Gundagai-Latest
Particulars The Goulburn
Herald and County of Argyle Advertiser 10 July
1852 |
Accounts received during the last two-days fully confirm all that has
been stated respecting this doomed township. Mr. Spencer is saved, but not a brick
remains to mark the site of his hotel - all are swept away. Mr. Collins'
station, lower down the river, has much suffered; although the house was
built on a high hill, the flood reached it, and has forced the walls from
their perpendicular. The family, and Mr. Frederick Moore, son of J. J. Moore,
Esq., of Baw Baw, who was on a visit there, escaped
to a neighbouring range, and remained there three
nights without shelter. Mr. Peter Stuckey and Mr. Henry Stuckey are both saved. Mr Collins has lost a number of horses out of his
paddock; but the extent of such losses it is impossible to ascertain at the
present moment. The survivors are in a state of starvation. There is little
flour left, and those who have secured any wheat are subsisting on it by boiling
it. Those we have conversed with, who have been eye witnesses, describe the
scene of death and desolation as most heartrending. The bodies that have been
recovered were interred with little ceremony - what ceremony could be
expected? - they were wrapped in calico and put into
holes! The following letter, received by Mr. M'Donald,
of the Australian Hotel, of this town, from his brother, will be read with
great interest. The writer, Mr. Donald Mc'Donald,
left Goulburn for the overland route to the Victoria mines, and arrived at
Gundagai in sufficient time to witness the distressing scene of its total
extinction! We believe we can safely state that the women and children
alluded to in the letter were drowned, and that they were not the wife and
children of Edward Cain, belonging to Goulburn, as has generally been
reported. "Gundagai, July 1. - We
arrived here on Monday evening, the 21st June, and got across the river on
Tuesday morning, all safe. I am extremely sorry to inform you that the
inhabitants of this unfortunate township were visited by an awful catastrophe
during last week. On the evening of Wednesday, the 23rd June, the river began
to rise rapidly, and on the next day it was considered unsafe to cross it
with the small punt. On Friday morning, all communication between the flats
and the ranges was cut off, and the melancholy scene we had to witness during
the rest of the day will be impressed on my memory while breath remains in my
body. There was nothing to be seen but human beings in distress - men, women,
and children clinging to the roofs of houses, or any other thing that came
within their reach that was not covered with water. Towards evening, those
frail tenements, on which depended their only safety, began to give way in
succession; nothing then could be heard but cries for the assistance which
could not be rendered them. Many of the young and able caught hold of the
limbs of trees as they were swept down, and there
remained until the blacks got them ashore in their canoes. It is calculated
that 92 lives have been lost. Amongst the drowned is poor Perkins, from
Goulburn. Only 21
dead bodies have as yet been found; 20 inquests have been held during the
last four days. As yet we have no authentic account of the amount of property
lost. Reports have reached us of the loss of life amongst the inhabitants of
the neighbourhood of the township. I will now
relate to you how poor Perkins lost his life, At 11 o'clock AM. of Thursday,
the 24th, he and two other men bound for Mount Alexander diggins,
put off in a small boat from the south bank of the river for the purpose of
rescuing some of the unfortunate persons on the opposite side; they succeeded
in getting across, and took a woman and five children into the boat. As they
were coming back they came in collision with a tree, and the boat upset; one
of the men managed to save his life by swimming ashore, but poor Perkins swam
to a tree at a distance, and put off his clothes and dried them; and as soon
as he got them on again, and seemed to have got over his predicament, the
tree gave way, and down they both went and appeared no more. His body was
found three days afterwards, and was interred in un- fortunate Gundagai. I
have just been informed that the inhabitants of Wagga
Wagga have experienced a similar catastrophe as
those here. We intend to start to-morrow for the Mount, and hope that we may
never again view such a scene of distress as we have lately witnessed. Farquhar
Ross and his friends arrived in the township a few days ago, but have not as
yet crossed the river. " Donald M'donald." The following extracts are from a letter received by Mr. Abraham Lawley, of Goulburn, dated Wandadura,
(Murrumbidgee River) 30th June: "The river rose very rapidly on the night
of Friday, the 25th. At about 12 o'clock all the people on Mr. Jefries' head station had to fly to a tree to save themselves. There were ten persons in all; five men, two
women, and three small children. They had to remain in the tree until Sunday
morning without anything to eat and their clothes all wet. Young Mr. Jefries was one of those situated as I describe. He was
nearly drowned by getting down the tree; the current took him off his feet
and he had to swim for his life; he succeeded in reaching another tree. The
flood took away all the huts, stores, woolshed and press, and a large
quantity of fencing. I think it will take from £400 to £500 to replace all he
has lost by this awful calamity. I have been told that more than 100 persons
were drowned at Gundagai: one man I know was taken from a garret window by a
black in a canoe. I think that the flood was about 13 or 14 feet higher than
it was last August. I expect I shall soon have to eat boiled wheat, for there
have been only 3 or 4 bags of flour picked up since the flood: we have none
and neither tea or sugar, but we fortunately have plenty of good mutton.” Extract of a private letter:-"There
are some melancholy cases at Gundagai. One poor man named Gormley
came up to that neighbourhood in the Messrs. Macarthurs' service, and by his own industry, and the
good conduct of his sons, the poor man saved money, and bought land at
Gundagai and farms in the suburbs, and was commencing with his sons, who were
just grown up. The unfortunate man, with his wife, daughter, two sons, and
lodgers, were all drowned, their house taken away, leaving but two of the
sons." |