From Kalgoorlie to the Somme: The Sacrifice of Private James Valant Turner

Private James Valant Turner, Service Number 5931, son of James William and Elizabeth (nee Williams) Turner of 322 Egan St, Kalgoorlie, was born and educated in Kalgoorlie. As an 18-year-old postal assistant, Pte Turner enlisted on the 29th of May 1916 and went to the Belmont camp. He embarked from Frementle on October 30th 1916. He was described in his service record as of dark completion, hazel eyes, 5 ft 4in with black hair.

Pte James Valant Turner – Image Australia Fighting Sons of the Empire

Pte Turner was a member of the 27th and later the 28th Battalion and was involved in many important engagements on the Somme front, including Ypres. He was killed in action at Mont St Quentin on September 2nd 1918, only two months before the war ended, aged 19 years.

Private James Valant TURNER (far right) of Kalgoorlie was killed in action in France only two months before WW1 ended – Image Australia War Museum.

The letters of condolence received by his parents from the soldiers’ friends all spoke of him in the highest way. Among them was a moving letter written to Private Turner’s mother by Private J H Little of the 28th Battalion, which read:

James left behind in Kalgoorlie his childhood sweetheart, Alice Margaret WILSON, but they were parted by the tragedy of war. Alice later married Richard Vosper SUMMERS, a policeman, in 1926.

Alice WILSON (centre) was Pte Turner's first love, but they were parted by war. Alice, pictured with her sisters Gertrude and Grace later married a policeman.

Alice Margaret WILSON (centre) was Pte Turner’s first love, but they were parted by war. Alice, pictured with her sisters Gertrude and Grace.

Military Service Record - Australia War Museum

Military Service Record – Australia War Museum

 

Ref – The Kalgoorlie Miner ‘Weekender’ 19 April 1997.

Builder of Dreams: Sir James Connolly’s Western Australian Legacy

Sir James Daniel Connolly (1869-1962)
By Robin Connolly

Sir James Daniel Connolly was born in Queensland, Australia. Drawn as a young man to the newly discovered Coolgardie goldfields, he quickly established himself as a builder and community leader in the late 1890s and early 1900s. He went on to become a well-known state politician in Western Australia. Taking his family to war-torn Europe, he became the State’s representative in England and was knighted. He always worked to further Western Australia’s interests. The family settled in England, and James is buried in a London cemetery.

Portrait of Sir James Daniel Connolly, 1920. Source: National Portrait Gallery, London.

Portrait of Sir James Daniel Connolly, 1920. Source: National Portrait Gallery, London.

James was born in 1869 in Allora, a small country town in a farming district on the southern Darling Downs, Queensland. His parents, Johanna Callaghan and Denis Connolly, were Irish immigrants who took up land grants in the Warwick area. James was the third-born in a large family; he had a total of 10 siblings, eight of whom survived to adulthood and settled in Queensland.

James trained as a quantity surveyor. His first project was not surveying but building, constructing a school building at Elphinstone, near Allora, where his elder sister Mary worked as a pupil teacher. But he sensed greater opportunities in the west. Gold had just been discovered at Coolgardie when he moved to Perth, Western Australia, in January 1893, aged 23. Then, less than six months after arriving, gold was discovered at what was to become Kalgoorlie-Boulder. The finds opened up a rich goldfield, sparking a major gold rush.

James worked for a year in Perth as a building contractor before winning a government contract to build a temporary post office in Coolgardie, which precipitated his move to the goldfields. Coolgardie was booming, and better postal facilities were sorely needed; recipients sifted through mail left in a tent to find their own letters. James built a simple wood and corrugated iron building in five months for the tendered cost of £464. The building served until the new, much grander permanent post office was built in 1895.

From that simple start, James built a thriving contracting business in Coolgardie. He set up a workshop on the corner of Sylvester and Ford Streets in Coolgardie and proceeded to build a series of ever grander buildings in the town. He built Kennedy’s Family Hotel in 1893, Freemasons Hotel in 1894, various shops and halls through 1895 and 1896 and public baths in 1897.

But the grandest of all was an exhibition building on Bayley Street between Renou Street and Lady Loch Road that James completed in October 1898. The Governor, Sir Gerard Smith, opened the Coolgardie International Mining and Industrial Exhibition on 21 March 1899. Some 3,000 people came to the opening, and a staggering 61,000 visitors attended the exhibition during the three months that it ran. A special medallion was struck to commemorate the occasion.

Coolgardie Exhibition Building at the opening ceremony, 21 March 1899. Source: State Library of Western Australia

Coolgardie Exhibition Building at the opening ceremony, 21 March 1899. Source: State Library of Western Australia

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The Kanowna Scandal: A Tale of Seduction and Betrayal

Kalgoorlie Miner 10 October 1906, page 2 Alleged Seduction The Kanowna Case - Serious Charges against a Married Man Frances 'Frank' Fordham BROWNE (Plaintiff)-v- John Lewis Henry MARTIN (Defendant) The hearing of the civil case of … [Continue reading]

Birrigrin’s Golden Days: A Mining Settlement’s Brief Spark

Birrigrin Lat 27° 30' 14'' South  Long 119° 31' 13'' East Birrigrin is 120 km from Wiluna and is in the Black Range District near Sandstone. It was known in the early days as the '50 Mile' as it was about 50 miles from Nungarra. The main source of … [Continue reading]

The Mirage of Gold – Paddy Whelan’s Livesey Range Saga

Sunday Times 11 December 1932 ON THE GOLD TRAIL 'Paddy’ - Whelan's Claims Not Borne Out by Lugg Party A Warning That Was Justified Excitement and hopes sprung from the faith of many Australians in the stories of the famous ' Lasseter's … [Continue reading]