Network of Our Inland Mails By Ross F. Howard The Sydney Morning
Herald 3 January 1953 |
Next
Wednesday is the 115th anniversary of the opening of the first major over-
land mail service in Australia - between Sydney and Melbourne. To
see that event in perspective, it is necessary to step back a little in time
to days when an inhabitant of Sydney Town would make his way towards the
tall-masted sailing vessels lying at anchor in Port
Jackson. His
mission was to collect mail from Britain - mail that, in all probability, had
been posted some eight months earlier. The
year was 1808, the year before the opening of Australia's first "post
office," in the office of Mr. Isaac Nichols, near the Queen's wharf, in
George Street. Nichols was empowered to collect all mail from incoming
vessels. For
21 years after the first settlement, there were no regular mail offices in
N.S.W., and most of the correspondence, consisting mainly of Government
dispatches and communications, was carried by mounted constables. Sometimes,
the constables were allowed to carry settlers' letters. If not, inhabitants
made their own arrangements. Isaac
Nichols was permanently appointed as postmaster in 1810. Two years after his
death in 1819, the population had in- creased to almost 30.000, with little
or no improvement in postal services. Commissioner
Bigge, in his report, ordered to be printed by the
House of Commons in 1823, wondered how many letters addressed to convicts
actually reached their destination. He
suggested the establishment of regular postal communications by horseback
from Sydney to Parramatta, and "from thence to Windsor." In
1825, tenders were called for the conveyance of mails between Sydney and
Parramatta, Windsor and Liverpool, and between Liverpool and Campbelltown,
and from Parramatta to Emu Plains, and thence to Bathurst. Charges
were to range from 3d to 1/ a quarter ounce, according to the distance. It
was not until late in 1827, however, that practical arrangements appear to
have been made. During
1830, postal services were extended throughout the Colony - north to Port
Macquarie, 120 miles from Sydney; to the south, and 238 miles to the west. Four
years later, the services of the mounted police in carrying mails were
dispensed with and contracts were let for all inland mails. The
post office at Yass was established in 1835, and linked by a weekly service
with Goulburn office, then in its third year of existence. Yass was later to
become the junction of the over land mail from Melbourne. Melbourne
was officially named in 1837. Its post-office, under the control of Sydney
until 1851, was opened the same year, and postal communications were
established with Sydney by sea as opportunities arose. The
need for a more regular service was apparent, and towards the end of 1837,
the Government of N.S.W. accepted a tender from Joseph Hawdon
to convey mail to and from Melbourne and Yass. Payment was fixed at £1,200 a
year. Hawdon, a pastoralist, and, later, a member of the New
Zealand Legislative Council, employed as mailman a young man named John
Conway Bourke. A letter cost10d prepaid. The
mail from Sydney was dispatched to Yass via Liverpool, Campelltown,
Berrima and Goulburn. Hawdon's mailman left Melbourne on either January 1 or
2, 1838, and mails were evidently exchanged at Howlong,
on the Murray, on January 7. Both
Hawdon and Bourke have left accounts of the journey
from Melbourne - Hawdon in the form of a diary,
published in book form last year, and Bourke mostly in newspaper
reminiscences in his old age. The
accounts are at variance. Bourke claims to have gone alone, setting out on
January 1, preceded only by Michael O'Brien, who went ahead to blaze the
trail as far as the Goulburn River, where Hawdon
was to give final instructions. In Hawdon's
version, he himself accompanied Bourke, no mention is made of O'Brien, and
the date of departure is January 2. Dr.
A. Andrews, in the Victorian Historical Magazine of March, 1917, cites the
differing accounts as an illustration of the difficulties besetting
historians. Bourke, he describes as "possessed of a fertile
imagination"; Hawdon was "notoriously
absent-minded." According
to Bourke, his horse was speared by natives near the Ovens River, but he
managed to get his mount as far as Howlong, where
the hapless creature became bogged in the clay shallows of the Murray and was
drowned. Bourke
stripped and swam the river, only to be set upon by "a pack of 50
dogs." Climbing a tree to escape them, he was at length rescued by the
superintendent of Howlong station, a Mr. Weatherall, who was not easily convinced that the
near-naked tree climber was, in fact, "His Majesty's Mail from
Melbourne." Despite
difficulties, the mail was duly exchanged with that from Sydney. "This
service, which was inaugurated 115 years ago, was continued at fortnightly
intervals for about a year. In
1839, the service was increased to once a week. The
overland mail to Melbourne would seem to have run until 1841, when
communication was established with Melbourne by the steamer - Sea Horse. In 1843, answers to and
from Melbourne could be received by sea in a fortnight. January
1, 1847, saw the dispatching of the first overland mail from Sydney to
Adelaide, a distance of 750 miles. The route was via Melbourne and on to
Mount Gambier, where the mail was received by mounted troopers paid by the
South Australian Government. More
recent mail services have also presented pioneering difficulties. In
a book of memoirs, published in 1935, Francis Birtles
relates the story of "The Aboriginal Express of the Gulf of
Carpentaria." An aboriginal, known as Jimmy, walked more than 100 miles
and back to collect letters deposited in a biscuit tin, half way across a
sun-baked plain. This was the quarterly mail to a little out-station. Amid
torrential rain, and forcing his way through the jungle of Cape York
Peninsula, "Mailman Mac," a "wirey
little old man clad in dripping oilskins and seated on a big bony
horse," led six weary packhorses laden with mail. Frequently he was
delayed for more than a week by rain. Other
outback mail services have included the Bicycle Mails of the West Australian
Goldfields, the Camel Mail Trains of Central Australia, the Buckboard Mails
of North-Central Queensland, and the famous Mail Coaches of Cobb and Co.,
which operated until as late as 1924. Mail
is still carried by horseback in many inland parts of Australia. Twenty
packhorses are used lo carry fortnightly mails and
goods between Laura and Coen in North Queensland,
on a route that covers 346 miles. In
the far west of N.S.W,, in the service from Tibooburra to Cordillo Downs,
the mailman covers a distance of 728 miles once a fortnight, crossing into
three States - N.S.W., Queensland and South Australia. Numerous
watercourses and marshes, flooding rapidly after heavy rain, tax the
resources of the mailman on the 1,164-mile run from Meekatharra
to Marble Bar in Western Australia. Here, progress reports of the mail
vehicle are broadcast to settlers by radio. Whatever
the difficulties, whether it be the delivery of mail to our neighbouring suburb, or to the most remote and
inaccessible part of this continent, the post office tradition remains firm
that "the mails must go through." |