Saturday, July 5, 2014

SHELL-SHOCKED NEIGHBOURS Continuing biog of Crusading Editor, " Big Jim " Bowditch


Living next to the Bowditch residence  was never dull what with police raids, an officially  forbidden  tryst   by  Gladys and Mick in  the  banana  patch and   other assorted alarums . There  was  a  right wing  neighbor not  enamoured  of  Bowditch . The  Shell Mess was  close  to  the  Bowditch  house  in  Georges Crescent , Fannie Bay , and  the men  who  resided  there  had  an  upright  piano  for their entertainment , which  often  resulted in them  returning at night from various  hotels  and engaging  in some hearty  singing of  tunes , like  Roll Out The Barrel . 
 
About midnight ,  Bowditch ,  lubricated himself,  became annoyed at  the noise  from the mess- especially  the  tickling of the ivories and the raucous  singing. He stormed up the stairs of the two storey building  and  confronted the happy  throng . Telling them that only peasants  sang   community songs , he announced his intention  to  push the piano  down the  stairs  if they did not stop their  infernal racket.  To back up his threat, he began  to push the piano , which was on wheels, towards the balcony .  A very large footballer  took hold of the  editor  by the seat of the pants and the  scruff  of the neck and,  in the words  of a  popular community song , attempted  to  show him the way to go home.  
 
By  Peter  Simon
 
A man of undoubted  agility , heightened by his commando training , Bowditch  stunned the group when he   flipped open the  top of the piano and  pulled out some of the vital  innards .  He subsequently  received a  bill  for  his  unusual  piano concerto  and  paid  for the repairs.  

Police  raids on his  house looking for the Stayput Malays and Portuguese   also disturbed the  tranquility of  the suburb and  set  dogs barking.  One long suffering neighbour  was  jeweller  Max  Tite. Returning home after some heavy drinking late  one night , the residence then  in  40 Phillip Street ,  Bowditch  went to the bedroom  and  saw  a man  in bed   . “You bastard!” Bowditch exclaimed , as he  kicked the man . “What are you doing in bed with my wife ?”

Max Tite jumped  up  and yelped:  “This is my wife, Jim , and  this is my house - you live two doors away .” Betty Bowditch  told  of another  event involving “that poor man Max Tite ”.  She noticed  a receipt for   payment  of  some glass  sent to  Jim.  When  she asked him what  it  was for, he revealed that he  had  again  paid a noctural  visit to the Tite residence. On that occasion,   thinking he was  home , he had  found the   door closed  and  thought Betty had locked  him out .  He  then began kicking in  glass panels.  Shocked and alarmed,  Max Tite had appeared and told Jim he was  at the wrong  abode.  Without  telling Betty of his faux pas,  Jim arranged  to pay for repairs to  the door.
 
AGAINST  ASIAN  SWEATSHOPS
 
After  a trip to Asia  with some friends, Betty  Bowditch returned home   with  the usual  range of electrical goods and  gifts.  While she was pleased with her purchases , Jim took an instant dislike to them ,  saying they had been  made by slave labour in sweatshops. So vehement was he in his antipathy to  the purchases that he  threw  them off the verandah  onto the concrete driveway while she was absent .   One of the items thrown over the rail was  a stereo . He enlisted the  help  of  daughter Ngaire to  heave the  stereo over the rail. At the time she thought that dad  new about such things as  slave labour  and sweatshops , so he must be right .  In later years, she realised  what “poor mum” had been through.   Betty had   arrived home to find  all her  things  broken and   strewn  about  the  driveway .

Betty endured much over the years and many people said Jim was lucky she  remained with him .  She constantly  remonstrated with him over his drinking  and told him he brought a  lot of  trouble upon himself  through excessive drinking  .  There was a  Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde  aspect about his personality  .  Sober, he  was gentlemanly   , in the old fashioned way, which saw him  stand  whenever women  got up from or joined   a  group at a  table .  

And if any male in the group , or nearby,  swore  in the presence of  women, Bowditch would  glare  at  them  .  Then you had   the obverse -the drunken , swearing, aggressive  editor prepared to  fight at the drop of a hat.  Though capable of killing people with unarmed combat blows taught him during the war, he  would not use  them  and being of slight  build  he often came off  second best  because he  mixed it with  larger, younger  men.
 
CHASED  FLIES  WITH  KNIFE
 
Sleep , he maintained, was a waste of  time  , so he got by with about four hours  a night . Because of  his heavy  smoking , the  home was pock marked with  cigarette  burns and  infuriated Betty  .  A new  teak table  she bought   soon   sported    many cigarette burns. Incredibly fast in his  reflexes ,  Bowditch would  take a knife from the drawer and stalk flies  or catch them with his  hand .

Jim’s sister , Mary, came out from  England and made a surprise  visit to Darwin.  Jim  arranged to meet her at the front of the  Hotel Darwin  and  immediately  asked her to  come inside  for a  drink .   She did not  drink  alcohol  and Jim  said  he was surprised  to learn that  there was a member of the  Bowditch family who did not touch alcohol. She told him he was  just   like  their father in  his behaviour.

When he took her  home to meet Betty , Mary sympathised  with her  and  asked ,“ How do you put up with him ?”. Betty often explained that she was kept busy bringing up  the children ,  taking part in their and her  own  sporting and school activities,   running the home . Jim had been  on the go all the time , deeply involved  in the newspaper, socialising  after work  and   fighting  for various causes. Because  they both led busy lives , she often did not know many  details of  events in which Jim had  been involved . With all  her  family commitments  she just could not be  expected to recall  endless details about  news  stories and  people connected with  her  husband. NEXTContact with  ASIO .