Australian Stories from our Past

Greg and Peter

A podcast about Australian family stories and social history.  Everyone has a story that we want to tell. To contact us, email us at: australianstories101@gmail.com or search for "Australian Stories from our Past" on Facebook or YouTube.

  1. MAR 20

    The Long Road To Bendigo (Episode 25)

    Send us Fan Mail Nine weeks on the road and the Murray finally slips behind them, but Bendigo still doesn’t feel real.  We pick up our 1852 overland trek right where the party crosses into Victoria, a colony gripped by Australian gold rush fever, and we track the next month of slow, stubborn progress through Mallee scrub, sandhills, swamps, and half-formed bullock dray tracks that barely resemble modern roads. We also step back to ask a messy question with big consequences: who actually “owned” the land they’re moving through?  Squatters have rushed across the Murray frontier, and the colonial government is stuck playing catch-up, registering pastoral runs with boundaries described by river bends and tree stumps. To make sense of it, we lean on a crucial 1851 Survey Map of the Murray’s southern bank, cross-check station names in the diaries, and follow the chain of homesteads and outstations that guided travellers long before highways existed. Along the way, we meet the landscape by name: Hattah-Kulkyne and the lakes later standardised as Lake Mournpall, the station world of Bumbang on Country significant to the Lati Lati and Dadi Dadi people, and the approach to Swan Hill.  We talk about Peter Beveridge and his writings, Lake Boga and its Moravian mission, the dead-flat 25 Mile Plain with Mount Hope in the distance, and the pivotal stop at Booth and Argyle’s Durham Ox Inn where bullocks, drays, and horses are sold before the last grind. If you love Australian history podcasts, goldfields stories, and the real logistics of migration by wagon, you’ll want this leg of the journey. Subscribe, share it with a mate who’d never survive a bullock track, and leave a review telling us what you think happens when they finally hit the Bendigo goldfields. Contact us at todaysstories101@gmail.com or watch recent episodes on YouTube.

    29 min
  2. MAR 13

    E24 - Off to the Rush - Crossing the Murray

    Send us Fan Mail A river in flood can be a teacher and a judge.  We open on the Murray–Darling Basin’s split personality—winter-and-snowmelt-fed Murray versus summer-storm-fed Darling—to explain why our 1852 trek met a swollen Murray while the Darling ran lower.  From there, the story flows to Gundagai, a town mapped neatly between a big river and an anabranch despite Wiradjuri warnings.  Earlier floods wrote clear messages in mud, yet officials kept the town on the plain until the Murrumbidgee rose in June 1852 and carried away lives, homes, and any illusion that tidy grids beat water. At the heart of the tragedy are two names more people should know: Yarri and Jacky.  In bark canoes, they moved through wreckage and current to save at least 34 people.  We talk about why their recognition arrived late, how memory gets made, and why First Nations knowledge is not a footnote but the backbone of survival along the river.  Their skills—choosing landing trees, reading the pull of the main channel, timing the ferrying of loads—echo downstream in the practical rivercraft that helped our gold-rush convoy cross  the Murray at Gol Gol. Then the journey turns mechanical, muddy, and mesmerising: empty hogsheads lashed under drays, a five-gallon keg on the pole for lift, long ropes ferried by canoe, and bullocks chest-deep on the inner floodplain dragging frames toward higher ground.  Plans to speed things up with a midstream buoy meet a firm no from the experienced river workers, and for good reason.  We sit with the friction between haste and safety, track a rogue horned bullock a mile downstream, and keep flour and port above four feet of brown water across a swamp one and a half miles wide.  Nearby at Euston, another party uses near-identical methods, proof that river wisdom travels faster than roads. History adds a twist: Joseph Hawdon once crossed the Murray on a marked sandy bank “without much trouble.” Same river, different stage. That contrast underlines the theme running through every scene—hydrology sets the conditions, but listening to Country, choosing where to build, and respecting those who read water decide the outcome.  If you love Australian history, disaster lessons, and ingenious problem-solving, you’ll feel the pull of this story from the first eddy to the last rope knot. If the journey resonates, follow the show, share this episode with a mate, and leave a review telling us the moment that stuck with you most. Your words help others find the story. Contact us at todaysstories101@gmail.com or watch recent episodes on YouTube.

    32 min
  3. MAR 6

    E23 - Off to the Rush - Crossing the Darling - Twice

    Send us Fan Mail A newborn in a spring cart, a flood-swollen river, and a punt that won’t run on Sundays—our 1852 trek along the Murray is a study in grit, chance, and consequence.  We read the original diaries aloud and sit with what they reveal: Regent parrots blazing over saltbush, lost stockmen saved by First Nations know-how, and the stark reality of cattle drowning as they “ring the water” mid-crossing.  Every scene is anchored in place—Frenchman’s Creek, Bagot’s Billabong, the Great Darling Anabranch—so you can feel how the landscape sets the agenda. We trace the web of stations claimed by Ned Bagot and unpack squatting in plain terms: land taken, lines drawn, and law arriving after the fact through Commissioners of Crown Lands.  From McLeod’s rough inn to a government-proclaimed ferry, the junction that becomes Wentworth shows how a track hardens into a town.  Along the way, river science meets story: the Darling’s brown current sliding beside the Murray’s clearer flow, a two-toned seam that Sturt and Hawdon both recorded.  Those split waters echo the cultural currents that meet without blending—overlanders relying on local canoe crews while the diaries stay quiet on payment and credit. There’s tension and tenderness in the details: Mary Emmett nursing two small children while the drays inch through bog and scrub, horses swimming clean while bullocks panic, tolls posted while floodwater erases the “original road.”  We follow the rise of policing and lockups on the riverbank and the later heritage that preserves bricks while we argue over meaning.  By the time the convoy reaches Gol Gol, the Murray has the last word, forcing a pause and a plan for another day.  If you care about Australian history, river systems, First Nations labour, overlanding, and how towns like Wentworth came to be, this story gives you the map and the mud. If this journey moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves Australian history, and leave a quick review—what moment stayed with you most? Contact us at todaysstories101@gmail.com or watch recent episodes on YouTube.

    31 min
  4. FEB 27

    E22 - Off to the Rush - Life and Death along the Track

    Send us Fan Mail A flooded river, a stubborn pony, and a crooked border set the stage for a journey that refuses to fit neat lines on a map.  We follow our hardy party from Lake Bonney through sand and scrub toward Lake Victoria, rebuilding their path from terse diary entries and hard choices made under rain-heavy skies.  What some call Freeman’s Creek aligns with Ral Ral, and distances snap into focus: eighteen rough miles off the river flats, then a camp where a stockkeeper, local guides, and a “mungo” canoe become essential to keeping the trek alive. The path knots around station histories that blur and split—Bookmark, Chowilla, Calperum—revealing how names shift as leases change hands and memories fade.  Ten days vanish as bullocks wander deep into the saltbush, and the camp becomes a crossroads of labour and knowledge. Flooded lowlands force a northern swing around Lake Victoria, past salt springs that earlier travellers noted for their bite and their perfume.  Flowing out of Lake Victoria is the Rufus River, a calm name that carries a darker legacy, where contact turned to conflict after waves of stock and squatters pressed hard on country that had sustained First Nations trade and life for generations. Threaded through the map is another story: a boundary meant to be straight but surveyed askew.  The 141st meridian collides with timekeeping limits, courtrooms, and politics, leaving a permanent jog across the Murray and an obelisk to mark both precision and compromise.  And yet, in the midst of lost cattle and contested lines, something tender happens at dawn by the lake: Mary Emmett gives birth, and a new voice joins the caravan of history.  It’s a reminder that every route is walked by people whose days are made of small meals, shared words, and the will to carry on. If this story moved you or taught you something new about the Murray, Chowilla, and the people who crossed and cared for this country, follow the show, leave a review, and share it with a friend who loves Australian history.  Your notes help others find the journey. Contact us at todaysstories101@gmail.com or watch recent episodes on YouTube.

    31 min
  5. FEB 20

    E21 - Off to the Rush - North West Corner to Lake Bonney

    Send us Fan Mail A river can be a map, a memory, and a meeting place all at once.  We follow the Murray’s sweep from Charles Sturt’s gruelling 1830 voyage and the collapse of the inland sea myth, to Joseph Hawdon’s cattle drive that carved the overland stock route, and then into the gritty detail of our 1852 party wrestling a stubborn Timor pony through sand toward Overland Corner and Lake Bonney.  The story unfolds in raw diary lines, vivid landscapes, and the older truths of Country that surface in shell middens and trade paths. Sturt’s crew linked the Murrumbidgee, Darling, and Murray, reached Lake Alexandrina, and found a mouth barred by lagoons and sand.  Their triumph rewired maps but came at a physical cost.  Hawdon’s journal picks up where the boats could not: on the top of cream limestone cliffs and along plains thinly brushed with grass, he meets First Nations travellers carrying mussels and news, trading on an ancient network that ran the river long before drays.  Our 1852 trekkers move within that web, buying sheep from Jacob Hart, negotiating rain and sand, and learning how an untamed Murray set every pace, flood, and crossing. Overland Corner turns from a bend into a hub: police station, smithy, hotel, and a staging point for drovers and coaches.  Devlin’s Pound holds two tales at once, a natural corral and a red-bearded ghost riding storm light above rumours of illegal grog and stolen cattle.  At Lake Bonney, or Nukamka, the night echoes with swan calls and the slap of wings, and the camp fills with First Nations families whose presence, ceremony, and trade point to older sovereignty.  Later, locks and weirs tame flows for navigation and water supply, but in these pages, the river still breathes in floods and droughts, reminding us why routes bent where they did and why stories pooled where cliffs meet water. If this journey stirred your curiosity about the Murray’s layered past—explorers and drovers, middens and myths—follow the show, share it with a friend who loves Australian history, and leave a review so more listeners can find these river stories. Contact us at todaysstories101@gmail.com or watch recent episodes on YouTube.

    35 min
  6. FEB 13

    E20 - Off to the Rush - An Initial Challenge

    Send us Fan Mail A desert boundary, a flooded creek, and forty bullocks that won’t stop heading home—this is the uneasy start of a family’s 1852 push from Kooramoora to the Bendigo goldfields. We open with the puzzle of Goyder’s Line, the fenceless border where rainfall drops, Mallee yields to saltbush, and the dream of cropping often turns to stone ruins.  Then we set our wheels on the Upper Murray track, chosen to dodge rutted southern routes and the bottleneck at the Wellington ferry, only to find the “dry” path drowned by a storm that swells Burra Creek and bogs every crossing. Through first-hand diaries, we trace the rhythms and frictions of moving a small economy across harsh country:  pre-dawn tea, yokes on, scouts probing unknown creeks with whip handles, and a relentless cycle of finding water and feed before dusk.  Worlds End Gorge becomes both gateway and refuge—permanent waterholes under towering River Red gums, flanked by semi-arid flats that blur toward the Murray.  When the livestock bolt, Joe rides through the night, reads tracks by first light, and turns the mobs fifteen miles from home. The camp adapts with bush yards, hobbled horses, and hard choices, inching toward the river’s North West Bend as cliffs rise and floodplains widen. Along the way, we unpack the wider story: how Goyder’s 1865 survey codified climate reality, why “rain follows the plough” led settlers astray, and how old coach roads, squatter runs, and the modern Goyder Highway mirror each other across time.  Route selection becomes a study in risk management—shorter isn’t safer if the sand is churned and the feed is gone, and “longer” may win when water, ground, and patience align. By the end, progress is slow but earned, the line on the map feels less abstract, and the lessons are plain: respect the country, move with its limits, and expect weather to rewrite plans. If this journey hooked you, follow the show, share it with a history-loving mate, and leave a quick review so others can find these stories.  Tell us: would you risk the desert track or queue for the ferry? Contact us at todaysstories101@gmail.com or watch recent episodes on YouTube.

    34 min
  7. FEB 6

    E19 - Off to the Rush - Gold Fever Strikes

    Send us Fan Mail Bankruptcy to gold fever—William Henry Neale's remarkable journey captures the essence of Australia's 1850s transformation.  After two financial collapses, including a £6,000 debt in England (equivalent to $1.8 million today), Neale found himself working at South Australia's famed "Monster Mine" in Burra, then the continent's seventh most populated area and largest inland settlement.  The Monster Mine was truly extraordinary — employing over 1,000 workers and paying shareholders an astonishing 800% return on investment.  But when gold was discovered in Victoria, everything changed.  Almost overnight, this thriving community watched its workforce dwindle from thousands to fewer than 100 as gold fever swept through the colony.  Through rare first-hand accounts from William's sons-in-law, we follow the Neale family's ambitious plan to assemble a 19-person convoy with bullocks, drays, and supplies for the 600-mile trek to Bendigo. Their expedition included William's extended family, a doctor who had recently lost his wife, several colourful bullock drivers, and even a man known as "Five Finger Jack." The convoy itself was substantial—six bullock drays, a horse dray, a spring cart, approximately 36 bullocks, plus horses, dogs, a dairy cow, and likely chickens suspended under the drays. What makes this story exceptional is how it illuminates the social upheaval of Australia's gold rush era.  As Bill Emmett noted, "More than half of the houses in the farming district of South Australia were empty.  Six or seven married women whose husbands had left for the fields would be found living in one house."  Join us as we uncover the human stories behind one of Australia's most dramatic economic transformations—when the promise of gold emptied mines, transformed communities, and sent thousands trekking across country in pursuit of instant fortune.  The Neale family's journey, preserved in daily diaries, provides a fascinating window into the ambitions, hardships, and entrepreneurial spirit of Australia's pioneering families.  Contact us at todaysstories101@gmail.com or watch recent episodes on YouTube.

    42 min
  8. 05/06/2025

    E18 - Diseases of the 19th Century - Part B

    Send us Fan Mail The deadly journey to Australia wasn't just about surviving treacherous seas—it was about escaping invisible killers that stalked passengers in the cramped confines of sailing ships.  Dr. George Mayo's diary from his second voyage records the heartbreaking reality: "Friday March 15th, aged two years three months, dead." We're joined by a medical expert who unpacks the devastating diseases that claimed so many lives on these early voyages.  Measles, often mistakenly considered benign today, killed millions annually before vaccination, with mortality rates reaching alarming heights in young children.  The characteristic fever, rash, and respiratory symptoms proved fatal for many youngsters trapped in the close quarters of migrant ships. Our discussion clarifies the crucial difference between measles and German measles (rubella)—the latter being particularly catastrophic for pregnant women.  We learn about Australian ophthalmologist Norman Gregg's groundbreaking 1941 discovery linking rubella in pregnancy to congenital defects, a finding that would eventually save countless unborn children. The conversation turns to whooping cough, aptly named the "100-day cough" for its persistent, violent spasms that could fracture ribs or cause bleeding in the eyes.  Without modern antibiotics, this bacterial infection was especially lethal for infants.  We also explore "the itch" (scabies), a non-fatal but miserable skin condition that spread rapidly in shipboard environments and was treated with remedies as dangerous as mercury compounds. This episode provides remarkable perspective on our medical progress.  Diseases that once decimated populations on voyages to Australia have been largely conquered through vaccination campaigns and antibiotics, though they remain threats when preventive measures falter.  The suffering of early migrants reminds us how fortunate we are to live in an age where these once-inevitable killers can be prevented with a simple injection. Ready to learn more about the medical challenges faced by Australia's early settlers? Subscribe now and join us next episode as we continue our exploration of 19th-century diseases. Contact us at todaysstories101@gmail.com or watch recent episodes on YouTube.

    36 min

About

A podcast about Australian family stories and social history.  Everyone has a story that we want to tell. To contact us, email us at: australianstories101@gmail.com or search for "Australian Stories from our Past" on Facebook or YouTube.

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