U3A Benalla
  • Home
  • Benalla
    • Benalla
    • Benalla District
    • Who, What and Where? - Benalla Rural City
  • About
    • Our U3A
    • President's Page
    • Executive Committee
    • Convenors
    • Policies
    • Newsletter
    • Website
  • Groups
    • 2026 Groups
    • Past Groups
    • Program Ideas
  • A-Coi
    • 'A Taste of Art'
    • American History
    • Art Appreciation
    • 'As Time Goes By'
    • Australian Shares and Stock Market
    • Be Connected - Tech Advice
    • Birdwatching
    • Brain Games - Neurobics
    • Car Torque
    • Cards '500'
    • Chat n' Chew
    • Coin Collectors
  • Col-F
    • Collectors
    • Community Singing
    • Come and Learn Croquet
    • Creative Writing
    • Critical Thinking
    • Demystifying Psychology - Discussion Group
    • Digital Up Skilling for Lifelong Learners
    • Easy Bushwalking
    • Exercises for Fun
    • Exploring the Universe
    • Family Research - Getting Started
    • Film Discussion
  • G-Pi
    • Garden Appreciation
    • Garden Team
    • German >
      • German Home
      • Lessons
    • Learning and playing traditional Celtic tunes
    • Let's Talk Books
    • Mahjong
    • Meet and Mingle
    • Music Appreciation
    • Page Turners
    • Patchwork and Craft
    • Pickleball
  • Pl-W
    • Play Reading
    • Poetry Appreciation
    • Politics & Current Affairs
    • Recorder
    • Singing for Fun
    • Social Golf
    • Sustainability/Stock & Land
    • Tech Talks
    • Train Buffs
    • Ukes4Fun
    • Using My Android Mobile Phone
    • Wine Appreciation
  • Join
    • Join Us
    • Membership Application/Renewal Form
    • Program Guide 2026
    • Timetable with Dates 2026
    • Venues and Maps
  • News
    • News
    • February Newsletter
    • 'What's On' Calendar
    • Monthly Calendar
    • U3A Benalla Online - Emails, Website and Facebook
  • FB
  • Gallery
  • Links
    • Links and References
    • U3A Network Victoria
    • Seniors Online Victoria
    • U3A Albury Wodonga
    • U3A Beechworth (Indigo U3A)
    • U3A Bright
    • U3A Goulburn Valley
    • U3A Murrundindee East
    • U3A Wangaratta
  • Contact

'This (Adventurous) Life'

21/10/2020

0 Comments

 
In the spirit of adventure, my parents emigrated from England to Australia in 1926. They had been married just three weeks. My father Ben, a Gloucestershire salmon fisherman, was only 20 and Dorrie who had been a governess to the children of a well-to-do family, two years his senior.
Australia House in London painted the picture of a land ‘flowing with milk and honey;’ of a country where you could make your fortune in a few short years.
​
As new settlers, Ben and Dorrie are granted a “settlers block” at Katandra to be paid off at low interest rates. Life was tough as a new settler. The block allotted to them was wet and swampy and had no internal fences or sheds. Ben had to take timber from the framework of the roof of the house to build a cowshed.
 
As well as dairy farming, he turns to cropping and has a team of eight draught horses. The horse yard has only three sides. Dorrie is the fourth side. They are young freshly broken in horses. She approaches them cautiously with a pan of oats when they come in from their days work.
 
A daughter, Maureen is born while they are at Katandra. After the birth Dorrie develops septicemia and hovers between life and death for three weeks. There are no anti-biotics. Three other women at Mrs Fitz’ hospital at Numurkah die from the infection and the hospital is to be closed but Dorrie, the remaining patient, fights on.
 
The quest to seek their fortune takes them to a bigger property out beyond Tocumwal.  They live miles from the nearest neighbours; there is not another house in sight.
 
Once their crop is in, Ben’s work as a share farmer takes him a long way from home. He lives in a tent where he is cropping and only comes home at weekends.
 
Life in Australia is both a shock and a challenge for Dorrie. Gone are the comfortable days of her last employment with dressing for dinner and domestic servants to take care of everything. She finds herself living in the isolation of the bush... alone, with a small child. She sleeps with a loaded revolver under her pillow at night.

Sometimes when the wind is in the right quarter you might hear the sound of a distant train. This is her only contact with civilization, apart from the fortnightly drive in the old ute to the nearest town for supplies, or the occasional phone call on the party-line from distant neighbours who become anxious about her after severe storms.

The only people who call in are swaggies looking for food. On arrival they ask to speak to the boss.  She tries not to reveal that she is alone and gives them whatever food they ask for. They are always very courteous; say, “Thank you Missus” and move on.

Dorrie, the city girl who never loses her English ways, learns how to milk the house cow and to endure the loneliness. There is nothing to do on hot afternoons while the baby sleeps except play with the goannas. She rolls a stone along the ground and they come down from the trees to investigate and then go back up again watching for the next stone.

The seasons are tough. They had come to seek their fortune, but instead of a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, they found the heat, dust and drought of the Riverina.

They decide to return to England. Dorrie and Maureen, who is now five years old, sail from Port Melbourne. Ben will join them after the harvest which he anticipates will give them enough profit to farm in England.

After several months staying with family during the summer, Dorrie is feeling the cold of the approaching winter and missing the Australian sunshine. When she receives a cable from Ben saying, “Crops failed. Come back for another two years” she is happy to return.

When Dorrie was ninety she said “I have had a wonderful life. There are no regrets. We didn’t return to live in England, but we came here in the spirit of adventure and we had plenty of that.”
                                                                                                        

Bev Morton
October 2020
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    'This (...) Life'

    "This (....) Life".  The brief?  " Submit a 500 word story of own choice, a story important to you, a story you have often wanted to write about.  After writing the story, develop a title for it using the title 'This (......) Life".  It might be something like, "This (inspiring) Life", "This (entitled) Life", "This (serendipitous) Life" or ‘This (downsizing) Life’,  A recent story in the Australian* was titled - ‘This (Number 8) Life’ - a story about growing up as ‘Number 8’ in a family of nine children.'

    'This (...) Life' has been the topic for October since 2020 when the Pandemic caused the demise of the Benalla Festival's Writing Competition.

    *The topic 'This (...) Life' draws on the concept behind the Weekend Australian's column which publishes stories submitted by readers.

    Stories by ...

    All
    Barry O'Connor
    Betty Milligan
    Beverley Lee
    Bev Morton
    Carmyl Winkler
    Delfina Manor
    Elizabeth Kearns
    Graeme Morris
    Graham Jensen
    Heather Hartland
    Heather Wallace
    Helen Duggin
    James Davey
    Joy Shirley
    Kathy Beattie
    Lou Sigmund
    Margaret Nelson
    Marg McCrohan
    Neville Gibb
    Ray O'Shannessy
    'This (Long) Life'
    'This (Virtual) Life'

    Archives

    February 2025
    November 2023
    October 2023
    November 2022
    October 2022
    November 2021
    October 2021
    December 2020
    October 2020

    RSS Feed

We acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which we meet and pay our respects to their elders - past, present and emerging.
Picture
News
​Newsletter
Facebook Page
​
Program Suggestions
​CO-VID Safety

U3A Benalla Flier 2026 
Membership Application/Renewal
​
Semester 1 Program Guide 2026
Semester 1 Timetable with Dates 2026
Developed and maintained by members, this website showcases U3A Benalla 
​Photographs - U3A members; Benalla Art Gallery website; ​Weebly 'Free' images;Travel Victoria and State Library of Victoria