Old Tom Boyd North Australian, Darwin 7 August 1885 |
Old Tom Boyd," of whom a
portrait appear's on the first page of the
Bulletin, died the other day at Tumut, wretchedly poor. He was the first white man who crossed the
Murray with Hume and Hovell's expedition, in 1824, of which he was the last
survivor. He was a native of Dublin, and was once a
prosperous grazier, but through unavoidable
misfortunes, lost everything. Some time ago, he received a gratuity of £50
from the N.S.W. Government, but he never got the amount promised by the
Victorian Minister at the Albury railway opening celebration, in June, 1883. His last hours were passed in a miserable bark
hut, under the care of his married daughter; his funeral expenses were paid
by a kind-hearted Tumut friend. The poor fellow was an honourable
man, and a good specimen of the old Australian pioneer. He had resided at Gilmore for the last 57 years,
and at the time of his death was in his 88th year. His appearance at the Albury railway festival was thus described at
the time in these columns; "At this juncture of the palaver old Thomas
Boyd, the only survivor of the Hume and Hovell party who crossed the Murray
in 1824, appeared on the scene. Now for about thirty years, Old Tom, in a brown
hat and sore eyes, had been roaming the country in poverty; but, at the
banquet, Sir John Hay referred to him as ' my old friend Tom Boyd.' This was
honour for the old man. But what he had been kept alive for all this
time was now to come. His reward now being unpacked - with care, this side
up. Tom was introduced to Lord Augustus Loftus,
Governor of New South Wales, and the Governor actually gave him his hand!!
Tom's surprise, when he found nothing in it, can be better imagined than
described. T his was the overwhelming honour
reserved for Tom Boyd. They didn't even ask Tom to take a drink. By the way, here are two little unauthenticated
narratives about Tom and the banqueters that haven't yet got into print. Old Tom, when he first went into the banquet
hall, was put away in section two, among some upstart chronic guzzlers. The waiters guyed him, and kept asking him: 'What did he do with the old woman?'
‘Would he sell his coat ' 'What did he want there with his gravy
eyes' 'S'pose yer came
through the boards, eh, Noah? or through the
skylights.' Tom couldn't understand them 'Latin dishes;' and, as no one could
explain, he cleared; and when the universal voice went up for 'Tom Boyd,' the said Thomas was found
half a mile away, discussing a circus-posters, on a street hoarding. The other anecdote consists of two statements. 'Tis said that, on Tom going up to the Governor, a
subscription was started for him, and £2 15s. 9d. scooped in the space of
half an hour. Handing the money to him, the while looking
suspiciously around, Lord Augustus whispered 'Here's two-fifteen nine. If you'll take my advice, you'll quietly
slip out; if you don't, they'll probably borrow it back." The other statement, which is probably the
correct one, is that Tom offered a subscription himself, putting a crown in
his old hat to start the affair, and then when the hat came back it was
empty. S. Bulletin. |
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