© 2018 Greg & Sylvia RAY
Read more about the article Gloucester via Newcastle in the mid-1800s
The paddlesteamer Williams, built in Scotland in 1854 for the Hunter River service. Image from the State Library of Victoria

Gloucester via Newcastle in the mid-1800s

Church histories aren't everybody's cup of tea. The theological debates and schisms that exercised many of our European ancestors are almost forgotten in the 21st century, and it's hard to grasp the central role that the church, in its various denominations, occupied in society not all that many generations ago. Today, accounts of the various doings of the churches may seem dust-dry and irrelevant and, as a result, it's tempting to leave church histories sitting unread on shelves. Now and then, despite this disinclination, I do pick up church histories and occasionally I'm rewarded with some…

Continue ReadingGloucester via Newcastle in the mid-1800s
Read more about the article The dairy herd travelled by punt
Mrs Farley and her children cross the river by punt, ahead of Mr Farley and the dairy herd.

The dairy herd travelled by punt

It was February 24, 1948, and the Farley family of Eagleton, near Raymond Terrace, NSW, had a difficult house-moving problem. The farming family was shifting from their home of the past 10 years at Eagleton to a new address at Millers Forest. The problem was how to shift the farm's 47 milking cows across the Hunter River. The Farleys' dairy herd boarding the punt. Fortunately, the Raymond Terrace punt supplied the solution. Shortly after midday on the day of the big shift, Mrs Farley and her three children - Cecil, Warren and Nola - crossed the…

Continue ReadingThe dairy herd travelled by punt
×
×

Cart