Saturday, January 15, 2022

Court cases between Sarah Hansen and Thomas Stacey of Bunyip.

On December 6, 1889 Thomas Stacey took over the Railway Hotel at Bunyip from  Sarah Hansen, even though she still retained ownership of the property. It was a unhappy relationship as in the next five years they were involved in multiple legal cases with each other.  


The Railway Hotel, Bunyip, c. 1905 - the source of the contention 
between Mrs Hansen and Mr Stacey.

The Railway Hotel was started in the late 1870s by William Hobson who married Sarah (nee McKernon) in March 1879. After William died, Sarah continued to operate the Hotel on her own. She married Christian Hansen in 1885. She sold the business (but not the property) to Thomas Stacey in 1889. He operated the Hotel until his death in January 1928 at the age of 77. Sarah  died in October 1913, aged 73. Sarah had four children to William Dethmore before she married William Hobson. Her daughter Christina Dethmore is involved in two of the cases. I have more details on the hotel and the family here.

Here are some newspaper reports about these legal cases between Sarah Hansen and Thomas Stacey.

From the Warragul Guardian, August 12, 1892 (see here)

Warragul County Court, 
Wednesday, 10th August, 1892
(Before His Honor Judge Worthington)
Libel Action -Damages £3. 

Thomas Stacey, hotelkeeper, Bunyip v. Sarah Hansen, claim for £49 for alleged libel contained in a letter addressed by defendant to Sergeant. Hillard, of Warragul. Mr. James Gray appeared for the complainant, and Mr. D. Wilkie defended. The alleged libel was contained in a letter from the defendant to Sergeant Hillard as follows:-
" Dear Sir--I must call your attention to Stacey's hotel, at Bunyip, last Tuesday week. There were two drunken men in and out the place during Tuesday. The night before last and last night we could not sleep for noise there all night. I hear there is going to be a dance there to-night. There seems to be an open house there day and night. I have got the Church of England minister staying with me, and I think it is time their conduct was seen into, as there are drunken women and men singing all night. I think it would be wise to send some one in plain clothes. By doing so you will oblige, as it is my property, and I must have it seen to."

Mr. Gray submitted that the language was too strong to be privileged. The relations between the parties had been strained for some time. The defendant lived 200 yards from the plaintiff's hotel, and the allegations in the letter were perfectly foundationless. 

Mr. Wilkie pointed out that he had received two summonses (Nos. 93 and 94), and as the former had not been filed, he was at a loss to know on which the complainant was proceeding. He contended the letter was a privileged communication, that it was written without malice, and in the public interest. The point raised by Mr. Wilkie respecting the two summonses was argued at length, and was finally overruled, his honor merely asking down the grounds of Mr. Wilkie's objection - two summonses had been served in the case, No. 93 was served some days previous to No. 94. That at the time No. 94 was served no notice of discontinuance had been given in the action, and that therefore the second summons (No. 94) was invalid, and on that ground he applied to have the summons set aside and struck out.

Robert Hillard, sergeant of police, stationed at Warragul, was then called. Mr. Gray,: Do you produce any document? Mr. Wilkie: I thought that any communication sent to witness was privileged. His Honor allowed the question with the understanding that the witness could consider it privileged if he chose. Witness (continuing): Had had notice to produce a letter. Did not feel he could very well object to produce the letter (letter put in.) On receipt of the letter he sent it to Constable Trainor, of Longwarry. Mrs. Hansen had called at his (witness') office. She said that her daughter had written the letter for her, and that she had not written it, or words to that effect.

Constable Trainor enquired into the complaints contained in the letter. To Mr. Wilkie: It was not the practice for the police to disclose the name of an informer. It would be an improper thing for a constable to show the letter to anyone. It was confidential. Constable Trainor went on the evening of the 3rd July. Anthony Joseph Trainor, stationed at Longwarry, said that on receipt of the letter from Sergeant Hillard he went to Bunyip to make enquiries.

Mr. Wilkie submitted that the witness should not state the result of his enquiries. Mr. Gray: If there was no foundation for the expressions in the letter, and they were proved to be groundless then the expressions were libellous. Mr. Gray (to witness): What was the result of your enquiries? Mr. Wilkie: I object. His Honor upheld the objection. 

Witness (continuing) said: I saw Mrs. Hansen on the 3rd of July. Went the same evening that he received the letter. Mr. Wilkie again objected, contending that the conversation between the defendant and witness had no right to be disclosed, otherwise people would be afraid to complain to the police. His Honor held that the evidence was permissible. Witness said that when he called upon the defendant she said that the contents of the letter were quite true. There had been two drunken men in knocking about on the Sunday in and out of the hotel, and that she saw Stacey pushing them about. He witness) asked who they were. She replied, "Two men in the employ of Stacey. Their conduct was very bad, singing at all hours of the night. There were drunken women too. She heard them singing going home at night in a dray, and thought one of the women was a boarder at the hotel, or she only heard so. The minister complained about the noise during the night; it was time it was put a stop to"

He (witness) said- "why did you not tell me ?" She replied that a stranger would be best, I was too well known. Defendant's husband came in and said he had not noticed any misconduct at the hotel, and asked who had been reporting it? Witness replied "Mrs. Hanson has been reporting it. He replied, "She has no right to complain or write letters, it had nothing to do with her." The defendant had made previous complaints. He (witness) said, " It is strange you are always making complaints about the hotel. I cannot find anyone else in the township that sees anything wrong. You must have some motive in saying so." Defendant replied, " Yes, I have a motive. The place is not half insured; it is my property. They promised to insure for £400 when they took it from me, and have not done so. If is only insured for £200, and they might burn it down any time."

To Mr. Wilkie: Knew the rule in the police force, and that they should not reveal an informants name. He did not reveal the name, and did not show the letter to anyone. Could not say how Mr. Gray got the letter. Never saw it after sending it back to Sergeant Hillard. Told Stacey there was a complaint about his hotel, and who had complained, and what the complaints were. He had no reason to complain about the hotel. Heard Stacey had been fined for Sunday trading. Was not annoyed about the letter himself.  Never told Stacey that the words were actionable. Mrs. Hansen did not say she did not want to make a charge.

Thomas Stacey, the plaintiff, was licensee of a hotel at Bunyip. Had purchased the place from Mrs. Hansen two years ago, and been in the premises ever since. Heard about the letter. There was not one truth in the statements made by Mrs. Hansen. Had been on bad terms from two months after he took possession of the house. On one occasion had put a man out of the hotel. She said that he (witness) had insulted her and summoned him at the Drouin Court, when the case was dismissed with costs.

To Mr. Wilkie: Did not now where Mr. Gray got the letter from. He had bought the hotel. Did not pay any money down. Mrs. Hansen lent him money. Had executed a mortgage to Mrs Hansen and was a tenant of hers in the meantime. Had agreed to rebuild the premises at an outlay of £450. Did not as a rule serve people on a Sunday. Admitted that a woman was dressed in men's clothes at the hotel and singing. To Mr. Gray: From what Constable Trainor had told him he came to see Mr. Gray. There were no drunken women on the place.

David Evans, storekeeper in Bunyip, said he did not hear any noise about the date mentioned. Knew that Mrs. Hansen disapproved of the way the house was conducted, but could not remember what she had said. Harold Nixon, Church of England minister as Bunyip. Remembered living at Mrs. Hansen's at the beginning of July. Never complained to Mrs. Hansen about Stacey's hotel. Did not remember any noise. It was not true that he complained about a noise to Mrs. Hansen. To Mr. Wilkie: Had said on coming down to breakfast one morning " what was that noise in the street last night."

George Farrow, selector, lived five or six chains from the hotel. Never complained about the hotel. Did not take any notice what Mrs. Hansen had said to him. Did not expect to be brought up as a witness. No one spoke to him about this case. Had heard Mrs. Hansen say that Stacey would be out of the place in three months, and that she could not see what kept him there, but she did not say that she would hunt him out. He had said that Mrs. Hansen was worth leaving alone. He did not want to be mixed up in a neighbor's quarrel. Never spoke to Mrs. Hansen about this case.

This concluded the base for the plaintiff. Mr. Wilkie submitted that there was no case. No proof had been adduced that Mrs. Hansen had written the letter containing the alleged libel. He contended that the letter did not contain any allegation of a breach of the Licensing Act, it was a general complaint, and it was hard to see how plaintiffs business or credit could be affected. His own evidence had shown that names of informants should not be disclosed to the public; and it was well known that defendant had an interest in the property and had a right to complain. There was no evidence of malice, or of a vindictive motive, and on the other hand plaintiff had been allowed absurdly easy terms to pay for the property. And a complaint made to an officer of police of alleged misconduct should be treated as privileged. Sergeant Hillard had said that the letter should not have been shown to any one.

At this stage the court adjourned for lunch, on resuming - His Honor: said that there was not a case for a jury, but he held that some of the evidence went to show that defendant desired to get complainant out of the hotel. He would therefore hear the defence.

Mr. Wilkie was at some loss what to answer. According to his view there was actually no evidence of a libel.His Honor thought there was, and he therefore asked for the defence. Mr. Wilkie contended that it His Honor held that malice had been proved, his evidence could not alter that belief.

Christina Detmore, daughter of the defendant, said she wrote the letter. The letter was written on July 1st. The night before she heard noises at the hotel, principally singing. Knew that it came from Stacey's hotel. The Rev. Mr.Nixon said on that morning that he had heard noises in the night. Her mother told her to send a note to Mr. Hilliard about the noise the night before: Wrote the letter about 9.30 on Saturday morning. Her mother did not tell her what to write, nor did she see what was, written or was aware of the contents, as the letter was written hurriedly. Previous to this time she had seen drunken men about the place, and had heard singing at night.

To Mr. Gray:- Wrote a good many of her mother's letters but not all. Was quite positive that she did not tell her mother what was in the letter until afterwards. Hardly remembered the contents of the letter until she saw it in the summons. There were no houses between their's and Stacey's. Never told anyone that they had a few pounds as well as Stacey and would fight him. She wrote the letter without her mother knowing anything about it. To Mr. Wilkie: She told her mother about a portion of the letter.

Sarah Hansen, the defendant, said she remembered the 1st July. Heard a noise that night after 12. It came from Stacey's. Her daughter's evidence was correct. She told her daughter to write to Sergeant Hillard, as she could not rest at night. She did not know what had been written until she got the summons. Had sold the place to Stacey, but could get no satisfaction. She was always insulted. When asked to insure the place he treated her in a most vulgar manner. Had told Constable Trainor that the place was not insured and therefore was in danger. To Mr. Gray: This was not the first libel action she had been concerned in. Her daughter only told her a portion of the letter. Was sent to trial for perjury on one occasion. To Mr Wilkie: The charge of perjury was dismissed.

In closing the case for the defence Mr.Wilkie remarked that he must repeat what he had previously stated - that there was no case - and held that the mother could not be held responsible for what her daughter had written. His Honor had admitted that the communication was a privileged one, therefore the plaintiff must prove a strong case in order to secure a verdict. It had not been shown how the letter had been made public. Sergeant Hillard had stated that it should have been confidential, and Constable Trainor denied showing it to anyone. Mr. Gray contended that if Mrs. Hansen said she did not know what was written in the letter she told a lie, as she must have been aware of the contents. The letter was full of innuendos of a libelous nature. The statements had been made broadcast, and there was no attempt to deny them.

His Honor held that the letter was defamatory, but that it was privileged being addressed to the police. The complainant was a debtor and did not keep his covenants; but the defendant had not gone the right way about. He gave a verdict for £3, costs to be taxed.


Warragul Court House, where Sarah Hansen and Thomas Stacey 
conducted some of their legal battles.
Warragul Court House, Smith St. Photographer: John T. Collins. Photo taken March 8, 1971.
State Library of Victoria Image H98.251/2439


From the Narracan Shire Advocate, November 26, 1892, see here.
    
Slandering a young woman.
Claim for  £250 Damages
She recovers £60.
Action at Warragul.

At the adjourned sitting of the Warragul County Court on Friday, before His Honor Judge Hamilton, a young unmarried woman of ladylike appearance, about 22 years of age, named Christina Dethmore, brought an action to recover, a sum ot £250 from Thomas and Ann Stacey, hotelkeepers at Bunyip, for alleged slander, based on the circulation of the report that the plaintiff had had two children. Mr. Johnston (instructed by Mr. Wilkie) appeared for plaintiff, and Mr. Lyons (of the firm of Lyons and
Turner) defended.

Mr. Johnston, in opening the case said the action was being brought for slander uttered by one of the defendants - Mrs. Stacey, wife of Thomas Stacey, hotelkeeper, Bunyip. The plaintiff, Miss Dethmore, was the daughter of Mrs. Hansen, her step-father being Mr. Hansen, Mrs. Hansen's second husband. The Hansens were also hotelkeepers up to three years ago, when they sold their hotel at the Bunyip to the Staceys - the defendants in the case. Ill-feeling arose subsequently between the Hansens and the Staceys, and Mrs. Stacey had chosen to vent her spite on the daughter - Miss Dethmore - by circulating the baseless slanders which were the subject matter in the case. He did not know what the defence would be - no defence of justification, at any rate, had been filed, and he would therefore ask His Honor to call on defendant's counsel for the defence. Mr. Lyons said the defence was one of not guilty - that the defendants did not utter the slander, and that there was no publication.

Esther Johnson, unmarried woman, engaged in the service of Mr. and Mrs. Stacey in August last, was then called and said: She left their employ after being there a month. The same day as she entered their service Mrs. Stacey said that the plaintiff was the mother of two children. She also said the Hansens were bad people and advised witness not to have anything to do with them. At this time witness knew nothing of the plaintiff or the Hansen family she subsequently repeated the allegations on several occasions. On one of these occasions Mrs. Stacey and witness were standing on the verandah of the hotel when the plaintiff passed and Mrs. Stacey remarked, "You would never think to look at her that she was the mother of three kids" Witness left Mrs. Stacey's employ shortly afterwards.

Cross-examined by Mr. Lyons: Mrs. Stacey had always treated witness well. She had never previously ever heard anything of the Hansens or the plaintiff. Witness did not tell Mr. Stacey at Longwarry  station, that she was dragged into the case and wished she was out of it.

Annie Roberts, married woman, said her husband carried on a bakery business at Bloomfield. She knew Mrs. Stacey and was on one occasion standing on the verandah of the Hotel with her when Miss Dethmore passed. Witness remarked to Mrs. Stacey that Miss Dethmore was rather proud and Mrs. Stacey replied that she had nothing to be proud of and that she had had a child which her mother was keeping.  Cross-examined: Witness was still on friendly terms with Mrs. Stacey. 

Amy Roberts, daughter of the last witness, said she was in Mrs. Stacey's employ within the past 12 months. Mrs. Stacey told witness that Miss Dethmore had had two children and that her mother was keeping them in Melbourne. Annie Cain, married woman, not at present living with her husband, said she was at Mrs. Stacey's hotel on the 10th of June last and stayed there one night. Mrs Stacey asked witness if she knew Mrs. Hansen and witness answered "No" Mrs. Stacey then said that Mrs. Hansen's daughter was the mother of two children and that one of them was in Melbourne and that when Mrs. Hansen went to Melbourne she frequently went to see the child.

Plaintiff was then called and said she was engaged to be married. She first heard of the slanders on or about the 6th of August. Cross-examined by Mr. Lyons: The first witness heard of the slanders was from Mrs. Cain who said "I have heard about all the kids you have had and what you did with them." This was the case for the plaintiff.

Mr. Lyons then opened the defence briefly and called the defendant, Mrs. Stacey, who said that she advised Esther Johnson not to have anything to do with the Hansen family as they were not on friendly terms. She did not say that plaintiff was the mother of two children but that she had heard that she had had a child. Witness did not remember mentioning anything in the matter to Amy Roberts, and did not have the conversation alleged with Mrs. Cain. 

Cross-examined by Mr. Johnston. Witness's husband in July brought an action for slander against Mrs. Hansen and won the case. Mr Johnston: Who was your solicitor in the action? Defendant: Mr. Gray. Mr. Johnston: Just so - that is quite enough to account for you winning the case.

Mr. Lyons then addressed his Honor and agreed that whatever might have been said by Mrs. Stacey to the witnesses who were at that time in her employ, was privileged, and was said as a warning out of regard of their moral welfare. The same might be said in regard to Mrs Roberts, who was spoken to by Mrs. Stacey, as she was the mother of the girl in her employ and was entitled to know it. The whole affair was only tittle tattle among neighbours and consequently was not a case in which heavy damages should be given. There was no evidence whatever against the husband, he had done nothing whatever to circulate the report, and therefore it would be hard, make him liable in any serious degree. The plaintiff had not been in any way ignored in the eyes of her friends or neighbors and having regard to all the circumstances of the case very small damages would suffice to rehabilitate the character of the plaintiff.

Mr. Johnston said he could not find any mitigating circumstance in the conduct of the defence. He ridiculed Mrs. Stacey's professed concern for the moral welfare of the servants in her employ and asked for substantial damages.

His Honor said that in his opinion the slander was a false and foul calumny on the reputation of the plaintiff and that she was entitled to such damages as would show that the court considered she had been grossly wronged. He, however, was not disposed to give exorbitant damages because it might mean ruin to the husband who, although legally responsible for his wife's torts, had done nothing to spread the reports. A verdict would therefore he given for the plaintiff with £60 damages and costs.



Gooddy's of Grattan Street. A bill from Gooddy's was the cause of a legal case between Sarah Hansen and George Stacey (see below)
Green Ginger Wine bottle label, 1873. State Library of Victoria http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/54322


From the Narracan Shire Advocate, May 6 1893, see here.

Peculiar Perjury Case 

A considerable amount of public interest was manifested in a case heard at the Warragul Police Court before Messrs. D. Connor and P. J. Smith, Js.P., on Tuesday, when Sarah Hansen preferred a charge of wilful and corrupt perjury against George Stacey. The proceedings arose out of an action heard at the Warragul County Court in November last, when Mrs. Hansen sought to recover a sum of money from Stacey for certain empty bottles and cases which he was alleged to have neglected to return to L. Gooddy and Co., aerated water manufacturers, Melbourne according to agreement, and with which she was consequently charged, as the order for the stuff was sent through her as the owner of the Railway Hotel Bunyip, of which Stacey was the licensee. The evidence on that occasion was very conflicting, and the judge dismissed the case.

Mrs. Hansen subsequently determined to proceed against Stacey for perjury and on the 20th of April last swore an information in which she alleged that Stacey committed wilful and corrupt perjury by stating that "he never received from the said Sarah Hansen any cases, lemonade, or ginger ale, except 5 or 6 dozen mixed cordials, lemonade and squash." Mr. Gray, at very short notice, appeared for Mrs. Hansen, and Mr. S. Lyons (Melbourne) defended. 

Mr. Gray gave a lucid explanation of the informants case, as set forth in the following evidence, and then called Mrs. Hansen, who said: I am the wife of Christian Hansen, residing at Bunyip. I recollect the 6th December, 1889, on which date Stacey purchased my business and took over my house - the Railway Hotel, Bunyip. He took over the portion that was left of the stock. Some time prior to this -about a fortnight or three weeks - he asked me to get him a supply of lemonade and ginger ale and other cordials. I promised to do so, and did so. The order was complied with and tbe things were delivered at the house two days after he took possession. About 8 or 9 months after this - when he paid me for the things - I asked him if he had sent back the empty bottles and cases to the firm I got them from, and he said "Yes" 

An account of all the goods he received was drawn up and sent to Stacey. I asked him for the receipt of all the empties that had been returned to Gooddy. He said "I have the receipt in the house and will give it to you when I find it" I had at this time paid the account for the lemonade and other drinks to Gooddy and Co - the amount being £3 2s. This was the stuff which was delivered to Stacey, and it was in reference to this account that Stacey said he had returned the empty bottles and cases in which the
stuff was sent. The items contained in the book (produced) were read over to Stacey and were agreed to by him except one or two items. He wanted to take out the item for £3 2s. from among the other items and asked for a separate account for it. I said "I will not have my books interfered with and refused."

He then paid me the whole of his account, including the £3 2s. About 12 months after I told Stacey he had deceived me as he had not returned the empty bottles and cases to Gooddy and Co. I told him I had received a notice from the firm in the matter and he told me I could go and do the best I could. I was compelled to pay for the empties myself, prior to which I had received a County Court summons from Gooddy and Co., and on telling Stacey this he said, "Hook it and do the best you can" I then paid the amount claimed by Gooddy, and costs. Subsequent to this I made a demand for the amount from Stacey, and he refused to pay. 

I then sued him in the Warragul County Court. I gave evidence when the case was heard at the County Court, and Stacey gave evidence too. He said that he had never had the empty bottles and cases referred to. He said he had had nothing but 5 or 6 dozen of mixed cordials and squash, and that he had never received the bottles and cases she sued him for. 

After some corroborative evidence had been given, Mr. Lyons called the defendant, who said: I am a publican at Bunyip, and was defendant in the case, Hansen v. Stacey, on the 17th of November. I remember Mrs. Hansen's bill being shown to me. I never swore I had never received any goods from Gooddy through Mrs. Hansen. I did not say I had never received 22 dozen of aerated waters from Mrs. Hansen. I said I had got some stuff through Mrs. Hansen from Gooddy, but that I could not remember the quantity. I then produced the bill, and showed where I had paid for the stuff. The contents of the bill of the staff received by me from Gooddy was not read over to me. I cannot read. When I said I only received 4 or 5 dozen of stuff I referred to the aerated water I had taken over from Mrs. Hansen when taking possession. Gooddy's stuff came in afterwards. When I paid the account to Mrs. Hansen I understood I had paid Gooddy's bill, as that was one of the items in Mrs. Hansen's account.

Cross-examined by Mr. Gray: When settling up with Mrs. Hansen the items were read over to me by Mrs. Shields. After I took possession of the hotel I received some stuff from Gooddy, but could not say the quantity. It was a good lot, and I thought I had paid for it in the bill I settled with Mrs. Hansen. I don't remember Mrs. Hansen coming to me in reference to the demand for the return of the empties. I returned the empties to Gooddy. I never told Mrs. Hansen that I would produce a receipt for the empties. I did not send the empties back myself. I told my man to do so, but I don't remember whether he did so.

At this stage the Bench intimated that they intended to dismiss the case. The charge was a very serious one, and they did not consider that there was sufficient corroboration to justify them in arriving at the conclusion that a prima facie case had been made out.



The Supreme Court in Melbourne, where Thomas Stacey took action 
against Sarah Hansen in December 1894.
Law courts, Melbourne, c. 1888-1890. Stata Library of Victoria Image H7942


From The Argus, December 11 1894, see here

Action under a Mortgage.
Exercise of power of sale

In the Supreme Court yesterday, Mr. Justice A'Beckett decided on action brought by Thomas Stacey against Sarah Hansen, to restrain the defendant from exercising the power of sale contained in a mortgage deed. Mr Mitchell, instructed by Messrs Lyons and Turner, appeared for the plaintiff, and Mr Bryant, instructed by Mr J. E. Dixon, for the defendant. 

The plaintiff by his statement of claim stated that in October, 1889, he possessed certain property in the parish of Bunyip, county of Mornington, and in Collingwood, and mortgaged it to the defendant to secure the repayment of £725 and interest. He covenanted in the mortgage deed to insure against fire in the name of the mortgagee, but no amount was specified. There was no express covenant for repairs. It was provided that the plaintiff should be entitled to continue the security for a further term of five years upon giving certain notices. The plaintiff did insure against fire in the name of the mortgagee, and kept the buildings and improvements in repair, and made no default in payment of principal or interest.

In February, 1894, he gave notice to the defendant of his desire to continue the security for the further term of five years, but the defendant refused to do so, on the ground that there had been breaches of covenants to insure and repair, and she notified that unless the principal and interest were paid within a month she would at once proceed to exercise her power of sale. The plaintiff asked for an injunction to restrain the sale, and a declaration that he had not disentitled himself to the extension of  the mortgage. The defence was that by a memorandum of agreement contemporaneous with the mortgage the plaintiff agreed to rebuild a certain hotel which had been burnt down, and to insure the new building for £450, and also the buildings on the other land for their full insurable value. The plaintiff, it was alleged, failed to effect the insurance for £450, or to keep the buildings in proper repair, and was disentitled from obtaining a renewal of the mortgage.

Mr Justice A'Beckett held that there had been no breach of the covenant to repair, but that there had been a breach of the covenant to insure to the full insurable value. The agreement to insure the hotel for £450, however could not be construed as a covenant under the mortgage, and the plaintiff was never properly called upon to perform the covenant to insure contained in the mortgage. Then the defendant had failed in the notice which she gave of her intention to exercise the power of sale, to state which covenant was said to have been broken, and the question arose whether this was rendered the notice bad. His Honour considered that it did. 

Where the covenants were numerous it was quite possible for the mortgagor unconsciously to overlook one of them, and it seemed a reasonable interpretation to put upon the act that where a mortgagee was about to take such an extreme measure as to sell for the non-observance of a covenant, and where the mortgagor might avoid the consequences of that breach by remedying it within a month, the mortgagee was bound to state precisely the covenant which he alleged to have been broken. Judgment would therefore be entered for the plaintiff, with costs.

Friday, January 14, 2022

Bunyip Hotels - a short history

In 1847 a  road was surveyed from Dandenong to Gippsland  along the edge of the ranges (1). When this proved to be impassable in places, a new road, which became the coach route, was surveyed between 1857 and  1859 by A. S. Campbell, even though planning had commenced in 1855 (2).  This road went through Cannibal Creek (around where Bassed road is in North Garfield) and through the old township of Buneep and onto Crossover (3). Jabez Janes operated a 'beer house' from 1866 at Cannibal Creek, you can read about him here. The Melbourne to Sale telegraph line followed this new road in 1865 (4). This later gave the road the name of Old Telegraph Road  and where it crossed the Bunyip River was where the aforementioned town of Buneep was established (where modern day Ellis Road would cross the Bunyip River). This town was surveyed in the 1850s - it had a High Street and a Barkly Street (you can see the Survey Plan, below)


This is the township of Buneep, surveyed in the 1850s. Click on image to enlarge.
This is from a Bunyip Parish Plan, which was on-line at either the State Library of Victoria or the Public Records Office of Victoria in 2015, but I can't find seem to access it now.



This is a map I drew years ago, which shows the old Coach Road /Old Telegraph Road 
and Old Sale road.


The book, In the Wake of the Pack Tracks says that  in 1857 David Connor (1821-1887) selected  a site for an Inn at the Bunyeep township and it was built in the early 1860s, and this was called the Buneep Inn (later the Old Bunyeep Inn).  In 1869, John Rhoden became the proprietor,  he was a son-in-law of  David Connor (5)  It was actually built much earlier than this, he was granted a licence in September 1854, see notice from The Argus, below.


Licence granted to David Connor

This earlier date for the establishment of  David Connor's Inn is also confirmed from a 1855 report of the road that A.N. Campbell was planning to survey. The Argus reported in the November that the contemplated road adopts the present Gipps Land Road, via Dandenong, as far as Mount Ararat, thence it would bear E.N.E., along undulating ridges, avoiding most of the swampy land towards the Bunyip River, and leaving Cannibal Hill on the south. Crossing the Bunyip River at Connor's Inn....(6) 

I do not know when the Bunyeep Inn was closed, I believe around the mid 1880s (7) and the  history is obscured by the fact that the New Bunyip Inn (see below) was later also called the Old Bunyip Inn. 



This advertisement from The Argus, October 1865 advises that you could catch a mail coach at 5.00pm Monday to Saturday and have a 36 hour trip all the way to Sale, stopping at Bunyip (the old township of Bunyeep). That would have been a fairly rugged 36 hours!
The Argus October 20, 1865 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article5773079


Bunnyip Hotel, North Gippsland, c. 1880-1885 [David Connor's New Bunyip Inn]
Photographer: Fred Kruger. State Library of Victoria Image H41138/11

Around 1867,  David Connor’s New Bunyip Inn, was established. It is pictured above. This was built on the Bunyip River on the Gippsland Road, as the Princes Highway was then called. It was on the south side of the Highway,  just east of A'Beckett Road and the west side of the Bunyip River. (8) At this time, the coach route, instead of crossing the Cannibal Creek in a north-easterly direction, followed the south bank in an easterly direction to reach this new hotel (9). This road eventually became known as the Old Sale Road.  



The red circle, shows the location of the New Bunyip Inn, on the Gippsland Road, 
and the small settlement that surrounded it. Click on image to enlarge.
This is from a Bunyip Parish Plan, which was on-line at either the State Library of Victoria or the Public Records Office of Victoria in 2015, but I can't find seem to access it now.

A small settlement developed around the Inn, including the establishment of a bakery by William Snell in 1878 and a dance hall erected by Mr Hyne, opposite the Inn. (10)  Around 1885 (11)  David Devenay took over this Hotel. His surname is also spelt in various sources as Devanny, Deveney  or Deveny and some sources also say that he is the son-in-law of David Connor, but that is incorrect (12). There was a double tragedy at the New Bunyip Hotel in 1909 when David and his wife, Eleanor (also known as Ellen) died. Eleanor, aged 59, was tragically burnt to death when her dress caught fire and she passed away two days later on November 22. David, her invalid husband, aged 80, died of shock as  a result on November 24 (13)

In 1911,the property was sold to Fred William Cock of Broadmeadows (14). The Hotel  was the subject of a hearing by the Licensing Reduction Board in 1917.  The Hearing of the  Board which took place in May 1917, and was reported on in the Dandenong Advertiser,  gives us some idea of the building and clientele of the Hotel. It was  single story weatherboard 17 rooms, 8 bed rooms for public in fair repair, well conducted...was on the Gippsland road, which was a three chain road and was used for travelling stock; it was a house of resort for sportsmen, the Bunyip and Tarrago rivers were close to the hotel; Ararat creek was the next nearest water on the east, and 5 miles on the west; there were 30 acres of land attached; at week ends there were up to 14 people staying at the hotel, and more during the holidays. Evidence from drover Robert O'Doherty of  Flemington, said he  stopped at the Gippsland now for 20 years; the Gippsland Hotel was one of the best places for stopping; he had had 3,000 sheep there (15) Sadly for the New Bunyip Hotel, it was closed by the Licensing Court and the then owner, Mrs Rebecca Wilson, was awarded £375 in compensation (16).

The closure of the New Bunyip Hotel was announced in June 1917.
Dandenong Advertiser, June 14 1917 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article88660050

As well as being involved in the Old and New Bunyip Hotels, David Connor also built in 1863 the Halfway House Hotel. It was on the Gippsland Road, west of  Abrehart Road. It was de-licensed in 1899 (17). The building was much later moved to the Gippsland Folk Museum. 

Labelled as Bunyip Hotel, Bunyip c. 1890 - but is this actually in Bunyip?

This photograph is the Bunyip Hotel, George Stevens, Licensed Victualler. It's location is labelled on the Museums Victoria website as Bunyip, but this is incorrect. It's obviously not the New Bunyip Inn, as the building in the top photo has a sign which says, New Bunyip Hotel, and this is clearly a different building. It is not a forerunner of the Railway Hotel and Gippsland Hotel in the township of Bunyip, as the landscape is wrong and I feel it is unlikely to be the original Bunyip Inn as, I can't see that there would have been enough traffic to sustain such a large building. I am suggesting that it could be the Bunyip Hotel in Cavendish - it's been around since at least the 1860s and modern day photos, show that the 1930s existing building is on a corner like this on  flat ground. 



Overview of the Bunyip townships, they moved south each time. 
Click on image to enlarge.
This is from a Bunyip Parish Plan, which was on-line at either the State Library of Victoria or the Public Records Office of Victoria in 2015, but I can't find seem to access it now.

The township of Bunyip moved again after the establishment of the Gippsland Railway Line. The line was completed from Oakleigh to Bunyip in October 1877. This saw the establishment of two other Bunyip Hotels in 1876 as firstly the line from Morwell to Bunyip wasn't completed until March 1878, so travellers had to stop over at Bunyip and continue by coach, secondly the hotels serviced the locals and the workers on the railway line. The book Call of the Bunyip: history of Bunyip, Iona and Tonimbuk says that the Hotels were the Butcher's Arms and the Bunyip Hotel and that John O'Brien had the licence for the Bunyip Hotel and in January 1877 he took up the licence for the Railway Family Hotel (18). 

I found the following references on Trove, from the 1870s, to the Hotels in the new town of Bunyip, based around the railway line -  In October 1877 at the Shire of Berwick Council meeting - the application for transfer of publican's license was read from John O'Brien for a house at Bunyip (19)I do not know where it was either transferred from or to. In January 1878 the Bewick Licensing Court renewed licences for Maurice Connor, new Bunyip Hotel, David Connor jun., Bunyip and William Goldie, Bunyip (20). Maurice and David were the sons of David Connor. We know where the New Bunyip Hotel is I don't know anything about the other two Hotels, but I presume David Connor jun. had the Old Bunyip Hotel. It's possible that William Goldie should actually be William Hobson of the Railway Hotel, more of whom later. In July 1878, there was a well reported meeting at O'Brien's Family Hotel in Bunyip (21).


Licences renewed for local Hotels 
South Bourke & Mornington Journal January 7, 1878 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/70010579

In March 1879, three Melbourne newspapers carried the marriage notice of William Hobson of the Bunyip Railway Hotel  to Sarah McKernan. The marriage certificate lists his age at 47 and her age at 29. He was a widower, born in Manchester in England, with no children and his address was Bunyip. She was a Spinster, born in Newton Stewart, County Tyrone Ireland and living at 26 Moray Place, Emerald Hill (South Melbourne).  What was recorded in the marriage certificate wasn't actually all totally true as I believe Sarah was actually 39 and had been in a previous relationship with a William Dethmore of Yandoit and had given birth to four children, three sons and a daughter, however that is a story for another day (22).


Marriage notice of William Hobson and Sarah McKernon


William and Sarah Hansen operated the Railway Hotel, until William's death on September 30, 1883 at the age of 56.  When he died his Will described the Hotel as a weatherboard building with Iron roof and containing 5 rooms erected on Crown Lands at Bunyip, occupied under a business lease, erected four years ago and used as a public house with the remains of an older building in the rear. It was valued at £60 (23).


Part of William Hobson's Will
Public Records Office of Victoria VPRS 28/P0002, 26/949

 In 1885, Sarah married Christian Hansen and they had a son Frederick Christian, the same year (24). Sarah continued to operate the Hotel. Sadly September 6, 1889 the Hotel burnt down and it was reported in the Warragul GuardianA fire which resulted in the total destruction of Mrs. Hansen's hotel, Bunyip, occurred about three o'clock on Friday morning. The flames had obtained such a hold before the alarm was given that very little was saved, both water and assistance being limited. The damage is covered by a policy in the Colonial Fire Insurance Company for £1,200 (25).


The Railway Hotel at Bunyip, c. 1915

On December 6, 1889 Thomas Stacey took over the Railway Hotel from Mrs Hansen, even though she still owned the property, and it appeared to be his responsibility to rebuild the Hotel (26). This proved to be an unhappy relationship. Mr Stacey took Mrs Hansen to Court in August 1892 as he claimed she liabelled him; Mrs Hansen took Mr Stacy to Court in November 1892 to recover money from him, she claimed she was owed; in May 1893 they were back in Court again when she accused him of perjury; and in December 1894 they were in the Supreme Court where a decision had to be made  on an action brought by Thomas Stacey against Sarah Hansen, to restrain the defendant from exercising the power of sale contained in a mortgage deed. (27).  I have transcribed some of these legal cases, here. There was another case involving the families in November 1892 when Mrs Hansen's daughter, Christina Dethmore, sued Thomas Stacey's wife, Ann for slander. Mrs Stacey had implied that 20 year old Christina, a woman of ladylike apparence, had had children out of wedlock, which of course was considered to be quite scandalous at the time. Christina won her case and was awarded £60 in damages (28). Christina married her finance, William Shiell in December 1892,  had two little girls Gladys and Ruby, and then tragically died at only 25 years of age in November 1897 after an operation at the Alfred Hospital (29).


The Railway Hotel, c. 1925

Thomas Stacey operated the Railway Hotel until his death on January 26, 1928. The book Call of the Bunyip: history of Bunyip, Iona and Tonimbuk says the Hotel was destroyed by fire in 1924 (30) but an article in The Argus (see below) says that it was demolished in late 1923 - so not sure which is correct. the new building was officially opened on October 9 1924. 

Railway Hotel is being pulled down


The opening of the new Railway Hotel


The other Hotel in Main Street, Bunyip was John O'Brien's Family Hotel. As we saw before, the earliest reference I can find to him in Bunyip was October 1877. O'Brien's tenure at the Family Hotel didn't last very long as it was sold up by the Sherriff''s Office in May 1881, as the advertisement in The Argus, below, attests.


Sale of O'Brien's Family Hotel in Bunyip

John O'Brien was listed as a Publican in the 1881/1882 Shire of Berwick Rate Books; in 1882/1883 Lawrence Finch was listed as a Publican, on property owned by James Egan; and in 1883/1884 Lawrence Finch was listed as a Publican and the property owner. Lawrence Finch had the Gippsland Hotel, so I believe this was the renamed Family Hotel.  Lawrence was granted a licence at the Licensing meeting held at Drouin in December 1881. His daughter, Sarah Alice Finch, was then granted the licence of the Gippsland Hotel at a hearing in December 1897 (31).  Lawrence died on January  8, 1898, aged 68. That same year Sarah Finch married  William George Kraft and the Hotel soon became known a Kraft's Gippsland Hotel (32).


Gippsland Hotel and Main Street, Bunyip, 1908
Image: Call of the Bunyip: history of Bunyip, Iona and Tonimbuk by Denise Nest (Bunyip History Committee, 1990)

It was Sarah who held the licence all the way through until November 1911 when the Hotel was sold to Stephen Ryan of Modella for  £3750 and the license was transferred to Elizabeth Mary Ryan (33).


Transfer of licence of the Gippsland Hotel from Sarah Kraft to Elizabeth Ryan

On Wednesday, March 9 1927. the Gippsland Hotel was destroyed by fire. The owner at the time was Sydney Wentworth Smith of Noojee and the manager as Mr E. Tulloch (34). In April 1927 the Licensing Court approved plans for the new Hotel. The Architect was Mr. R.H. McIntyre, who said that the new building would cost between £5,000 and £6,000. It would be constructed of brick externally, and of cement sheeting internally. A septic tank would be provided (35). I don't have the opening date of the new Gippsland Hotel but I presume it was late 1927 or early 1928.

Gippsland Hotel destroyed by fire


We will finish this short history of Bunyip Hotels by going back to the Butchers Arms Hotel, said to be one of the two Hotels in the township of Bunyip, based around the railway line. Was this the original name for the Family Hotel, which became the Gippsland Hotel or was it the original name for the Railway Hotel? I cannot tell you and I cannot find any information about it al all.

Trove list - I have created a list of articles connected to the early history of the Hotels in Bunyip, access it here.

Footnotes
(1) From Bullock Tracks to Bitumen:  a brief history of the Shire of Berwick (Historical Society of Berwick, 1962) p. 18. Daley, Charles The Story of Gippsland (Whitcombe & Tombs, 1960), p. 74.
(2) Daley, Charles The Story of Gippsland (Whitcombe & Tombs, 1960), p. 79, and The Argus, November 14, 1855, see here.  
(3) From Bullock Tracks to Bitumen, op. cit., p. 19
(4) Ibid
(5) In the Wake of the Pack Tracks:  a history of the Shire of Berwick (Berwick Pakenham Historical Society, 1982), p. 39. David Conner's family is listed in Early Settlers of the Casey Cardinia  District (Narre Warren & District Family History Group, 2010) - David Connor (1821-1887) m Honora Connor (1810-1899) in 1841 in Melbourne and they had the following children - John (1842), David (1843), William (1845), Ellen (1846), Maurice (1849), Catherine (1851), James (1859) and Francis (1864). It was Catherine who was married to John Rhoden.
(6) The Argus, November 14, 1855, see here.
(7) I am basing this date on the fact that in the 1884/1885 Shire of Berwick rate Books, David Connor, junior, was no longer listed as a Publican.
(8) From Bullock Tracks to Bitumen, op. cit., p. 54
(9) From Bullock Tracks to Bitumen, op. cit., p. 19
(10) From Bullock Tracks to Bitumen, op. cit., p. 54
(11) David Devenay is first listed as a Publican in the Shire of Berwick Reate Books in 1885.
(12) From Bullock Tracks to Bitumen on page 54, says he is a son-in-law. However, David Devenay (1829-1909)  was married to Eleanor (also known as Ellen) Fitzpatrick.
(13) The Age, November 23, 1909, see here and The Age, November 26, 1909, see here.
(14) The Argus, April 29, 1911, see here.
(15) Dandenong Advertiser, May 10 1917, see here.
(16) The Argus, November 10, 1917, see here.
(17) In the Wake of the Pack Tracks, op. cit.,p. 39.
(18) The Call of the Bunyip: history of Bunyip, Iona & Tonimbuk, 1847-1990 by Denise Nest (Bunyip History Committee, 1990), p. 4.
(19) South Bourke & Mornington Journal, October 24, 1877, see here.
(20) South Bourke & Mornington Journal January 2, 1878, see here.
(21) The Age, July 10, 1878, see here.
(22) I bought the marriage certificate. It clearly says she was 29, thus born 1850, however the Call of the Bunyip book says she was born in 1840, which meant she was 39 when she was married. Her obituary in the Bunyip & Garfield Express of October 14, 1913 says she was 73, thus born 1840.  I can't find her death  listed on the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages.  Family trees on Ancestry list Sarah McKernon having four children to William Dethmore - William James (1866-1867 at Yandoit); William James (1868-1937); Christina Annie (1872-1897); Alfred James (1874-1933). I can't find any record of  a marriage being registered, so I suspect no marriage ever took place. The first William had his birth and death registered - his surname being recorded as Dettmer (Reg. no 24985 / 1866); then Dethmer (Reg. no 11053 / 1867). The second William is registered, under Dethmore (Reg. no 24830 / 1868) I can't find the other two births registered under any surname variation.
(23) His will is on-line at the Public Records Office of Victoria, www.prov.vic.gov.au 
(24) Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages.
(25) Warragul Guardian September 10, 1889, see here.
(26) Narracan Shire Advocate, May 6, 1893, see here. The Argus, December 11 1894, see here.
(27) Reports are listed in my Trove list, see here.
(28) Narracan Shire Advocate, November 26, 1892, see here
(29) Various family notices in the newspapers, see my Trove List and Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages
(30) The Call of the Bunyip, op. cit, p. 198.
(31) Warragul Guardian December 22, 1881, see here and South Bourke & Mornington Journal December 15, 1897, see here.
(32) Death notice of Lawrence Finch, Indexes to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages. First mention I could find of Kraft's Gippsland Hotel was in The Age February 17, 1900, see here.
(33) The Age November 15, 1911, see hereThe Age, November 20 1911, see here
(34) The Herald March 9 1927, see here
(35) The Argus, April 12, 1927, see here.


A version of this post, which I wrote and researched, appears on my work bog, Casey Cardinia Links to Our Past. This is  a revised and expanded version.

Sunday, January 9, 2022

Bills' Troughs in the local area

We have a Bills' Trough at the Historical Society Museum, here at Koo Wee Rup, and you will probably have seen others on your travels throughout Australia. They were funded from a bequest from the will of George Bills, who died on December 14, 1927. His will left various bequests to friends and employees but the bulk of his Estate was to be made available by his Executors to Societies for the protection of animals, such as the Victorian Society for the Protection of Animals (as the RSPCA was then called) and the Purple Cross Society; and for the construction of horse troughs for the relief of horses or other ‘dumb animals’. These troughs were to be inscribed with the names of George and his wife Annis. 

The Purple Cross Society had been established in England in 1914 to mitigate the sufferings of horses in war (1). A branch was established in Victoria in 1915 (2) and after the War finished it was decided that the principal aims of the Purple Cross Society should be the establishment of a rest home for horses, and the erection of drinking troughs (3). By November 1926 they had erected 33 troughs throughout  Victoria (4), such as the one shown below.


A trough erected by the Purple Cross Services of Victoria, in St Kilda Road, near Domain Road. It was unveiled in 1926 by Sir John Monash (5).  The small plaque reads 
He gains no crosses as a soldier may, 
No medals for the many risks he runs;
He only, in his patient, puzzled way
Sticks to his guns! 
Photographer: John T. Collins, taken September 29, 1974. 
State Library of Victoria Image H98.251/939

Who were George and Annis Bills? An article by Tim Gibson, Donated by Annis and George Bills - Australia: their concrete horse trough legacy published in the Gippsland Heritage Journal (see full citation at the bottom of this post) tells us that George was one of fourteen children and was born in Brighton in England on March 11, 1859. The family emigrated to New Zealand in 1869 and moved to Victoria in 1873. In 1880 George, and his brother Henry, commenced a wire working business in Sydney. Other brothers, Richard and Walter, later joined the business. Walter had invented a wire coiler and this led the Company into the manufacture of wire mattresses. The business became known as Bills Brothers. Various of the brothers operated factories in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane at one time. George married Annis Elizabeth Swann (b.1860) on May 18, 1885 at the Brisbane Registry Office. In 1910 the couple went on a trip to England where Annis died. They had no children.

George and his brother Henry had been supporters of the Victorian Society for the Protection of Animals and this devotion to the cause of animal welfare was continued, as we know, after George’s death through his will. His Estate was administered by his sister, Daisy and her husband, William Crook. In those days the contents of Wills were reported in the newspapers and Mr Bills' will was clearly unusual as The Age reported on his will under the headline - A Freakish Will; whereas as The Argus started their report with Some unusual provisions are contained in the Will (6).  

Tim Gibson, in his article cited above, says that the first troughs were individually designed and constructed. The two earliest newspaper mentions of troughs connected to Mr Bills I could find concerned troughs in Williamstown and in Hawthorn.  The Williamstown Chronicle reported on a Williamstown Council meeting in December 1928 - At the meeting of the council, a letter was received from the Purple Cross Society of Victoria, stating that the society had agreed to supply a water trough for erection on the Strand, near the ferry. The trough would be in concrete, with a large basin for horses, a special drinking basin for dogs, and a bubbly fountain for drivers.....It was requested that when the trough was built that the words, "Annise [sic] and Geo. Bills, Australia," be placed on the structure. (7).  

A month later, The Herald reported in January 1929 that - A handsome granite trough with a dog dish and drinking fountain will be erected in Barton street, Hawthorn, as a tribute to the memory of Mr Bills (8).


A trough to honour Mr Bills.

In the early 1930s Jack Phillips became the contractor and had a standard design of pre-cast concrete, which were manufactured in Auburn Road in Hawthorn. Rocla then took over the manufacture of the troughs around 1937. Also in 1937 the last trough was supplied to a Victorian location and erected in Buckley Street in Essendon. After that, the distribution of the troughs moved to New South Wales and finished at the end of the Second World War. All up, around 700 troughs were donated to towns in Australia, around 400 of those in Victoria and fifty overseas.



Report in The Argus on the last Bills trough erected in Victoria
The Argus November 27, 1937  http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article11127791

Where can you find the Bills' troughs? In this area, the only ones I know of are at Koo Wee Rup, Tooradin, Pakenham and Bunyip. The one at Koo Wee Rup is at the Historical Society in Rossiter road. This one was originally installed outside the Royal Hotel in January 1933. The Koo Wee Rup Sun of February 2, 1933 reported -
The new water trough opposite the Royal Hotel, is an elaborate as well as a much-needed acquisition. Artistically moulded in concrete, of large dimensions, and mounted on a concrete base put down by the council, it has attached to it, hygienic drinking facilities for mankind, whilst at one end of the base there is a small catchment trough for the use of thirsty dogs. The trough bears the inscription:-“Donated by Annis and George Bills, Australia.” Similar troughs have been erected in Pakenham, Narre Warren, Garfield and Bunyip, besides of course, many other places throughout the State


This article  from the  Koo Wee Rup Sun of February 2, 1933, tells us that the Koo Wee Rup trough was originally erected near the Royal Hotel in Station Street. 
Koo Wee Rup Sun, February 2, 1933  Image: Heather Arnold

You can see both the horse trough and the dog trough at Tooradin, outside the Fisherman’s Cottage Museum on the Foreshore. The two troughs can also be seen in Bunyip in High Street. The Berwick-Pakenham Historical Society has a trough on display at their Museum in Pakenham. The Bunyip and Pakenham troughs were originally installed around late 1932, early 1933.


The Koo Wee Rup Bills' trough, originally installed in January 1933 outside the Royal Hotel. It is now at the Koo Wee Rup Swamp Historical Society. In the background is the Lock-up built in the 1920s, which was originally located at the Police Station in Sybella Avenue and moved to the Historical Society in 1993.
Image: Heather Arnold, taken in 2010.


The trough at the Berwick Pakenham Historical Society Museum in Pakenham.
Image: Heather Arnold, taken in 2020.



A close-up of the inscription on the trough at the Berwick Pakenham Historical Society
Image: Heather Arnold, taken in 2020.


The trough that was erected in Bunyip is still in Bunyip, and the little dog trough also remains. I do  not know where it was originally located, but I would presume in Main Street, where the two Hotels are.


The trough in Bunyip, in High Street. 
The terracotta roof in the background belongs to the Post Office, which was opened on December 8, 1925.
Image: Heather Arnold, taken in 2010.

Where has the Garfield trough gone? I believe the Garfield one was outside the Iona Hotel in Main Street, but I have no information about its fate.  There is also a trough on display at the Fishermans Cottage Museum, on the foreshore at Tooradin. The Museum is operated by the Cranbourne Shire Historical Society. The Tooradin trough was apparently outside the Store and Post Office along the South Gippsland highway.


The trough at the Fishermans Cottage Museum, Tooradin.
Image: Heather Arnold, taken in 2010.

The Bills' troughs are a lovely reminder of a by-gone day, when horses ruled the road and also a practical memorial to George & Annis Bills' community spirit and love of animals.

Acknowledgment
The article I referred to, and based much of this post on, is Donated by Annis & George Bills - Australia: their concrete horse trough legacy by Tim Gibson. Published in Gippsland Heritage Journal No.20, September 1996.

Trove list
I have created a short list of articles, on Trove, connected to Bills' Troughs in the old Shire of Berwick and Shire of Cranbourne region, access it here.

Footnotes
(1) The Herald, February 9, 1915, see here.
(2) Ibid.
(3) The Argus, November 12, 1926, see here.
(4) Ibid.
(5) The report of the unveiling of this trough by Sir John Monash, is in The Age, May 11 1926, see here; there is another reference to it in The Herald, May 6, 1931, here.
(6) The Age report of March 15, 1928, can be read here; The Argus report of the same date, here.
(7) Williamstown Chronicle, December 8 1928, see here.
(8) The Herald, January 19, 1929, see here.  

A version of this blog post, which I wrote and researched, also appears on my work blog - Casey Cardinia Links to Our Past and had appeared first in the Koo Wee Rup Township newsletter, The Blackfish. It has also appeared in the Garfield Spectator.

Saturday, January 8, 2022

Royal Commission into Overseas Settlers from Britain (Migrant Land Settlement) 1931 and the Owen family

The Age newspaper, of January 24, 1931 reported on the Royal Commission on Migrant Land Settlement [read the full article here] -
The Royal Commission appointed some time, ago by the Federal and State Governments to inquire into certain allegations affecting the settlement on the land in Victoria of migrants from Great Britain will open the inquiry at 10.30 a.m. on Wednesday 4th February, at the Arbitration Court, Melbourne. The members of the commission are Chief Judge Dethridge, of the Arbitration Court (chairman), Mr. C. McPherson, and Mr. W. E. B. Macleod. The secretary of the commission is Mr. C. Nance, an officer of the Prime Minister's department.The State Government will be represented by Mr. C. F. Knight, assistant Crown Solicitor for Victoria, and a large percentage of the settlers will be represented by Mr. G.U. Nathan, of John W. McComas and Co.
The terms of reference to the commission briefly are as follow:—
1. Whether the complaints, or any of them, are justified, having regard to the facts of each particular case and to the provisions of certain agreements between the Commonwealth, Victorian and British Governments.
2. Whether the Victorian Government has failed to fulfil any, and if, so what, obligations arising out of or under the agreements, and by it agreed to be performed.
3. In what respects, if at all, has the Victorian Government failed to fulfil the said obligations.
4. Are there any, and if so what, circumstances directly or indirectly contributing to the subject matter of the complaints, or any of them, over which the Victorian Government has no control.

As a matter of interest and quite unrelated to this story, apart from a rural connection, Chief Judge George James Dethridge was the younger brother of  John Stewart Dethridge who worked for the Public Works Department and later the State Rivers and Water Supply Commission and was the inventor of the Dethridge Water-meter, used in flood irrigation (1).

This Royal Commission took evidence from some local farmers at Caldermeade and Yannathan as well as Narre Warren North and the Hallam Valley settlement at Narre Warren (the old Cheese Factory in Homestead Road in Berwick is in part of this same estate) and all throughout Victoria and some of this was reported in the papers. The settlers' evidence is typical of all the evidence presented - the land was too dear, unsuitable for the purpose, there was inadequate training and supervision etc. Some reports mention Elcho, which was the Government training farm for migrants near Geelong. 

Evidence from George Owen, Yannathan.
Before coming to Australia, I was a saddler and leather worker, earning £5/10/ a week. Early in 1925 I saw an advertisement of the Victorian Government offering land for farming. This attracted my attention I thought that it would be a good thing to come out to Australia on the terms shown for the sake of my children. At Australia House I was told that I could get a good mixed dairy farm at £10 an acre of a capital value of £1,500. Before I came to Australia I could plough and milk. I went to Elcho for a few weeks and then took up the block, at Yannathan. The area of the block was 66 acres and the price was £33 an acre, without improvements. I was told that I could make a living on the block. The land is unsuitable for cultivation because of the drainage. The debt should be wiped off and the valuation reduced. That is the only solution. I have, since going on to the block received an increased acreage of 27 acres at £27/10/an acre. That shows that the board has admitted that the land should be revalued. (The Argus, May 8, 1931, see here)

Evidence from Charles James Dixon, Caldermeade.
Before coming to Australia, I was employed in a steelworks, receiving £3/ 10/ a week. I saw various posters and advertisements, advertising Australia and I went to Australia House. I had a pension as an Imperial Soldier. At Wembley I heard a lecturer dealing with land settlement in Victoria. He touched on the patriotic side. He said - We helped you during the war. "Now you come and fill our empty spaces" (laughter) The second picture that was shown was of the glorious Sydney Harbour (laughter) I learned to milk at Elcho. My block has an area of 68 acres and the price was £42 an acre. I took possession on December 9, 1925. I had never touched a plough before I went on to the block. I have lost crops through bad drainage. My arrears to the board are about £2,000. I suggest that I should have more land and more stock and that the price of the land should be reduced. My father visited me in 1928. He intended going into partnership with me but when he saw the land he booked his passage back to England. (The Argus, May 8, 1931, see here)

Evidence from George Arthur Green, Caldermeade.
Before I came to Australia I was engaged in farming operations. I was earning £ 2/10/ a week had house rent free and commission on buying and selling cattle I questioned Mr Wyatt, who was migration officer at Australia House, and decided to come to Australia. My block is 40 acres in area and the price was £50 an acre. After I got on to the block I discovered that it had been abandoned by the previous occupier. I could see that the land had been ploughed and then left. My block has not been revalued. (The Argus, May 8, 1931, see here)

Evidence from Henry James F. Jones, Koo Wee Rup (later at Fish Creek)
Henry James F. Jones, farmer, of Fish Creek, stated in 1913 he left England, where he was earning £5 12/6 as a painter. Mr Wyatt told him land suitable for dairying could be obtained at from £5 to £10 an acre. He and his wife had £850 between them upon landing in Australia. After being at Elcho farm he was shown land at Kooweerup valued at £1966, portion of which was swamp abandoned by a former settler. The board's solicitor stated the board admitted the land was unsuitable for settlement, and the whole question was a matter of compensation. Witness, continuing, said the block was completely saturated with water at one time. Officials of the board said improvements were futile on such land. Draining cost him £90. In 1927 his receipts from potatoes and dairying were £566. In 1928 and 1929 he received £929, and his expenses were £692. Owing to flooding of the land he gave up and went to Fish Creek. On 100 acres at £23 an acre he had 12 cows, from which he received £120 for the year. He grew potatoes and the highest price he received was £3 a ton. He had only £50, four cows, three horses and farm implements when he left Kooweerup. His interest and principal to the board was accumulating, as the area was not large enough to make a living. (The Age, May 20, 1931, see here)

Evidence from George Lewis Williams, district officer for the Water Commission of the Mornington Peninsula area.
As might be expected some of the officials who gave evidence had a different viewpoint. Mr Williams was quite blunt in his evidence."From time to time", continued Williams, "I engaged gardening experts to supervise and instruct the settlers, but these men gave up in disgust because they could not get the men on the blocks to take their advice. Many of them tried to cultivate an area that was too large. They were advised to concentrate on small areas, but would not follow that advice. They held Bolshevik meetings to ventilate their grievances. The Water Commission has supplied a motor-truck and employs two men to transport vegetables. The settlers even refused to cart the produce from their blocks to the packing shed for sale. There are too many misfits among the overseas settlers. They have been offered the use of scoops and other implements to do work on their blocks, but would not take advantage of the offer. They were too lazy. They also would not take advice on methods of cultivation and growing vegetables. They are the most contrary men I have ever met"  (The Argus, May 14, 1931, see here)

Findings of the Royal Commission
The findings of the Royal Commission can be accessed on the Victorian Parliament website, at https://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/papers/govpub/VPARL1933No3.pdf   However, the Weekly Times had a comprehensive report of the findings of the Royal Commission on April 8, 1933
The Royal Commission in Migrant Land Settlement has found in its report to the Lieutenant-Governor (Sir William Irvine) that the settlers were justified in their complaints of misrepresentation by Commonwealth and State representatives in London........The Commission examined 504 witnesses at 146 public sittings. The inspection of holdings and the examination of witnesses in country centres necessitated the travelling of 10,000 miles.......In a summary of the conditions of 318 individual settlers, the commission finds that in practically every instance conditions were not such as to provide "a living and all commitments" and that in such cases the opportunity given to the settler of earning a living and ultimately acquiring his farm more or less fall short of the State's obligations to him. The Commissioners, however contended that they had no right to make any recommendation concerning the remedy or redress of any of the complaints (2).

The findings of the Royal Commission also have a summary of the evidence of 318 individuals - which gives a good indication of the areas covered by the Commission which include The Mallee, Murrabit, Maffra, Katandra, Stanhope, Alberton West, Shepparton, Leongatha, Tongala, Coleraine, Red Cliffs and this region. It is no wonder they travelled over 10,000 miles to inspect the properties. The evidence summary includes notes on training, block condition and whether it could provide the farmer with a living and the ability to fulfil commitments.

The farms were clearly thought to be small family farms, which rely on the labour of all family members. John Roy, farm supervisor, Water Commission, gave this evidence - Dairying was not necessary if a man was making a success of market gardening, but if a man had a growing family it was a good thing to have cows, pigs and poultry, and keep family occupied on the farm (3).

If a farmer did not have a wife, he was advised to get one - Charles Rowatt McTaggett, dairy farmer, Alberton West. He came to Victoria with £300 capital but was given no training. His present block which he took over from the board was of 48 acres and cost £2,253 with £600 for improvements, making the price £61 an acre. It would carry only 18 cows and was far too small to return a living. When he complained, Mr. Weir, who was in charge of the Closer Settlement scheme, advised him to get married, because he would then be able to milk 12 more cows. He did not follow that advice (4)

The Owen family of 'Ivanhoe', Yannathan
One of the men who gave evidence to the Royal Commission was George Owen.  There are some photos on the Museums Victoria website of the Owen family of Ivanhoe, Yannathan, taken in  1925 and 1926.  These photos provide us with a lovely snapshot of the life of the family on their farm - from ploughing the paddocks, digging potatoes to the children at play and the family at their Sunday devotions. We are lucky to have access to these photos and they were contributed to the Museum's  Biggest Family Album project by Mrs Wynne Jennings (nee Owen). I have done some research to find out a bit more about the Owen family.


The Owen family home at Yannathan

George and Emma (nee Matthews) Owen moved to Yannathan in 1925.  George and Emma and their four children had migrated from England and, as we know, were induced to come to Australia under the Migrant  Land Settlement Scheme.  The children, who all feature in the photos, were William Henry (born 1914), Eileen Mary (born 1915), Winifred Emma (known as Wynne, born 1920) and Catherine Marjorie (known as Marjorie or Marj, born 1922). They moved to 454 Sydney Road, Brunswick around 1934/1935 (according to the Cranbourne Shire Rate books) and in the 1935 Electoral Roll George was listed as being employed as a 'Dairy Produce merchant'.   They later moved to 9 Pickford Street in Armadale (5). 

The Owen farm was located on Games Road. It was part of the Waori Park Closer Settlement Board subdivision. Waori Park and was established in 1919 and had been owned by Percy Charles 'Paddy' Einsiedel - there were two sections - Section A adjoined the Monomeith railway Station and section B, where the Owen family were, adjoined Yallock. The Owen property was Allotment 9 according to the Cranbourne Shire Rate Books and Allotment 8 according to the Yallock Parish Plan (see image immediately below) The original allocation was 66 acres and the family later on (1932/1933 according to the Rate books) took on another 27 acres (6).


From the Yallock Parish Plan - the Owen property went from Games Road to Forrest Road at Yannathan.

The Owen's had a dairy farm - we know this from a letter young William wrote to the Weekly Times of June 23, 1928. In the letter he says they cows, pigs and poultry and he has a dog, a  cat and a bantam rooster as pets.

William Owen's letter to the Weekly Times



George and young Bill chopping wood

What happened to the family after they left Yannathan? The four children all enlisted in the Australian Army in World War Two. The newspapers reported on Marjorie's wedding to William Edmund Hume-Spry in April 1950, where Wynne was bridesmaid,  and Wynne's marriage to John William Jennings in November 1950 - both girls were married at the  St Kilda  Methodist Church. Wynne carried a sprig of heather on her wedding day, which her sister Eileen had sent from Scotland. Wynne and John were married by his father, the Reverend W.E. Jennings. George Owen died on July 23, 1954 at the age of 68 and Emma died July 18, 1966 aged 80. When George died his address in the death notice was 87 Cranbourne Road, Frankston, however his funeral was held at the Methodist Church in St Kilda. When Emma died she was living at Inala Village, in Blackburn and her funeral was at the Mt Pleasant Methodist Church in Forest Hill (7).


Catherine Owen's wedding

These are more photos of the Owen family from Museums Victoria.

Mrs Emma Owen and the children at Yannathan, feeding chickens.



Mr George Owen and the children and the dog at Yannathan, building a trough.


The Owen children collecting firewood


Wynne and Marjorie at the clothes line.


Eileen Owen



Sunday devotions on the farm at Yannathan. This is  a beautiful photo. the caption on the Museums Victoria site says that Sunday school classes which were held every Sunday under a large gum tree.


Trove Lists
I have created  a list of newspapers articles on Trove relating to the Royal Commission, you can access the list here. I have also created a list of newspaper articles about the Owen family on Trove, click here to access the list. 

Footnotes
(1) John Stewart Dethridge (1865-1926) - read his Australian Dictionary of Biography entry, here.
(2) Weekly Times, April 8 1933, see here.
(3) The Age, May 15, 1931, see here.
(4) The Argus, June 3, 1931, see here.
(5) Information from the Cranbourne Shire Rate Book and the Electoral Rolls. The dates of birth of the children come from World War Two Nominal Rolls, as they all served in the Army in the War.
(6) Information in this paragraph - Niel Gunson The Good Country: Cranbourne Shire (Cheshire 1968), p. 132; Yallock Parish Plan, 1931; Cranbourne Shire Rate Books.
(7) Information in this paragraph - World War Two Nominal Rolls,  newspaper articles, see my Trove list here The death and funeral notice for Mrs Owen was in The Age July 19, 1966 on newspapers.com


A version of this post, which I wrote and researched, has appeared on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past, and the in the Koo Wee Rup Blackfish newsletter.