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John Holt – grave tales

19/09/2020 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

There are roughly 94 burials in the Bulong Cemetery, but only 17 identifiable headstone. By far the most impressive of these and the best preserved, is the memorial to John Holt. As you will see no expense was spared. After the Christian cross, the urn is one of the most commonly used cemetery monuments. The […]

Filed Under: Grave Tales, People, Places & Towns Tagged With: Australian History, Bulong, Goldfields History, Western Australia

Apologies!!!

12/09/2020 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

Dear Readers I would like to apologise for there being no news letter this week. Family circumstances have kept me busy. Normal service will be resumed next week I promise.

Filed Under: About Outback Family History

John Hindhaugh – grave tales

05/09/2020 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

John Hindhaugh was born in Northumberland England in 1870, the son of William and Elizabeth Hindhaugh, and he died in Perth on the 19th Aug 1958 aged 88yrs. His ashes were scattered on the gardens at Karrakatta Cemetery. He is not known to have ever married. At the age of 14 years he canceled his […]

Filed Under: People, Ripping Yarns & Tragic Tales Tagged With: Australian History, Coolgardie, Goldfields History, Western Australia

Frank Albert Day – mascot to the 11th Battalion

05/09/2020 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

Story by:- David McMillan Truth can be stranger than fiction can’t it?  Frank Day’s life is stranger than most and shouldn’t be forgotten. Blackboy Hill was the Western Australian training camp established in 1914 to house local Australian Imperial Force (AIF) recruits before they left for the battlefronts in the Middle East and Western Europe.  […]

Filed Under: People, Soldiers Story Tagged With: Australian History, Goldfields History, Kalgoorlie boulder, Western Australia, WW1

Tom McMillan and the Wobblies – by David McMillan

05/09/2020 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

As we commemorate the ANZAC battles of a century ago, it is not generally appreciated today that Australia was bitterly divided over its commitment to the war effort.  The Labor Prime Minister, Hughes, had promised Britain another 80,000 men but was unable to get the necessary legislation through the Labor-controlled senate; two thirds of the […]

Filed Under: People Tagged With: Australian History, Goldfields History, Southern Cross, Western Australia

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