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History of our LGA


How the Blow family settled into Foxground’s surrounds
How the Blow family settled into Foxground’s surrounds

08 October 2025, 7:00 PM

When looking at the history of families in the Gerringong district, some have been around for many generations and are still prominent such as the Millers, Quinns and Campbells. Many others have all but disappeared. One of those is the Blow family.As a child I can remember my father talking about the Blow family from around the Gerringong district. He would regale me with stories about “Joe Blow did this” and “Joe Blow did that”. I actually never remember meeting any of them. Most, it seemed, had left the district before I was grown up. Here is a tale from Clive Emery about a meeting in Foxground for the 150th anniversary of the Blow family coming to the Gerringong district. It mentions a reunion of the family. I do not know the exact year this happened but I am guessing about 1990.A small contingent of The Blow family, accompanied by many friends and pupils of the Foxground school which closed in 1954 met on a patch of prepared pastureland situated beside the oak-lined creek for a picnic lunch to celebrate the 150 years since the original grantee, John Blow, took possession of 300 acres of the fertile Valley floor. Stories are told of the presence of numerous flying foxes in the area at the time, and so the naming of the valley was first Fox Ground, finally grouping the two words for convenience.The temperature of the day was around 20 degrees, made so by an inordinate southerly wind which lowered the usual temperature, but the geniality and friendliness of the group of some 65 celebrants overcame all difficulties and disabilities and around 40 cars lined the banks of the creek where a picnic lunch was held, and conviviality reigned.Several representatives of the early families were present, and tales and remembrances were the order of the day.Douglas Blow, a grandson of the original grantee, used the loudhailer to welcome the invitees and in a speech of explanation, he detailed the series of events in the Blow family throughout the intervening years.On various tables he presented his collection of data which consisted of photos and genealogical history which left no one in doubt of the presence in Foxground of the redoubtable Blow family.It appears John Blow built the original home on what was to become “Lawndale”, Harry Blow on Barham's property, Captain Ernie Blow on H.G. Miller's “Nestor Farm”, Dawson Blow on “Willow Glen”, while Captain Blow's Aides-de- camp farmed on Leaney's farm. In effect, the valley floor and into the foothills of the scrub land through which the Foxground Creek wended its circuitous way southward towards the Broughton creek at Berry, was peopled by family members.The clearing of the land and the felling of the magnificent cedars started, to make way for the utilisation of the land for dairy farming purposes. To this end, a milk factory was eventually built on part of “Willow Glen” beside the road which wound its way along the Valley floor, and from which land was acquired by other settlers. Other roads would go into the hills and mountainsides to service the new selections.Following the luncheon, provided by individuals, Doug Blow again brought his loudhailer to the fore and instructed the gathered groups on the format for the remainder of the evening, introducing various speakers who presented interesting histories on the Blow family. The Mayor of Kiama was welcomed, and addressed the gathering on the part the farming industry had played in the development of the wonderful area which was now the Kiama Municipality, and the Blow family in particular.Following the speeches there was a general get-together of friends and relations and renewal of acquaintances while tales were told and memories recaptured and relived.Schoolmates recalled incidents for examination and discussion, while others pored over the memorabilia displayed, and a small section went on a walk to the home of Harry Blow, now in the possession of Barbara Mathie, to whom generous thanks were offered for allowing her property to be used for the celebration.By four o'clock the party began to disperse. Tables were folded and packed away and the assembly broke up, but not before expressions of gratitude for the event were paid to Doug Blow for the opportunity to meet old friends once more in the beautiful Foxground Valley which had claimed so much of our young lives and loves in days gone by. 

How colour TV made a splash 50 years ago
How colour TV made a splash 50 years ago

23 September 2025, 8:00 PM

I have previously written that one of the reasons why we loved going to the Gerringong Town Hall to watch pictures was because the films were in colour. Films like Chitty Chitty Bang Bang had stunning images in Technicolor.At home on the old TV, it was very different. We had to watch a screen with black and white images. I used to watch football on a Sunday night. In my child’s mind, I thought South Sydney were two tones of gray.In the Samurai TV program, Shintaro’s helpers, like Tombei the Mist and the Iga Ninja wore light-coloured costumes. I often wondered what colour they were. Like thousands of kids everywhere, we could not, try as we might, make ‘star knives’, stick in posts and jump backwards into trees. And who could forget the Beatles’ Magical Mystery Tour. It had a lot of psychedelic colour sequences. Most notable in the song, I am the Walrus. Unfortunately for them, the film was a flop as it was shown in black and white. Mind you, we really did not care. I was an avid TV watcher. One of my other favourites was Combat, with Vic Morrow. I could never work out how the German soldiers could fire 1000 bullets and only scratch him on the arm whereas Morrow could kill 10 of them with one burst from his submachine gun. I also fondly remember Phantom Agents (we only use guns as a last resort), Gigantor, Astro Boy, Dad’s Army, Steptoe and Son, and Man about the House.Some other US shows were great such as Gomer Pyle, McHale’s Navy, Green Acres, Petticoat Junction, The Beverly Hillbillies, Gilligan's Island, The Man from Uncle and, of course, The Monkees. “Here we come, walking down the street, getting the funniest look from, everyone we meet …”My sister, Merelyn, who is seven years older, remembers with affection such shows as Shirley Temple’s Storybook, Annie Oakley, Disneyland, Mr Ed, Mr Magoo, Rocky and Bulwinkle, The Lone Ranger, The Avengers and everybody's favourite, Monty Python’s Flying Circus.The list could go on. I am sure you can think of scores of others.And who could forget that you could go to the shop to buy a packet of Scanlens Bubble Gum, throw away the gum, and collect the cards to keep or swap with your friends at school.There were many adult programs that the oldies enjoyed that I did not, like Twilight Zone. But the one I remember the most for not watching, if that makes sense, was “Alfred Hitchcock Presents”. This funny music would come on and Hitchcock would say “good eeeeeeeeeeeeeeevening”. At that moment I was ordered to bed and the rest of the family sat down to watch it. I managed to see some programs on YouTube years later.In 1975, the TV landscape changed. To be able to see your favourite show in bright living colour was brilliant. Suddenly any person producing TV programs had to think of the way it would look. I know a lot of teams in the rugby league changed their uniforms to make them brighter.Pop stars had to spruce up their costumes to make them look big and spectacular to help them get the chance to perform on Countdown with Molly Meldrum.It was not all beer and skittles to begin with. Buying a new colour TV was not exactly cheap. There were scam artists who said all you had to buy was a piece of coloured plastic and place it on the screen but, alas, this did not work. Filming in colour for those who made TV programs, films and commercials was much more expensive.Eventually, TV producers realised that if they did not change to colour then nobody would watch their programs. Viewers also eventually had to make the switch. That did not, however, mean that all black and white TVs disappeared. Second-hand ones could be quite cheap and poor uni students living in caravans could afford to have a small beat-up black and white TV which you could watch if you manipulated the rabbit ears just so by holding onto one with one hand and have the other out the window or doing some other contortion. It was better than nothing.Nowadays there are techniques where black and white film can be changed into colour.But sometimes I do miss the old days. Old black and white TV shows and movies looked quite quaint and I swear the horror films looked scarier.

Tales of old Gerringong corn growing
Tales of old Gerringong corn growing

16 September 2025, 1:00 AM

As a child I can vaguely recollect my father growing corn. My sister Merelyn confirmed this by saying he grew corn at Gerroa to feed the cattle. But the growing of corn was very important for farmers many years before that. Clive Emery wrote a tale about his father growing corn at Foxground.For as long as my Dad lived, corn was his favourite crop. Never a season went by without us having acres of maize growing in our best paddocks. Hickory King was Dad's favourite grain. I never did discover how many years he had grown this variety, but every year throughout my young life that was the variety grown. Dad supported this variety because he said Kellogs used it to make Corn Flakes, so it must be the best! Rightly or wrongly, it was the favourite - that was until Cliff and I decided to try some of the new varieties coming on the market. I honestly believe it was the grain he grew as a boy, and saved the seed each year to keep it pure. He said when he went to the North Coast, an old farmer gave him some advice which he heeded well throughout his life.“Emery,” the old fellow said, “always make sure you have some corn in the barn. In bad times, my kids were crying round the table and there was nothing to eat, but the missus ground the corn and made gruel and baked to fill their little bellies! We have lived on corn for weeks on end, when there was no money to buy food!”Gerroa, many years ago.The sincerity of this declaration was so real Dad took it to heart and it may have been the trigger which energised him to carry it out. Whatever, 80 years since that remark I am still growing maize! I was sorry for Dad's sake when we changed the breed to Giant White because of its superior cropping potential over Hickory King - the cobs of which we learned first to husk as boys. There was something about family husking bees when we all sat under a hurricane lamp in our barn husking the cobs until our little heads began to nod, and Dad told us stories of his life until all we wanted to do was curl upon his lap and be buried in husks!He would pick the two of us over his strong shoulders and carry us off the bed.The hempen bags we used for collecting the corn cobs had many uses on the farm; used often for overcoats during inclement weather or for bagging the potato crop in season and in many homes used for bedding, then called a "Wagga Rug'. The peculiar thing about corn is that every animal on our farm liked it. The cows were fed corn in the stalls, the pigs in their pens, the horses in their nosebags, the dogs and old Joe the cat, and of course so many birds. Corn was a staple food for the fowl as a matter of course - ground for the chicks and cracked for their mothers. The crows, the Rosella Parrots, the White Cockatoos would raid the crop in the paddock. Dad stood a Scarecrow at the end of the paddock to frighten them away. It was so lifelike that our neighbour rode down one day to have a yarn to the fellow standing at the edge of the crop.But the birds were wiser than he thought - they moved to the other end of the paddock for their meal of corn.My mother would come to the barn some nights to help with the husking. She did not use a husking-peg like the rest of us but tore the husks off with her hands; it was good to have Mum there because she could tell stories too. She did not know much about corn until she married Dad, because the property she was raised on did not lend itself to ploughing and cropping as it was so steep. We usually retired about ten at night, when we would hang our husking pegs on a nail and carry the husks out to the paddock where the herd was waiting to chew on them. We often had wrestling bouts in the pile of husks for fun. We piled our barn lofts with cobs, to be left there to dry before being ground for the cattle.When we moved to Foxground, nothing changed. For years we went on with the husking bees, with this difference. Mother and Olive made it into a Valley night picnic and so many young folk came to help and have fun in the barn, while their mothers stayed with Mum in the house. But they were not idle - we all shook the corn hairs and dust from ourselves and enjoyed the repast our mothers had prepared. They were happy events, and many a lass was grabbed for a roll in the pile of husks before the night was over, and released in time to prevent being smothered. Graveyard at Gerringong about 70 years ago.In the dim light of the hurricane lamp nobody knew who was rolling who, nor did anyone care, and everyone was happy and joyous laughter filled the barn.It was during the husking bees I learned that cobs of corn always had even rows of grain, and Dad offered anyone 10 shillings if they could bring forth a cob with uneven rows. He found it was counter-productive for we counted the rows on each cob before tossing it into the heap and husking less cobs. No one got the money, however.Why we didn't husk the cobs in the paddock was never really explained. When I began farming on my own that is what I did - it meant less handling - but Dad always seemed to have plenty of labour.It is strange how we stick to the old routine at times until a total stranger will correctly make a suggestion. Up until then it was a matter of: 'if it was good enough for my father it is good enough for me!'Somehow, I am glad to be able to tell of the simple fun we had at our husking bees. Thinking it over, I wouldn't have missed it for the world !As Hickory King was laid aside, so has the plough and Cydesdales that pulled it. Where we used to walk nine and a half miles behind the plough to turn an acre of furrows, with the tractor we did that before breakfast. The steel machine that made it possible did not rub its head on your chest, nor nuzzle your shoulder as you exchanged winkers for nosebags, nor do you pat it on the shoulder.Strangely, mechanisation has not kept the farmer in the field, and houses are growing where once they trod! The art and science of farming is dying.

Tales of old Gerringong: Billy Lees the blacksmith
Tales of old Gerringong: Billy Lees the blacksmith

16 June 2025, 1:00 AM

By Clive Emery Blacksmiths were such an essential part of the community more than a century ago, especially in country areas. Before tractors, cars and trucks, horses would do most of the work. Clive Emery brings to life the story of one in Gerringong, Billy Lees. Billy Lees was one of four blacksmiths we had in Gerringong, from early in 1900 to about 1950. Other names were Cockerill, Bourke and Fitzpatrick.Billy's shop was in Fern Street where the old Post Office building (now changed to commercial enterprises) was situated. I well remember turning the handle of the bellows for him while a horseshoe was being softened for shaping in the bed of coke or coal simmering in the bed of ashes. This was contained by brickwork against the northern wall of his corrugated iron premises.There was a sign painted on the outside of the southern wall of the building, which was displayed in blue lettering and read, for as long as the premises remained: “Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills.” As a boy I thought it was some remedy for ailing horses, because Billy was also a horse doctor. I knew this because he came to our farm at Crooked River once to dose one of our horses suffering from gripes. The remedy, as I remember, was a bottle of whisky. The horse was up and about within the hour!There are many things for which Billy should be remembered besides shoeing horses. The principal one was his eternal good humour. In all my life I do not remember meeting him in anything but a cheerful mood.Billy was a nugget of a man whose strong, hairy arms were never covered. He wore a short-sleeved flannel shirt open at the neck and heavy tweed trousers with a bluish tinge. He had a breaking-in yard on the boundary of the school ground where we could watch him breaking in horses for the farmers. Two sons, Tommy and Tod, would be helping on most occasions, especially if a horse was to be broken to the saddle. The Walker residence Gerringong, where the chemist is now. Photo: The Emery Family CollectionYoung Tod did this job in the circular yard. Tod was a great horseman and as a young man, worked in Neely's store, riding around the district taking orders each Monday, and delivering them in a sulky the next day. Tommy was the elder of the boys and worked on the roads mostly during his period in Gerringong. Tommy had bright blue eyes like his father and remained an excellent citizen during his lifetime in Gerringong.Billy was to be found in his pole and corrugated iron premises on most days, and the “ring” of steel as he hammered shoes into shape and mended broken machinery and plough shares for the farmers could be heard all over town. On most days, if they were “shoeing days”, the smell of burning hooves was abundant as red-hot shoes were temporarily fitted and shaped the hoof rather than the reverse, to be then cooled and refitted. He had room in the shop for three horses at a time, and most farmers waited for the job to be done, when the horse would be put back in the shafts and driven home. Everyone in town knew when it was “shoeing day”, for the mixture of coal fire and burning hooves floated before the breeze. However, shop doors were never shut as a result, for Billy was as much entitled to free trade as anyone else, and respect for him as a person and a worker would be far too strong in any case.Billy had a daughter, “Bubby”, who attended the school as her brother had done, and for a period when I was a student. She was slight of build and wore her hair shoulder length. She and Ella Donovan were neighbours as well as great mates. His wife was a great worker for the Anglican Church but otherwise was content to care for the home beside that of the Donovans.Billy's shop was a Mecca for idle men. When Tom Love retired from dairying to Fern Street he would always be found at the shop, helping Billy by turning the bellows handle if it was necessary while Billy shaped red-hot shoes and punched seven holes for the nails.Great yarns were told and retold, when Tom pushed the old wooden window out and propped it with the swinging shaft to keep it stable and sat on a block at the aperture to watch the traffic. Perhaps a cart or two or Jim Donnelley delivering a passenger to his destination with his coach and pair, or perhaps he might spot James Walker looking out his shop doorway for a sighting of an approaching customer. Billy and Tom were a great combination - they pondered, proposed and predicted between yarns and hammer blows, even while Billy was shoeing a horse with six nails in his mouth as he hammered the first one home!Now they are gone forever! The shop has gone, the smell of burning horsehair has gone, and the ring of steel on steel will never again be heard in Fern Street.The present has overtaken the past, as time goes by, taking the local smithy with it. My personal interest in Billy as a young child was because he was the first man I had ever seen with gold in his teeth clearly visible when he smiled, as he did often, and I thought him a rich man. The one thing in which he was rich was heritage, because his grandfather arrived on our shores in 1822, and his father settled in our district on a farm near the foothills of Willow Vale. Billy died in 1953, aged 72.This article is from the archives of Gerringong historian Clive Emery.

Omega Retreat Estate a long lost wonder of Gerringong
Omega Retreat Estate a long lost wonder of Gerringong

09 June 2025, 8:00 PM

Helping out at the Gerringong Library and Museum once a month, we get many interesting people visiting. On different occasions, I’ve had the pleasure of meeting a member of the Gray family, who have a strong connection to the Kiama LGA.Their link to Gerringong district is through the Omega Retreat Estate. What was this estate?Mackay Cameron, a descendant of the first Gray to come here, gave me the opportunity to view a manuscript he had completed on his family history and was happy for me to use it to help tell the story.The Omega Retreat is a large area of land just south of the lookout at Saddleback Mountain and continues down the hill on the southern side of the highway, stopping close to what is now Werri Beach.The Gray family had lots of wonderful adventures in many different places mentioned in the manuscript but for the purpose of this article I am focusing on their time at Omega.In 1833, James Mackay Gray (usually known as just Mackay Gray) left Ireland. After a few adventures he ended up visiting Thomas Campbell, who owned that parcel of land which he called “Bark Hill”.Campbell had travelled to Australia five years earlier and he had applied for a land grant. He was offered a choice of two parcels of land and in 1829 and settled on acquiring 1280 acres (518 hectares) that stretched from Saddleback Mountain to the swamps to the south and west to the slopes of Saddleback. Mackay Gray fell in love with the place and wanted to purchase it. However, Campbell was not allowed to sell it until 1838. This suited Mackay as it gave him time to organise his affairs and arrange for his wife Sarah Anne and their five children to come from Ireland to their new home at Gerringong. One can only imagine the joy of seeing this for the first time from the top of Saddleback Mountain.As he waited, Mackay began to farm a section of the land.Considering that he thought that this land would go as far as settlement would go, he named the land Omega Retreat - Omega being the last letter in the Greek alphabet.James Mackay and Sarah Gray. Photo: The Gray Family Collection Mackay Gray had, at first, some difficulty in paying Campbell the full price for the land.Therefore, he set about clearing it so it could be used to generate an income. For this he was able to use convict labour as it was a lot cheaper. Part of this entailed the cutting down of the red cedar trees. Three of the convicts he had were Richard Bagnall, Thomas Bromley and William Brown.When Mackay found he was unable to use much convict labour anymore, he cut the land up into tenanted farms. The new tenant families had to clear their lot, then hoe and plant crop seeds by hand. Some of these were ex-convicts as “Ticket of Leave” men. On the 1841 census the names of these were George Brothers, William Burlane, John Cook, John Jordan, George Barnes, Evan Campbell and William Greenwood.Life was not always rosy on the estate. In 1842, Campbell’s original building - in which the Gray family was residing - was burnt to the ground. All their possessions went up in flames. Not to be defeated, they just started again.Around 1853, Mackay decided to expand. Firstly, he extended the estate by adding another 400 acres of property adjoining what he already had. Secondly, he built a grand home with 11 rooms. It was lined with red cedar as stately homes around Gerringong were at that time. He called it “Omega House” but the locals referred to it as “The Big House”. Unfortunately, it burnt down in 1886.He then looked at the education of the local kids. The first school was the Mount Pleasant School established in 1858 with a very “interesting” lady as teacher.He had more luck with the Omega Retreat School in 1860. That building is now a private residence halfway down the hill towards the south.Some businesses were established on the property - a tannery, a store and a pub - the Dairyman’s Arms. In 1880, a milk condensing factory and a butter factory were established, without any great success.Life was not all wonderful for Mackay and Sarah though. They lost a son and daughter. a terrible tragedy which badly affected them.In 1877, Mackay died, followed by Sarah the next year.The remaining son, Sam, inherited the farm, as was the custom in those days.A poster for the sale of the Omega Retreat Estate in 1901. Photo: The Gray Family CollectionHe died in 1889. His wife continued on until she passed away in 1900.  This marked the end of the Omega Retreat farm, as it was sold in 1901.Nowadays there are a number of dairy farms as well as a few private houses set into the hill above Werri Beach to capture the wonderful view.  Many people stop at the top of Saddleback Mountain to admire the sight. I wonder if they have as much excitement in their eyes as Sarah did when she first saw her new home all those years ago.Mackay Gray’s association with the Omega Retreat was only a fraction of the activities he was involved in. Space does not permit me the justice he deserves in the history of the Kiama LGA.

Our caravan parks create golden memories and lifetime friendships
Our caravan parks create golden memories and lifetime friendships

02 June 2025, 3:00 AM

I was volunteering at the Gerringong museum the other day and a lady came in. She was telling me a story about how, as a child, about 50 years ago, give or take a few, she used to come down with her family to Easts Beach Caravan Park every year and spend the Christmas holidays there.She spent every day at the beach, made some great friends who also came down every year.She said the group, all well and truly grown up, planned to go back and spend a weekend at the park to relive the excitement of their youth.It got me thinking about those times. I actually had two childhoods, a bit like her. During the non-holiday time I spent my youth the same as any other child around Gerringong, going to school, cricket, scouts, church and so on.During holiday time I was fully employed at my parents' caravan park at Gerroa.Even though Easter was a big time and there were some reasonably busy times on special weekends, I wanted to just focus on the biggest time of them all - the Xmas holidays.The school bell rang for the last time in a year back in the days when we had three terms. Therefore you had a full six weeks of Xmas holidays.Christmas in the park in the 1970s.You had a week of holidays between school breaking up and Xmas. We did get a few people to come into the caravan park but most people waited until Xmas Day was all but over.From late Xmas Day and Boxing Day, locals did not go out onto the roads if they could help it because they were packed with holiday-makers descending onto the coast. It was a very busy day.The holiday-makers could be divided into three groups.First were those who took up accommodation that was already there, like onsite caravans.Second were those who brought their own accommodation such as caravans or tents and were occasional visitors.The third group were those who had bought a caravan and left it at the park more or less permanently and came down to the same place every year, sometimes for decades.On the day, it was interesting to watch some "green" holiday-makers trying to back a caravan into an allocated spot. Some had never towed a caravan before.Staying in a tent sounds like a lot of fun and I’m sure it was, when it didn’t rain. Some Xmas holidays it started to rain and just kept it up for weeks.We had a shop and we would have these poor drowned rats come up to the shop just to get out of the rain for a couple of minutes. Everything they owned was wet through.By the time Boxing Day was over most of the parks around the Kiama LGA were full, including ours.And so started a different life for myself and the holiday-makers. The tourists' days went on a repeating cycle. The family wakes up and has breakfast. Pack up the beach stuff and off to the beach for a few hours. Sunscreen was usually a Coppertone variant, designed to give you a "safe" tan or a thick gooey cream that sat in streaks on your face called Zinc Cream.You would sit on the beach under an umbrella if you had one, or went out in the water with a blow-up surf mat (Surfoplane) with handles or a hard plastic kickboard to catch waves. Occasionally "real" surfboards were used by young people with varying degrees of success. A block of surf wax was essential.Christmas in the park in the 1970s.Back home for a sandwich lunch and back out to explore the landscape, canoeing, walking on the rocks, etc.You usually did not go back to the beach as by that time a stiff nor'easterly was blowing, flattening the waves and blowing sand so hard it actually cut into your legs as you walked.Dinner was often a barbie set up in front of the van. Maybe you were lucky enough to go to the movies at the Gerringong Town Hall.This routine was repeated for up to five weeks. Many people I saw never wore anything else apart from a swimming costume and thongs.After the first week, some dads (and it was usually dads) returned home alone to go to work and came back on weekends.Great friendships were forged. As the same people came down every year to the same sites, you got to know your neighbours and little communities sprang up.At our park I got to know some other young people and had a close relationship with this group for the Xmas period but never saw them again until the following year. My brother even married a girl from the park.Speaking of my brother, he was involved in one of the highlights of the day for the kids.In those days you had cylindrical garbage bins with lids. It was his job to drive around the park picking them up, ready to take to the dump. Hordes of kids would descend and hang off all parts of the truck as he drove around.Many businesses would come to the park to sell their goods. I can remember daily deliveries of meat and apple pies. The smell was wonderful.In those days vans had ice boxes rather than electric fridges and an ice man would come around. Tourists would come out in droves carrying any plastic object they could find to get a block of ice to keep food cool.Come the end of January the parks would empty out and people would go back to their other lives.Walking around Avonlea Caravan Park in February you could hear the silence!Many holiday-makers ended up buying properties in the district.

Quinn the 'gentleman hero' of Gerringong who became a Kangaroo
Quinn the 'gentleman hero' of Gerringong who became a Kangaroo

24 May 2025, 6:00 AM

In a previous issue I mentioned getting my hands on a wonderful collection of Gerringong sporting memorabilia from Athol Noble.Among this treasure trove was a couple of beautiful meticulously constructed scrapbooks about Paul Quinn’s trip with the Kangaroos in 1963/4. These were too wonderful to be lost and took them to Michael Cronin, who assured me they would find a good home with his family.It got me thinking of Paul and how his memory is one to be honoured. The basic facts are there. He played with Gerringong from a young age. He gave sterling service to the club and was a member of the premiership-winning sides of 1956 and 1960. For Quinn, 1963 was his highlight year, making his Test debut against South Africa. But the cream from that year came later in the season when he became, not just the first Gerringong Rugby League player to represent Australia but he was also chosen in the famous touring side of 1963/4, hence the scrapbook of newspaper articles. When he returned from the tour a big crowd gathered to welcome home Gerringong’s “gentleman hero”. Included in the crowd naturally enough, was his entire family. Paul's comment was: “If all the family are here, who’s milking the cows?”After returning he joined the Newtown side from 1964-67.Playing representative football is undoubtedly a major moment but rugby league players will tell you a major highlight of their career will be getting a chance to play finals football, better still to participate in a grand final. Winning a premiership is the “toppermost of the poppermost” to quote John Lennon. Now in the mid 1960s St George (who joined with Illawarra in 1999) always took one finals place. So it was a fight among the other nine clubs to get the other three places. In 1966, Paul got the chance to play at the SCG in his one and only semi-final against Manly-Warringah. Not only that, he was captain of the Newtown side.Now this was a big affair. So big that the Sydney Morning Herald of Saturday August 27 had an article about a contingent of South Coast dairy farmers heading to the big smoke to watch the match. Paul himself drove back from training to pick up his wife and mother-in-law. He did have a problem with what to do with his four sons, aged from seven years to 12 months!The Rugby League News was a weekly publication from 1920 until 1973. It had team lists of the main games in Sydney and representative fixtures. It also had stories from around Australia. Two about Paul while in Sydney are worth repeating. The first was about Paul and another Newtown player travelling to training at Henson Park. The other player came from Wollongong and Paul had to travel from Gerringong, after milking, and meet him there. From Wollongong, they took turns driving to Sydney. “It was fine," the other player said. “When Paul was driving, he was chatty. But when I drove all he did was sleep!”The other story happened in 1965 when Paul was a member of the Australian side touring New Zealand. As the team were on the bus travelling to the next town for a game, one wag, obviously roping in the other members of the team for the joke, innocently asked Paul if he was a dairy farmer. After getting an affirmative answer he asked Paul, again in that innocent voice, if you could get milk from bulls. Paul laughed and proceeded to go into a long and detailed explanation as to why it is impossible to get milk from bulls. At that moment the bus pulled into a town to pick up some supplies, including milk. The name of the NZ town? Bulls.Paul Quinn playing for Newtown. After finishing with Newtown in 1967 he went to Nowra and then onto Canberra. He was described in the Rugby League News as having a ‘blinder ‘ in a match for Monaro Division in 1970.There have been many members of the Quinn family who have had distinguished careers for Gerringong and Sydney clubs. Some of the others include James, Tom, Jack, Peter and Ron. Paul, though, must have a special place in the Quinn family. He forged an outstanding career with Gerringong, Newtown and various representative teams and will be remembered as the first Gerringong player to represent his country. When discussing great sportspeople from the town, and there have been more than just a few, his name should be front and centre.It was wonderful reading all the old newspaper articles that Athol Noble had in beautifully presented scrapbooks and I know they are treasured by the family.

A look back at the wonder of Minnamurra Falls
A look back at the wonder of Minnamurra Falls

11 May 2025, 8:00 AM

By Clive Emery One of our local wonderlands is the Minnamurra Falls. Situated beyond Jamberoo from Kiama, follow the Jamberoo Mountain Road to the foothills to a right-hand turn which will lead you to the parking area and kiosk.From where you are launched into a primordial forest of transcendent ruggedness and beauty as nature intended its lovers to experience.When I first saw it with my brother Cliff over 60 years ago, we were enthralled by the experience of being in a bush setting where seldom the foot of man had ever trod.Like demons, we scrambled up the mountainside to the upper falls to see the cascading stream descending through the thick scrub to the lower falls.We disturbed a couple of lyrebirds and they went scurrying at our approach, but the bush was full of bird song and near at hand wonga pigeons were calling.We drank from the stream, and munched our apples while we revelled under the cloak of the forest and listened to its sounds.We were bush boys, thoroughly versed in knowledge of the bush and of its inhabitants.It was one of our prime joys to explore the bush and its wonders and listen to its songs, inspired and encouraged by the teacher at the little school in Foxground, where nature study was an important part of our learning.An hour must have passed before we returned to the rest of our party of four, and found them splashing in the chilly water below the impressive lower falls.As it was a hot day, we joined them for a swim before another scramble into the forest across the stream and back into the scrub where we found immense cedar trees growing.Returning to join the others who had the billy boiling, we told them over lunch of our find, and said we would take them there. We were amazed and felt we had discovered something as precious as gold.We vowed not to tell others of our find, for fear it might get to the ears of timber-getters and be destroyed.Within a few years our fears were allayed however, for a Mr Judd, who was the owner on land adjacent, had the foresight to have the area declared a national treasure and placed under the care of the National Parks & Wildlife.My interest was excited recently when our church group decided to have a picnic at Minnamurra Falls, and I agreed to go, knowing that over the years it had been developed as a tourist resort by the National Park trustees.I was anxious to see the development, among other things. On the day I was held up and missed the departure of the rest of the troop, but still decided to go.On my arrival I was surprised to find umpteen buses and cars had beaten me to the huge parking lot, laid out in terraces above the modern kiosk and launching point for visitors.I could not find any of the party, so concluded they had already made their way into the forest, and I would catch them up, or else they had called the trip off without telling me.I had not seen the changes that had taken place, although I had heard of the board walkways installed in latter years.I was surprised to find they diverged and did not include the lower falls, which was a pity, for they had an appeal equal to, if not better than, the cascades of the top falls.Once on the wooden walkway I found it a tremendous advantage, especially as they are capable of being undertaken on wheelchairs, and all people were able to enjoy the scent and beauty of the bush.Without hesitation I took the path to the top falls, passing many teams of schoolchildren pausing on the way to be instructed by their leaders on aspects of the bush.I would have liked to participate in the lectures for I was disappointed to notice trees like Sassafras, Maiden's Blush, Cedars and a thousand others were not identified for the benefit of students, and there was a possibility of them not being known by the teacher as well.However it was not my task, and I continued on in search of the falls, reaching them after a walk of an hour and a half.Owing to recent rains they were going at full blast, cascading over the rocks in holiday mood.I reflected on the ease the walkway made when compared with my first sighting of these falls, and I hoped the timbered walkway would be able to withstand the gloom and damp of the forest.On my return I observed the bottom fall from above only, and had to peer through the branches to see them at all.I wondered just why a platform had not been erected at the pool below for a better presentation - perhaps it is still in mind.At the joining of the walkways I found the second one led me back to the magnificent Cedar trees my brother and I had 'discovered' so many years back.And I was proud to see them again in their pristine beauty, appearing more immense and numerous than I remembered.I stayed a long time at this point just thinking and admiring and reflecting on the foresight of one man who had made their preservation possible, and I dashed a tear or two to know they now would never fall to the axe!It does one good that millions of people may now see the living tree that had opened the coast of New South Wales to other pioneers, almost forgotten as we race madly by on bituminised roadways between towns, always in a hurry with no time to reflect.As I sat in my car and had my sandwiches and tea (from a thermos flask), I felt I should gather some friends and come back to this place when the weather is comfortable and the locusts are chirruping.I would like there to be just ourselves, and we could boil a billy of tea by the creeks, and I could tell them of our 'discovery' and the thought I I had in 1936!

Lions roaring in Gerringong for more than a century
Lions roaring in Gerringong for more than a century

25 April 2025, 8:00 AM

Gerringong Rugby League Club has a long and rich history. The Lions have won the most premierships in the South Coast competition and punch far above their weight for such a small town. Reading about local lads Hamish Stewart and Dylan Egan recently making their NRL debuts for the Dragons reminded everyone of the large number of Gerringong boys who have played in the top rugby league competition in Australia. Some have even represented our country.In 2014, Barry Ross wrote an excellent book on the history of the club which compares favourably with any such publication, even those of major Sydney clubs. His book, "Gerringong Rugby League Football Club: Celebrating 100 years 1914-2014: From our boys to Lions”, gave me great help for this article.Scrolling through eBay one day I came across an item that was a list of the premiers in the Wollongong District Rugby league competition. The Wollongong area has competed with success against touring international sides and produced and continue to produce champions, such as Graeme Langlands, Steve Roach and Jason Ryles.But scrolling through the list I glanced upon a premier team 100 years ago - Gerringong.Gerringong? What is a little town on the South Coast doing with a premiership trophy from 1925 in the Wollongong competition?Seeing that it is the 100th anniversary of that great year I thought I might reminisce about those “good old days”.At the start of that season it was thought it might be a good idea to join the South Coast and Wollongong competitions together. This did not last long. However, Gerringong decided to join the Wollongong competition. Some South Coast clubs were glad to see the back of the dominant Gerringong club. The rugby league had begun in 1914 and in the nine seasons since then Gerringong had won six.As the season developed it was clear Gerringong was the team to beat in a six-club competition. Gerringong finished minor premiers after winning 10 games, drawing and losing only one each. Glebe and Port Kembla finished equal second and under the rules at the time, those teams played off for the honour of meeting Gerringong in the final.Port won and the final was played at Kiama Showground on 29 August 1925.Now you can imagine the excitement. Port Kembla had been a powerhouse in the Wollongong competition for many years, and the new boys from Gerringong were minor premiers.Fans from both towns had to scour the district to find as many cars as they could to transport the crowds to the game. Not many people could afford cars in those days. Around 3000 spectators packed in to watch. Now it may not seem a big number compared to crowds today, but this was a record for the rugby league on the South Coast.The game itself lived up to all the expectations. The result was in doubt until the last minute. A missed goal from in front for Port was very costly. Mind you, Gerringong did score three tries, they just did not kick any goals! They won by the skinniest of margins, 9-8.A rugby match at Gerringong in 1909. Photo: Athol Noble CollectionAn interesting sidelight came from an injury to a Port player, S Harris who broke his collarbone in a tackle. Although I believe replacements were allowed, he refused to come off. When he had the ball, he had to tuck it under his one good arm left and just lean into the tackle. The Gerringong players were at a loss as to how to tackle him without causing him immense pain. On more than one occasion they stopped him by just holding him around the waist.The Gerringong team on that glorious day was Jack Miller, H. Morrow, Clive Cant, C. Miller, W. Guthrie backs, Vic Martin and Ray Miller halves, Vince Fields, J. Wall, Hedley Chittick, Roy Love, A. Burgess, S. Miller forwards.The back of the postcard featuring the match in 1909. Photo: Athol Noble CollectionIt is interesting to note that a lot of the names in the Gerringong Rugby League team reappeared in the Gerringong Cricket Club’s first-grade team that also won the local competition. Sport in Gerringong 100 years ago was particularly strong.For the pictures to accompany this article I would like to share with you, not photographs from 1925, but special ones from a time long before.Before Gerringong Rugby League Club was established in 1914 the local lads played Rugby Union. Once I went in search of an old cricket scorebook from 1894 that I knew Athol Noble had. Michael Tierney was kind enough to give me access to Athol’s collection that included, in addition to the aforementioned scorebook, a collection of Gerringong football memorabilia. Jack and Vince Fields. Photo: Athol Noble CollectionAmong that collection were some great old photos. One was of the two Fields boys, Jack and Vince. Both of these players were some of the best players Gerringong have ever had. And that is saying something.  Two other photos grabbed my attention. These were from games at what is now Michael Cronin Oval. One game was not dated but the postcard type picture stated it was a 1909 Gerringong v Berry rugby union game.Sitting at the eastern end of the oval one Friday morning, watching members of the club mark out the field for the big weekend game, I got to thinking that the goalposts looked a bit more secure than 1909. I also wondered if the Gerringong players would be wearing hats.

Russell revives forgotten warplane crashes in Kiama
Russell revives forgotten warplane crashes in Kiama

12 April 2025, 8:00 AM

Local skies, lost stories and brave souls remembered ...  It was standing room only at the Kiama History Centre on Friday as fifth-generation local Russell Fredericks took the audience on a wild ride.Or rather, a tragic nosedive through three remarkable military aircraft accidents that took place in the hills and skies around our region.It was the kind of talk that made you lean forward, forget to sip your tea, and wish history had a rewind button. Gordon Bell, who opened the event with affectionate banter, joked that Russell was “chicken” - too young, at least compared to his Jamberoo pedigree.But nobody in the room doubted that his deep local knowledge and knack for detail were the real deal. With warmth, wit and a surprisingly slick PowerPoint for someone who claimed not to do technology, Russell took us through three aviation incidents that had been all but erased from collective memory.  The first story took us to 1939 and the side of Saddleback Mountain.A Hawker Demon fighter, piloted by young Jack Ohlmeyer from Clare, South Australia, spiralled out of the clouds and into the earth.His parachute failed. Locals from Jamberoo rushed to the wreckage.Wal Alexander, a dairyman, got there first.Jack died within seconds in his arms. His body, taken by ER ambulance, was eventually buried with full military honours back in Clare.Site of the Fountaindale Rd crash on Saddleback Mt Jamberoo Russell revealed that Jack was not only the first pilot from No.3 Squadron to die in WWII, but possibly the first RAAF pilot overall.The moment hit hard. Not just for history buffs, but for everyone who has walked the Saddleback trails and never known. On to 1943. A Bristol Beaufort bomber vanished above Foxground in dreadful weather.Beaufort Bomber Its crash was so secretive that locals did not even know it had happened, until Bullocky Brennan came upon the wreckage while carting timber with his bullocks. He found four crew members charred inside the plane, and one slumped against a tree, lifeless. Decades later, Gerringong Scouts and locals trekked to the site to install a plaque.It was a poignant reminder that war often leaves its mark quietly, deep in the bush, under the ferns, and in the memories of people like Molly Irvine, who rode from Clover Hill Rd across Wallaby Hill to milk cows for her neigjbours for two shillings and remembered those men as if they had just fallen.Then came 1957.A Fairey Firefly crashed west of Foxground during a training exercise.Fairey Firefly wreakage below Barren GroundsTwo young naval officers died instantly after mistaking Kiama’s lighthouse for Point Perpendicular. A flare seen shortly after raised false hope. It was just the intense heat igniting ammunition. A naval prayer was said on the hillside that night. It was an accident that could have been avoided by 20 feet. A tragic miscalculation that has haunted the escarpment ever since. Russell peppered the afternoon with vivid asides.A radar operator who was not believed when she tracked a Japanese flight over Kiama.A mysterious 1920 crash near Chapman’s Point. Bullock teams and Scout maps. The room chuckled and sighed in equal measure. The final slide called for a small gesture.To remember the airmen who died here, often in training, far from enemy fire but no less brave.Graham Kenderdine, aviation sleuth and son of a local wartime navigator, helped piece these stories together.But it was Russell’s voice, steady and respectful, that brought the forgotten back into focus. As we filed out, the murmurs said it all. “Incredible,” someone whispered. “I had no idea.” Neither did most of us. Until Russell gave us wings.You can read more about these historical aviation tales here.

A tough life for early European settlers
A tough life for early European settlers

07 April 2025, 12:00 AM

By nature and circumstance, Australia’s early European settlers had dwellings of bark and poles.  In the rugged and untamed bush, it was far more convenient to take from the bush what it could provide in the way of a place to rest one's head, like a cave, a burnt-out tree-trunk and subsequently a slab-walled hut.  The quickest and easiest method was to use the available materials the bush could provide and that was bark and poles.No bushman was without an axe, and with this implement he could cut and erect a skeleton building of poles and sheet it over with bark stripped from a tree. The Australian stringybark provided the best covering but if that was not available, bark from most eucalyptus trees was a good alternative.Green bark had a tendency to curl as it dried, so the roofing had poles laid lengthwise on the top section to keep it flat and also to prevent it being dislodged by wind.  Walls could be bark or slab - a decision of the builder and the estimated permanency of the structure. Loose boards provided a doorway.That this could be the very first building of a man and his wife in the early days of settlement is legend. Poets and writers wax lyrical about the sense of isolation and privation, but to hear of it first-hand from one's grandparents and to see their weathered hands is to know the truth of it.After building a home there were many things to consider - beds were made of hempen bags strung on poles, which was slightly better than sleeping on the earth, especially when a thunderstorm flooded the inside of the hut.  How to keep provisions dry and free from ants was an ever-present battle. It may be years before circumstance and availability when corrugated iron could be used to roof the dwelling, and sawn slabs replaced the bark walls. Corrugated iron was used to provide a chimney and fireplace at one end of the hut, having the structural timbers on the outside for safety.  Sparks were a constant danger once the bark walls had dried. Water was carried from mountain streams in tin buckets and billies.Toilet facilities consisted of a hole in the ground walled in by sheets of bark which was propped,and held in place by shortened logs, with the roof also of bark. A crude and serviceable seat was a wooden slab cut smooth with a square hole morticed through appropriately, and rested on round blocks or logs, or in many cases a single pole suspended on forked sticks at either end and this was known as the ‘long drop'. A neighbour could be a half-hour walk through the forest, even after a walking track had been cleared. To have a neighbour was a bonus; there would be the inevitable case of an accident to either party during the hard and dangerous clearing of the brush and forest and there was also the necessity of a woman to assist at births, unskilled as she invariably was, and a baby brought a new dimension to the striving couple.  It could be more than a day’s walk or further to the nearest settlement - if there was a settlement at all. Returning with supplies or necessary means of survival this could mean a hazardous adventure as well, only to be repeated if the burden of fencing wire or wire netting was too heavy to be managed on the one journey.  Men became beasts of burden until a horse or a bullock could replace him, and the settler was a fortunate man if he had an area of grass upon which to graze his animals.  Nethervale, just south of Kiama. Photo: Emery Family CollectionTo have the fortune to possess two bullocks to yoke raised the status of a pioneer immensely for he then had the means of cultivation and hauling materials and logs into position for fencing.His crops would be damaged by the marauding kangaroos and wallabies seeking succulence, with the only means of preventing their incursion was eternal vigilance, lighting fires and tending them at nighttime being a necessary addition to the daily rounds, with fires in themselves a hazard if the forest litter should catch alight.  Wives shared these duties to give their man a chance to rest, and a kangaroo dog or two had to be added to the set-up.If the hapless settler had the luck to have cedar trees in his location, the harvesting of this timber would be a means of cash if it could be taken to one of the few ports of call of the sailing ships plying the coast and thence to the city markets.  This involved the cutting of tracks through the bush and the hauling or carrying the lumber some miles in many cases, a painstaking task at best. Although the commodity was mostly received by agents at the wharf-side, and who had the responsibility of payment for the article the cutter received little recompense in comparison to the retail value when received in Britain when sent on by the wily trader.  It was the beginning of the appearance of the adventitious “middleman”' or trader who bought and onsold produce for personal profit or loss. During the next 20 years our settler may have a family of seven, a small herd of cattle and a few accoutrements in the way of labour-saving devices, a plough and six or eight bullocks, a stock horse and a dray.  His children may have all been born without the aid of a doctor, and a neighbour's wife may have developed into a renowned midwife servicing a small community striving to achieve enough recognition to have a local town available to them as a trading post, where farm produce like eggs and milk and butter and hides could be traded for tea and sugar and farm necessities. His wife was usually never recognised for the duties she was expected to perform and her contribution to the union. However, she stuck to job of having and raising children and supporting her man with a stoicism not unremarkable in her day but liable to be forgotten and unrehearsed 150 years later.

Gerringong living legends Sgt. Ken Hodges
Gerringong living legends Sgt. Ken Hodges

22 March 2025, 8:00 PM

Recently, David McCallum organised for me to have the honour of meeting a living legend residing in Mayflower Village at Gerringong. I thought it might be nice to write an article about this gentleman for the Bugle. But I have a problem. What is the problem you might say? Well when writing about the lives of notable people, most of them have excelled in just one area.They might have had an outstanding career in the Police force. They might as a member of the above run a Police Boys club for many years. They might have had such a positive effect on Aboriginal and other migrant children from disadvantaged homes that the former children will say it changed their lives. They might have organised and run boxing tournaments and had a big influence on Australian boxing champions. They might have established a relationship with other world class boxing champions like Mohammed Ali.They could have, for many years, trained and managed representative Pentathlon teams attending numerous Olympic games and other international meets. They could have been heavily involved in surf lifesaving clubs in Sydney. They might have become famous for a huge rescue effort and received major awards.They then may have moved to Gerringong and become the president of the Gerringong Surf Lifesaving Club and be heavily involved in the building of the first major clubhouse as well as the day to day running of the club and tournaments. Ken at a Gerringong surf carnival  Any one of the abovementioned activities would warrant an article on its own. But what happens when you have to write an article about a man who has achieved all of these? And this is only the highlights!This gentleman’s name is Mr. Ken Hodges.I first came across Ken in an unusual place. I was flipping through an old newspaper from 1967, and I came across a picture and accompanying article about a group of aboriginal boys having fun at the South Sydney Police Boys Club in Redfern.I posted pictures of these on the South Sydney forum. A man replied and said that he was one of those boys. In those days Ken was Sgt Hodges the policeman. He was a Sergeant at Redfern PCYC on Elizabeth Street for many years. With John ‘Pogo’ Morgan, Ken worked tirelessly to help young aboriginal boys get a good start in life. The poster recalled that he and the other boys had full access to the club including boxing, Sgt Hodges helped out there and broke it up with a laugh when things escalated! They had trampoline, gymnastics, roller skates, simple toys and things us poor kids could only dream about.Ken with the Governor Marie BashirHe said he will always love and forever respect Pogo Morgan and Sgt Hodges, both fantastic men for their efforts to make life a little better and the example they set to get us kids off the streets.Just about all of the kids that were involved in that program went on to be very decent family men. Some went into government and helped create community development programs. These thoughts were echoed by an Aboriginal boxer named Wally Carr who gave generous praise to Ken in his book MY LONGEST ROUND.In another post Brian Corless, a Gerringong resident, had this to say about Ken.‘Sgt Ken Hodges retired down the coast and was a significant figure in the early days of Gerringong Surf Club at Werri Beach. Ken was also involved in surf lifesaving in Sydney and received a bravery award for swimming 100 metres from a surf boat in heavy seas with a line to attach to a fishing boat, so they could pull it and the crew away from rocks. His bravery medal was at one of the northern beaches and was on the front page in a newspaper. He was always doing good things for youngsters in Sydney and down the coast and managed and coached young Australian pentathletes taking them to Olympic Games and World Championships. He started the Berry Biathlon, a swim and run events for all ages at Broughton Creek, Berry as a fundraiser for the surf club. It featured ex Olympic athletes, emerging and retiring surf stars, elite triathletes and aquathon athletes alongside mum, dad and their kid participants.’While visiting Ken, I had the chance to flip through a plastic sleeve folder where he had placed all the certificates, awards, newspaper articles and testimonials. It took quite a long time to go through them all. There were some from the Queen and even Winston Churchill.Brian sent me a photo of Ken with some other dignitaries at the opening of the new Life Saving club house at Gerringong. The Gerringong and District Historical Society currently has a wonderful exhibition at the museum featuring the surf club and is releasing a new history book by Robyn Florence. I know Ken will be rightly honoured at the launch.Mind you David did say I had to do one thing before I met Ken. That was to get dressed in my best South Sydney regalia. One of Ken's biggest passions all of his life has been the Rabbitohs.

 Tony Gilmour is Kiama’s storyteller who uncovers our past
Tony Gilmour is Kiama’s storyteller who uncovers our past

02 March 2025, 10:00 PM

Dr Tony Gilmour has spent his career bridging the worlds of finance, housing policy and heritage conservation. Now retired in Kiama, he remains an active force in historical research and community advocacy, bringing his expertise to both local and national discussions.With a PhD in Urban Planning from the University of Sydney, a Master of Business Administration from the University of Manchester and a Bachelor and Master of Arts in History from Cambridge University, Tony Gilmour built a global career that included 20 years in investment banking.He later focused on not-for-profit community housing across Australia and New Zealand, helping to shape policies and support providers tackling housing affordability and social housing shortages.Despite his extensive experience, he sees himself first and foremost as a historian. “This is my passion now, writing histories and researching the stories that shaped our communities,” he says.His latest project is a detailed history of Kiama’s pubs, tracing the evolution of these social hubs and the characters who frequented them.Dr Gilmour’s approach to history is rigorous, drawing on original sources not just secondary accounts. “A lot of information out there has not been properly researched. As a trained historian, I go to the original sources such as newspaper articles on Trove, land titles, national archives and oral histories,” he explains.His upcoming book on Kiama’s hotels will launch on March 22, with two events marking the occasion:• A formal launch at the downstairs Kiama Library auditorium, hosted by the Kiama Historical Society at 2pm• A gathering at 5pm at the upstairs bar of The Kiama Inn Hotel, affectionately known to locals as ‘Torys’For Tony, the book is more than a history of pubs. “You cannot write about hotels without writing about the people, the changing economy and the way our community has evolved,” he says.Dr Gilmour’s passion for history led him to take on a leadership role in the Kiama Historical Society, where he serves as Vice President and Treasurer. Under his guidance, the society has embraced digital tools, grant funding and new exhibitions, including an initiative with Aunty Joyce Donovan to improve the representation of Aboriginal history at the Pilot’s Cottage Museum.“We have secured funding to develop displays that better tell the story of First Nations people in this area,” he says. “It is an important step in ensuring our local history is inclusive and properly documented.”While Tony insists, he is taking a break from writing large books, his passion for history continues. This year, he will focus on curating new museum displays and documenting the 50 year history of the Kiama Historical Society .For those wanting to explore local history, he encourages people to get involved. “Come to one of our monthly speaker events at Kiama Library, three dollars for members, five dollars for guests. You will hear fascinating talks, meet like minded people and enjoy tea and cake afterwards,” he says.Kiama is fortunate to have someone with Dr Gilmour’s depth of knowledge, not only shaping conversations about the past but also helping to navigate the challenges of the future. “We have incredible talent and expertise in this community, let’s find ways to use it,” he says.

Orry-Kelly and Bette Davis: The Kiama local who designed a Hollywood icon
Orry-Kelly and Bette Davis: The Kiama local who designed a Hollywood icon

22 February 2025, 10:00 PM

In the lead-up to the Kiama Icons and Artists’ Orry-Kelly-themed event scheduled for July 26, 2025, The Bugle is planning a series of articles to share the story of Orry-Kelly and his impact on the world. If you missed the first article, you can find it here.There’s no mention of the first time Kiama costume designer Orry-Kelly met Bette Davis in his memoir Women I’ve Undressed, which makes it seem as if they’d known each other forever, a great indication of their relationship.The first mention in his memoir is a throwaway sentence where Orry writes, “Warners wanted to get the clothes underway for her forthcoming picture The Rich Are Always With Us, which would also feature an up and coming actress called Bette Davis.”The Rich Are Always With Us was one of Orry’s first jobs as a costume designer at Warner Brothers Studios, and it was only a year later that he became head of the wardrobe department. But it was the 1938 film Jezebel, which led to Davis’s first Oscar, that truly marked the start of their winning combination.In Jezebel, Davis, as Julie Marsden, wears a striking red gown designed by Orry to a ball, shocking the other attendees in an era when women were expected to wear only white.Since the film was shot in black and white, Orry had to create the gown in grey so that it would appear red on screen. This early example shows how Orry’s designs were to become pivotal plot points in major Hollywood films.The two worked together on over 30 films, but the one most people, including Kelly, believe is their best work together is the 1942 classic Now, Voyager, in which Bette Davis plays a repressed woman who gains independence.Bette Davis in Now, Voyager. Source: Women I've Undressed.Lesley Chow writes in a CNN article, “Kelly’s gowns are key to this dramatic transformation, as Davis appears in a series of stunning, minimalist black outfits which showcase her newfound elegance and strength.”“A master of silhouette, Kelly preferred a lean, linear shape to the frills and puff-ball sleeves popular at MGM, and he knew how to give Davis’s figure the illusion of length.”Even though the film was a success, Kelly recalls how Davis was in a foul mood during the fittings for the film. But on the final day, she suddenly came out of it.“When the fitting was over, she turned to me and said, Kelly, I’ve been a devil this last week, haven’t I? I’ve been almost out of my mind; my sister Barbara has been terribly ill,” writes Kelly.“That’s the way Bette was with everyone. It made up for everything. It didn’t matter if I’d jumped in my sleep all week, or that I was hitting the bottle,I didn’t need an excuse for that. In the end, she was always so fair and considerate.”In 1944, Kelly left Warner Brothers, but Bette Davis still tried to get the studio to hire him exclusively for her films. She had grown so attached to him.Costume designer Deborah Nadoolman Landis, as reported in the Sydney Morning Herald, once said, “Personalities are created in the fitting room. Icons are created in the fitting room. That’s a relationship from the knickers outward. From the inside out, Orry-Kelly helped Bette Davis create her people.”Another photo of Bette Davis in Now, Voyager. Source: Women I've Undressed.Beyond their professional partnership, Kelly and Davis were also good friends and remained close even after he left the studio.Kiama Historical Society president Sue Eggins, a researcher on Orry-Kelly’s life, says, “They had a very good relationship. He dressed her for 20 years, even after he left the studio, Warner Bros. Bette had it written into her contract.”It seems as though they were almost two peas in a pod: Bette, a woman trying to make it in Hollywood, and Orry, a gay man navigating the same industry. They both had to be passionate, stubborn, and brave.Orry says of Bette, “She was a loyal friend and a really nice person. Often I jumped in my sleep. And I saw little men jump on the set, and others drop their hammers from catwalks during a battle between Bette and her director. But she had a right. If it weren’t for her, this man who was once a dialogue director might have remained a dialogue director!”For those eager to get involved or stay updated on the event, the Kiama Icons and Artists group is active on Facebook.

Beach racing on Seven Mile beach 1925
Beach racing on Seven Mile beach 1925

10 February 2025, 5:00 AM

Seven Mile Beach at Gerroa is, I feel, the best kids’ beach in the world. The waves aren’t too big, and the sand is firm underfoot - almost like concrete. The large stretch between the high and low tide marks provides plenty of space to walk, play, and swim.But 100 years ago, some people saw Seven Mile Beach not as a swimming spot but as a raceway. In 1925, the beach thundered with the sound of engines as car enthusiasts gathered to push their vehicles to the limit. That year, Don Harkness set the Australian land speed record at over 100 mph (160 km/h). By 1929, Norman “Wizard” Smith went even faster, reaching 128 mph (204 km/h), with an aeroplane-engine-powered run hitting 140 mph (224 km/h)!Motorcycle races continued until the 1950s, and planes even landed here, most famously flown by Sir Charles Kingsford Smith.I recently came across an old Sydney Mail article from 1925 detailing a reliability trial from Sydney to “Gerringong Beach” (Gerroa). Selling cars was tough back then, and events like this were designed to showcase their reliability while entertaining thrill-seekers.The rally began smoothly, with drivers winding through scenic South Coast roads, many of which no longer exist thanks to modern highways. Upon reaching Gerringong, they took a picturesque lane to Seven Mile Beach, where the sight of the ocean was breathtaking. However, rain had made the descent on red soil treacherous, and crossing the Crooked River to the beach proved tricky.Excitement built as spectators gathered, many eager to see if the 100 mph barrier would be broken. But fate had other plans. A classic South Coast downpour hit, turning conditions into chaos. Drivers, sitting in open cars, struggled to see through the torrential rain, wiping their goggles while trying to avoid overenthusiastic spectators who ignored roped-off areas.Eventually, the storm forced an early end to the races, but the real challenge was getting back. The once-slippery descent had become a thick, impassable mud pit. Hapless drivers were forced to drag their cars out by sheer manpower before retreating to the warmth of a local hotel, drying off, and fortifying themselves with a warming elixir.Surely, they thought, the rain would clear by morning. Alas, it did not. Unlike today’s smooth highways, the roads back to Sydney were waterlogged and impassable, forcing drivers on extensive detours suggested by locals.Yet these daredevils weren’t discouraged. They returned to Gerroa again and again for more races and more attempts at land speed records.I wonder - could we get an old car on the beach for one last run? Mind you, that 224 km/h record is quite safe!“Want more local news and in-depth stories? Download The Bugle app to access the full digital version of this article, exclusive updates, and community insights. Stay informed wherever you are!”The Sydney Mail 20 May 1925Photo source Gerringong Historical Society

Our local pubs  were once the places where Kiama gathered
Our local pubs were once the places where Kiama gathered

29 January 2025, 2:01 AM

A recent survey by the NSW Government revealed the most common names for licensed hotels across the state in 2025, with familiar names like Royal Hotel and Commercial Hotel topping the list. These pubs, scattered across New South Wales, have long been staples of community life. Closer to home, Kiama once had its fair share of pubs with similar names – though only The Grand Hotel and Tory’s remain today. Are you like me and remember the Brighton Hotel? The Grand Hotel and Tory’s have survived while others have faded into memory. Photos Kiama Library What happened to the others? Why have these two endured while so many others disappeared?Pubs were once central to Kiama’s daily life. They were places where people could gather after a hard day’s work, share a laugh, or even quietly enjoy a drink without judgement. They weren’t just buildings, they were places of connection, with names like the Imperial Hotel or Railway Hotel conjuring images of a different time.The Grand Hotel and Tory’s have survived while others have faded into memory. Is it their location, their character, or perhaps something intangible that keeps them standing?These two pubs now serve as living relics of a time when Kiama’s streets were dotted with places to pull up a stool and share in the town’s stories.We’re calling on the community to help us remember the names and stories of Kiama’s lost pubs. Were they places for celebration, or just a quiet refuge?If you have memories, photos, or even theories about why The Grand and Tory’s have outlasted the rest, we’d love to hear them.Kiama Library has the back story of Tory's Hotel. Here is a little snippetWe all know the iconic 'Tory's Hotel' in the centre of Kiama, but did you know that it is the oldest continuously operating business in Kiama? The licence was appointed to Irishman Jimmy Barton and his wife Elizabeth on 6 April 1853, originally for 'The Fermanagh'. (Two other inns in town predated the Fermanagh, although they have not survived.)

‘Marvellous’ the Dharawal  boomerang thrower at the Nowra Show 1925
‘Marvellous’ the Dharawal boomerang thrower at the Nowra Show 1925

24 January 2025, 8:00 PM

The returning boomerang is one of the most famous objects from the Indigenous Australian culture. ‘Marvellous’ George John Noble, whose Aboriginal name was Ooloogan, was a brilliant exponent of the art of the returning boomerang. For a time he lived at Minnamurra and toured the countryside performing at various venues. Here are CliveEmery’s memories of meeting the famous man at the Nowra Show in 1925.In 1925 Dad took Mother and I to see the Nowra Show. Dad enjoyed the local shows, and would meander among the exhibitors. He seemed to know most of them and greeted men dressed in suits and hats with waistcoats adorned with silver chains. A lot smoked pipes, or had the bowl of one protruding from their vest pocket.There was music and colour everywhere, and Dad wanted to watch the ring events, where some sixty horses performed before the judges and men in the ring wore dustcoats with ribbons hanging from their arms. After the judging they handed the ribbons to the judge and he fastened them round the neck of the winning horses. There was movement everywhere, with the ladies raising their ornamental parasols to shield the sun.It was by accident that I noticed an Aboriginal fellow sitting cross-legged on an old blanket just inside the Arris-railed fence circumnavigating the show-ring.Beside him lay an old sugar-bag tied with a frayed hempen rope, and at his feet lay an assortment of boomerangs, shaped and ornamented in a range of colours, mostly ochre and charcoal. The timber was a reddish colour and likely sourced locally. He was probably 50, it was hard to tell. His dark eyes twinkled beneath heavy brows and a bushy beard, now greying, covered the greater part of his face, but not the lines spreading from his eyes.His nose was broad and flat and the veins stood out on the hand that held a clay pipe, brought to his lips from time to time to draw contentedly upon the weed. When he smiled, as he did to the children, his teeth were stained from the tobacco smoke. We were fascinated and he seemed to enjoy our interest and speaking to us kindly. He held out his hand for us to take, but no one was game enough to take hold of it. Our attention turned to a dozen boomerangs lying at his feet. Noting this, he picked one up and offered it to us to hold. It was heavy, crescent-shaped, and bore many strange markings which we didn't understand. One horn of the crescent was longer than the other. We handed it back, not knowing what to say to the old man, but not before one game fellow aimed it at the sky, as if to throw it in the air but did not do so and cheerfully laid it on the pile. This caused the old fellow to smile once more, and murmur a song quite incomprehensible to any of us.Our curiosity satisfied we returned to our respective parents. The Show was in progress on the hot, but pleasant day, and once the mornings judging of livestock was completed exhibitors and spectators alike all enjoyed a picnic lunch. The ring events were still in progress, the horses paraded before the judges while officials with their coloured ribbons moved among the throng. Finally, there was a lull. As it was approaching 1pm it was probably time for Member for Wollondilly Mark Morton to open the Show, Dad said.At that moment I observed the old fellow entering the ring and pointed excitedly to draw my father's attention.'Oh, that's old Marvellous,' he said, 'I believe he's going to give us an exhibition of boomerang throwing later. Keep an eye on him for me, I'd like to see it too. They say he is terrific!'My eyes were glued to the old fellow once more, and I noticed people were leaving their seats and gathering in a rough circle around him. I encouraged Dad to come closer with me to see what was going to happen. He agreed and took my hand and we joined perhaps more than a hundred fellows and kids around the old fellow standing on his blanket amid the pile of boomerangs.  I had not realised how tattered the clothing was until I saw Marvellous standing up and I felt sorry for him, saying to my father ‘it is a pity he did not have some nice clothes to wear’. He reminded me that the blackfellows were mostly dressed like that, and that they did not have any clothing at all when the first white men came to Australia. But he felt sure he would be able to buy some after his boomerang-throwing.For my benefit we moved in quite close to the old chap, who had commenced singing a song, and the only word I could understand was 'Marvellous'. He seemed to repeat it so often I thought he must have been singing about himself.Suddenly he bent down to select a boomerang from the collection while he was applauded for the song. He took up a stance on his blanket and cast the boomerang into the air toward the farthest point of the arena. The gyrations of the object were fascinating - it whirled, rose up, came down within inches of the ground, rose up once more and floated like a bird hovering above the crowd to drop on the blanket at his feet! The applause was tumultuous, and coins of all denominations were showered onto his blanket by the crowd. Dad gave me two shillings to put on the blanket, and I was proud to do so.There was another song about Marvellous before two boomerangs were selected from the collection. Standing there Marvellous hurled each of them into the air. For the next fifteen seconds the crowd stood transfixed as the two objects took different trajectories after their propulsion and seemed to vie with each other in the number of circles and convolutions before returning to the blanket within seconds of each other! There was a roar of approval and the crowd around the ringside joined in.Another shower of coins fell with the others on the blanket, more coins than I had ever seen in my whole life, and I was pleased for him, for he would now be able to buy some nice clothes!His exhibition was now over, for the stewards were recalling the entrants into the arena to continue with the judging, and Marvellous would have to move out.I was sad, I would have liked to have seen him throw his boomerangs once more. He probably did the following day, but we would not be there.He packed his boomerangs into his bag and rolled up his blanket and melted into the crowd. My heart went with him, and hoped I would see him another day. It was never to be!Nowra Show 2025 will be held from February 7-8.

When the boxing tent ruled the Kiama Show
When the boxing tent ruled the Kiama Show

24 January 2025, 2:53 AM

The Kiama Show has always celebrated agriculture, community, and entertainment, but its history also holds a mirror to the values of society. Once, it wasn’t just about livestock and baking competitions; the sideshows were full of weird, wonderful, and sometimes shocking attractions.The boxing tent was one of the biggest draws. Men from the crowd would step into the ring to take on professional fighters, with travelling troupes like Jimmy Sharman’s becoming iconic across Australia. It was raw, rowdy entertainment, but the idea of locals throwing punches in front of a crowd now feels like something from another era.Other sideshow acts traded on curiosity and spectacle.Posters for the Kiama Show once promoted “Jolly Nellie,” the “biggest woman in the world at 42 kg,” and “Abdullah Abdul Carim,” a mystic who supposedly made mango trees grow in seconds and boys lay eggs. Posters for the Kiama Show once promoted “Jolly Nellie,” the “biggest woman in the world at 42 kg," Image Source Kiama on Show Across the country, sideshows featured performers like the bearded lady, the two-headed man, and other so-called “freaks.” While acts like sword swallowers displayed genuine skill, many sideshows exploited physical difference, showcasing people as curiosities rather than celebrating them as individuals.How clever was Abdullah the Wizard ? What a feat making boys lay eggs!!!!! Image Source Kiama on Show Today, these attractions seem politically incorrect, but they also reveal how far we’ve come. Modern shows prioritise inclusivity and education, valuing diversity over shock value. Yet, the past isn’t without nuance. For many performers, sideshows were a way to make a living and find community in a world that otherwise rejected them.Figures like the famous bearded lady Josephine Boisdechene found success on their own terms, despite the exploitative nature of the industry.The boxing tent and sideshows are long gone, but the show’s role as a community hub remains.While the attractions have changed, the spirit of wonder and shared experience continues.Reflecting on these quirky parts of history reminds us of both how society has evolved and the resilience of those who performed in these shows. Today, the Kiama Show is a celebration of the best in all of us, quirks included.

Kiama Show a place to connect with local businesses and producers
Kiama Show a place to connect with local businesses and producers

24 January 2025, 2:00 AM

The 177th Kiama Show, one of the oldest in the nation and the fifth oldest in NSW, kicks off today after thousands of hours of work behind the scenes from community volunteers.“Everyone has been doing long days in the week leading up to the show to make sure everything runs smoothly,” says Kiama Show Society president Guy Stearn. “Thousands of hours of unpaid work goes into setting up agricultural shows and everyone who is a part of it is so passionate and should be congratulated.Motorcycling at the 2024 Kiama Show. Source: Brian Scott.The Kiama Show will feature 1700 pavilion categories and competitions in beef and dairy cattle, horses, showjumping, woodchopping and the always popular pet show. But one of the things Mr Stearn is most proud of is the Local and Homegrown Hub, a space where the community can connect and engage with local farmers and local businesses.“The Homegrown Hub educates visitors on various elements of local agricultural and horticultural activities and their connected products,” says Mr Stearn. “For many it’s the first experience they have of a working farm. A couple of great examples are Pines Dairy, recently hosting Regenerative Farming workshops giving people a better understanding of an agricultural practice leading to the production of cheese and gelato and Butchers Nook and their agricultural connections leading to high quality meat.”The future of woodchopping at the Kiama Show 2024. Source: Brian Scott.If this sounds like a step back in time it is, honouring not only the farming practices used by Kiama’s early settlers but also the ethos behind agricultural shows.The first Kiama Agricultural Show was held 1849 in the Fitzroy Inn brewery in Collins Street, a building long enough to display the produce grown by local farmers. There were just 18 houses, two stores, two inns, a church and a jetty in the township and the Agricultural Show was a way to connect the community so farmers could workshop better ways to farm the newly settled land. Each year - except for those between 1858 and 1867 due to a cattle disease - local farmers proudly displayed their crops and produce, which included vineyard grapes cheese, ham, bacon, and of course the giant vegetables, which have become a show society stalwart. “We are so excited to be able to connect and engage the community with agriculture,” says Mr Stearn. Show jumping at the Kiama Show 2024. Source: Brian Scott.Kiama is one of 580 agricultural shows held nationwide. Upcoming nearby Agricultural Shows include Berry Show, from January 31 to February 1; Nowra Show on February 7-8; Kangaroo Valley Show on February 14-15, Goulburn Show March 1-2, Milton Show March 7-9, Robertson Show March 14-15 with Dapto Show on September 25.

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