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The Last Survivor of the “Ragged Thirteen” — Camel Billy Recalls the Wild Goldfields Days

23/05/2026 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

Sunday Times 19 February 1939, page 6


Three Pioneers of the Goldfields Arrived in Perth Yesterday
Ages Total 237 Years
One is a survivor of  ‘The Ragged Thirteen’

Three goldfields pioneers, whose combined ages total 237 years, arrived in Perth together yesterday morning by the Westland express for treatment at the Perth Hospital. They are: William (Camel Billy) Kirkwood (81), Andy Chanley (81) and Andy Currey (75), and they came from Leonora. “Camel Billy” Kirkwood is the last surviving member of the famous

“Ragged Thirteen,” wild blades of the roaring 90’s on the goldfields, and in the Kimberleys.

“They were great days, but they didn’t last long enough,” he said, with a hint of regret, yesterday as he sat in the casualty ward of the Perth Hospital, waiting for the doctor’s decision on the state of his eyes, which have been causing him trouble. He has lost sight of one and is frightened for the other. Until he came down to Perth yesterday, he was working on the Sturt Meadows station. “Camel Billy’ they call me,” he said proudly when asked his name. “They called me that at Kanowna years ago when I caught a bad-tempered camel for Paddy Whelan, you know him, who built the Shamrock Hotel in Perth.

Last Survivor – “Yes, I’m the last surviving member of the ‘Ragged Thirteen,” he said. “If I’d stayed with them, I would have been dead, too. They used to drink a bottle of whisky a day. “Let me see-there was Bill Cross, Tom McClay, Jim Jones, MacDonald, C. Burbride and some others. “Jones used to ride into a hotel bar on a colt and smash all the bottles on the shelves. “On one occasion, we got the Coolgardie express driver and guard drunk and drove the train to Perth ourselves. “We tried the same thing on a ship, but the captain put us in irons.” Chuckling reminiscently under his bandages, “Camel Billy” went off with firm step into the doctor’s office. He will remain in Perth for further treatment.

Camel Billy Kirkwood & A Charnley

Camel Billy Kirkwood (left) & A Charnley.

Filed Under: People, Places & Towns, Ripping Yarns & Tragic Tales Tagged With: Australian History, Goldfields History, Leonora, Prospectors, Western Australia

Barmaids, Dust Storms, and the Wild Men of Yalgoo

23/05/2026 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

Murchison Times and Day Dawn Gazette – 25 September 1897, page 4


The Murchison
(From the London Financial Times)
Author unknown

The Murchison was the earliest explored field in Western Australia, not the first goldfield—that was the Yilgarn, discovered by my friend Anstey—but the first upon which development work was undertaken. It went with a boom and has, for some time, been suffering the usual reaction. Miners imagined that they were going to make fortunes and didn’t. But today I like the prospects of the Murchison better than those of any other field except Hannan’s. They have got water all through this country, and indeed, the prospectors can seldom sink below 70 feet anywhere.

What water means, only those who haven’t got it know. I do not so much care for washing. Cleanliness, maybe, is next to godliness, but I have met some of the most admirable specimens of humanity who never washed in their lives. We never washed at Menzies, Hannan’s, White Feather, or Broad Arrow, and we were picturesque and healthy. But whilst I stayed in Yalgoo, I washed my hands often twice a day and could never keep clean.

Begin to wash dogs or cats, and they are always dirty. It’s just the same with miners.

Outback 'willie willie' - Image SLWA

Outback ‘willie willie’ – Image SLWA

The desire to be clean is a sign of degeneracy. I will give you an instance of how dangerous it is to indulge in a bath in the fields. We get what are called ” willie willies.’ They are water-spouts made of sand instead of water, and they are most entertaining. They usually begin upon a very small scale, and the idle miners sit on their haunches and watch them circle down the street—a dancing column of dust, dung, dead flies, and old paper. Give them time, and they will show sport. But the ” willie willie ” has no perseverance; he lacks continued effort, and the slightest opposition in the shape of a tin hut or telegraph line so destroys his symmetry that he dies of disgust in a small heap of refuse. But with plenty of room, he becomes rampant. When he gets over fifty feet high, his power is vast.

One of the boys was much in love with a beautiful barmaid, and, failing to win her by fair means, he determined to wash. Having spent his week’s earnings upon a tub of water, he borrowed the hospital bath and retired to his tent. A ” willie willie ” had its eye upon him, and, coming across the plain with a rush, lifted the tent clean into the air and discovered the rash boy. His legs were a beautiful ivory white, but the rest of his body was a deep copper colour. There he stood, a bronze and ivory Adonis for men and barmaids to jeer at.

He never washed again, but he won the love of the lady.

Filed Under: People, Places & Towns Tagged With: Australian History, Goldfields History, Murchison, Western Australia, Yalgoo

The Man Who Found Goldfields Fortunes — Death of Alf McDonnell

23/05/2026 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

I was in correspondence with a lady way back in 1996 (yes, I do keep my research letters that far back😊). This was in the pre-Internet days when all research had to be done by letter (possibly strapped to the leg of a dinosaur). The lady’s name was Susan Salvair, and at the time she […]

Filed Under: People, Places & Towns Tagged With: Australian History, Bardoc, Goldfields History, Western Australia

From Grief to Despair: The Doyle Family Tragedy

23/05/2026 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

On the 23rd of September 1903, in Gwalia Street, Leonora, Western Australia, an event would take place that would start a string of family tragedies. The event was the death of a little girl, Eileen Margaret Doyle. She died of Tonsillitis and Bronchitis and was only 2 ½yrs old. She had only been ill for […]

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

Shot in His Sleep — The Day Dawn Murder That Shocked the Goldfields

16/05/2026 By Moya Sharp 3 Comments

Evening Mail – Fremantle 23 March 1908, page 1 No one will deny that Harry Goninon Smith, who at 8 o’clock this morning paid, on the scaffold at the Fremantle Prison, the last penalty for the supreme crime in the criminal calendar, was the murderer of the man, William John Clinton, at Day Dawn. No […]

Filed Under: People, Places & Towns, Ripping Yarns & Tragic Tales Tagged With: Australian History, Day Dawn, Goldfields History, murder, Western Australia

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