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| THE GIBBS BROTHERS |
William was born at Edbury, Oxfordshire UK in 1832. He arrived
in Australia on the "Salem" in March 1854 and died at
Dunolly (?) on August 18th 1912.
He lived at Nuggetty Flat with brothers John Woodman and Richard.
None of the brothers married, and all are buried at Tarnagulla.
William claimed he was the first to hatch out chickens without
a hen!!
Four kilometres on the left, as one drives towards Tarnagulla
from Laanecoorie, is an area of cleared land at each side of Nuggetty
Creek, and the ruins of a mud brick residence. This land (A4)
was selected by the Gibbs brothers in the 1860's and titlee to
the land was granted on 21st November, 1871.
John Woodman Gibbs arrived in Australia 19th August, 1851, on
the ship King William. He must have sent back encouraging reports
of life on the goldfields because his brother Richard arrived
on the ship Negotiator in September, 1852, and William on the
Salem in March, 1854. The brothers came from the town of Edbury
in Oxfordshire where their father was a farmer.
Today the most notable feature on their 15 acre block is the ruins
of what was once a very well constructed stone and mud brick house.
Beside the house there is the remains of a cellar and 100 metres
away the creek has been deepened in one area to form a small water
catchment. This would have provided stock and irrigation water
for some months after the remainder of the creek had dried. The
banks have been reinforced for about 30 metres in one region,
possibly to prevent flooding of the brothers' vegetable patch.
The Gibbs' mud brick house was constructed with stone at the
bottom five courses and corners and resisted erosion very well
until the shingle roof collapsed about 30 years ago.
Rumour has it that the house once served as a Penny School with
Richard Gibbs as teacher. However, other authorities claim this
is not so and that the Penny School was a wooden structure in
the adjacent paddock owned by John Gibbs (Allotment 1).
Indeed this block was always referred to as the School Paddock"
by Andrew Sturni who bought the land long after the building had
been demolished. These small private schools all closed when the
State introduced free education in 1871.
The other notable feature of the property is the dilapidated orchard
which straggles along the banks of Nuggetty Creek for about 200
metres. There are almond, peach and dozens of quince and plum
trees and a multitude of self propagated offspring.
Ruth Ewart, a journalist with "The Age" wrote a piece
published on 31st May 1988 in the Gardening Section entitled "Last
Gift of Summer Lightens Dark Days". In this essay she describes
this deserted orchard and its homely quince trees which have continued
to bear fruit for over a century.
The Gibbs brothers worked as miners in the early days but as they
grew older turned their attention to farming their small holding.
There was no main road past their home in those days but all the
surrounding allotments were populated. so there was no shortage
of congenial company.
The Pallots, Wilshusens and Bakers all had large families and
lived within a few hundred yards. The nearest shops were some
three miles away at Waanyarra but the old timers were extremely
self reliant and probably only needed to visit town every month
or so or to attend church services.
Richard Gibbs died in 1890 aged 63 and his brother John followed
in 1899 aged 71 years. The youngest brother Bill lived on until
1912 when he died of "apoplexy and syncope" at the age
of 80. None of the brothers ever married and Bill left his estate
to his nephews Henry and John Gibbs of Longton, Staffordshire,
England and small bequests to locals, Henry Wilshusen and Mrs.
Carrique of Waanyarra.
Article originally published in "The
Footsteps Echo" by Lynne Douthat