Sun Kalgoorlie Sunday 16 March 1902
Brandon’s fate
A TALE OF DARLOT
by Pharisee.
The eager, excited crowd that thronged the long dry stage to the Darlot diggings in the first blush of the new discovery included Dick Brandon and his mate, Jimmy Spiggot. That dreary and waterless track skirting the edge of desolate Lake Barlee presented a motley appearance as all kinds of conveyances, from the humble wheelbarrow to the evil-looking camel, trudged hopefully to the scene of operations. It seemed a long way to those far back places in the pioneer days, but the advent of the coach, the springing up of mining townships, and the gradually approaching railway have somehow made the distances short and the hardships of little account.
The long-standing mateship which existed between Brandon and Spiggot began on a Queensland mining field, where the latter, coming away from shots in the shaft of the Dingo Extended GM, fell from the chain ladder down among the hissing fuses and would have met certain death but for the promptitude of Brandon in rushing back and nipping off the seething tapes before the fire reached the detonator caps. Brandon, a reckless man whose life, when money was plentiful, was a stupefying debauch, received modestly the wild cheers which greeted his appearance at the mouth of the shaft. Though the undemonstrative Spiggot gave voice to his gratitude, there henceforth existed an undying friendship between the two men that only death could sever. For this act of bravery, Brandon received a large gold disc from the Humane Society. No degree of poverty could ever tempt him to “raise the wind” on it, even though
His Many Protracted Sprees often reduced him to destitution.
After battling for many years in the north of Queensland, from the Towers to Croydon, down through the Etheridge and among the tin on the Tate, they were attracted by the fabulous accounts of Bayley’s find and the boundless riches of the Golden West. They soon were among the surging horde of cosmopolitans who flocked through Bayley Street, Coolgardie, and fought madly for their poison amidst the stifling atmosphere of De Baun’s bar. At Dunn’s, they met with no success, and in many of the other discoveries which preceded Darlot, they were a portion of the large crowd of unlucky ones of whom nothing is heard. It was after dark when the camel team carrying their machine and traps filed down the beaten track at Darlot, which ran almost parallel with Horseman’s Gully. A thousand campfires lit up the darkness, giving fantastic shapes to the medley of human beings who moved restlessly to and fro, or sat discussing the absorbing incidents inseparable from the life of the gold hunter.
There was the hum of voices, the sound of laughter, and the boisterous oath while the dull haze of the dust cloud churned up during the day still blurred the brightness of the fires. Near Reid’s Camp, a lurid fight was in progress, in which a rather small man, with a full beard and bare to the hips, emitted blood-curdling threats, and bore down with the utmost ferocity on his opponent, who, having the full glare of fire upon his face, was an easy mark for his more favoured antagonist. There is always something nerve-racking in the appearance of two furious and half-naked men tearing one another about under the glare of a night fire. This was observable among the thousand or more men who looked at the contest and quivered with suppressed excitement.
Brandon and his mate were up early the next morning and busily searching for a spot to set up. Dissatisfied with the result of their investigations in Horseman’s and Scorpion Gully, they went further down the creek in the old watercourse and set to work fossicking. Hundreds of others, who fancied that something must have been found to induce Brandon and his mate to go further away from the established spots, soon hemmed them in on all sides.
It didn’t take much to start a rush at Darlot
Only a report that a speck was found somewhere, and the whole congregation rushed madly about, armed with pegs, ready to mark off a selection. The restless spirit of Brandon soon began to show itself. They had found nothing of consequence, except an 8oz slug which was promptly converted into liquor at McNab’s shanty. Mac supplied nearly the whole of the snake juice absorbed at Darlot, and being distant from Coolgardie, where he obtained his stock-in-trade, it taxed all his ingenuity to meet the local demand regularly. He said, “If I could only find someone who could manufacture rum from local ingredients, blast him if he wouldn’t take him into partnership.” No one liked the grabbing Scot who, it was generally known, had been constantly doctoring up the solitary keg of rum for months, and many a stricken dish-twister wandered through the mulga cursing him and the infernal juice he ladled out. In other days, before he became fired with the gold lust, Jimmy Spiggot was a university student, and if there was one branch of science that occupied his close attention, it was chemistry. Having heard McNab’s promise re partnership, he felt confident he possessed sufficient knowledge of different poisons to
Manufacture a Liquid at least as palatable as the composition which the shantyman dealt out to a suffering community.
A conference consisting of Brandon, Spiggot, and McNab discussed the matter in all its bearings, and it was decided that a partnership be effected with equal shares of profits, provided a liquor could be made which would take on with the public. It was soon noticed that Brandon worked the shaker alone and that Jimmy fossicked underneath a cement crust, where he spent most of his time. Not long afterwards, McNab began to receive numerous compliments concerning the improved quality of his snake-juice and did a better trade than ever.






