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The Gate of Golden Hope –

27/06/2026 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

Western Mail Perth 25 December 1928, page 76


Micky O’Driscoll, or “Micky the Priest”, as he was known, humped his bluey disconsolately through the scrubby jam-tree thicket. Behind him, some ten miles lay the town . . . . Hell’s blessings on it! . . . where he had squandered two months’ wages in as many days, and after a spree of glorious but short duration had received the not uncertain hint of the police officer to make himself scarce. Towns mused Micky, were the habitations of the Philistines, and an honest man had no part therein. The beasts of the field had their lairs, the fowls of the air their nests, but verily this son of woman knew not a resting place for his lightly-laden “Matilda” or for his Prince Alberts-shod feet.

Yet, perhaps, there was something to be said for the sober propriety of these foregathering places of mankind. Had he been able to adopt sobriety and respectability, he would not have been the peripatetic pauper that he had made himself. There would perhaps have been a cottage, rose festooned and snugly nestled in a garden, with a golden-haired woman and a chubby kid or two. Now these Eden-dwellers turned him out without grace or warning, so what was the use of a casual farm-hand, who had tramped the unknown miles of the back-country in the early gold-rush days, and who had lost himself in his pursuit of the elusive metal .

What was the use of such as he making a song about their lack of charity and understanding?

At the present moment, the milk of human kindness was the one thing missing from the menu. His dry tongue was cracked with the thirst of an empty aftermath. To drink in a cool and sociable bar was immeasurable joy, but when the pocket was barren of money, and the bar’s attitude changed to unmasked hostility, the whole thing became an unbearable nightmare. Oh, for a haven of comfort and a spring of the amber liquid!

His humble soliloquy was checked as the track came upon a gate. It was a gate to be proudly exhibited in a city museum as an example of rural ingenuity. In all his wide experience, Micky O’Driscoll had never seen such a gate. It was a mixture of scrap iron, erected in a more or less vertical plane. There were pieces of rusty half-inch piping, barbed wire and fencing wire, string, rope, binder-twine, whipcords and broken reins, and it hung a silent memorial to the uses of adversity . . . which are great. A sheet of galvanised iron, that had apparently been churned in a ‘Cock-Eyed Bob’, graced the middle portion.

On it was scrawled in spidery characters, “Golden Hope.

Peering over the top of this formidable obstruction, he saw a low house of rough-hewn logs, ranked side by side with gaping crevices between. A window yawned open and sea-sawed in the vagrant wind. Micky’s eyes returned to the gate that barred his progress. “Golden Hope,” he read, “well, wot’s lackin’ in gold is suttin’ly made up by ‘ope. I’m game to bet the bloke wot owns this concern numbers ‘ope among ‘is most valued possessions. Without judgin too strongly, I should say it’s likely a fair amount of ‘ope is wanted to undo this ‘ere durned contraption.”

He turned a savage glare upon the offending scrap heap. At that moment, a dog, a product of its Irish father’s rakish youth, appeared from behind the tatterdemalion house and set up a menacing barking. Its brown eyes flashed with electric hate, and the fine hairs on its neck were lifted to form a bristling collar. “Dang it!” “The Priest” muttered under his breath, “Away with you, you barkin’ son of a Shin Fane zealot! It’s not a bit of use for you to stand there barin’ you ivories while this hardware shop’s between us.”

Again, he read “Golden Hope.” Strange how that name beguiled him. It stirred emotions long since dormant, and the mysteries that rose in his memory included the golden-haired woman of his dreams, with her eyes of cornflower blue and teeth of dental perfection. The yelping dog receded into the nebulous distance. The woman was speaking. “Micky,” she said, and her voice was soft like the whispers of a night wind, “Micky, you have come back at last!”

Yet though her words spoke unreserved welcome, her eyes roamed enquiringly over his sun-tanned face. He read their mission aright, for he replied, “Yes, Molly, at last, with a clear conscience, I can say I have left all the old life behind me. I have forsaken my old companions, I have deserted the old craving, so I can come to you cleanly and claim you for my own.”

The gate between them had similarly shed its dross and now shone with highly burnished gold. “You are sure, Micky?”, “Molly, my own, when I left you, it was to fight the great fight with myself. I have battled and I have won. Not a single drop have I tasted for three whole years!”

A roseate smile lighted the woman’s face. “This is the day I have dreamed of, Micky,” she said simply. “And I,” agreed the enraptured man. Then, “Molly!” “Yes, dear?” The face was growing nearer. “Let me kiss you as I used in the good old days.” He moved forward. He felt her breath hot upon his brows. His eyes were moist.

Suddenly! his progress was arrested by a substance that flung him back to the plane of things mortal. The face and eyes receded, then vanished, and he collapsed heavily on a tangle of embryo shrapnel. In his ears dinned the sound of a barking dog, drawing rapidly nearer. Then a stentorian voice thundered,

“Wot d’yer mean by breakin’ down my gate?”

O’Driscoll lifted himself painfully from the nameplate of the “Golden Hope” to face a swiftly approaching man, whose beetling brows and hairy chest boded ill for his well-being. At a glance, he took in the newcomer’s patchwork nether garments and the tattered shirt that gaped like an imbecile child. “Wot in ‘ell ….!” commenced the man, but Micky was on his feet and smiling.

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

Over the Plates: The Unlucky Gamble

27/06/2026 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

Dolly Pot – Western Mail, Perth – 21 November 1940, page 8

OVER THE PLATES
An Unlucky Gamble

Early in the “Roaring Nineties,” Billy Collins, Ned Campion, Barney, and I were camped at a pool ten miles west of Cue. At the south end of the pool, flies were making short work of a horse and cow, both dead, that had bogged in the mud. We scraped holes at the rocky edge of the pool, and the water was not too bad. The daily menu – breakfast, dinner, and tea – was tinned dog (tinned meat) and damper, the nearest store being Murphy and Gibson’s.

Cue at that time consisted of Payne Carlisle, the butcher, Sutton, the baker, Fred Carlisle, the Cue Hotel,  Tom Williams, the Crown Hotel, and an iron camp post office, with Mr Livingston as postmaster. The Warden’s Court was a 12 x 4 tent. The prison was a huge mulga log.

Big Russian Jack had been on a bender and was handcuffed to the prison log. After a sleep, he woke up and felt thirsty, so he carried the prison log to the pub. Constable Lucanus missed him, located him, and ordered his return. “All right, constable, another drink, and I’ll go”, and to the amusement of everyone, he picked up the ‘prison’ and returned. A few weeks later, Jack got the fever and was one of the first victims.

We were working on a lease on the other side of the range, called the Fairlight. We had a fair amount of stone in the paddock showing little gold, but it dollied well. It was usual to fire out last thing before knocking off, and the smoke was well clear by the next morning. One morning, we got a pleasant surprise. An ironstone bar had crossed the reef, and where it intersected the reef, it had made rich stone. The face was like a jeweller’s shop. The first bucket sent up had over a hundred ounces of specimen stone, which we took into the bank.

Lord Percy Douglas late to become the Marquess of Queensbury

Lord Percy Douglas – later to become the Marquess of Queensbury

It created quite a sensation. Lord Percy Douglas, the heir of the Marquess of Queensberry Estate (brother of Alfred Douglas, the lover of Oscar Wilde), was in Cue in the interests of an English syndicate, and he returned to the lease with us. After looking over the property, he offered us £4,000 cash and a quarter interest, which we accepted.

It was arranged for one of us to go to Perth with Lord Percy to complete the deal. Of course, we would all have liked to go, so we decided to draw lots. We shuffled a pack of cards and dealt. The first with a Jack was to go. Barney was the lucky man. Lord Percy and Barney left by Marsh and McKenzie’s coach for Geraldton the next morning en route to Perth. Many weeks went by, and we heard nothing from Lord Percy or Barney. No cheque had been paid into the bank, and Barney was drawing heavily on the account. The rich stone turned out to be only a pocket, so I went to Perth and found Barney, just getting over a bad case of the D.T.’s.

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

Navvies, Newlyweds and the Goldfields Dream

27/06/2026 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

The Sun. Kalgoorlie 8 December 1901 North Country Notes by Pharisee Since the advent of the navvies with the Malcolm-Leonora railway construction, the Malcolm hash houses have received a severe shaking up. Formerly it was only possible to get a square feed if – like Oliver Twist — a man possessed the grit to ask […]

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

The Crown for the Queen of the Murchison –

27/06/2026 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

Geraldton Express and Murchison and Yalgo0 Goldfields Chronicle – 26 March 1897 Parer’s Crown Hotel, Cue, is one of the most popular resorts for visitors and residents of the town in which to make their home while in the fields. The name of Parer Bros is well known to everyone who has ever been in […]

Filed Under: Hotels, People, Places & Towns Tagged With: Australian History, Boulder, Cue, Goldfields History, Hotels, Western Australia

Coolgardie Cemetery Project –

25/06/2026 By Moya Sharp Leave a Comment

COOLGARDIE CEMETERY UPDATE I’d like to share an update on my ongoing project to expand the biographies of those buried in the Coolgardie Cemetery. I recently realised that it is almost exactly a year since I began this enormous undertaking, and I’m pleased to say that I have now completed the biographies for burials from […]

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

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