|
|
Clarendon Street,
Derby
|
Derby
Wild
and unusual outback town in the Kimberley
Derby, like so many town in northern Western
Australia, knows that it is surrounded by a seemingly endless vastness
and consequently it has no conscience about sprawling in every
direction. Located 2354 km north of Perth and 236 km from Broome, it is
a town without a clearly defined centre. The locals refer to Clarendon
Street as the town's main street. However, Loch Street, which runs
adjacent to Clarendon Street, is not only more attractive but also has
the Police Station and Post Office in it. It is this kind of indecision
which gives the settlement a special casual charm. Who really cares if
the town has a main street?
The Derby region was first explored in 1688 by William
Dampier. This statement, now widely accepted, is, in part, one of those
strange cases of the rewriting of history. Dampier was one of the crew
of the Cygnet which sailed around the King Sound area for three months
in 1688. The Cygnet was actually under the command of Captain Read but
it was Dampier who, upon his return to England, published A New Voyage
Round the World and thus was incorrectly credited as leading the
expedition which anchored in Cygnet Bay and sailed around King Sound.
It was in A New Voyage Round the World that Dampier
made his observations about the Aborigines of Western Australia and the
poor quality of Western Australia. These observations ensured that no
one in Britain took any great interest in Australia for the next century.
'The inhabitants of the Country,' he wrote, 'are the
miserablest People in the world. The Hodmadods or Monomatapa, though a
nasty people, yet for Wealth are Gentlemen to these; who have no Houses
and skin Garments, Sheep, Poultry, and Fruits of the Earth, Ostrich
Eggs &c. as the Hodmadods have: And setting aside their human Shape,
they differ but little from Brutes. They are tall, strait-bodied, and
thin, with small long Limbs. They have great Heads, round Foreheads,
and great Brows. Their Eye-lids are always half closed, to keep the
Flies out of their eyes; they being so troublesome here, that no
fanning will keep them from coming to ones Face; and without the
assistance of both Hands to keep them off, they will creep into ones
Nostrils; and Mouth too, if the Lips are not shut very close. So that
from their infancy being thus annoyed with these Insects, they do never
open their Eyes, as other People: And therefore they cannot see far;
unless they hold up their Heads, as if they were looking at somewhat
over them.' Inaccurate as it certainly was, it did nothing to encourage
other Englishmen to explore the southern continent.
Near the jetty is a bicentennial monument to
William Dampier who arrived near the present site of Derby in 1688. He
reached the head of King Sound on 5 January 1688.
After Dampier came Phillip Parker King who, from 1818 to
1822, explored the coasts of Western Australia and the Northern
Territory including King Sound (which is named after him) upon which
the port of Derby is located. King's explorations generated no interest
in the region.
In 1837 George Gray and John Stokes explored the
eastern coast of the sound naming the Fitzroy River after Captain
Robert Fitzroy R. N. and also naming Stokes Bay.
It wasn't until 1879 that any European settlement of the
area occurred. Isolation and harsh conditions had combined to ensure
that only the most tenacious of pastoralists and workers came to the area.
In 1879 Alexander Forrest travelled through the area and
sent back reports which were clearly exaggerated. He described the area
around Derby as being 'well watered land suitable for pastoral
purposes, besides a large area suitable for the culture of sugar, rice
or coffee'. Such a glowing report attracted pastoralists to the area
but they soon found that tropical diseases, unreliable seasons,
horrendous transportation problems and very antagonistic local
Aborigines made life in the area almost unbearable.
|
|
The Old Wharf
|
In 1880 the Murray
Squatting Company established a sheep station at Yeeda some 45 km from
Derby. They initially transported their goods from Cossack near
Roebourne but this was clearly impractical. That same year a landing
port was created at Derby and the following year a ship called The Ruby
under the command of Captain Pemberton Walcott landed the first cargo.
Derby was never an ideal port. Steering ships through the narrow
channels off the islands of the Buccaneer Archipelago required
remarkable skills. The area is swept by vicious rips and whirlpools and
there are tidal variations of up to 11.3 metres. The tidal range
ensured that all the ships at the port were left high and dry at low
tide. This created its own special problems with goods being left on
the mud flats to be ferried to and from the ships anchored off the
shore.
In 1883 a simple grid pattern was placed over the area to the
south of the present jetty and the township of Derby (named after the
British Secretary of State for the Colonies) was proclaimed. The eight
sheep stations in the area now had their own port and police
protection. It was also in late August of 1883 that a shipment of wool
waiting on the mudflats for delivery to a ship was swept away by the
tidal wave caused by the Krakatoa volcanic explosion in Indonesia.
The first jetty was built in 1885. The timing was
impeccable. That same year Charlie Hall discovered gold at Halls Creek
and miners and prospectors poured into the port on their way to the
goldfields.The jetty ran out across the mudflats beyond the town and
the ships that brought the miners in were only to eager to depart with
cargoes of gold (1886), pearl shells and wool. The goldrush was
shortlived and by the 1890s the port was used almost exclusively for
the export of live cattle and sheep.
1885 saw the arrival of the MacDonald brothers in the
area. They had overlanded cattle an incredible 6440 km from Goulburn in
NSW. They arrived in the area with only 30 head of cattle.
It was during this time that major problems broke out
between the local Aborigines and the pastoralists. The leader of the
local Aborigines, a true hero and remarkable guerrilla fighter, was a
man named Jandamarra who became known to the pastoralists and the
police as Pigeon. An excellent account of Pigeon's reign of terror and
a discussion of the places connected with his operations around Derby
can be found in The Pigeon Heritage Trail: Aboriginal-European
Relations in the West Kimberley, 1890s which is available from the
Derby Tourist Bureau in Clarendon Street, Derby. It has clear
directions to the Old Derby Gaol in Loch Street and the old cemetery in
Sutherland Street which has the grave of Pigeon's first victim, Police
Constable Richardson.
Pigeon shot Richardson on 31 October 1894 after
the pair had tracked and rounded up 16 Aborigines accused of stealing
and killing stock. What Richardson didn't realise was that had used
Pigeon to track members of his own family. These prisoners duly
explained to Pigeon that if he didn't set them free their tribal lands
would be overrun by white pastoralists. They explained that stockmen
had been seen with over 500 head of cattle in the vicinity of the
beautiful Windjana Gorge. It is not known precisely what happened but
it is reasonable to assume that the prisoners convinced Pigeon that a
stand must be taken against white invaders. Pigeon duly shot
Richardson, freed the prisoners and, with himself as their new leader,
headed off to attack the stockmen at Windjana Gorge. The attack was
successful. Pigeon and his men killed the two head stockmen and it was
only because another stockmen, following some kilometres away in a
wagon, heard the shots and fled that news got through to the police at Derby.
The police sent reinforcements to the area and in the
battle that followed Pigeon was shot but, with the help of some
Aboriginal women, he managed to escape capture.
The old principal of indiscriminate reprisals
occurred over the next six months as police and vigilantes
indiscriminately killed hundreds of Aborigines most of whom had no
connection with Pigeon.
For two years Pigeon hid in the Tunnel Creek Cave to
the south of Windjana Gorge. The white police were convinced he had
been killed but in early 1896 he raided the Lillimooloora Police
Station and stole a rifle and ammunition. This remarkable 'return to
life' did much to ensure the legend of Pigeon. For the next few months
Pigeon taunted the police and pastoralists. He was a superb bushman and
his contact with the police allowed him to outwit them. He was finally
cornered in 1897 and killed near his hideout at Tunnel Creek.
Things to see:
Pigeon Heritage Trail
An excellent account of Pigeon's reign of terror and a
discussion of the places connected with his operations around Derby can
be found in The Pigeon Heritage Trail: Aboriginal-European Relations in
the West Kimberley, 1890s which is available from the Derby Tourist
Bureau in Clarendon Street, Derby. It has clear directions to the Old
Derby Gaol in Loch Street and the old cemetery in Sutherland Street
which has the grave of Pigeon's first victim, Police Constable Richardson.
|
|
The Boab Prison Tree
|
Boab Prison Tree
and Myall's Bore
On the outskirts of town (7 km south on the Derby
Highway) is the Boab or Baobab Prison Tree and the Myall's Bore.
The huge baobab tree was used as a lockup for Aboriginal
prisoners. It was the last stopover point for patrols returning to
Derby. Capable of holding a number of prisoners it has an entrance
which is about one metre wide and two metres high.
The Bore, originally known as Miyarli Well, was
originally sunk by a man called Mayall who in 1912 sank the bore to a
depth of 322 metres. The daily flow of water was 315 000 litres. The
bore was capped in 1980. Beside the bore stands a huge 120 metre long
cattle trough which was built in about 1920 and is reputed to be the
longest in the southern hemisphere. It is claimed, although it seems
hard to imagine, that when the trough was in use 1000 head of cattle
could be watered at one time.
By the early 1900s Derby was a port of minor importance.
It wasn't until the 1950s that the port had a new lease of life when,
in 1951 iron ore mining commenced at Cockatoo Island. This did much to
revitalise the town so that by 1964 there was sufficient optimism to
build a new jetty (the one now standing at the northern end of the
town). Beside the jetty is one of the town's most unusual sights - the
remnants of the livestock loading facility. The yards and the race were
built in 1964 and used until 1968. Cattle after being inspected and
dipped at Myall's Bore were herded along the fringe of the mudflats to
the cattle lead near the present bulk fuel depot. The lead ran 2.5 km
across the mudflats to the yards and the race near the Wharf Restaurant
gives some idea of the complexity of the operation.
Since the 1970s the port has been slowly in
decline. In 1973 the last passenger arrived aboard a state ship and in
1980 the last commercial ship visited the port. In the port's last full
year of operation 51 vessels visited consisting of 13 overseas ships,
34 interstate, 2 naval vessels, 1 customs vessel and a refugee boat.
Now there is some talk of moving the town so that a new port can be
built closer to the deep waters of King Sound. If this eventuates it
will be part of the Kimberleys continuing process of building two towns
for purely practical reasons.
| |
Tourist Information
|
| |
| |
Derby Tourist Bureau, Derby Cultural Centre
1 Clarendon St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 1428
Facsimile: (08) 9191 1609
|
| |
| |
Hotels
|
| |
| |
Derby Boab Inn
Loch St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 1044
Facsimile: (08) 9191 1568
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
| |
King Sound Resort Hotel
Loch St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9193 1044
Facsimile: (08) 9191 1649
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Spinifex Hotel
Clarendon St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 1233
Rating: *
|
| |
| |
Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
|
| |
| |
Mt Elizabeth Station Guesthouse
370km north of Derby
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 4644
|
| |
| |
| |
Mt Hart Homestead Lodge
250km north West of Derby
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 4645
|
| |
| |
Lodges & Chalets
|
| |
| |
West Kimberley Lodge
50 Sutherland St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 1031
Facsimile: (08) 9191 1028
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
Caravan Parks
|
| |
| |
Kimberley Entrance Caravan Park
Rowan St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9193 1055
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
| |
Mt Barnett Station Roadhouse
Derby-Wyndham Rd
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 7007
|
| |
| |
| |
Windjana Gorge National Park Camping
145km east of Derby
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9192 1036
|
| |
| |
Camping & Other
|
| |
| |
Goldsworthy Connection Budget Accommodation
Guildford St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9193 1246
Facsimile: (08) 9193 1246
|
| |
| |
Restaurants
|
| |
| |
Alberts Kitchen
Clarendon St Arc.
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9193 1064
|
| |
| |
| |
Boab Inn
Loch St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 1044
|
| |
| |
| |
BP Colac Restaurant
84 Loch St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 1256
|
| |
| |
| |
King Sound Resort Hotel
Loch St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9193 1044
Facsimile: (08) 9191 1649
|
| |
| |
| |
Lwoy Chinese Restaurant
Loch St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 1554
|
| |
| |
| |
Spinifex Hotel
Clarendon St
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 1233
|
| |
| |
| |
Wharf¹s Restaurant at the Jetty
Jetty Rd
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 1195
|
| |
| |
| |
Willare Bridge Roadhouse
Great Northern Hwy
Derby
WA
6728
Telephone: (08) 9191 4775
|
| |