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THE LAST TRAIN TO BALLARAT, AMIDST SNOW AND GOLD
by Bob Tucker
The day after the convention closed a swarm of fans swept down on
Spencer Street station to board a special train to Ballarat, the town
where gold had been discovered in 1851. The con committee had arranged
the excursion, but I doubt that even the wisest amongst them really
knew how many fans completed the trip. We heard numerous reports of
people being left behind, people wandering off to be lost forever in
the Australian bush, and people jumping off to run ahead and beat the
train into town. It was a lovely excursion for an old train fan.
To begin, there was a delay of an hour or more at the station
because (1) the trainmaster had lost his train. or (2) track gangs
had taken up the Ballarat trackage and sold it, or (3) nobody could
find the engineer. (Choose any one.) We whiled away the time
by harassing commuters, taking pictures in fannish poses (which
often startled those commuters), studying the murals in the
lavatories, and eating daffodils. Susan Wood bought an armload
of daffodils at a nearby flower shop and distributed them to fans,
trainmen, and likable strangers; but rumor had it that Robin
Johnson ate his for breakfast. The train finally arrived and
all hands trooped aboard, using the daffodils as boarding passes.
The conductor, his daffodil in hand, made several head-counts
while the train was underway but arrived at a different figure
every time -- the poor man never knew that some fans were hiding
in the toilets while others were riding on the roof, or running
on ahead and daring the engineer to catch up to them.>
It was
a splendid old train, a 19th century treasure that may well have
carried pioneers to the goldfields in 1851. Pulled by a "T"
class diesel locomotive, the only concession to modernity,
the rolling stock consisted of three creaking, drafty, unhbated
wooden carriages of the British type, and a brakevan bringing
up the rear. One didn't tarry long in the toilets for fear of
freezing his possessions; most fans huddled together for
warmth and comfort in the compartments, protecting their
daffodils from winterkill. A brake-van is a
combination-baggage car and caboose, and there was some
dancing in the van until the air-conditioning drove out
the merry-makers. The van was air-conditioned because
the brakeman rode with his burly frame hanging halfway out
an open window, while he stared wistfully at the diesel
ahead. He ignored the dancers and ignored me when I
climbed into the cupola and tried to emulate him; I
couldn't see the carriages or the diesel because the
tiny windows were black with the accumulated grime of
the past century. On we sped, thru Footscray and
Werribee and North Geelong and Lal Lal, racing the sun
in a loose manner of speaking. Ballarat is about 50
miles from Melbourne and we made it in under three hours.
Tour buses met us at the station, and the daffodil
conductor hopped off his train and onto a bus to act
as tour guide. (Amtrack will swoon dead away.) Gold was
first found at Poverty Point and then on (or under)
Sovereign Hill, followed by other rich strikes at Red
Hill Gully Creek and the Canadian Gully; a mining town
grew up around the sites and all of that area is now
enclosed and called the Sovereign Hill Historical Park.
We had lunch at the New York Bakery, and afterwards
inspected a Chinese Joss House. a Mechanics' Institute
and Free Library (no science fiction on the shelves),
the United States Hotel and Victorian Theater, an
Apothecaries Hall and two dozen other reconstructions of
the old town. Some fans panned for gold in the Red
Hill Gully creek while others bought souvenirs from the
tinsmith and pottery shops; stick candy was on sale in
the Ballarat Times printshop, as well as "Wanted" posters
with your own name inserted as a desperate criminal.
City slickers inspected the barnlot and listened with
rapt interest as Sheryl Birkhead ticked off the breeds
of livestock strolling about -- but then city slickers
don't know much about farm critturs. A chill wind
swept the hills driving a misty rain before it -- and
before the afternoon was done I saw snow. I insisted it
was snow and asked eyewitnesses to verify it. In a
recent fanzine, Lesleigh Luttrell said it doesn't snow
in Australia but then Lesleigh never visited Sovereign
Hill on a cold August day. As we left, Shayne McCormack
pinched a brick from the Hill brickyard and presented
it to me as the first brick for the New Tucker Fan
Hotel. I was quietly proud and toted it away.
A noted Los Angeles fan did not fall into the mine shaft.
Victorian Railways had a pleasant surprise for us when we returned to the
train: the antiquated carriages were now heated! A foot-warmer had been
placed in each compartment and we whooped for joy as we jostled one another
for foot space on the heater. Tired but happy, toting bricks and
daffodils, we returned to Melbourne.
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