Palmers Channel in the 1950s
and 60s was probably typical of numerous small rural communities around
Australia at the time. Life for me as a child was probably not all that different
to that known by my parents with the exception of some advances in technology,
communication and travel. I doubt if many communities like it still exist in
Australia.
Ready for school |
Palmers Channel opened to white
settlement in the early 1860s. My great-great grandparents, John and Mary Anne
Marsh (nee Parkinson), took up a selection of land on Palmers Channel in 1869.
Many of the other families in the district also traced back to this time. The
Marsh family was the largest on the Channel and in the 30 or so student
one-teacher primary school I attended most kids had a connection to the
Marsh's.
My father and grandfather (Pa)
were neighbours, separated by Amos's Lane. Jacky Marsh, one of Pa's cousin
lived next door to him and Kevy Davis, Nana Marsh's cousin, lived on the other
side. Dad's cousin Alvin Marsh owned the property behind ours and Lamby
Parkinson, a distant relative, the property next to his. Other Channel farms
and also on Palmers Island were owned by Marsh's or relatives of either the
Marsh or Davis families.
People stopped and talked to
each other. Neighbours usually had time for a chat or, if not there was a
friendly wave and a cheery hello. Dad's cousin Alvin Marsh once related this
story to me about his grandfather Albert (Bertie) Marsh. Bertie lived at the
end of what is now South Bank Road where my grandfather's brother Harold and
his wife May lived when I was a kid. Bertie would leave in the morning to go
into Maclean. A few of his brothers lived along the way and Bertie liked a
chat. So he would drop in to see the first brother, then the next, and the next
… The next morning he would head off for Maclean.
There were regular community
events that bought us all together. Three that stand out were the annual
swimming carnival, Sunday school anniversary and school Christmas tree concert.
Almost everyone in the district attended these, whether or not they had
children involved.
I remember the district coming
together to build the school tennis courts which were used more by the
community than the school. Our swimming pool was in a fenced off area of the
Channel across the road from the Union Hall and a few hundred metres from the
school. The frame was in place all year round. At the beginning of the swimming
season the men of the district would hang the fencing from the frame to keep us
in the pool and remove it at the end of the season. They built a bus shelter
shed on the Yamba - Maclean road from where we would catch the bus to Maclean
for high school. And when the bus route changed to come through Middle Road
Palmers Island and along South Bank Road Palmers Channel they built another
shed next to the swimming pool. If something needed to be done and it was
within the resources of the community to do it, it was done.
This was a rural community.
Those farmers knew they needed one another to survive. Especially at cane
harvest time neighbours would help one another burn cane and transport it to
the derrick on the banks of the Channel where it would be loaded onto barges to
take it to the sugar mill on Harwood Island. All this contributed to a great
sense of community.
In front of the family home with my grandfather Joe Marsh and brother David |
As I have grown older I have
realised how fortunate I was as a child. My brother and I did not experience
abuse. Sure, there was a some corporal punishment, especially from Mum who was
quite skilled at wielding a switch from the peach tree. We usually deserved it
and other than leaving a few marks I do not believe it hurt us in any way.
My most treasured memories are
of family. We spent time with each other. Not constructed 'quality' time, for
time together came naturally. When school didn't get in the way I would
accompany my father and grandfather when the milked the cows. After the morning
session I would often have breakfast with my grandparents. During the
harvesting and planting seasons I helped out. Cane planting in particular could
be a whole family affair, with Mum
working with Dad, Pa, my brother David and me.
We grew a lot of our own fruit
- peaches, pears, plums, locuts, mulberries and more. There were evenings Mum,
Dad, David and I lined up on the veranda
peeling fruit and helping prepare it for bottling. Mum had a set - maybe a
number of sets - of Vacola preserving bottles.
A large cupboard was set aside for storing the finished product. At the
end of the fruit growing season it would be full and there would be enough to
last till next season. How we enjoyed the fruits of our labour.
Dad grew corn. When it was ripe
it would be stored in the barn. Then we would spend the evenings with light
from a kerosene lamp removing the husks, a task that normally left me itchy.
The grain would then be removed from the cob by a hand operated machine and
stored in a tank until it was fed to the
chooks.
It was in this community and
this family that I grew. I was nurtured, disciplined and protected. Values were
taught more by example than words. I fear that the way society has developed
over the last 50 or so years the type of community I knew as a child no longer
exists for many Australians. And, in my
view, that is a significant loss, one that we need to find ways to recapture
for the sake of future generations.
No comments:
Post a Comment