea). The school parents voted for the school to close in November 1959 and the children were sent to Pakenham Consolidated School. Five Mile was the last school to join or ‘consolidate’ with the Consolidated School which had officially opened in May 1951. Read more about the Koo Wee Rup North school, here.
The Pakenham Consolidated School was officially opened on May 29, 1951, on the site of the Pakenham State School, No.1359, in Main Street. The original Pakenham School had opened on a site near the Toomuc Creek in January 1875 and it moved to the Main Street site in 1891. The Pakenham Gazette of June 8, 1951 reported that on May 29th, four buses conveyed 130 children from surrounding districts to Pakenham Consolidated School. At present there are 258 pupils attending the School, and it is hoped that in September several other schools will be consolidated, raising the attendance to over 400 children.
The first Head Master was Charles Hicks. The School offered classes up to Year 10 (Form 4). The schools that formed the Consolidated School were Pakenham Upper No. 2155 (closed January 1952), Pakenham South No. 3755 (closed September 1951), Toomuc Valley No. 3034 (closed September 1951), Army Road No. 3847 (closed April 1947), Mount Burnett No. 4506 (closed October 1949), Tynong No. 2854 (closed April 1951), Tynong North No.4464 (closed December 1951), Nar Nar Goon North No. 2914 (closed October 1951), Nar Nar Goon South No. 4554 (closed May 1951), Rythdale No. 4231 (closed September 1951), Officedale No. 4242 (closed May 1951), Cora Lynn No. 3502 (closed May 1951) and Koo-Wee-Rup North (Five Mile) No. 3198 (closed November 1959).
When the Iona School, No. 3201, opened two days after the Five Mile School on July 9, 1894, on the corner of Thirteen Mile Road and Bunyip River Road, it was called Koo Wee Rup North; in 1899 it changed its name to Bunyip South and then in 1905 to Iona. This school closed in December 1993. Read more about the Iona State School, here.
School No. 3456
School No. 3456 was opened on April 1, 1903 in Modella in temporary premises in a room in a private house. At the time the area and the school was known as Koo Wee Rup East. The school moved to its permanent location, on the corner of Longwarry-Koo Wee Rup Road and Bridges Road in January 1904. On February 16, 1905, the school officially changed its name to Modella. The first teacher was Frederick Rumpff and he was there until 1907. There was then a series of short-term appointments including Dorothy Sillett, who was there in 1908. Her report in the Teacher Records file at the Public Records Office, says she was inexperienced, but anxious to do her best. Dorothy was 20 years old and had only been teaching since April 1907. Given that she was the sole teacher at the school, and that she would have been isolated by lack of transport coupled with the low pay of female teachers it is no surprise that her few months at Modella marked the end of her teaching career with the Education Department. The Modella school closed in December 1993.
School No. 3502
In January 1907 the Koo Wee Rup Central School (No. 3502) was built at Cora Lynn. The first Head Teacher was John McGibbon. On July 9, 1907, Mr McGibbon wrote to the Education Department…..on July 1st the Postal authorities granted the residents here a postal service and in compliance with a general request, named the district Cora Lynn. Hence, we should like the school to bear the name likewise. Again, great delay and inconvenience are caused by parcels and letters addressed to Koo Wee Rup Central S.S. first going to Koo Wee Rup S.S., or Koo Wee Rup South or Koo Wee Rup East before finally coming to hand. This annoyance would cease with the change of name. By September of the same year its name was changed to Cora Lynn. This school became part of Pakenham Consolidated School in May 1951.
Sources
- From Three to Ninety three: ninety years of education at Modella by Shirley Breese (The School, 1993)
- On the edge of the swamp: a history of the Iona Primary School No. 3201 1894-1994 by Denise M. Nest (Iona Primary School Back-To-Committee, 1994)
- Schooling on the Swamp: a history of Primary School No.2629 Koo Wee Rup 1884-2009 by Don Jewell (Koo Wee Rup Primary School, 2009)
- The tale of the Blackfish: a history of the Koo Wee Rup High School 1957-1977 by Fred Hooper (Koo Wee Rup High School, 1977)
- Vision and Realisation: a centenary history of State Education in Victoria edited by Les Blake (Education Department of Victoria, 1973)
- Notes on the history of Cora Lynn State School, compiled by Bryan Sim, Education History Services of the Education Department in 1984.
Sunday, October 9, 2022
Baby Health Care Centres
The Baby Health Care movement began in Victoria in June 1917 when Dr Isabella Younger Ross (1) opened a centre in Richmond, with Sister Muriel Peck (2) as the Sister in charge. Dr Younger Ross had studied medicine at Melbourne University and Glasgow University. She then worked at the Queen's Hospital for Children in London and this encouraged her interest in child welfare. This interest was reinforced by later study in Chicago. The child health experts emphasised the importance of teaching women hygiene, nutrition etc with the ultimate aim of lowering the child mortality rates.
Dr Younger Ross and Sister Peck were helped in her endeavours by supporters such as Ethel Hemphill and Mrs W. Ramsay (3). Other centres were soon established in the Bouverie Street Clinic in Carlton and City Free Kindergarten in the City and they then spread throughout Victoria. The Victorian Baby Health Centres Association was established in 1918.
I came across, purely by chance, the digitised reports of the Victorian Baby Health Centres Association from 1918 onwards on the Queen Elizabeth Centre website http://www.qec.org.au/professionals/corporate-documents
From the next report lists of the Centres appear along with their opening hours, and later the names of the Nursing Sisters in charge and the names of women on the local committees, so this gives us some indication as to when Centres were opened in each area.
The Shire of Berwick and Shire of Cranbourne were both relatively late in establishing Centres; later than many areas much further from Melbourne. The first mention of local towns I could find in the 1935-1936 Annual report (see here) when both Garfield and Bunyip are listed. Garfield was open Fridays 10.30am to 12 noon and 12.30pm to 1.30pm; Bunyip was open Fridays 2.00pm to 4.30pm. I presume that there must have been local agitation to have these Centres opened in what were by no means the biggest towns in the Shire.
Office bearers of the Bunyip and Garfield branches from the 1936-1937 annual report
In 1937-1938 Annual report the Lang Lang and Pakenham have Centres opened. The report has statistics for Pakenham (or Pakenham East as it was called) - 39 individual babies were treated, plus 13 children over 2 with a total visit of 300 babies and 48 children.
The number of babies attended to at various Centres, including Pakenham, from the 1937-1938 annual report.
It wasn't until the 1938-1939 Annual report that the Shire of Cranbourne presented a report - they had Centres at Lang Lang and Pearcedale. The statistics for Lang Lang were 29 individual babies were treated, plus 21 children over 2 with a total visit of 354 babies and 68 children.
The Tynong Centre was operating according to the 1942-1943 report.
In the 1944-1945 report the Shire of Berwick could present statistics for seven towns - Berwick, Beaconsfield Upper, Bunyip, Garfield, Nar Nar Goon, Pakenham East and Tynong - as Berwick, Beaconsfield Upper and Nar Nar Goon had not been listed before we can assume that these Centres were established during that time.
Gembrook and Officer in the Shire of Berwick had Centres established in the 1945-1946 year and the Shire of Cranbourne established a third Centre, in the town of Cranbourne. In that year the Centre in the town of Cranbourne saw 19 individual babies treated, plus 8 children over 2 with a total visit of 82 babies and 25 children.
Koo Wee Rup was established in 1946-1947, I don't have an exact date. It is interesting to look at the statistics for that year for Cranbourne and Koo Wee Rup - they both had about the same number of individual babies treated (40 for Cranbourne and 42 for Koo Wee Rup) and yet Cranbourne's total baby attendance was 586 and Koo Wee Rup's was 276 - so Cranbourne mothers had an average of 14 visits per baby compared to Koo Wee Rup's 6 per baby - it's hard to know why - were Cranbourne babies more sickly or did more of the mothers live in the town and not on farms and it was easier to attend or did the Infant Welfare Centre Sister encourage more visits?
(1) Dr Isabella Younger Ross (1887-1956), read her Australian Dictionary of Biography here.
(2) Sister Muriel Peck (1882-1947), read her obituary in The Herald of May 21, 1947, here and a tribute to her in the Gippsland Times of June 5, 1947, here. Sister Peck also visited many country towns on the Better Farming Train and gave valuable advice to many rural mothers. I have written about the Better Farming Train, here. I have also written about her in connection to the Lady Talbot Milk Institute, here. Here obituary form the 1946-1947 report is below.
A version of this post, which I wrote and researched, has appeared on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past.
Friday, August 12, 2022
The Circus comes to Koo Wee Rup - October 1952
The Koo Wee Rup Sun reported that Bullen Bros Circus, came almost direct from 14 weeks in Sydney.
Last week-end Koo Wee Rup and district had the unusual experience of being able to attend two of the largest circuses operating in Australia on consecutive nights. Difficulty was experienced by both shows in finding a suitable location owing to recent rains inundating low-lying land, but with thanks to the Railway Department they were granted permission to show on the Railway Reserve embankment. On Friday night Bullen Bros and Hagen showed on the eastern end of the railway yards and on Saturday night Wirth's opposite the railway station. Both shows were largely attended and greatly enjoyed.