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Article: Ten Pound Poms

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    Ten Pound Poms

    76 Comments by Brian Probetts (Site Admin) Published on 21st May 2012 03:01 PM
    Ten Pound Poms

    by Mike Williamson


    On a bitterly cold morning in January of 1955, my family set out on the adventure which was to determine the direction of all our lives for many generations to follow and without doubt was to set the course of my future at sea.

    We were a family of five – my Mum and my Dad, my 13 year old sister, five year old brother and me. We were “ten pound Poms” on our way to Australia on the P&O Liner, “SS Strathaird”. What an adventure for a nine year old boy!
    Having sold the family house in late 1954 we started the year living in rented accommodation in Mapperley in Nottingham before embarking from Tilbury on that day in January.

    The trip took about five weeks. I remember the Suez and the bum boats coming alongside at Port Said, selling all kinds of souvenirs and collectables. My mum bought a couple of wooden plates inlaid with shells. I remember her telling me years later that the first words the local vicar said when he came to introduce himself were what nice collection plates they would make.
    There isn’t a lot that a nine year old can remember of such a trip – but the memories of a long exciting sea voyage must have left an exciting impression, because I’m sure it was why I went to sea as a ship’s engineer a little over ten years later.

    The Strathaird completed her maiden voyage in 1932. With a length of 200 metres and a 24 metre beam, she weighed just over 22,500 tons gross and cruised at 20 knots. She carried a crew of 480 and 1,242 single class passengers. During the Second World War she saw service as a troop ship, after which during her refit, two of her original three funnels were removed. Along with her sister ships, Stratheden, Strathmore and Strathnaver these wonderful ships must have delivered a hundred thousand or more fresh faced new immigrants to Australia during the fifties and the early 60s. She was eventually retired from service in 1961 and sold to a Hong Kong breakers yard shortly after.

    The first place we stepped ashore on foreign soil was the port of Aden, now part of Yemen, but at that time a colony of the British Empire at the eastern approaches to the Red Sea. After that it was on to Colombo in Sri Lanka. Of course it was called Ceylon then. It was amazing. There were beggars on every street, in every doorway, and by every road. Vendors thrusting their wares in our faces and following us as we were hustled along the busy thoroughfares. The throng of humanity after the relative calm of shipboard life was overwhelming. Yet the most exciting thing which I remember to this day was the thrill of being in Aden and Ceylon and being able to buy postage stamps from those countries to add to my schoolboy collection. Vendors were everywhere and I’m sure I would have pestered the daylights out of my parents to let me spend some money.

    After Ceylon the ship made the long trip across the Indian Ocean to Fremantle. We had some terrible monsoon weather and one night a passenger fell overboard after too much partying. Although the ship turned several circles he was never found. What a terrible way to go.

    Shipboard life for the kids was wonderful. I’m sure it was for the adults as well, but I particularly recall sharing a dining table with several other migrant kids and our steward, a Londoner who told us to call him Seb who used to say to us, “what you don’t want, don’t eat.” This was heaven – no one telling us to eat our vegetables. We were even brought tea in bed at breakfast time. We did have to attend school lessons of a sort, but it wasn’t difficult or like real school. We were taught songs about kookaburras in gum trees, and were shown pictures of kangaroos and told something about the history of this great country we were about to call our new home.

    We disembarked in Sydney in February 1955 and shortly after were on a long train journey to Brisbane. Along with all the other Queensland bound settlers, we were first accommodated at the Yungaba Immigration Centre where we stayed for several weeks. Yungaba was the first port of call for many thousands of the migrants who came to Queensland. Built in 1887 by the Queensland Government expressly for that purpose, it is situated right on the tip of the Kangaroo Point peninsula and with three-sided river views, it was a marvellous location for such an establishment.
    Although Yungaba was a government-run institution, there was always an obvious concern for the comfort and welfare of its residents; not just for compassionate reasons, but also because of the competition that existed between the states as they each attempted to attract migrants who could boost their labour force. Extensions and improvements to the centre were added to present a favourable atmosphere to incoming migrants. This included playground equipment for the kids and a supply of multi-colour check blankets instead of the usual institutional grey. I think my parents were quite happy to be placed there even after the relative luxury of shipboard life.

    My father had already organised his place of employment before we left Britain, and shortly after we arrived in Brisbane, Dad flew up North Queensland where he was due to start work as a motor mechanic at a small garage in the town of Mossman. We had no idea where that was but we were soon to find out! Dad’s job was to prepare the ground for us. To make sure we had a decent home to live in and to get settled into his new job. Mum was to follow on by train with the rest of us a week or two later.

    What a trip that was. I have often thought about what a harrowing experience it was for my 38 year old mother, literally fresh off the boat, having left a fairly comfortable (if cold) life in England boarding a train with three children to travel 1000 miles north to “God knows where”.
    Air-conditioned Sunlander trains were still a few years in the future, as we headed north on a rattling old train straight into the North Queensland wet season. Even today, conventional rail travel in Queensland can be a slow experience with a lot of stops and starts as bogeys rattle along in narrow gauge 3 feet 6 inch tracks, although Queensland’s new Tilt Train is now the fastest train in the world using a narrow gauge track. However, nothing was further away than the old rattler which took us about a week to get us to Cairns. Stopping at sidings and stations for long hours, it was a slow, uncomfortable trip with Mum doing her best to look after and feed three kids. And there were no sleeper cars; this was a journey where we were sitting up all the way. Every time the train stopped at a station, passengers and locals would make their way to the railway bar, or if there was no bar on the platform, to the local pub where they would buy and consume more and more booze for the long trip. What an ordeal it must have been.

    When we came to the Burdekin River which separated the towns of Home Hill on the south and Ayr on the north, the train was unable to cross the bridge which was several feet under water. We were forced to leave the train and were ferried across the mile wide river in little flat-bottom boats, with water almost lapping the gunwales as we made our way to the other shore. There we were crammed into another even older train for the remaining 300 miles or so of the journey north.
    When we eventually arrived in Cairns, Dad was waiting for us and we still had another 50 miles to travel, north along the Cook Highway to our new home. We were piled into an old International truck stopping every few miles along the way to ford another flooded creek or causeway. We eventually made it Mossman and our new home.

    Mossman was a cane town – it still is. Its sugar mill was not far from the middle of town and the little cane trains with their cargo of freshly cut cane would travel down the centre of Mill Street through the town several times a day, holding up what little traffic there was. The town had five pubs and a little picture theatre in a corrugated iron building with deck chairs for seating where we saw such wonderful films as Magnificent Obsession and Dial M for Murder.

    Our home was a little one storey fibro dwelling a long way from the home in Beeston, Notts. I remember one day doing hand stands in the hallway and putting my backside through a fibro wall – not something which went down too well with my Dad.

    We didn’t have a car, which is something which would have disappointed my father who was always an enthusiastic motorist. We did have use of an old International flatbed truck with a foot starter button on the floor and a split windscreen which you could wind open on hot days (ie every day). My Dad painted it red.

    We didn’t stay there long – about a year maybe before moving back down the Cook Highway to the big smoke – Cairns, where Dad got a job as workshop foreman at the local council. It wasn’t the big tourist town that it is now – just a few streets, a muddy esplanade, no traffic lights, no parking meters and lots of places for youngsters to go swimming.

    I have great memories of those times.




    This article was originally published in blog: Ten Pound Poms started by Mike Williamson
    Last edited by Brian Probetts (Site Admin); 1st November 2021 at 11:49 PM.

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  3. #51
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    Default Re: Ten Pound Poms

    Yes Vernon, up until about 1990 it was fairly easy to get out here.
    But things have changed much brought about by the Howard Gov.

    Unless you have a required skill it can be very hard, but even with a skill such as my brother as a sparky we still had to sponsor him.

    Most now have to have sponsor ship of some form to et here, but some skills such as Bakers, plasterers, brickies, dunny divers, sparkies, now in big demand, it is possible to get sponsorship from a firm who specialize in this.
    Happy daze John in Oz.

    Life is too short to blend in.

    John Strange R737787
    World Traveller

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    Default Re: Ten Pound Poms

    Re my Post #4

    The next Year one of the Brothers ( no not a Golden Girl haha)also used that Assisted Passage here and sailed from Durban on a Ship that i cant remember but will find out!

    ACHILLE LAURO

    Funny that this Post should have come up again by the Likes so then i too just remembered the name of that Ship , as i have posted above!

    Remember going aboard and saying Hasta Lavista to him, and his Wife! Lovely Ship it was but that was many Moons ago!
    Cheers
    Senior Site Moderator-Member and Friend of this Website

    R697530

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  6. #53
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    Default Re: Ten Pound Poms

    Now the restrictions are a little easier and there is a big shortage of some skilled workers there is the chance the feral gov may erase entry restrictions for some time.
    Happy daze John in Oz.

    Life is too short to blend in.

    John Strange R737787
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  8. #54
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    Default Re: Ten Pound Poms

    I know of many from this way that went, some were back ASAP,
    have many family that stayed and still there. One young lady
    went for a holiday to Sydney, was offered a job in banking and
    sadly for me only seen her once since.

    K.

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  10. #55
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    Default Re: Ten Pound Poms

    Quote Originally Posted by Victoria Moss View Post
    friendly people all around so why would we live anywhere else!


    Shiny Happy People

    R.E.M.

    Shiny happy people laughing

    Meet me in the crowd, people, people
    Throw your love around, love me, love me
    Take it into town, happy, happy
    Put it in the ground where the flowers grow
    Gold and silver shine

    Shiny happy people holding hands
    Shiny happy people holding hands
    Shiny happy people laughing

    Everyone around, love them, love them
    Put it in your hands, take it, take it
    There's no time to cry, happy, happy
    Put it in your heart where tomorrow shines
    Gold and silver shine

    Shiny happy people holding hands
    Shiny happy people holding hands
    Shiny happy people laughing

    Whoa, here we go
    Shiny happy people holding hands
    Shiny happy people holding hands
    Shiny happy people laughing

    Shiny happy people holding hands
    Shiny happy people holding hands
    Shiny happy people laughing

    Shiny happy people holding hands
    Shiny happy people holding hands
    Shiny happy people laughing

    Shiny happy people holding hands (people, happy people)
    Shiny happy people holding hands (people, happy people)
    Shiny happy people holding hands (people, happy people)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1H20W0e_oSM

    mn hands.jpg

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  12. #56
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    Default Re: Ten Pound Poms

    Well I came here in later life 1991 , 38 years after my first visit to Australia . The reasons why came are not important to others . But I paid all the way and right up until 2 weeks ago was still paying by way of taxes .like Vernon arrived with very little money , an unsold house in UK even left the car in the garage to be picked up later by a buyer. However had a sister out here which got 2 points off the 90 then required . Knew an Australian in uk who gave me the address of someone in Adelaide Steamship Co.who I wrote to to see the possibility of work here , and his reply was get here and you’ll have no problem with work. Used that letter as reference for the immigration authority’s , never had to show my face to them , they tried to warn me via mail about the costs of housing , which I replied I had been to Australia many times . Stuck all our furniture in a container sent by Maersk whicharrived 3 months after us , so put in storage as was living with sister before going into rented property. Starting from new again at my age was hard but worth it , especially since the accountant I now have has got my tax liability down to
    $37 dollars for this year , so celebrated by buying 2 new electric beds to ease the aches and pains of old age. Everything is worth it in the end . Australia has been my haven or more practible my heaven for the past 30 years and can’t think of anywhere else I would rather be, maybe for short spells in the bath house in Kobe with the wax treatment to follow. But always coming home to Oz. At the end of.
    JS
    Last edited by j.sabourn; 31st October 2021 at 06:45 AM.
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    Default Re: Ten Pound Poms

    Used to be Lewis that to get any benefits you had to be an Australian citizen , worked in Australia for a minimum of 10 years and paid taxes.All of which I agree with. I signed a paper that I would not be a burden on the State and never have been up until now. O.A P here is related to other pensions you maybe receiving. My Australian pension is reduced accordingly . But I do get subsidised prescriptions and free medical treatment , I have no teeth left so dental wise don’t pay much , but can cost a bomb for the wife as she has lead a good life and still has all of hers . Don’t know what the illegals get but whatever it is it is too much. JS
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    Default Re: Ten Pound Poms

    I will never match you guys but i was honestly on my way to a promised job in New Zealand in 1961 when I emigrated to the USA expecting to stay for two years while saving up the $2000 or so necessary to continue on to NZ. My mother had left the UK for Canada when i was still a Cadet and she had managed to move into New York State as a Cook/Housekeeper and the man she had recently married was a Chauffeur/Butler for very rich East Coast families. I had just married a Cargo Dept BookKeeper for Cunard whose mother wouldn’t agree to letting her daughter go directly to NZ as knew she wouldn’t see her again. My new wife also wasn’t sure either so the two years was a sort of trial — it didn’t work out and she returned on her own to UK eventually. Union Steamship had a ship under construction at Cammel LLairds in Birkenhead and i was to work aboard as Mate and also take her out to NZ - i was to be allowed to Box up our furniture and take it with. I also had a job lined up with a small Coastal shipping group out of Christchurch on condition i got myself there
    Often wonder if that job actually existed. Anyway, i had to back out of the Union Steamship job.
    I think the UK govt paid 25 pounds each to fly us out to Chicago. Only allowed a medium size suitcase each and a huge envelope containing chest X-rays showing we were TB free. Only had money for one month. Landed on Sunday morning, went looking for a job through a Clearing House
    On the Monday and started work on the Tuesday as a Statistician for an Insurance Company. A year later discovered i was the lowest paid person in the 12 person team yet 2nd in charge ! Quit and Took a job as Ocean Marine Underwriter as Great Lakes opening up to Salties in a big way and a year later was working in Stevedoring in Chicago and Milwaukee ports. Met and married my Chicago gal and still together 54+ years. Always a cargo man in some form or another since then. Keith A.

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    Default Re: Ten Pound Poms

    Like you Victoria we went for a drive Sunday.
    Glorious weather and the crowds along the sea front was enormous.
    Had a great day with every one in a great mood, freedom after almost 280 days lock down.
    Today the aircraft are arriving again, sanity may yet prevail.

    My brother in law and his wife, now both residents in the local cemetry, came out as 10 pound Poms in the mid 50's.
    As he told me the changes he saw over the years was amazing.

    We were lucky when we came out, under the small business scheme, cost us nothing, Oz paid our fare.
    Happy daze John in Oz.

    Life is too short to blend in.

    John Strange R737787
    World Traveller

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    Default Re: Ten Pound Poms

    #64 you weren’t around the traps. In Milwaukee about 1968 ish were you Keith. If you were did you ever get to a club there called the Safe House.? JS
    Don’t want to get too personal or tell stories out of line but was strongly tempted and offered a job as a grain inspector in Chicago by a licensed surveyor for same , he offered to pay to put up my shingle for me , but in meant taking big risks which I wasn’t prepared to do at the time. Cheers JS
    Last edited by j.sabourn; 1st November 2021 at 07:29 AM.
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