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Jack - War Diary (10th Feb 1942)

Coleraine Cricket Club played Hamilton in Easter Fund Raiser

bulletDiary page 1 left Balcombe camp on 9th Feb 1942 - Mornington Station - crowded carriages - tons of gear - passed through Melbourne Streets - deserted - breakfast at Spencer St. - sausages and spud - now pulling out on our long trip North - 12 Yanks in our carriage - pulling into Ballarat - had refreshments - chat with Ethel Mills - heading off to Horsham very enthusiastic welcome - Stawell Station - Serviceton
bullet10th Feb - 30 miles from Adelaide Diary page 2 beautiful scenery - first glimpse of Adelaide - Teasdae, Bull Smith and I embark on fruit stealing expedition - almonds - meet a couple of sheilas
bullet11th Feb - Diary page 3 the worst train I've ever seen - narrow guage - Peterborough - wheat siding at Black Rock - see first Oasis - a stunt - very annoying deception
bulletCurrorro - average size town - Walloway stone building - Moochra - stones and hills - 240 miles from Adelaide - Americans very popular with autograph hunters - excellent afternoon tea from local ladies - Welson a desolate waste in the hills 260 miles from Adelaide
bulletDiary page 4 Maree - emus, kangaroos and never ending plains - Wangrama - unusual scene here desolate country - Curdimurka had dinner here -
bullet11th Feb - Coward Springs - I disobey orders not to swim in a spring close by getting a cobber to push me in: immediately 40 others follow suit.  While swimming my last Will slips out of my back kick and is eventually found floating on the water by a chap from Stawell.
bulletIn the rattler again - William Creek - wall of sand - can only see the tops of the overland telegraph poles - 10 feet wall of sand - lots of donkeys - Abinga for breakfast
bullet12th Feb - lonely grave near a tree - boundary rider returning to his camp - decent creek of water - now in the Northern Territory 200 miles from Alice Springs.
bulletFinke - saw first blacks here - camped on an open plain
bulletHad a lot of fun riding camels which an old Indian had there.
bulletTumbalma - had dinner here
bulletGins T. Plateau really beautiful sight - beautiful red at the base
bulletExcellent roundup display - two stockmen mustering about 150 wild horses.
bulletArrive Ewaninga 6:50 p.m.
bulletDiary page 6 13th Feb: Arrive through the gap - peak on the right is like a cathedral - country is absolutely marvellous - grass is green - fat bullocks, donkeys, camels - huge windmills - Alice Springs 8 p.m. - the most picturesque place I have ever seen - 2000 people turned out- Mc Donnell rangesAlice is situated i the bottom of a basin - reminds me of the hollow referred to in Rolfe Boldrewood's book "Robbery under Arms" - mountains all around are covered in a purple heath - sunset a magnificent sight - had a tiring walk from the station to the camp with all our equipment - Teasdale and I are dry as 'Wooden Gods' so we bowl over 14 bottles of drink between us
bulletWe are now in trucks and about to leave Alice - I notice a large monument up on one of the mounts
bullet13th Feb: Arrive Tea Tree - 120 miles from Alice - here I experience the most flies I have ever seen in my life - stinken hot too - got rid of 4 mugs of tea - black fella giving us a lesson on throwing a boomerang - I eventually pinched a couple to practice up North with.
bulletOur ride in the motor trucks from Alice to here was nothing short of bloody awful.
bulletArrive Barrow Creek
bullet14th Feb diary page 7 Bonney Wells - excellent pool - water teeming with minnows
bulletArrive Tenant Creek - Catholic Mission station - gold mines - afternoon tea provided by locals - terribly hot day
bulletBanka Banka for tea - couldn't have a shower - water in the pipes nearly boiling
bulletYanks playing two up
bullet15th Feb: arrive Elliott - pet magpie on table - another rough ride
bulletArrived Larramah - saw American planes here - also American trucks lost.
bulletArrive Pine Creek - a good place for water and very green
bulletAdelaide River - "beautifully green - saw bananas growing on a farm- saw crashed plane : two killed
bullet17th Feb arrive  diary page 8 Noonamah camp just outside Darwin - very tired, dense scrub - mosquitoes - long grass - MET DAN
bulletExperienced first Jap raid - 97 planes - continual explosions from about 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
bulletGeorge Cocini paralized by insect while on guard with me
bulletTrip to Darwin - scenes of bombing, Post Office blown up - also ships in the Harbour - hospital badly damaged.  Collect some interesting keepsakes  Nib pen from the PO ruins

This is Jacks photo

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Jacks group in Darwin

 

bulletAnother Jap raid - dive for trenches - land on my arm on paralizing insect - in agony for the rest of the day
bulletMarch through swamp
bulletYank crashes plane on Darwin Rd. burnt to death
bulletWorking at RAAF petrol drums - Jap reconnaissance plane overhead - piece of Jap plane - made boomerang
bulletWent for swim - tangled in reeds in Elizabeth River
bulletAir battles - Yank trashed plane - burnt to death.
bulletDiary page 9 Saw a good dog fights - Jap crashes about 2 miles away
bulletCamped with Yanks - making keepsakes out of a Jap bomber
bulletGet sad news of Reg Shines death R.I.P. - died at Adelaide Rive after operation.
bullet16 mile march to slaughter yards - worst experience so far.
bulletBlack gins salting hides
bulletTaken ill now and in ambulance en route for Adelaide River.
bulletArrived here and after a 4 days I am packed up and about to enter truck to proceed to Bachelor Aerodrome to board plane for Brisbane - travel with Bob Montgomery from Adelaide as a companion
bulletMay 8th: Left Batchelor in Douglas C3 - 29 passengers and crew of 4.  Saw the sunrise - feeling as cold as a brass monkey - the first time cold in 3 months - plane flying very high.  Nothing but barren and sandy desert so far.
bulletDiary page 10
bulletArrive Cloncurry - barren and stony - fair sized town -  - engine dismantled - oil leakage - copper mines - take off for Brisbane - engine trouble - a decent scare - the near side engine stalled and the plane rolled and twisted rather badly.  Engine going again now - but still missing badly
bulletArrive Brisbane - Mascot - beautiful sunshine - camped at the Brisbane showgrounds - numerous vegetable plots and agricultural areas

bulletDiary page 11: Sat 9th May: Went to Albion Park races - won 4 Pounds 17 shillings and 6 pence on Nalong in Melbourne
bulletWent to a dance
bulletWent to sleep at pictures
bulletVisited Taronga Park - saw Floral Clock - rode across in ferry
bulletMay 29th - rained today - races tomorrow
bulletAlbury
bulletMurray River
bulletDandenong Camp
bulletSorrento

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Drawing in grade 3, two

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Aussie rules book 1932

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Business certificate 1932

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Racebook Coleraine 1958, his bets

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Diary 1930, bowling

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Diary 1942 Darwin, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven

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Japanese bank note

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War missal

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Merit certificate

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Mouthorgan

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Accordian

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War discharge, two

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TAB

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Rosary beads

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'Dream lady'

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7th Grade reader

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Book of Animals

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Tex Morton signature

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Nib pen retrieved from the bombed Post Office in Darwin: Feb 19, 1942

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Electricity job, two

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Autographs

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Bowling average

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Diary 1970, two, three

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Car license

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Leg break, wrongun

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Poem - war

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Puzzles - war

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Albion article - cricket, cricket again

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Postcard war

    (Coleraine)
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Cricket cup

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Sacred Heart photo in Ballies old bedroom - given to Jack from Miss Strong in Fenwick St. Nth Carlton.  Jack was very friendly with them.  They lived opposite the Gormans - well to do people.

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Book of Animals - Nelson.  Given to Jack by Mary Gorman of 74 Rennie St. Coburg - 1926.  Mary suffered badly with asthma.  When she came to Coleraine to visit her sister Nora she couldn't even talk.  Later she lived at Rochester where she never got asthma.  The Gormans dropped the 'O' in their name in the early days.

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Certificate of War Service - large and coloured (located in gun cupboard)

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The Zither (Banjo Guitar).  Jack played it.  (located in Ballies old bedroom)

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Jack pencil drawing of Bradman

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Jack Dad large picture

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Jack's cheques below:

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JACK'S WILL

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Photo taken in 1983

Jack Kane did some schooling at St. Brigids Fitzroy when he returned to Melbourne with Aunti Lizzie (Auntie Sheila)

bulletMAYBE JACK CAME BACK TO COLERAINE BECAUSE HE DIDN’T HAVE MUCH MONEY - ALSO HE WANTED TO SUPPORT BALLIE
bulletHE WAS IN A PARTNERSHIP WITH BALLIE AND BORROWED $5000.  HE ONLY LEFT ABOUT $5000 IN HIS WILL
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Was always buying dresses for his mother

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Jack said Dad will never be dead while I’m still alive

Ballies thoughts about Jack

bulletThe Christian Brothers came around canvassing for students for St. Patricks Ballarat.  Clem was already there.  Dad and Jack did not want to go even though offered the chance by their father.
bullet1948 Jack was here on the farm.  He suffered badly with asthma.  Jack decided to go to Adelaide to work in the Railways.  He worked in the yards doing hook ups etc with good trains.  He also did this at Talem Bend.
bulletHe transferred to Adelaide Electricity Trust.
bulletJack was in charge of installing the towers at the Port Augusta Power station.
bulletHe worked in the Adelaide hills, Murray Bridge.  Hotels were paid for when he worked out in the towns of Tailem Bend, Waikery etc.  His home base was the 'Duke of York' in Hinley St. Adelaide.  He met lots of Station people there who raced horses.
bulletJack played a lot of music  - button accordion, mouth organ.
bulletHe mostly worked with Polish and some Italians.
bulletHe was works inspector of Transfield contractors to inspect the towers.  He would climb up 300 - 400 feet.
bulletBallie wanted him to stay till 55 and gradually phase himself out but he came back to the farm when he was 50
bulletHis mates in Adelaide were George Hocking, John O'Neil who was an ABC broadcaster etc.
bulletJack was in Materankah or some place close when Darwin was bombed.  He retrieved a pen from the Post Office ruins.
bullet1932 Jack Gorman of Renee St. took Jack and Dad to the Bodyline tests.  There were a 100000 there to see bowlers such as Larwood.
bulletHarmonious relationship with Ballie - Jack doing the orchard and cooking Ballie on the farming.
bulletJack made good money in strawberries.  He was getting a dollar a punnet.  He went down to Norlangie with Dad to get the certified plants.  He had thousands of punnets here.  Red gaunlets were grown.  Did it for a number years.  Ballie put down the dam for Jack and got a diesel engine and pump.  It was under polythene and was mounded up.  He was known a strawberry Jack.  He sold a lot to Grinams.
bulletHe also grew cherries and apricots.

Jack took crook up in Darwin.  They flew him down to Heidelberg Hospital.  They operated on him there and he was made medically unfit.  He had some throat trouble.  He couldn’t swallow.  He was vomiting.  Every thing he tried to eat, he just brought up.  So they had to straighten something down along there to get the passage way going and of course they discharged him.  So it was a blessing in disguise because that would have been about 42.  After the War, Mum and Dad were heading for there 70’s.  Jack got asthma very bad – we all had asthma.  I had asthma too but I sought of shook it off when I was 16 or 17.  Back in 48, he was that bad he had to get out of the area so he headed over to Adelaide and got a job on the Railways and he stayed there for quite awhile.  He was up around Pinnaroo, Tailem Bend and all that.  Then he met up with some of his other cobbers there and he transferred into the Adelaide Electricity Trust and he worked himself up there though his ability to do these sort of things and he finished up right up till when Dad died in 67 as one of the most important fellas there in the Administrative side.  You see he played a big part in the Port Augusta Power Station. He worked himself practically to the top as works inspector over Transfield which is still in operation.  All those big companies won contracts with the electricity trust.  Jack was the chief inspector.  You’d have to know your job.  Even after he came back here in 67 to give me a hand because I was on my own.  I answered the phone one day there and they asked for Jack and he wasn’t there at  the time.  Eventually, he contacted them.  There was a big job over in Papua New Guinea and out of all the people.  They contacted the SEC in Victoria and through them over there they said there’s only person we can really recommend to go over there and do the job which would be required and that was Jack Kane.  He said he had pulled the pin and he explained to them he wasn’t available.  It would have been worth a terrific amount of money because the living away allowance and with all the extras they offered him.  It would have been a terrific darn money spinner.

 

John “Did he regret not doing it?”

 

No. No. Because, when you come to think of it, he was away from home from 48 till 67 and of course Dad and Mum getting old.  I was quite capable but there’s one thing, all through his holidays he never went anywhere but he came back here and worked.  When he got his annual leave or even Christmas or Easter.  He might have got a fortnight or three weeks at Christmas time but he always came home here and helped me.  Because at that time it was the harvesting of hay and all that sort of thing.   

Jack Kane did some schooling at St. Brigit's Fitzroy when he returned to Melbourne with Aunti Lizzie

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