Dollypot, Greenhide and Spindrift:
a journal of bush history
Russian Jack and Synchronicity – by Diane Oldman
I rather thought I had made up the word ‘synchronicity’ and when I attempted to look it up in several dictionaries I couldn’t find it. So I decided it was a new noun – my noun. Then I discovered this definition from Wikipedia: Synchronicity (the experience of two or more events that are apparently causally unrelated occurring together in a meaningful manner. To count as synchronicity, the events should be unlikely to occur together by chance.)
My story begins in England in 1994 when my sister asked me, on my return to WA, to check the name Kirkus in the Australian telephone directories. Claire Kirkus, a friend of hers living in France, was seeking connections with her husband’s Kirkus ancestors. I did eventually discover a connection with a sea captain in Melbourne in the 1850s but this fact is only the B movie to my main feature.
Finally, Claire’s other correspondent was a Justice of the Peace from Carnarvon, WA, who described himself as ‘an author-historian’. Bryan Clark was doing research for a book on interesting personalities from WA’s northwest. Bryan was particularly fascinated by the tales of Russian Jack whom he believed to be the only Russian-born immigrant in WA at the time of the early gold exploration. Brian wrote to Claire Kirkus,
Tales of his feats of strength were legion; his reputation preceded him wherever he wandered in the outback country. He was truly a unique personality.
When nothing new transpired, I soon forgot about Claire Kirkus, Bryan Clark and Russian Jack. Then six years later in July 2000 the Western Australian newspaper ran a story entitled “Russians pay homage to Jack with a heart of gold”. My interest flickered for a moment; I sent the clipping to Claire and that was that.
the infinite capacity of journalistic inventiveness of which historians must beware.
Even Jack’s contemporaries who included Daisy Bates, G J C McDonald, the Murchison Police Sergeant based for a time at Peak Hill and Russian Jack’s mate Dead Finish, who worked gold claims with him, may have sacrificed absolute truth for the sake of a good yarn, many years after Jack’s death in 1904.
But he was certainly a different JFK !
Moya Sharp
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