In memory of a special bloke, Russell Hilton of Texas 4385.
(The passing of Alwyne about whom I blogged a couple of weeks back caused me to think of other notable people whom I've yarned with and who are no longer with us. Russell Hilton came to mind first, and when I was advised this week that the Stockman Hotel at Texas, Russell's local was on the market, I understood I should share this memoir of a time I spent with him at the pub a few years back)
A
few years back, I was staying in Texas, Qld. I was due out early next morning but Helen Rush, the publican told me about a local who'd be in early and was worth sticking around for. I figured he could wait until I came back but something made me stay. That next morning, not too long after opening time, Russell turned up with his betting form. I caught up with him down near
the TAB window.
Russell
Hilton was a jockey-sized bloke, probably no more than 60 kilograms, pretty
deaf by now, but with a firm handshake and eyes that looked into mine as he
spoke, but which glazed as he tried to remember some detail to his stories.
He
was born 89 years before at Silver Spur, about 20 kilometres east of town.
There were 17 kids
who survived, and Russell was the youngest of the ten boys.
In 1939 he knocked back school and started trapping rabbits.
"I’d wake
early in the morning, when it was still dark, and go out and empty the traps. I
had between 60 and 70 of them. I’d kill and gut the rabbits and then re-set the
traps, take the rabbits home and clean up a bit. Then a few hours later I’d go
back to the traps, empty them again, and usually move them. I’d do this three
times every day."
Russell
had to catch 120 rabbits every day.
"We’d get a
halfpenny for each rabbit and I had to make five bob a day to give to Mum so
that meant catching, killing and cleaning 120 rabbits every day. Otherwise we’d
bloody starve.
Each
lunchtime he’d take the pelts to the rabbit works at the east end of town where
he’d be paid his five bob and the older men would sort, grade and pack them.
I’d ride in
on my horse. I’d never been allowed to come into town until I was about 14 and
then Mum let me come in to watch the pictures in that beautiful hall that’s
still over there on the other side of the street."
Then war
broke out and the army was looking for soldiers for its light horse regiment.
"I was too
young. This was June and I didn't turn 16 until October and the army was
needing 18 year olds. So went to see Doctor Burton who was the registered
doctor in Texas and convinced him to make me a certificate saying I was 18
already. See I’d worked out that the army was paying five bob a day and for
that, all I had to do was wake up, do some drills, go on parade for a bit and
sleep all the night in my own bed."
Four of
his brothers signed up with him and, with their horses, they caught a train to
Toowoomba via Inglewood and Warwick and then for five weeks or so:
"We did all
the training and that’s where I came to grief. We were out on a bivouac and we
were doing a charge with our swords drawn and all the bloody rest of it but
they’d taken my horse off me. They had this disease going around, see, and mine
got sick so they put me on another horse, it was Jimmy Kemp’s mare. I’ll never
forget it. Well we come to grief and she fell on top of me and buggered my hips
up."
They put
him in hospital in Toowoomba for a bit over a week, then when he was
discharged, the army told him he was needed down in Gatton to look after the
horses. His brothers Ernie and Dick went with him.
"By now my
brother Ernie had the stripes, he was a bigshot. He was a corporal, but ended
up a sergeant. Old Thomas Blainey came around and saw Ernie at work and said,
‘best bloody drill sergeant I’ve even seen.’"
It was in
Gatton that Russell caught meningitis and he was rushed to hospital and was
about to be discharged and pensioned out of the army but there was a hitch.
"They found
out I was only 15. And the youngest you can be discharged from the army was 18
so I had to stick around. I didn't end up coming back to civvies until 1946."
When he
finally was discharged, it was a Friday in June 1946 and Russell caught a train
to Brisbane but there was no connection to Sandgate where his family now was.
"So I found a
place to stay because the next day was the Doomben 10,000 and I hitched a ride
with a fella I know and went to the races. At the turn of the big one,
Bernborough was near last and I was near a bookmaker who shouted, ‘Nine to two
Bernborough’. I had the 20 quid the army had given me in my pocket so I shouted
out, ‘I’m on.’ The bookie looked at me and my uniform and said, I’ll make it an
even 100 for you digger. Well Bernborough came flashing down and won, and I had
100 quid."
Russell
didn't return to Texas but found a wife, and then went bush, cooking for
shearers and sending money back to his wife. He kept busy on his visits home
and pretty soon had five kids.
One
day he returned from Windorah and his wife had her bags packed. She was leaving.
This wonderful man, eyes weeping, tells me the details but asks that I don't
share them. The boy who’d spent 18 hours a day catching rabbits to make five
bob to feed his family, had become a father and husband who’d travelled the dry
plains working to feed his children, never drinking or wasting a farthing, just
sending every penny home. In his absence, his wife had him charged with being a
delinquent father.
‘I sat in the front room and watched the
policeman take my five children away. I never saw them again.’
In
a bar in a small pub in Texas Queensland, two grown men, one almost 90 and the
other just turned 60, sit in silence and wipe tears from their eyes.
Then
he reaches for his wallet and pulls out a photo he’s kept there since it was
taken over 85 years ago. It shows him standing to the side as his mother feeds the
pet sheep and kangaroo. He’s never lost
his wallet and he’s never lost his love for his mother.
We didn't have a lot of food back
then but we still had enough for a few pet sheep and a couple of roos. But they all had names and the rule was
that we’d never eat anything with a name. Those
animals never knew how lucky
they were!
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The photo from Russell's wallet with him at right and his mother feeding their pet (named) roos and sheep. |
Three
months later Helen Rush, the extraordinary publican at the Stockman Hotel rings me. Russell has died. My tapes of our yarn may
well be the last recordings of this extraordinary struggle of a life.
Russell
Hilton and his brothers have a place in Australian History.
They are the only
set of ten brothers who all signed up for the Second World War and who all came
home. Not all saw overseas service, but six did, all with the Light horse.
Before this half dozen could return, they were forced to shoot their own
horses.
Russell, was the last of the line, he outlived all 16 of his siblings.
He
taught me many things this man. Perhaps the most telling was to never travel
thinking I shall return: to not ever not do something, ask something, record
something, visit something, talk to someone because ‘I’ll do it next time.’
Next time so often doesn't come and every time the urge comes to not bother
about doing something now, I think of
Russell Hilton.
never travel thinking I shall return: to not ever not do something, ask something, record something, visit something, talk to someone because ‘I’ll do it next time.’ Next time so often doesn't come ,
ReplyDeleteI think this is a motto all of us travellers should be aware of. I think it is great and I would like to borrow it if possible. Cheers John.