SHIPS
This song was sung to John Meredith by Mary Byrnes of Concord ... and she learned it, as a young girl, on the family farm at Springside (near Orange) - probably from the singing of casual farmhands. (Folk Songs of Australia and the men and women who sang them - volume 1
The Mornington Penninsula is on the Victorian South coast and, during the nineteen and early twentieth century, a bust port for steam ships. The waters are quite dangerous and several ships were wrecked. This song, an appeal for financial support for the families, is typical as it recounts the horror and ends with the appeal. Compare it with P F Collin's 'Eldorado Mining Disaster' or The Sunshine Railway Disaster'
The Winefred MarvelLife on the emigrant ship 'Winefred'.12 numbers of the ship's newspaper on the London to Brisbane run in 1875 Entry that Mr Buckingham sang a song including the verse: To QueenslandGood friends, adieu! I'm shortly sailingTo Queensland over the trackless sea And when I'm far from home and kindred I pray you all remember me.
A Narrative on the Melancholy Wreck of the DunbarDSM/910.41/D1857 Booklet with first hand accounts of the tragedy and a narrative poem prefaced with: Warning not heard or seen – no help at hand – The wide dark bosom of the angry deep With irresistible and cruel force Received them all. One only cast alive, Fainting and breathless on the fatal rocks – To weeping friends and strangers afterwards Thus told his melancholy tale –
The LammermuirTune: Marching through GeorgiaFirst verse only. The Lammermuir left London boys A fortnight's start she got But the Orient overhauled her Before half way she'd got As we were sailing to Australia In 1873 the Orient was about to leave London for Adelaide when the owner of the Lammermuir (John Wills) acme on board with the story that his carpenter had left his toolbox. A five-pound bet was made between he and the captain Mitchell that he couldn't catch her and give the box over before the Line was crossed. The Lammermuir had sailed ten days earlier however the Orient did catch her up. The crew of the Orient composed this pumping shanty. Taken from The Colonial Clippers Basil Lubbock pub 1948 in Melbourne. Riverboat OscarQuoted by Ian Moodie and anon ditty from the Oscar which worked the rivers near Echuca and WakoolThere was gunboat Smith and skipper Hayes and the cook and the engineer All standing out on the afterdeck drinking some bottles of beer While the rest of the crew all looking blue and feeling pretty crook Were passing the wood as fast as they could and longing for Koondrook SabraonFrom the sight of dirty gutters, from a town without a drain, From the shores of Australasia to our own old land again In the clipper ship 'Sabraon' we are bound across the main To London! Another remembered song was this version of the shanty
I have not seen this broadside in other collections. It appears to be a fanciful piece with extraordinary evil deeds committed by the Aboriginals who attacked the shipwrecked crew.
The Blackball line ships travelled to most Australian ports. They had a well-earned reputation for speed.
This ballad shares a page with 'Jack and the Deck Of Cards'on a Broadside published by Nugent's of Dublin. The 'John Tayleur' sank off the Isle of Lembay, Ireland, on her passage from Liverpool to Melbourne.
The following item is an extraordinary lesson in how ballads travel. This appears to be a combination of a British poaching/transportation ballad and a local incident. I clipped this from the Sydney sun Herald in 1964. The recording of Mr Jim Davis is in the National Library Oral History & Folklore Collection. Refer to the original newspaper article. The ballad is related to early poaching songs and then goes into a local incident – fascinating. I am not sure what the singer is referring to in 'Valgate Mac' maybe Newgate Gaol.
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MARITIME
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