This one - the town hall without a clock - we discovered in the town of Menzies, 130km north of Kalgoorlie in the Western Australian goldfields, when we travelled through Menzies last September on a circuit tour to Cue, once the centre of the Murchison goldfields. I blogged about it here - Cue, Queen of the Murchison
There are many of these little towns scattered throughout the goldfields regions, which were once booming towns in their heyday of gold discovery. Some of them are now abandoned with only a few scattered bricks remaining.
In 1898 a town hall was built in the booming gold town of Menzies, in the Western Australian goldfields, however for many years the clock tower didn’t have a clock. This caused confusion between the residents as there was telegraph time, set many kilometres away, and mine whistle time, which was always twenty minutes earlier than telegraph time.
This photo was taken of signage in the Menzies main street. |
Finally in 1904 the Town Clerk was
instructed to purchase a clock which was shipped from London on the steamer SS
Orizaba. However in February 1905 the Orizaba ran aground off the port of Fremantle due to
poor visibility caused by heavy smoke haze over the ocean from a month of bush
fires along the coast.
Within hours there was twenty feet of
water in the engine room and the captain sent word to Fremantle via an Italian
fisherman. By 7pm three tugs and three barges were alongside and started
salvaging the cargo. The passengers, their belongings, and the mail were transferred
to Fremantle.
Six days later the captain and crew left
the ship when it started breaking up. About 900 tonnes of cargo was recovered
from the ship and several months later winter storms sent the rest of her to
the bottom of the ocean.
The fate of the Menzies town hall clock is
not known – whether it sunk with the ship, or was salvaged and sold – but the
clock never reached Menzies. Nearly one hundred years later Menzies was still
without a clock.
In 1999 the Shire of Menzies allocated
$16,000 for the purchase of four clocks, designed and built by Perth
clockmaker, Derek Morrison, to fit the four faces of the town hall tower. The
clocks were unveiled on New Year’s Eve 1999.
In a final twist to history, recent research
indicates that the original clock may not have been ordered as there is no
record of the order or that it was on the Orizaba. One theory is that the Attorney General used
the ship sinking as an excuse not to pay for a clock for a town whose population
was declining. Or was there a Menzies
clerk feeling relieved that his oversight was never discovered?
Menzies is a lovely little town to visit and explore some of the local historical gold-rush history if you are in the goldfields. They have a very neat caravan park in the centre of town.
Gold was discovered in Menzies in
1894. The population of 10,000 peaked in
1905 and the town boasted 13 hotels, 3 breweries and 3 banks. By 1910 the
population had fallen to less than 1,000, due to the decline in gold production
and further hastened by World War 1. Population today is less than 200.
My article, which you have just read, was published in the November-December 2018 issue of On The Road Magazine.
Recently I discovered that the Orizaba was indeed ill-fated. In 1889 there was a smallpox outbreak on board and the ship was quarantined in Melbourne. Late in 1889 it collided with the Clan Mackay en route from India. In early April 1903 a crew member was found to have the the plague and he was off-loaded in Egypt, but the ship was treated as an "infected ship" by health authorities when it reached Plymonth. In 1904 an explosion in the engine room killed six crew members.
From "The Way We Were", Western Australian newspaper, 1 December 2018.
Thank you so much for stopping by. I hope you have enjoyed this little story about the Menzies clock. Travel can be so fascinating! To find out more about Menzies click here - Menzies
Old ship photos borrowed from the Internet.
Photo of the town hall without a clock taken from heritage signage in the Menzies main street.
For more information on the Town Hall: WA Government Heritage council.
I value your comments and look forward to hearing from you. I will try to visit your blogs in return. Have a wonderful week.
I am linking up to the link-ups below. Please click on the links to see fabulous contributions from around the world - virtual touring at its best!
Hello there! I love reading your comments. If you scroll down to the bottom you can comment too! I would love to hear from you.
Jill - what a fascinating story. You could imagine so many possibilities, but my favorite is that the clerk never ordered the clock! "Ill-fated" does not seem nearly strong enough to describe the bad luck for that one ship. Cursed, I tell thee! Thanks for linking to Mosaic Monday!
ReplyDeleteWe have had towns come and go throughout USA. Some no longer even exist!
ReplyDeleteHow interesting! You've done a great job on this post! And I love seeing those birds in the mosaic! I'm going back for another look at them!
ReplyDeleteWow, now I am writing, the story of the clock is a great plot for a book! Crazy, all the circumstances before the clock finally was set on the tower!! Many thanks for this story! Since you were not able to link, the linky List has resolved its problems Mon morning - 10+ people have successfully logged on, so it's up to you,whether you want to link your post before Friday noon (California time) or next week!
ReplyDeleteHave a lovely week:)
done! thanks Jesh!
DeleteHow interesting! And I like how they installed the four clocks on December 1999 - a fresh start on the new year and millenium.
ReplyDeleteWonderful history and shots.
ReplyDeleteHvala :)
ReplyDelete