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Caboolture, QLD: Experience History

Caboolture is located about 45 minutes from Brisbane CBD,

The name is derived from the word Kabul-tur, meaning the place of the carpet snakes, used by the Gabi Gabi Aboriginal people for the area around the Caboolture River.

 

 The Kabi Kabi people

The Caboolture area is the traditional home of the Kabi Kabi people (various spellings). However, in  the south of Caboolture lies the Yugarabul traditional Aboriginal country.

The Gubbi Gubb language, like other Aboriginal Australian languages, was an oral language and not recorded in written form until the arrival of the Europeans. 

Although the Kabi and Wakka dialects are largely distinct, especially as regards nouns and adjectives, yet the two tribes followed very much the same customs, they were very friendly and intermarried freely, the class restrictions being the same for both.  

Yams, fern-roots, the roots of the cmijevoi, the core of the top of the cabbage-palm, and a few wild fruits, such as the quandong, the native plum, and the native lime, were the most common. It was the recognised duty of the women to dig the yams {Dioscorea Transversa) for family use. They were regularly provided with the yam-stick for this purpose, a staff about five feet long, the thickness of a stout walking-stick, and pointed at both ends. It served another purpose equally well, being the women's fighting weapon. They used it like a single-stick with great deftness in their feminine encounters.

 But, for the Kabi people especially, the most esteemed vegetable food was the product of the beautiful bunya tree.

R H Matthews (1910)

Subsection systems are a the social structure that divides Australian Aboriginals into a number of groups, each of which combines particular sets of kin and was important with regard to marriages between Aboriginal people.

Marriage was a central feature of traditional Aboriginal societies and often involved arranged infant betrothal. Usually this was between a young girl and an older man. (1.)

The area of Caboolture area may include sacred and ceremonial sites, including bora rings, paintings and axe-grinding grooves.
Party of Aborigines from either the Pine or Caboolture tribes. Taken in teh early 1870s or 60s. Bancroft Collection
A native hut built of saplings, grass and mud. Telegraph (Brisbane, Qld. : 1872 - 1947), Saturday 13 May 1939
Initiation, R H Matthews explained, was "a great educational institution" intended to strengthen the civil authority of the elders of the tribe.
John Mathew - File:Two Representative Tribes of Queensland. Gabbi Gabbi Clan

 Tom Petrie's Reminiscences of Early Queensland

(Dating from 1837)

 1770

James Cook was the first navigator to chart much of Australia;s east coast, one of the last major coastlines in the world unknown to Europeans at the time. He passed the Morton Bay area on 15 May 1770,

1840s

Durundur Station was established in 1841, one of Queensland’s earliest pastoral stations. Located near present-day Woodford, it was founded by Scottish brothers John and David Archer. 

Timber was rafted at hightide in groups, each of ten logs, down various streams and then drawn by
bullock teams to the Mooloolah River for shipment to Brisbane

The Caboolture area was opened up to free settlers in 1842. There were frequent clashes between Aboriginal people and Europeans. 

SOMETHING THAT MUST BE ENQUIRED INTO.

 IN the Observer of Saturday last is the commencement of a journal kept by the Rev. W. SCHMIDT, one of the German Missionaries to the blacks in the Moreton Bay district, in which, speaking of the disinclination of some natives to accomppany him in a particular direction, Mr. S. says, "There was also another reason which influenced greatly our natives against going any further, viz.—A LARGE NUMBER OF NATIVES, ABOUT FIFTY OR SIXTY, HAVING BEEN POISONED AT ONE OF THE SQUATTERS' STATIONS." From what we have heard of Mr. SCHMIDT, we believe him to be a prudent, cautious man, who would not make a statement conveying such a serious charge as that of murder against any one, unless he felt convinced that he had good authority for so doing. It will be perceived that there is no hesitation in Mr. SCHMIDT'S assertion ; he does not allude to the charge as a rumour, or as dependant upon the testimony of the blacks themselves, but boldly and unconditionally asserts that fifty or sixty blacks had been poisoned at one of the squatters'
stations. This grave charge cannot be allowed to pass unnoticed. It is the duty of the
GOVERNOR, and the Law Officers of the Crown, to cause a charge thus publicly made by a respectable member of society to be enquired into...

Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), Monday 5 December 1842, page 2 

Frontier violences reminiscence  here

1860s

Experiments with growing sugar cane and cotton were made by pastoralists in the 1860s. In 1861, George Raff began growing cotton on his property in Morayfield, along the Caboolture River. However, the cotton venture was unsuccessful and Raff began growing sugar by 1866,  He grew sugar cane for sugar, rum and molasses production until 1889.

In early 1860s, following the offer of a medal by the Royal Society of London for the first ton of sugar to be grown and processed in Queensland, that interest turned to that commodity and by 1865 some 2,000 acres were devoted to sugar,

Rev. John Mathew came to Queensland in 1865. He won the Royal Society of New South Wales bronze medal and prize for an essay on the Indigenous people in 1889. 1884, 1906-1909 and 1913, and even as late as 1923-1924. He went on to write several anthropological works and in 1926 was appointed to the Anthropology Committee of the Australian National Research Council.  

In 1867, dramatic change occurred with the discovery of Gold at Gympie. Hopeful gold prospectors poured into the area, heading for the diggings, with all its hardships. The roads at this time were crude, and the journey tortuous, with the road over the Stanley range almost perpendicular in places. In time the road became passable to horse drawn coaches.

The Caboolture mail station was named “The Punt” as it was necessary for coach and horses to be loaded onto the punt or ferry to cross the river.
Queenslander (Brisbane, Qld. : 1866 - 1939), Saturday 22 August 1868

1870s

The first state school opened  in 1873.

Durundur Mission some 15 miles west from Caboolture operated from 1877 to 1905 in the area now known as Woodford in the City of Moreton Bay.

In March 1877, 3,000 acres (1,200 ha) of land were gazetted as an Aboriginal reserve in the parish of Durundur near Monkeybong Creek. 

DURUNDUR NATIVES.  A group of aboriginals employed on Durundur station in 1867. (near Caboolture, QLD)

Telegraph (Brisbane, Qld. : 1872 - 1947), Saturday 1 March 1873
Morayfield Sugar Plantation at Caboolture, 1873, SLQLD
Bridging The Caboolture, c1874, QLD

 1880s

  St Laurence’s Anglican Church built in 1889.

 1890s

The Frazer Homestead at Upper Caboolture in 1891, QLD, Kaye
1. King Jacky Delaney, real name Menvil Wamuran. 2. Aboriginal club-like weapon

Description: King Jackie with [an Aboriginal woman] and daughter in his gunyah at the Newmarket camp. 'Wanmuarn' is one word written on the plate. (Jackie menvil? wanmuarn, King of Stoney Creek, Caboolture). (Description supplied with photograph). King Jackie has what appears to be a large spoon through his nose, and the woman on the right has a pipe in her mouth. 1897, SLQLD
Catherine Mewett,  Description: Catherine was married to the timbergetter, William Mewett. She established a boarding house in Caboolture and was also a midwife in the district between Buderim and Caboolture. (Description supplied with photograph.) Taken circa 1890, SLQLD

Our Caboolture correspondent writes :- "The floods are now rapidly subsiding. The Caboolture Bridge is safe, though blocked with immense logs and tress, which are now being removed. The handrails are all gone, of course, otherwise there is no damage. There is no reliable news from Woodford, but we heard yesterday that King's store was submerged, and the water was high in the post and telegraph office. It is feared some lives have been lost on the Stanley River, and much damage done at Villeneuve.
The Queenslander
Sat 11 Feb 1893
Butcher's shop and residence at Caboolture, Queensland, ca. 1895, SLQLD
Selector's homestead on Gympie Road, Caboolture, 1896, SLQLD
DURUNDUR, CABOOLTURE, QUEENSLAND (1898, September 24). The Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1871 - 1912) (stock men waiting for orders)
Caboolture railway station opened in June 1889 as part of the extension of the North Coast Line from Petrie.
Unidentified members of the Caboolture Divisional Board in the boardroom. 1898, SLQLD
Moreton Mail (Qld. : 1886 - 1899, 1930 - 1935), Friday 21 April 1899

1900s

MORAYFIELD HOUSE. Queensland Country Life (Qld. : 1900 - 1905; 1907; 1909 - 1910; 1935 - 1965), Saturday 1 August 1903
In January 1905, the Queensland Government decided to close Durundur Aboriginal Mission.
Pugh's (Queensland) official almanac, directory and gazetteer.(1905)
Pineapple plantation at Caboolture, QLD, SLQLD
Train approaching in The platform at Caboolture Railway Station, 1907
Dinnertime on the road near Caboolture, Qld - circa 1907, KAYE
D'Aguilar Hotel, near Caboolture, Qld - very early 1900s, Now called the Bushmans Arms Hotel. The original hotel was brought down by bullock teams from Gympie and placed at Waraba Creek where Buggies would stop from Caboolture. It was then moved to D'Aguilar.
Information and more reading here: www.gdaypubs.com.au/QLD/d+aguilar/49018/bushmans-arms.html

In December 1906, the Caboolture Co-operative Dairy Association was formed. The butter factory opened in October 1907 on a 1.1-hectare site on the north bank of the Caboolture River, just west of the railway line. 
Crowds gather near the Caboolture Railway Station, ca. 1908, SLQLD
Timbers workers, Morton Electorate, QLD. Queensland Country Life (Qld. : 1900 - 1905; 1907; 1909 - 1910; 1935 - 1965), Saturday 28 April 1900
Workers of the Caboolture Butter Factory pose against a wall in two rows. The back row from left to right includes Fred Uhlmann, Terry Lee, unidentified?, Bob Sanders, Dan Coghill, Billy Schultz, W. A. Schmidt. The front row from left to right includes Harry Johnson, Percy Seeney, unidentified?, Harry Schultz, unidentified?. Some men wear aprons and some men wear office clothes. A boy sits cross-legged on the ground in the middle of the group. 1912, SLQLD, PD
Road bridge across the Caboolture River, Queensland, ca. 1912, SLQLD
Early EMF automobile, Caboolture, ca. 1913, SLQLD
Court House building in Caboolture, Queensland ca. 1913, SLQLD 
St Peter's Roman Catholic Church in Caboolture, ca.1913. SLQLD (was in Church Street on the south side of the river. Transported to its present site in 1919)
A WELL-PRESERVED BORA OF KIPPA RING NEAR CABOOLTURE the "Sketcher"General View of The Ring (the men are standing in the centre).Queenslander (Brisbane, Qld. : 1866 - 1939), Saturday 3 January 1914, (Bora is an initiation ceremony of the Aboriginal people of Eastern Australia. The word "bora" also refers to the site on which the initiation is performed. Women and children were not permitted to be present at the sacred bora ground where these rituals were undertaken.)
Caboolture State School, ca. 1914, SLQLD

WW1

Description: Girls' patriotic tableau at Caboolture during World War 1. They stand in a row in costume bearing various national flags and hold aloft the letters spelling 'Fighting for liberty'. One girl sits in the centre of the group representing the allegorical figure of Liberty. 1917, SLQLD
Advertising postcard for A. Johnson, Sawmills at Caboolture, Qld - 1917, Kaye
Procession along a Caboolture street, Queensland, ca. 1917, SLQLD 
 
During the pastoral period of settlement that brass plates, or gorgets, were given to those Aboriginal elders recognized by Europeans as leaders, or Kings, of their particular groups. Casino and Kyogle Courier and North Coast Advertiser (NSW : 1904 - 1932), Saturday 19 July 1919 (Aboriginals groups did not have kings or queens but operated as a gerontocracy)

'Sons of Mr and Mrs E. Cox, Methodist minister at Caboolture, and brothers of A. B. Cox, of the " Courier " mechanical department. SERGEANT W. E. COX, 49th BATT. SAPPER R. W. COX, 2nd TUN. CO. DRIVER E, M. COX. A.S.C. .Courier (Qld. : 1864 - 1933), Saturday 8 March 1919, page 13

1920s

Anzac Day Caboolture 1921, SLQLD
 New Methodist Church at- Cahoolture. Daily Mail (Brisbane, Qld. : 1903; 1916 - 1926), Friday 19 June 1925

EARLY DAYS RECALLED 
Mr. William Pettigrew was a very enterprising and energetic man, and was known as a good employer, treating his men justly in every way: consequently, he soon had a good lot of men working for him, cutting, rafting and hauling the timbers he required. The names of the old timber-getters and pioneers are getting well-nigh lost to the residents of to-day. The felling of timber was done mostly by (A)boriginals under the guidance of Dick Jones. J. Martin, Dan. Cogil, and others, while the teamsters of those early days were Charlie and Tom. Chambers, Jack Kimmond, Jim Byrnes, Peter Stevens and others, not forget-ting the old 'rafter' Charlie Brown, who brought many rafts of timber down the Maroochy River to the Cotton Tree, where the teamsters.
Nambour Chronicle and North Coast Advertiser (Qld. : 1922 - 1954), Friday 4 March 1927

Malcolm Biggs (7 July 1904 - 1 August 1972) was born in Caboolture and attended the local school. He was an Australian cricketer and played in six first-class matches for Queensland between 1927 and 1931.
Malcolm Biggs (7 July 1904 - 1 August 1972) He played in six first-class matches for Queensland between 1927 and 1931

LADIES' COMMUTEE OF THE CABOOLTURE SHOW. The group includes Mesdames I. M'Pherson (president), H. Kemp, Freeney, Tomlinson, T. Flux, E. Hinton, H,^ Shultz, Miss E. Mewett, Mesdames H. Johnston, FI. Day, H. Lltherland, S. Moller, Gracey, Hurle, and Davidson. Courier (Qld. : 1864 - 1933), Saturday 23 July 1927

1930s

'The new Car for the Caboolture and District Branch of the Queensland Ambulance Transport Brigade and the Garage which is being built by a Working Bee to house the Vehicle.Telegraph (Brisbane, Qld. : 1872 - 1947), Thursday 9 July 1931
Residence of J. M. Newman at Caboolture, QLD,  ca. 1934 (later The War Veterans' Home (RSL Care)
The Memorial School of Arts building was erected around 1920 and demolished in 1975, Caboolture, QLD, 1936
North Coast and Stanley District News (Caboolture, Qld. : 1931 - 1964), Thursday 9 November 1939

 1940s and WWII

Queensland was a frontline of the Pacific War of 1941-45. Read more here

Secret Intelligence Australia (SIA) was located at "Newman House" at Caboolture, just north of Brisbane. It was previously called "Fernhill". Read more here The Land Army girls were to pick crops at Newman's estate during WWII. Read more here
Outdoor portrait of QX6313 Captain (Capt) Henry William Albert Cobb, 2/7 Cavalry Regiment, of Caboolture, Qld. A bootmaker and saddler in civilian life, Capt Cobb enlisted on 11 July 1940. On 19 December 1942 he was killed in action in Papua, aged 27. AWM, 1940
Marching band walking past the Royal Hotel, Caboolture, ca. 1940, SLQLD
North Coast and Stanley District News (Caboolture, Qld. : 1931 - 1964), Thursday 9 May 1940
Two women seated in front of the stage in a decorated hall in Caboolture, 1940, SLQLD
North Coast and Stanley District News (Caboolture, Qld. : 1931 - 1964), Thursday 2 January 1941
CABOOLTURE AREA, QLD. 1945-02-06. LANCE SERGEANT DEANE, (1), ACCOMPANYING MEMBERS OF 12 LINE SECTION, ON CABLE LAYING DUTIES DURING TRAINING EXERCISES. AWM
CABOOLTURE AREA, QLD. 1945-02-06. SIGNALMAN C WILD, OPEREATING A 43 LINE TC4 US PATTERN SWITCHBOARD DURING 22 LINES OF COMMUNICATION SIGNALS TRAINING EXERCISES. THE UNIT IS DUG IN TO ENABLE COVERAGE OF THE OPERATOR AND THE BOARD WITH THE NORMAL ISSUE MOSQUITO NET. AWM
Here is John Cameron, black tracker, of Oxley, examininr tracks believed to hare been made by 4-year-old toddler. Ralph Shellard Kirchner, who had wandered from his Caboolture home last week and whose tiny body was later found drowned in .-lagoon, about 200 yards from the house.Worker (Brisbane, Qld. : 1890 - 1955), Monday 2 June 1947
RACING FOR THE BALL. JEAN KENWAY (left), playing for Caboolture basketball team, deflects the ball away from White Wings goalie, Audrey Hampson, during the match at New Farm Park yesterday.Courier-Mail (Brisbane, Qld. : 1933 - 1954), Monday 17 October 1949
Audrey Bauer became Caboolture's first international basketballer in 1947 when she gained selection as a defence player in the 1948 Australian team to tour New Zealand.
Audrey Bauer became Caboolture's first international basketballer in 1947 when she gained selection as a defence player in the 1948 Australian team to tour New Zealand. 
Children Of Caboolture— Small Queensland Town— Enjoy Advantages

''THROUGH the efforts of the members of their local C.W.A., children living in the Queensland district of Caboolture arc being provided with new recreational interests and assisted to develop a sense of fraternity and citizenship.

Last October. Caboolture C.W.A. branch, which consists of 51 members and an active Younrcr Set, started out on a new field of work when It announced the ' official opening of their Kindergarten and Juvenile Centre,

Farmer and Settler (Sydney, NSW : 1906 - 1955), Friday 2 May 1947
Brisbane Telegraph (Qld. : 1948 - 1955), Saturday 3 December 1949

1950s

QATB, King Street, Caboolture. 22 August 1953, PD
Two women seated on a bench next to the flagpole in a park at Caboolture, QD, 1954, SLQLD
Domestic Science, Dressmaking and Cooking - Caboolture State School, QLD, March 1955, SLQLD
Caboolture State School, Domestic Science, Workshop - Caboolture State School, QLD, March 1955, SLQLD

 1960s

QATB, King Street, Caboolture. 22 August 1953, 10 August 1951.SLQLD

1970s

Caboolture  QLD (1979) Public Domain

 1980s

Formerly the Empire Picture Theatre in Matthew Terrace Caboolture, QLD, in the 1980s
 
1990s

Situated near the Caboolture Airfield, the Caboolture Warplane and Flight Heritage Museum was established in 1995.

 2000s

Caboolture Medieval Festival, QLD, 2014, https://www.flickr.com/photos/shebalso/

Around Calbooture

Caboolture and surrounds, QLD, https:/www.flickr.com/photos/bertknot/
Caboolture State School, QLD, John
Caboolture Historical Village Hospital, QLD
The Queensland Prisons Museum is located in the Caboolture Historical Village, QLD
Caboolture, QLD:
Caboolture Warplane and Flight Heritage Museum, QLD
Caboolture Warplane and Flight Heritage Museum, QLD
Caboolture Historical Village, QLD
Abbey Museum of Art and Archaeology, Calabooture, QLD
Queenslander, Caboolture, QLD

Things To Do and Places To Go

Caboolture Guide 

Early Visitors to Moreton Bay

Caboolture Historical Village   (The Queensland Prisons Museum is located in the Caboolture Historical Village)

Abbeystowe Medieval Festival 

 Heritage Day - Caboolture Historical Village

CABOOLTURE WARPLANE & FLIGHT HERITAGE MUSEUM

Old Time Australian Cooking

Bush Tucker

Sydney Mail (NSW : 1912 - 1938), Wednesday 2 November 1932,
ABORIGINAL FOOD.--II. ITS SEARCH, CAPTURE, AND PREPARATION.
COOKING. The actual cooking of both animal and plant food is effected either by roasting,
baking,-boiling, or grilling. Of these, roasting—broiling would foe a better term—is perhaps the simplest and easiest pro«e?S, the material to be cooked being just placed on and in the hot ashes. Baking inground-ovens with boated stones, or with chunks of antlbed when the latter are not
available, varies slightly in 'the different districts. At Cape Bedford and on the 'Bloonufield a number of stones, after toeing well heated in a fire, are removed together with the ashes, and a hole Quickly dug In the position just occupied. Along its bottom are next placed several kinds of leaves
(various species of ginger), and upon these pieces ol meat, amonsat which the hot stones and ashes are placed, thon a covering Dt some more leaves or tea-tree bark,•nd lastly a layer of earth and stones.Queenslander (Brisbane, Qld. : 1866 - 1939), Saturday 30 November 1901 Read More

Pressure CookingAboriginal Style. Fish cooked in a casing of clay by Aus. tralian aborigines was really an early form of modern pressure cooking, MIr. M. O'Shea paid yesterday.Mr. O'Shea, who was addressing Newcastle Legacy Club, said the aborigines packed the whole fish, without scaling or cleaning, in clay and placed it in a dying fire. The fish had been steamed when the clay was removed and was "really very good."Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners' Advocate (NSW : 1876 - 1954), Wednesday 15 October 1952

Pies

Anglo-Celtic Australians adapted recipes from the British Isles.

Egg pie
EGG PIE. Here is a recipe for a tasty luncheon dish : Grease a fireproof dish, and line with breadcrumbs. Add seasoning, and a layer of sliced onions, then sliced tomatoes and then mashed potatoes. Ontop of this carefully break as many eggs as will be required. Scatter chopped gherkins, capers, or pickles over them, then more breadcrumbs and a few small pieces of butter on the top. Bake in a moderate oven for 15 minutes.Richmond River Herald and Northern Districts Advertiser (NSW : 1886 - 1942), Friday 19 February 1932

PUMPKIN PIE. To every pint of mashed pumpkins allow 1oz. of butter, ½ cupful of sugar, the grated peel and juice of a lemon, 1 tablespoon of brandy or sherry,grate nutmeg to taste, a pinch of salt. Boil the pumpkin in salted water, to which a few cloves may be added, if liked. When cooked, drain well, mash and add other ingredients, mix well. Line a tart plate with good flaky pastry. Put in plenty of pumpkin; cover with the pastry rolled thin. Press the edges together with a spoon, brush over with egg or milk, and bake for about half an hour. A good pinch of citric acid and about 10 drops of essence of lemon may be substitute for the lemon, and two table spoonfuls of cream for the butter.Dandenong Journal (Vic. : 1927 - 1954), Thursday 25 June 1936

Tasty Pie. BUTTER a pie dish and cover tho bottom with any cooked and boned fish, or tinned salmon will do. Next put a layer of cooked vegetables, such as green peas, mashed parsnip, turnip or carrot. Cover with finely mashed potato and spread tho top with butter. Each luycr should have salt and pepper to taste. Bake in tho oven until potato is a golden brown.Advocate (Burnie, Tas. : 1890 - 1954), Saturday 11 June 1932,

EGG AND MUSHROOM PIE.
Six eggs, 1 lb. mushrooms, 2 tablespoons butter, salt and pepper to taste, 2 heaped tablespoons breadcrumbs. Peel and place mushrooms in a saucepan. Cover with water, then place lid on pan, and simmer till tender. Drain off liquid and melt butter in another pan. Add mushrooms and cook very slowly for ten minutes. Season to taste, then pour into a shallow buttered fireproof dish. Break the eggs on top. Sprinkle with crumbs, then dab with liny dots of butter. Bake till eggs are set. Enough for four to six persons.West Coast Recorder (Port Lincoln, SA : 1909 - 1942), Thursday 18 June 1936

Biscuits

Oatmeal biscuits

Oatmeal biscuits.
Ingredients :— 1 tablospoonfuls of flour and two of oatmeal, 1 teaspoonfnl of baking powder, and i of salt warm water. Method.— Mix flpur, oatmeal, baking powder, and salt togetbor. Pour in sufficient warm water to make into a nice light paste ; torn on to a slightly floured board, roll out thinly, stamp into rounds, prick slightly with a fork, and bake in a hot oven for about 8 minutes.Queanbeyan Observer (NSW : 1894 - 1908; 1910 - 1915), Friday 21 July 1905

CHOCOLATE BISCUITS. The whites of two eggs beaten to a froth, 1/2b white sugar, 1/3oz cinnamon, £lb sweet almonds pounded, 2oz powdered chocolate, enough flour to make a paste. Boll it half an inch thick, and out into any shape you like. Bake in slow ovenCowra Guardian and Lachlan Agricultural Recorder (NSW : 1898 - 1907), Saturday 9 September 1899

JAM DROPS. Take two cups of flour, two tea-spoonsful baking powder, three-quar-ters of a cup of sugar, half a cup of butter and two eggs. Beat butter and sugar to a cream, add the eggs, then flour and baking powder. Make into balls about the size of a walnut; press holes in top, and fill with jam. Bake in a quick oven. Corrigin Chronicle and Kunjin-Bullaring Representative (WA : 1925 - 1943), Thursday 8 January 1925

"Populate or perish" policy

Between 1945 and 1965, two million immigrants arrived in Australia. Displaced Persons who came to Australia were Latvians and Estonians (the Balts), Poles, Ukrainians, Hungarians, Czechs and Yugoslavs. The British remained the largest part of the migrant intake until 1953.[1] Between 1953 and late 1956, migrants from Southern Europe outnumbered the British.

In 1973, the Whitlam government (1972–1975) ended preferentially European immigration. Predominantly Asian immigration to Australia continues to the present day.

(Italian Bèan Soup)One rasher bacon, small quantity bacon fat, 1 small onion, 2 leeks, 2 skinned chopped tomatoes, I cup chopped celery, 1 carrot, 1 cup dried beans (soaked overnight in water to cover), piece of lean breast of pork, ? cups boiling: water, salt to taste, 1 cup chopped cabbage, J cup rice, 2 sprigs of parsley, 2 sage leaves, I clove garlice, grated cheese) toast croutons; 
Brown diced bacon in bacon fat with chopped onion, chopped leeks, and tomatoes. Add celery, diced carrot, beans and pork. Fry 1 or 2 minutes longer. Add water and salt, cook gently 1 hour. Add more water if neces-sary, then cabbage. Simmer 15 minutes, stir in wellwashed rice, and cook 12 to 15 minutes longer. One minute before taking off fire, add parsley, sage and finely minced garlic. Serve topped with grated cheese and toast croutons. 
Dutch Pea Soup Two pig's trotters, llb sausage meat, 1} cups dried' peas, 4 pi-its water, llb potatoes, 1 stick celery, few celery leaves, 2 level dessertspoons-salt, 1 onion. Wash peas, cover with boiling water, soak 24 hours. Boil gently 2 hours in water in which peas soaked. Press through sieve, add trotters, sausage meat, and water. Cook I hour, add diced potatoes, and celery, chopped onion, celery leaves, and salt. Continue cook-ing until soup is smooth and thick, about 3 to 4 hours. The longer it cooks the better the taste. This soup is particularly good if kept until the next day.Sunday Times (Perth, WA : 1902 - 1954), Sunday 6 June 1954

Greek Keftethers

Greek recipe A number of people who have tasted and enjoyed Greek dishes have asked for some Greek recipes. Here is a recipe from George and Maureen Xeros. of Merbein for a Greek dish called Keftethers: Ingredients: 1 lb. mince meat (lamb, topside or a mix-ture of pork and mutton), a medium onion, a cup self-raising flour, a large glass water, salt, pepper, a table-spoon of chopped parsley, a good pinch of herbs. METHOD: Mix all together adding more water if neces-sary to make a fairly wet mix-ture. Stand in refrigerator for an hour.Take spoonfuls and roll in flour; fry in deep very hot olive oil. Can be made large for everyday meals, but are nice made small for parties.Sunraysia Daily (Mildura, Vic. : 1920 - 1971), Thursday 13 January 1955,

(many Chinese came during the gold rush) CHINESE RICE.
Boil one cup rice, until tender, drain and add three-quarters of a cup each of celery and cabbage sliced very ( finely and one cup of diced, cooked: pork; cook gently until tender; add two well-beaten eggs and simmer forfive minutes, stirring constantly, add two tablespoonfuls of soy sauce (ordi: nary brown sauce) and serve very hot. This is a really delicious meal. Molong Express and Western District Advertiser (NSW : 1887 - 1954), Saturday 24 December 1938

Bortsch (Polish) 
ANOTHER NATIONAL DISH.Bortsch (Polish) Take 1 white turnip, 1 crimson beetroot, 1 onion, a couple of sticks of celery, a small cabbage (Savoy for preference). Shred the cabbage into small pieces and slice the other vegetables into 1 "matches." Cook until all the vegetablesare thoroughly heated, but not brown, with some butter in a saucepan. Then add some strained stock made from the bones., of a duck, a piece of beef shin; a bouquet of herbs, a bay leaf, peppercorns, cloves and a very small amount of mace. Simmer the vegetables in the stock until it is well cooked. Then cut up a fairly large beetroot, put a little white vinegar with it. Then strain off the juice and add it with some sweet or sour cream (preferably sour .cream as bortsch should have an acid flavor). Add just before the bortsch is brought to the table very hot,Table Talk (Melbourne, Vic. : 1885 - 1939), Thursday 13 August 1931





What Remains