OH13 - Bridgetown WA History
Transcription
OH13 - Bridgetown WA History
ROY DOUST SHIRE OF BRIDGETOWN-GREENBUSHES ORAL HSTORY PROJECT BICENTENNIAL HERITAGE PROGRAMME An interview with Mr Roy Doust 1975 A member of a pioneer family in the Bridgetown area Conducted by Glenn Bennett The original tape forms part of the Bridgetown High School Collection With notes about the early midwives in the district. Reference No OH 13 1 x 60 minute tape Verbatim transcript 1 ROY DOUST NOTE TO THE READER Readers of this Oral History Memoir should bear in mind that it is a verbatim transcript of the spoken word and reflects the informal conversation style that is inherent in such historical sources. The Bridgetown-Greenbushes Shire is not responsible for the factual accuracy of the memoir, not for the views expressed there-in, these are for the reader to judge. 2 ROY DOUST Narrator Roy Doust Interviewer Glenn Bennett Place “Moonya Lodge”, Ipsen Street, Manjimup Date 1975 PERSONAL DATA Roy Doust born 12 March 1890 at Bridgetown PARENTS Susan Doust (nee Rummer) born 8 May 1859 in England Alfred Doust born 9 November 1853 at Newcastle (now Toodyay), Western Australia BROTHERS AND SISTERS Ida born 2/2/1881 in Bridgetown Mena born 16/10/1882 in Bridgetown William born 12/7/1884 in Bridgetown Edith born 10/5/1886 in Bridgetown Esther born 1/5/1888 in Bridgetown Leonard born 28/3/1892 in Bridgetown Nelmore born 10/9/1894 in Bridgetown Keith born 18/9/1902 in Bridgetown Victor (Bob) born 7/10/1905 in Bridgetown SCHOOLING Winnejup Rural School 3 ROY DOUST SYNOPSIS SIDE A Discovery of tin by Mr Stinton Early tin mining in Greenbushes – first rush to South Greenbushes, known as Bunbury End – description of early mining – early dredge (not successful) Early settlers – Mr Bartlett and Mr Williams came from South Australia to Greenbushes and then later settled in Bridgetown Recreation in Greenbushes – three football teams during the boom period – cricket Bridgetown Agricultural Society – formed in 1885 (?) Description of original ground – move to present site Timber mills. First mill constructed by James Scott near present Hester Siding. (He later took over the Farmers Home Hotel – renamed Scotts) Description of later mills – all purpose mills Sleeper cutters Spot mills – Kurtz and Allnutt cut first fruit cases SIDE B Hotels in Bridgetown Farmers’ Home – the first built by Henry Doust Bridgetown – second – Joseph Daw Terminus – third – Joseph Smith, originally a store and residence, later obtained a liquor licence. Freemasons’ Hotel originally built at what is now Nelson House (Bridgetown Motel) Moved to present site – built by Bunning Bros Brick making – Mr Doust’s father supplied bricks for the Terminus Description of original Farmers’ Home – special room for visiting doctor from Bunbury 4 ROY DOUST First hospital Midwives – Mrs Joseph Smith and Mrs Jim Maslin from Bridgetown, Mrs Reeve of Balbarrup Early doctors – Dr Dickenson followed by Dr Dean Surgeries 5 ROY DOUST INTRODUCTION Mr Roy Doust, a member of a pioneer farming family in the Winnejup area, Bridgetown, is interviewed by Glenn Bennett. Mr Doust was born in Bridgetown in 1890 and spent his life in the area. He was manager of the Blackwood Times for some years and was interested in the history and development of Bridgetown. VERBATIM TRANSCRIPT SIDE A GB I’m talking to Mr Roy Doust about the tin mining at Greenbushes. RD After the discovery of tin by Mr Stinton there was a rush from Bunbury to the fields and at that stage it was South Greenbushes, but for a long time it was called Bunbury End on account of the number from that township. It wasn’t until later on it became South Greenbushes. Naturally to mine tin from so much other soil and particularly white slimy soil it was necessary to build what was known as the best method in those days, as a sludge pool. This was worked with a pony by going around some of the old horse works on farms and other areas. It was built in a complete circle with a wall of slabs mostly made from Jarrah, which would be about three foot in height and sunk about eighteen inches into the soil. Inside that and about three feet in width was another wall so that the water could be channeled into the sludge mill and would then wash off all the soil and eventually the tin being the heaviest of the lot required the services of a man in the sludge pit, or sludge circular hole you would call it, and he would throw with a shovel material back toward the inflow of the water, and as he did that, each shovelful he threw back was washed by the water to a certain extent. When they considered they had about fifty or sixty percent tin and other material, then it was bagged up and taken away for cleaning – hand cleaning usually in those days. Then this was followed by the introduction of motor engines, petrol driven, and they used what was known as a force of water – it was pumped out at a high degree into the walls of the mine they were working and naturally washed out everything! They had to be careful of course washing around trees in case a tree would fall on them. That was washed back and it would run into what they called a paddock, and round the paddock was heaped up dirt to the extent that it kept all the water in and the sludge. This was then run through a race built with galvanized tin bases at the bottom but in layers of about four or five feet, and each layer dropped down about six inches so that the chap standing at the top with the shovel or two men in the race would keep throwing the tin and all the rubbish back until they had nothing but tin and stones, or something that was fairly 6 ROY DOUST heavy that would not wash away. All the pipe clay and that sort of thing, which was snow white in those days and still is, was washed away and they sorted the tin out mostly by a pan system. . It was interesting to watch the old miners in as much as they could tell Tin and Tantalite but could not separate them, by picking up the jet black stones and throwing them onto their tongues. If it fell off it was Tin or Tantalite. If they could not tell that way then they took a couple of pennies and would grind the Tin down until they found out whether it was Tin, Tomlin or Tantalite, and that is how they worked it. Someone then had the idea that they would be able to work a dredge and they put in a water scheme from the Blackwood River right into Greenbushes – this would have been around 1914 or thereabouts. They purchased a second hand plant from Singapore but they did not have sufficient water to keep the dredge afloat. They chained the dredge with a wire rope to two large trees, one on each side of the pit, and kept it moving forward all the time when possible, but you can imagine that when taking out the solid dirt, rocks and so on which were washed with force of water going then out the back of the dredge, they became shipwrecked, and it was never a success. They could not keep it clear so it had to be dropped. During that time the Mines Department sought many avenues of finding Lode Tin in Greenbushes, and even put down what is still known as the Cornwall mine – a circular mine – and they operated that putting in drives and shafts in many places, but they never discovered what they were looking for. One thing they did consider was that the Greenbushes Tin continued under the Blackwood River and came out again at Smithfield, which is near the Donnelly River Mill right on the Donnelly River. Tin was discovered at Smithfield many years ago by J A Smith and two brothers named Donovan from Greenbushes, and they worked it there but could not find it in payable quantities. The Mines Department nowadays considers that that was an offshoot from Greenbushes. The great majority of miners worked on their own account – more what you would call prospectors, or in twos and threes, but the biggest company working there was F A Moss of Kalgoorlie, and they were working big plants all the time and always had managers for the job. They were there just after the turn of the century. The miners came from many parts of Australia, particularly South Australia, and some of the people who worked in Greenbushes came on to Bridgetown and bought land and businesses and settled. For instance, one of the chief businessmen in the town was the late Mr R C Williams 7 ROY DOUST who later became Clerk of Court in Bridgetown and he was attracted to Greenbushes because of the tin outbreak. The late “Big Bill” Johnson who was for years referred to as ‘The King of Manjimup’, was a Victorian, and he and his relatives came to Greenbushes as soon as Tin was discovered and eventually moved on to Manjimup and went into business. The miners were a jovial lot – very happy and easy to get on with. For instance – I knew them very well from the inception, but I got to know them better still in about 1918 to 1920. At one stage they erected a tin smelter in Greenbushes which was quite a big undertaking, because the only smelter in Australia in those days for tin was Sydney, and Greenbushes kept going until such time when there was not enough to handle, and consequently the mill was closed down. The mill was within a quarter of a mile of the present recreation ground and probably there would be the remains of the foundations still there. GB What type of recreation was there in Greenbushes at that time? RD That calls to mind many happy games played on the Reserve and Greenbushes was so busy that they had no less than three football teams! One was known as the Timber Corporation, with men selected from the Timber Mill out from the North Greenbushes Railway Station, Wanderers and South Greenbushes. In addition to the present Recreation Ground, they also had one at South Greenbushes, and one at Brown’s Mill, so that each club had its own ground. They took a keen interest in cricket and some of their players were outstanding in the first Country Week Cricket Carnival held in Perth when Nelson won the competition. I well remember when I was scoring for the occasion, the outstanding player at that carnival was a man by the name of Jack Arthur who lived in Greenbushes. GB Do you remember anything about the foot races they held outside the hotels on a Friday and Saturday evening? RD No, I don’t recall them – Wally Meares would know. GB What about the Agricultural Shows, Mr Doust? RD It is interesting to recall the effort put forward by the Agricultural Society which was formed in Bridgetown in 1885 in as much as there was little or no money available in the district in those days and it was even difficult to obtain work of any sort. But the Society went ahead and they decided to fence in the Recreation Ground which was all timber then, extending from the (old) Bridgetown State School, that is now the railway crossing in Steere Street, to Roe Street, opposite the Convent. It went down Roe 8 ROY DOUST Street almost to the Brook and from there straight back to where the railway is today and joined up then with the playground of the State School. When the railway came through, naturally they split up the playground with the result that we, as children had to play where the Freemasons’ Hotel now stands. There were no buildings at all there as far as the Farmers’ Home Hotel, now Scott’s Hotel. Then they fenced back again to Steere Street. I’ve no knowledge of course of what Gilbert and William Coverley charged for the work they did or what number of days or weeks was given in voluntary work, but if you want to see some of the efforts they put forward you can go to the present day Agricultural Society and you will see that there is a six foot fence around a lot of that, made of Jarrah slabs, posts and rails, solid. You will also find the cattle pen from Peninsula Road near the entrance gate down to the old booth, all cattle and horse pens of solid Jarrah six feet high with walking slabs on top of the posts so that anyone could walk around on top of the yards. From Roe Street down to the entrance gate which would be opposite the present Police Station other pens were erected for more vicious cattle. On the opposite side towards the railway were the horse pens. This gave them sufficient room for football and cricket and the only building on that full length of ground was a small shed used for produce when the Annual Show was held. GB One can imagine what it would cost these days to build such a fence or anything like it – it would be beyond the financial resources of anyone. Sheep pens made of very much smaller material and pig pens made of Jarrah were erected on the northern side of the round, and that left plenty of room for all entertainments. All sports gatherings were held there and a cricket pitch was put down, not concrete, they used to use mats in those days. So if we could just summarise the ground fronted on to Steere Street, went in a northerly direction nearly to the Brook, and that was entirely fenced with post and rail, and this has now been transferred to the present showground? RD I don’t know how much went there, but a lot of timber for the stockyards and the boundary fence. I have noticed for many years that for many, many years when you go into the country and select your own trees they split like matchwood, you never bothered with Curly Jarrah, consequently when a post was put into the ground it would last for years and years, whereas today I have noticed posts put in that would rot off quickly. GB So the Coverleys were the ones who did the fencing? RD Yes, William and Gilbert Coverley, if I remember rightly from what my parents told me, but no doubt they had plenty of help from other people. 9 ROY DOUST GB What do you know about timber milling in the area, Mr Doust? RD Well, the first Timber Mill of any note was erected by James Scott, who afterwards bought Scott’s Hotel, and that was erected a little more than half a mile below Hester Siding. He supplied quite a lot of timber to the Bridgetown district. GB Is it true that the motor for the original steam driven mill came from somewhere in the Boyup area. RD I’m sorry, I couldn’t tell you that, I know it was steam driven. The next Mill of any note that came in was Sexton and Drysdale who constructed a Mill a little over a mile on the northern side of Hester Siding. This was followed by a mill erected by Connell, William Connell, at Hester Siding, and that kept going for many years. GB Was there any particular reason for them congregating in the Hester area? RD If you want really good timber you want to get into gravel ironstone ridges – timber will keep better and it is easier to work, the poorer the land as far as agriculture is concerned proved to supply the best timber, and the timber around Hester Siding and for many miles out was excellent and it took many, many years for them to cut it all out. GB When you say a mill was begun, what sort of construction was there in the mill? RD They were cutting all classes of timber, including fruit cases and sleepers, six foot six inch sleepers, not the nine foot, they were all cut by hand. The Sleeper Cutters came along and they cut everything worth cutting. For instance, I know one man and afterwards he became MLA J A Smith, he was cutting sleepers, and on one occasion I was passing through a bit of bush, horse hunting, when I saw one of the finest jarrah logs I had ever seen in my life in size, shape, etc. When I pulled up alongside and had a look at it, I saw no less than three wedged blocks of wood side by side and they had not even split that log open, and I happened to mention to J A Smith many years afterwards what I had seen. He said that was his log and did I know how many lengths he had cut off it? I said I thought about five or six, and he said, “Yes, that was the toughest log I’ve ever seen in my life – we just could not split it!” You can imagine if that had been going through a mill every bit would have been saved. Sleeper cutters were very lax in finishing a log – if it was heavy and nasty and a bit cross-grained they refused to go with it, they would look for another. 10 ROY DOUST GB The original mills were all purpose mills? RD Yes, but the cutters were there before the mills, and of course when the cutting became short on crown land they eventually bought up all private property. I’ll just give you an interesting episode which occurred and was told to me by the man himself. He bought a T-model Ford, but it was a second hand one and not new. He was driving through the area one day when all of a sudden the driving wheel came off in his hands and left him with no control. It was all gravel or sandy roads in those days and within a few moments the car left the road and finished up nicely wedged into a Jarrah tree stump. Fortunately he was not hurt very much, he got out of the car, walked around it, looked at the stump and saw his own sleeper brand on the stump. In those days every cutter was obliged to carry a registered brand and immediately he cut a tree down he had to put his brand on it. So he looked at that stump and said, “you rotten swine, I thought I’d finished with you thirty years ago!” GB You mentioned the three mills that started up around Hester. Were there any of what were called “Spot Mills” in the Bridgetown area? RD Yes. I think possibly one that started up possibly about the same time that Scott started was operated by Kurtz and Allnutt. Kurtz was a German who came to Australia and had taken up a property in Bridgetown, and the two of them combined to cut the first fruit cases that were used in Bridgetown and they were known in those days, and still are, as three-quarter flats. They were followed by other smaller mills, and some of those mills on the farms were even cutting River Banksia which is a beautiful wood, and the cases were pretty to see, but what a pity to waste that wood. GB So these Spot Mills just spread around everywhere? RD The Spot Mills in the end of course, were cutting practically all sleepers. The point you’ve got to consider is this – for years now they have been cutting from private properties, and when you ring bark country and leave all the valuable Jarrah, they develop a cross grain, so you can only used them in a mill as you can’t use them for sleepers. GB How did these men actually work in cutting the timber? RD Generally if you were working for yourself you had a mate and you would use one another for backing off for putting a scarf in a tree. You are using a six or eight foot cross cut saw so you want someone to give you a start. You put your scarf in with an axe and then you back off with a saw and you want two men to handle it, otherwise one end of your saw is dropping down all the time and cutting too deep and makes a bit of a mess. Then when you do that you generally billet off. If you’re cutting six by eight by 11 ROY DOUST four, six foot long, eight inches by four inches, you billet off the pieces you can save, depending on what the tree is like – if it is a reasonable cuttable tree you have no trouble, and when you put your sleeper on, what we used was a cord with charcoal on it. You put the cord in and take it down the other end where you want to use to cut off you bring down the cord and tap it in, then you pull the cord up in the middle and drop it and it leaves a black line dead straight right down the middle, and that’s the line that you follow. Usually you have to take off most of the outside with an ordinary axe and then finish with a broad axe. A broad axe is about ten or twelve inches long and only sharpened on one side, the other side is perfectly straight so that it doesn’t matter whether you are left or right handed – you can put your handle in either end. This axe is so heavy that you can just drop it on the line and it comes right through and it looks as though you’ve planed it off with a plane. SIDE B To get sleepers out of the bush you usually used a horse and snigged them out onto a reasonable place where you could load up, and it’s not an easy job handling nine foot sleepers, or even six foot sleepers, but there were horses and even bullock teams carting sleepers in, in those days. One of my first visits to Manjimup, and that was a long time ago, a bullock load of sleepers came in while I was there. GB I wonder if you could tell us about the four hotels in Bridgetown, perhaps starting with the Terminus? RD The terminus was the third built in the town and that was originally built by Joseph Smith, and he and his family used it as a residence and a store. The store was on the town end of the building, and it was necessary to walk up a flight of steps to enter. Eventually he applied for and was granted a (liquor) licence. But the first hotel built in Bridgetown was known as Farmers’ Home Hotel, which is now known as Scotts Hotel and that was built by Henry James Doust. The next one built was the Bridgetown Hotel which has retained the same name, and that was built by Joseph Daw and was run by him for many years. It was eventually sold to someone else. The Freemasons’ Hotel was built as a hotel, now known as Nelson House, but it was realized soon afterwards that it was too far out of town to have a share of the business and in those days it had to be remembered that people were coming from Manjimup, Upper Blackwood and all those districts to Bridgetown for trade, because Boyup Brook was practically unknown then, Manjimup was just known as Warren, and some of those people had to travel thirteen, fourteen miles and more, so each of the 12 ROY DOUST hotels had to have a stable to hold at least ten or twelve horses so that when farmers did come it, they had somewhere to put their horses while they stayed in the town, and many would be there for four or five days, just for a change. The Freemasons’ Hotel was erected by Bunning Bros. and in the end they decided to build another Freemasons’ Hotel on the corner of Steere and Hampton Streets where it stands today, closing down Nelson House and transferring the licence. GB Do you know anything about the construction of the Terminus? Can you remember the clayholes from which the bricks were taken? RD Yes, the bricks for the Terminus came out of my father’s property not half a mile out of the town, because I remember he received eight bricks for every hundred they made, as his share, and in addition to that he supplied a pony for the Mill. GB How were the bricks made? RD Clay was wheeled up out of the holes in a barrow – the pony had to stop while he was tipping the clay into the Mill, which was just like an ordinary well, but built up, and there was a driveway down to where the brickie worked himself. The pony went round and round with iron bars stirring up the clay, who knew just what amount of water to put in with it, so it wouldn’t be too puggy. It was only on rare occasions that the brick maker would call out for another half a bucket of water. The poor unfortunate pony used to turn up every night after work with lumps of clay sticking to him all over the place, because when he stopped for a rest he was encouraged to start again with a lump of clay being thrown. GB How were the bricks actually constructed by the brick maker for the Terminus Hotel? Was there a mould? RD Yes, every brick comes through a mould. It’s surprising how easy it is if you have the right mixture. Almost every brick in those days had a thumb mark or two on it. They would have a barrow about six feet long and that would hold about three or four dozen bricks. On the barrow and in a layer was a light deal board, and each brick was placed as he pushed it out of the mould with his two thumbs. You had to be careful so the brick wasn’t pushed out of shape. Then as soon as he got the barrow full, he would wheel it off for stacking to dry. The barrow had a wheel which was back almost half way so that when he picked up the handles it wasn’t too hard to hold up, and when it got too heavy he would raise his hands and let the weight go forwards to pull him on. The bricks would be stacked in layers about four bricks wide on a perfectly level surface covered with sand and 13 ROY DOUST about a quarter of an inch apart, and he works the full length of that row so it gives them a chance to dry. In a few days, if the bricks are dry enough, he starts another layer, and so on. I think they only went about three feet in height, then they would be covered with bulrushes or ferns, but mostly bulrushes taken from miles around wherever you could find them, and it didn’t matter if they were green or dry. They would put a sapling along the bricks on the opposite way to where the wind was coming from, and then put the bulrushes on so there was something to take the rain off, then they would put another sapling on top to stop them blowing off, and that’s how they dried their bricks. When they are completely dry they were burnt the same as you would see them at a kiln at Burekup. I forget how long they were kept in the kiln. GB How about the old Bridgetown Hotel? That was built before the Terminus, wasn’t it? RD Scott’s Hotel, the new part of Scott’s where it is now, that was built out of the same yards, my father’s yards, but the Bridgetown Hotel was built of bricks made not more than two hundred yards from Fisher’s Garage, the clay pit was right in the gully there, and I think it may still be in evidence. GB When did they reconstruct the Bridgetown Hotel? I’ve seen photos of the old one and that was down in the hollow, wasn’t it? RD When the hotel was built, it was level with the track, and the Road Board had to build it (the track) up as it got to be a quagmire in the winter time, and when they did that you had to go down steps into the Hotel, so they had to demolish it by degrees and build the existing one. GB Could you tell me something about the Farmers’ Home Hotel and its appearance before it became Scott’s? RD The Farmers’ Home Hotel originally was a rather low building, low for architecture in those days. It was built with one small bar and numerous other rooms for various purposes. One was specially built for the medical officer who in those days lived in Bunbury. He was the only doctor in the district, Dr Lovegrove, and he used to come once a month. As a matter of fact I remember it well because I was vaccinated there, I must have been five or six, but I do know they took a long time to get me out from under the form. Between the main section of the Hotel and the Dining Room, washing quarters, maids’ quarters and so on, would be fifteen or twenty feet on and a roadway or carriageway between. The Dining Room was a very large one used for wedding receptions and all that sort of thing, in those days, as a matter of fact it was the leading reception room in the district when it 14 ROY DOUST was not the Dining Room of the Hotel. It was built on the old system of going into a room by going along a verandah or covered way and into another room. I don’t remember a passageway of any kind in all the building. So as you can imagine it covered a fairly big area, but all that was later pulled down and only the existing building erected. GB We were talking about medical facilities in the town, and Mr Doust has memories of the first hospital there. RD Yes, I can remember the first Hospital being built. It always appeared to me to be a dwelling rather than a Hospital, and the old building is still in existence with the addition on the southern end for a maternity section of three small rooms whilst I was a member of the Board. Originally three rooms made of weatherboard were at the back called “Native Wards” where blacks and half castes were taken and kept separate. I well remember at a meeting chaired by the late W P Scott, Chairman of the Bridgetown Road Board, we decided that instead of adding on pieces here and there the best thing to do would be to sell the Hospital as a residence and build somewhere else. Well they laughed in scorn at us and we got no support at all so we gave up the idea, but since then they’ve gone on patching it up all the time. Before a Medical Officer arrived in the district, whenever anyone was ill or having a baby you would only have to go with a horse and buggy for either Mrs Joseph Smith or Mrs Jim Maslin, both trained as Midwives and they would be immediately on hand to render service. Another great lady was Mrs Reeve of Balbarrup, who often travelled thirty or forty miles on horseback to attend a case. There were ten in our family, five boys and five girls, and eight of us were born without a doctor, most of us brought into this world by Mrs Smith, so you can see what a great part they played in the early days of Bridgetown and other country towns – it was phenomenal. The first doctor appointed to Bridgetown was Dr Dickenson. Following the death of Dr Dickenson, after a serious accident, the practice was taken over by Dr Dean who was there for very many years. There were quite a lot more doctors following him, but I could not put them in order. There were a lot of relieving doctors who came occasionally, and all of them gave good service, travelling in horses and buggies or whatever might be available. I well remember one doctor who was of a nervous disposition and he bought a Ford car, which was the first one owned by a doctor in the town. He could drive all right, but he hated to let go of the wheel, especially when driving over the River Bridge. So wherever he went he took his wife with him, and he made her learn how to switch the key on and off, and the story goes that she tied a string to the key so she could 15 ROY DOUST pull it either way when necessary, and that was the way he travelled around the district. In the end Mrs Lonergan took over from her husband and drove very well. GB Can you tell me the history of the present Medical Building in Steere Street? RD The first surgery was at the then Medical Quarters on the south side of the river opposite Blechynden House. The next one I remember was the late Dr Williams’ house in Steere Street, and now the present surgery is adjoining a building constructed by the second policeman who came to Bridgetown, Constable Stokes, and that property has changed hands many times since then. 16 ROY DOUST APPENDIX A The importance of the early midwives in the Bridgetown District. Mr Doust makes reference in his tape to the important work done by the early midwives in the district. This sentiment is echoed in other tapes so I have obtained what information I can about two of the ladies most frequently mentioned, Mrs Joseph Smith and Mrs Jim Maslin. Joseph Henry and Eliza Smith first came to Bridgetown in 1862 when Joseph was the foreman for the building of the bridge over the Blackwood River. Mr W Forrest, the father of Lord Forrest, was in charge. Eliza Smith (nee Cain) of Bunbury was one of the first midwives in the district. Mrs Lou Evans, her granddaughter, has told me she was in great demand by black and white alike, and you only had to go to her for assistance if anyone was sick or a woman was about to have a baby, and she would go on horseback or in a horse and buggy to give assistance.The nearest doctor at that time was in Bunbury, so this emphasises the importance of these ladies. Mrs Smith was the first registered Midwife in Bridgetown. She had had nursing experience but she also used to travel to Bunbury with her husband when he went for stores and did training under a doctor there; later in 1895 when her husband built a home (opposite the present bowling green) Mrs Smith furnished one room for use as a maternity unit and patients came to her. She also helped both Dr Dickenson and Dr Dean after they came to the town. The Doctor’s home at that time was almost opposite the Smith home on the other side of the road by the bridge. Mrs Evans told me that her grandmother and Mrs Maslin helped each other. Besides all this community work, Mrs Smith reared a family of nine children. She died in 1914 at the age of 69 years. Some of her descendents still live in the Bridgetown district. James and Elizabeth Maslin first came to Bridgetown in 1873 and took up residence in the building now known as the Bridgetown Pottery and Tearooms. Mr Maslin had an orchard on the land behind the house running down to the Geegeelup Brook. Mrs Maslin (nee Bogue) had had nursing experience and she, like Eliza Smith, would go to the assistance of anyone in need of medical help. According to an article in the West Australian (Newspaper) 2 March 1985, page 55, “the Maslin house was built in 1870 using hand-made bricks. It became the region’s first maternity home. In 1937 it was named Macedonian House after a young Macedonian woman and her husband opened the building as a boarding house. They sold it in the late 1950’s and the house then housed a succession of restaurants. In 1984 it became the ‘Bridgetown Pottery and Tearooms’”. 17 ROY DOUST (Information obtained from the Bunbury State Library) Mrs June Doust, a grand-daughter of Mrs Maslin has told me her mother could remember the maternity home and told her how they used to carry water up from the brook. Like Mrs Smith, Mrs Maslin also reared a large family of 5 sons and 5 daughters. She also has descendents still living in the area. Another lady who is mentioned as having been a midwife is Mrs Henry Doust of ‘Geegeelup’. Mr Doust played an important part in the business and civic affairs of Bridgetown. Mrs Doust’s contribution must also have been considerable. As the first doctor did not take up residence in the area until 1892 it can be appreciated the important part these ladies played in the early development of the town and district. DALLAS CHEVIS 18