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Kevnool
30-09-2009, 07:50 AM
While travelling yesterday i stopped at Pooles grave 300 klms north of Broken Hill.

Grab a pic to show the resting place of James Poole member of Charles Sturt expedition team.

Heres an extract.

This was Sturt's fourth major expedition and began in August 1844, when he was almost 50 years of age. Three hundred men applied to join the expedition. Sturt chose 16 including James Poole, the second-in-command and set off together with 11 horses, 300 sheep, 32 bullocks, six dogs and an assortment of carts and wagons.
Early in the trip he was confronted again with hostile aboriginals, but managed to reason with them. The party passed through today's Broken Hill, but failed to recognise the valuable minerals in the ground. Further north, at Rocky Glen (near the present town of Milparinka), a large stretch of deep water, they were trapped for 6 months by the extreme heat and the lack of water ahead. The party came down with a disease called scurvy because of the lack of fresh food. Poole's skin turned black and large pieces of flesh peeled off the inside of his mouth. It had become so hot that the thermometers were bursting - up to 67 degrees Centigrade and the river was almost dry. It was so hot it made screws drop out of boxes, lead fell out of pencils and the men's nails became as brittle as glass.


My hats off to the explorers of yesterday.
Cheers Kev.

RB
30-09-2009, 08:48 AM
Wow, amazing to read about the conditions they faced.
Can't imaging what it was like.

Kev, good onya mate, thank you for sharing these with us.

:thumbsup:

chrisp9au
30-09-2009, 09:26 AM
That brings back some memories!

I visited that site 25 years ago on a fossicking trip to the Easter Monday diggings at Tibooburra. Shortly afterwards there were some big storms and Evelyn Creek and the surrounding country started flooding, to the point that we had to camp in the middle of the Silver City Highway for 4 days at Milpa Flats waiting for the flood to recede.

Standing by that grave out in that country was very special.

Thanks Kev! :thumbsup:

Chris

ving
30-09-2009, 02:48 PM
those must have been some harsh times... gee!

thanks for sharing :)

h0ughy
30-09-2009, 04:40 PM
so that tree was there in 1845 - wow

Liz
30-09-2009, 04:47 PM
Very interesting ... thanks Kev ... looks nice and hot, and lookt that red dust - am sure I have some of that in my loungeroom at the moment!!!

Kevnool
30-09-2009, 05:14 PM
Thx all for the great comments.
Harsh times in the desert for the poor souls.
An extra pic as well.
The grave on the far right with the little lamb in one of those pics was an 11 year old girl.

Cheers Kev.

Kevnool
30-09-2009, 05:17 PM
That was a while ago Chris.
Not much changed not even the colours.
At present i,m camping with my job near the Cobham lakes.


Liz thats special dust....lol

Cheers Kev.

kinetic
01-10-2009, 07:36 PM
Great post Kev, I love these stories and pics,
please keep them coming.

They make me so homesick!

Wonderful stuff!:thumbsup:

Steve

Lismore Bloke
01-10-2009, 09:07 PM
It reminds us of our trip through South Australia and down the Oodnadatta Track, via Broken Hill last school holidays. We visited Depot Glen and it was one of the highlights in a great trip. A few pics, including Sturt's Cairn at the top of the hill and our vehicles down below.

chrisp9au
01-10-2009, 10:00 PM
Kev, I guess you would have seen this scene a few times!

Scan of a picture taken back 1981 or 82, looking east from near the Milparinka turnoff.

Mount Poole and surrounding country got a good soaking that day!

Cheers :thumbsup:
Chris

My lovely wife, who always knows better than I, has corrected my memory of the year I did this trip!

DavidU
01-10-2009, 10:45 PM
Thanks Kev, learned a few things.
Boy those fellas and ladys were tough in those days.
I sit in my hot/cold running water cozy home reading this makes me think how different early Australian life was.
You have an interesting job Kev !

astroron
01-10-2009, 11:06 PM
I may be traveling through Broken Hill in the next few months ,but a trip up there might be in the wrong time of the year, with the heat:question:
I would love to visit that area:)