Journeys
These are the individual History stories, or you can listen to them grouped into topics as History journeys.
Death at Redbank GorgeClashes between the original inhabitants of the West Macs and the new settlers were sometimes fatal.
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The Horn ExpeditionThe Horn Scientific Expedition was the first scientific expedition to study the natural history of Central Australia.
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Early days of fishingWhen Jim Hayes was a boy he learned how to fish in the time-honoured Central Australian way. |
A brilliant horseman with two gravesAn amusing story of the trials of marking a grave in the West Macs.
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Pioneering Central Australian TeacherIda Standley was the first, and for 15 years the only government-appointed teacher in Central Australia.
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Strehlow at Jay CreekNearby Standley Chasm some pioneering work was done on studying the languages and culture of the Arrarnta people.
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Peg Nelson remembers Ida StandleyThe canny Ida Standley had a knack for getting children through their exams.
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Early HistorySince the times before European settlement, Simpsons Gap has been recognised as a valuable source of permanent water.
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Dust and DroughtSondra Young grew up near Simpsons Gap on a cattle station. She remembers the harsh drought of the 1950s.
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The Building of Serpentine ChaletSerpentine Gorge was built by the Ansett group with Len Tuit at the helm. As former Ansett tour operator John Spencer explains,…
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Serpentine ToursRemote locations can sometimes call for some creative thinking in servicing tourists,
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The Owen Springs FamilyOwen Springs Station was owned by the Hayes family for the best part of a century.
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Good Cattle CountryThe early identification of Central Australia as good cattle country shaped the next hundred years of human activity there.…
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Cattle and DroughtThe early days of running cattle in the West Macs taught some harsh lessons about land and water.
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An early encounter with John FlynnMeeting John Flynn left a strong impression on Peg Nelson. Peg was born Margaret Bloomfield just before WW1.
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The History of Ormiston GorgeOrmiston Gorge was difficult to traverse, but was useful as a watering place for cattle.
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Glen Helen JourneyPeter Latz talks about how difficult it was to travel around the West Macs when he was a child.
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Bulldust, barrels and bell tentsDoing a circuit of the West Macs sights in the old days was true adventure tourism.
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Fred Raggatt - tough but with a soft streakFred Raggatt was the second owner of Glen Helen Station.
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