Avril Brotherton
Town/City | Greenway |
---|---|
First name | Avril |
Last name | Brotherton |
Country of Origin | England |
Year of Arrival in Australia | 1951 |
Submitted by | Kathryn Sutton |
Story
Welcome to Australia Ð 1951 Style
Orient Lines ‘Otranto’ sailed to Woolloomooloo
Disgorged her British migrants and lost most of her crew
The date was first of January nineteen fifty-one
When we landed in Australia beneath the midday sun
At midnight we shipped out on a creaking wooden train
Rattling over mountains till we reached the Western Plain
At Bathurst in morning light surprised by the disclosure
We were behind barbed wire in a prisoner of war enclosure
The week we spent in Bathurst was the strangest of my life
We looked at one another with a kind of disbelief
D.P.\’s from Holland ran the place, they issued us with tin
Tin forks, tin knives, tin cups, tin plates to put our pigswill in
We queued for watery stew served straight from the pot
A chunk of bread on top of the stew and butter on top of the lot
The announcements were in German and afterwards in Dutch
Then broken English last of all to keep us all in touch
They consulted every husband and just ignored the wife
Was this what we had come for, the Australian way of life?
The hostel we were sent to was Bankstown number two
Built on the edge of an aerodrome everything brand new
Twenty Nissan huts were there of corrugated tin
Allocated half a hut we began to settle in
Restrictions were forgotten, left in England one and all
We settled down in Sydney and prepared to have a ball
The canteen was a big bare hut with dŽcor non-existent
Lino covered tables and cockroaches quite persistent
In the middle of each table a penny candle stood
No way was this for romance but to let us see our food
For 1950\’s Bunnerong could not supply the power
Blacked out Sydney every night Ð just a dinner hour
The kitchen staff were European displaced in World War two
They spoke no word of English a very motley crew
Whatever they had learned, in their struggle to exist
Catering for Pommies was never on the list
The food was quite atrocious, no-one could ever finish
Pig bins always overflowed Ð especially with spinach
No-one else could stomach it but our baby daughter
This green and white repulsive mess swilling around in water
Gathered round our table crowds looked at her demolish
Her plateful of spinach with quite obvious relish
With two little fists she stuffed into her mouth
All that she could swallow of this revolting stuff
The blame should not have fallen on the staff who had to cook
We had a catering manager who was really quite a crook
The powers-that-be provided all the very best of food
Which he would have delivered to the butcher down the road
The hostel kitchen then received the rubbish he did swap
Half our milk was sold in town then topped up from a tap
One day we went to lunch we really were amazed
The room was so transformed that we simply stood and gazed
There were flowers on every table and a cloth of snowy white
Salt and pepper shakers and cutlery so bright
They even gave us napkins and some food that was delicious
We thought we were at last to have meals that were nutritious
It didn\’t last Ð we quickly found the flowers and preparation
Had been for an inspection by the Minister of Immigration!
Next day in the newspapers we read to our surprise
We were just a mob of whingeing Poms caught out telling lies
But the visit had a side-effect that we could not foretell
The fridge had been inspected and was empty as a shell!
It seems our Mr Furphy had been exposed at last
He got in his motor car and took off very fast!
He heard that the police were very keen to track him down
So he resigned by telephone from somewhere out of town
Caterers came and caterers went, they could not stand the pace
Every other week that came we saw another face
One assistant manager with fortitude undaunted
Tried to ascertain from us exactly what we wanted
He failed, and in a fury, these words passed through his lips
‘All you bloody Pommies want is bloody fish and chips!’
There\’s more to life than food and drink, this should be recognised
To buy a home, we\’d have to work and this we realised
We had no money in the bank but we were young and healthy
Twenty Ð three, with a baby girl, who needed to be wealthy?
The childrens\’ cr�che left women free to go and find employment
Home from work at the end of the day, you could always find enjoyment
Australian whisky lighting us up and four-and-sixpenny plonk
Sitting on our doorsteps for our pre-dinner drink
There were parties in the Rec room on a wonderful dance floor
With extra dancing partners from the Air Force base next door.
It wasn\’t always fun and games, un-interrupted gladness
Two months after settling in, the camp was struck with sadness
That year, within the first three months, in New South Wales alone
Twelve hundred kids caught polio, one wa