Goldseekers box
Date Published

: Mining (gold fields), Robe walk, Poll Tax
: Coorong (SA)
: Edenhope
: c.1856
A rare item from the Robe walk.

Goldseekers box
This wooden cask in the possession of a family long resident near Edenhope on the Robe to the Victorian goldfields walk is one of the very few verifiable objects remaining from that walk. In the case of the box pictured, the family history is that George Ramsay Johnstone who was manager of a property near Edenhope, Victoria, just across the border from South Australia, was given it by a Chinese goldseeker in return for food. At first glance it would seem a bulky item to be carrying but eyewitnesses report: ‘They had a very large number of baskets, with a small proportion of small casks, boxes, cases, and tubs, in which were stowed every requisite for a campaign upon the gold-fields.’[1]
Of those embarking at Adelaide in 1856 – doing so to avoid the new Victoria £10 poll tax – it was reported that they, ‘as soon as they had effected a landing on the wharf, began to sell various articles to those who evinced a desire for the novelties, which comprised curious fans, straw hats, with conical crowns and broad brims, beaded purses, &c.’[2] In addition to items for sale there would have been items carried for use and in the case of the Robe walkers perhaps too much. Julian Woods when travelling along the same route from Robe to Penola as the goldseekers in 1857 reported: ‘The road to Penola was like Guichen Bay in its Chinese aspect. Both sides of the track were marked by stray articles of clothing or baggage indicating how like a retreating army fatigue had made the Chinese abandon their goods one by one.’ Their passing left many objects ‘both useful and ornamental but these were too numerous to attract attention and really the population of the district was then so scattered and small that there was no one to collect them.’[3]
In style it is not easily recognised as typical of any specific kind of box and would appear to have been custom made to carry something of value to the owner. What, we will probably never know, just as we may never know what happened to the many fans, hats and purses eagerly purchased from the Chinese goldseekers so many years ago.
[1] The Age, 10 April 1855, p.5.
[2] South Australian Register, 24 January 1856, p.3.
[3] Woods, Julian Tenison, Ten Years in the Bush, The Australasian Catholic Record, July 1989, p.264.

Goldseekers box

Goldseekers Box





