Monday, August 24, 2015

DOWN THE TRACK CHANGES

The news  that Jimmy Ah Toy's famous store , above, established in 1935, in the old  gold mining town of  Pine Creek  in the Northern Territory ,had  closed about a year  ago  had  somehow  escaped my notice. Many interesting times were  had  in and around Pine  Creek , 230kms south of Darwin , fossicking  for old  bottles, Chinese utensils , coins ,  mining   and  railway items.
 
By  Peter Simon
 
 A  close  relationship  developed  with   prospector "Cranky " Frank  Atkinson , full of  fascinating yarns  and information, who lived in a smoky tin  hut in  the town  and took me  out  bush  to  dumps and  likely  sites to find treasures.

Frank's find
Frank , left, was scornful  of young blokes who did not know how to do a day's hard work  and regarded taking  up a shovel as  picking up a  venomous black snake.  Also, he  did  not   like a  number of similarly aged  Pine Creek residents who used to gather at Ah Toy's store  on  pension day, the group  collectively  referred to as  "  grumpy old  death  adders."
 
I mentioned  Frank to the  Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh   one  day when they  were  visiting Darwin , and told  them  he would not mind  returning  to his homeland  on  a  visit . The crowds , he said ,  would not worry him  after  all the time in the  bush ; his bladder , however, could  be a problem, I  informed  the  Royals. The  Queen  appeared  to  sympathetically  concur , uttering a meaningful  ,"I see."  She did not command  me  that  the next time  I was in  Pine Creek  to  tell  Frank  to  drop into Buckingham Palace  for  a  cup  of  English  Breakfast  should  he  lob  in  London.
 
Simon in hole
Frank took me bush to meet the eccentric prospector   Captain Jack Marsh  , who jumped out of a shack, saluted , and  told how he had shot Germans in the trench  and  had  himself been  shot in the  head . Years later, I was told  that Captain  Jack  had caused  a stir  among  women in a Darwin retirement village and  had  been found to have a  German  Luger  pistol  in  his possession. 
 
On a particularly memorable  visit to Pine Creek ,  I and my youngest son  saw a publican pistol whip a customer. Numerous   many fabulous  stories  were collected  including  one about the  Crow hating  resident   (he could not stand their mournful  cry) who  personally told me  how he shot  the  birds  with a  rifle  fitted with  a  silencer and  they  dropped  down around  startled police  at  a roadblock ; he died from an overdose of drugs .There  was a Russian  Cossack who had   jumped ship way  back and  ended  up  in  the Territory. Author  Xavier  Herbert accompanied  me on a  trip to Pine Creek and we met   a  person a relative of  whom had  been involved with Herbert in    Darwin  in  the late  l930s, close  to the  publication  of   Herbert's  novel  Capricornia .   
Edward  Cheong Ah Toy , Territorian of the Year  2005,  informing Darwin visitors about the Ah Toy family corrugated iron  bakehouse  and   bakery  building opened in the 1920s ; Eddie was born in Pine Creek in 1937. During the  gold rush era  ,see below ,there were close to 3000 Chinese  in the area ,with a temple and  their  own cemetery.
  
The late historian and author  Glenville  Pike  worded  this  plaque.


While the Ah Toy's store , which  had  developed into a supermarket over the years  , is  no more  , there  is  a  service station  still  carrying  the  name . Another  place of interest down the track, the Emerald Springs Roadhouse  ,32 kilometres north of Pine Creek, is on the market for $1.2million.  The  roadhouse was   once  owned  by Glenville Pike, his mother  and aunty , who found  that  truckies  who called in  during the 1950s only mainly  ate steak and eggs. Sold out   for 800 pounds ,$1600, a few  years later,Emerald Springs subsequently changed hands several times and was  modernised  and expanded ,  now boasting 40 rooms with ensuite , caravan and camp sites,  offering more than steak and eggs , a tub of tasty homemade  ice cream consumed  there by this writer  who  provided new owners  with  information  about pioneering  Pike and  family. 
Covered  in  waterlilies, Emerald Springs .