Remembering Charlie Adams: His mandolin story

Charlie strums the mandolin he had as a boy at the school at Lock 7, c 1931. Photo: Helen Stagg 20 Nov 2012

Charlie Adams took part in the oral history research for my book, Harnessing the River Murray, stories of the people who built Locks 1 to 9, 1915–1935 released in June 2015 to mark the centenary of the foundation stone for Lock 1 at Blanchetown, SA. Today I remember him and pay my respects, 9 years after his death at the age of 96.

After the Great Strike of 1919 in Broken Hill, in 1921 Charlie’s father, Charles John Adams, travelled in search of work to Blanchetown with his wife and young family. Charlie, just two years old at the time, spent his childhood moving from one lock site to the next. He lived at Locks 1, 9, 4 and 7, the locks not being built in numerical order, before moving with the family to Mildura, Victoria when Lock 7 was completed.


Although the locks and weirs have endured the ravages of time, the stories of life in the construction camps risked being lost as the last of those who were children at the locks reached a very advanced age; those I interviewed have all now passed away. This is why Charlie Adams’ mandolin story is important.


Each of the bustling, mostly remote, rural construction camps required a school and the teachers, under-resourced but assisted by parents and community members, provided a range of extra-curricular activities including music, first-aid courses, gardening programs and gymnastics training. Nella Dormer, wife of one of the Lock 7 labourers, was an accomplished pianist who played at social functions and dances and with no children of her own, she volunteered her time at the school to teach music to the students. She selected a small group of boys with special aptitude, to form a mandolin band to perform at local dances, concerts and during the silent movies. The boys were Max Pearson and George (Snowy) Taylor, aged about 10, Fred (Skinny) Bath (about 13) and Charlie Adams (12).


When I first interviewed Charlie in 2009, I was astonished when he said, ‘I’ve still got me mandolin, moth eaten by now; it’s never been out of the cupboard.’ After interviewing Charlie on several occasions, my requests to see the mandolin were met with a reticent non-committal answer along the lines of it being tucked away out of reach. It was therefore a great surprise one day when I was at his home, and he momentarily left the room, returning with an old brown case bound up with string. As he carefully placed this on the table he said to his wife, ‘Have you got your fly spray out Mum? You may want it to get the moths out!’ As the string was untied, the case literally fell open, the moths having demolished the stitching holding it together. The original music instruction booklet, the E to Z Method for Mandolin or Banjo-Mandolin lay on top of the instrument, and Charlie picked this up as a thousand memories flashed by. Then, almost reverently, he cradled the mandolin saying nostalgically, ‘Here she is. Now that’s how it was in its glory days.’ I asked him when he got the mandolin and he explained:
Mrs Dormer, was a pianist … she got a group of us boys to teach us the mandolin … of course she had a mandolin but we didn’t, so she had to pass it around. … So we were given the opportunity then to buy a mandolin. So Mum and Dad generously bought the mandolin at great expense. It was about £2 somethin’.
Charlie admitted that owning an instrument like this would have been a luxury especially with low wages and a large family. When quizzed about how long since he had opened the case, he replied, ‘What a question, my memory doesn’t go back that far.’


The tuner and the plectrums were also in the case and Charlie showed me how to tune each string by blowing softly into the tuner. As he did so, he remarked ‘We used to tune it off the piano.’ It was intriguing to see him re-imagining those long-ago experiences as he held the mandolin and began to pluck at the strings. Meanwhile, his wife Betty was somewhat otherwise engaged, and armed with a can of spray, she was determined to track down and annihilate any unlucky moths which may have been lurking. Seeming to be transported back in time, Charlie said:
I can’t remember any notes now. E to F … Every good boy deserves fruit. Arhhh… I can remember that much. [With a wistful tone…] I wouldn’t have had this out in thirty years, forty years. See I’d have to learn it all over again.


The mandolin was imported from Italy and judging by the immaculate condition of this aged instrument in the hands of its aged owner, it had always been treasured and cared for. Charlie remarked that he would have played the mandolin for between three and four years. As he posed for a photograph, he bemoaned the fact that his ‘fingers won’t go where they should…….After I left Lock 7 I dont think it played more than two tunes.’ Charlie’s wife Betty, mentioned that I was privileged to see the mandolin as it had never been allowed ‘to be down from the cupboard’ in all the years their family was growing up. No one else in his family had ever played it.

Charlie’s dry wit was a ‘trademark’ and the irony is obvious in his description of the following contest held at Lock 7:
There was a dance on there one night; we used to play our tunes for the dance. They’d screened off the area. And we were behind it and each one of us had to play a tune. That’s how amateur we were then. And, um, they had… the people in the audience, like the adults and that, had to choose which one was the best. And I can remember the other kids went for the hard tunes, like, er, ‘Humpty Dumpty sat on the wall’ and ‘Little Boy Blue’ and all this sort of thing, and there was a piece there always took my (attention) called Blumenlied, so I played this Blumenlied, it’s a very nice piece . And ah, Charlie won the thing…


The band would also gain valuable performance practice at dances at Cal Lal, which Charlie said was about ten miles away from the lock. Up to 100 people would attend these dances from all around, including from Locks 7 and 8, Ned’s Corner, Cowra and other stations in the region. Mrs Dormer would play the fox trots, tangos etc and the mandolin band would accompany her. Charlie recalled the particular night when the boys were accommodated at the Cal Lal Police Station and slept in the adjoining cell block which they all found rather a novelty.


From the first mention of Charlie’s mandolin, I had been intrigued in several ways: by its use by a boy over 80 years ago in the Murray River bush country, and by its ‘life’ journey from Italy to Lock 7 to Mildura. Then the mandolin was stored away while a boy became a man, a husband, a soldier, a father, a grandfather and a great grandfather. Eighty years since it was last played, this exceptional instrument retained a place not only in Charlie’s memory but also in his heart and his home. I felt honoured to have seen the mandolin in his loving care. If only it could talk, what tales it could tell of boyhood in another place and another time. As I bid farewell to Charlie that day, I said:
You should have it in a glass case, so people could look at it and everyone including your grandchildren and your great grandchildren, could look at it and go, wow, tell us about the mandolin, Charlie.

He responded with a casual shrug of his shoulders, which failed to disguise the ambiguity of his dry reply, ‘It’s dying of old age.’
Post script:
At Charlies funeral on June 11 2015, the tune Blumenlied which Charlie had played as a youth on the mandolin, was played during the final farewell.

Fred Sims: lockworker with a hidden talent

Frederick Arthur “Fred” Sims was employed on construction work at Lock 7 on the River Murray and later at the Goolwa Barrages. During his time at lock 7 he sometimes worked as the diver wearing the cumbersome outfits required at the time.

Berri Information Centre, lock history display, September 2018

I don’t know much about Fred before his time on the locks. However he was born on Dec 12 1901 at Dulwich in South Australia and married Roma Grace Burke on 5 July 1924 in Norwood. Fred sounds like he was quite a character, with a flair for writing. Recently, his grandson sent me what are believed to be poems written by Fred during his time at Lock 7.

These poems provide a unique insight into the past, especially when I have been able to connect up some of his subject material with real events that have been documented or which tie in with oral history I undertook for my book, Harnessing the River Murray: Stories of the People who Built lock 1-9, 1915-1935.

In 1935, when works at Locks 7 and 8 had been completed the massive task of dismantling all the equipment, workshops and cabins/houses was undertaken for it all to be transported by barge to Goolwa to commence barrage construction.

It was on one of these trips that misfortune struck the barge Aurora at Lock 5. Early in January 1935, the barge being towed by the SS Industry, hit one of the pillars of the open lock 5. See story here:

Fred Sims was an eye witness to this event and penned this amazing poem, which I have permission to share here. I think he would never have imagined when he put pen to paper that his musings would be ‘published’ on such a platform as this! Many thanks to Rodney Sims for sharing the poem (found in the possession of Darrell Sims.)

The Arora (sic) page 1
The Arora (sic) page 2
The Arora (sic) page 3
The Arora (sic) page 4
Arthur Eddy, S Allen and Stan Underwood with diver Fred Sims c 1932 Lock 7

Christmas is coming, the geese are getting fat…

Have you done your shopping? Do you know a history-buff, Murray River enthusiast or book-lover?

Harnessing the River Murray: stories of the people who built Locks 1 to 9, 1915-1935 could be ‘just the thing’ for some on your Christmas ‘gift list’!

You can read a sample of the text here: SAMPLE-Harnessing_the_Murray

Order DIRECT from Digital Print Australia

lock 7 Christmas tree from dawn glenn collection

Lock 7 Christmas tree c 1932 showing a large number of Christmas stockings at the base, one for each child.

On page 48 of Harnessing the River Murray, the Christmas celebrations at Lock 9 are described: ‘On Christmas Eve, the eagerly anticipated Christmas tree was erected on the lawns next to the men’s quarters and decorated with toys, balloons and Christmas stockings. Little electric bulbs illuminated the tree which sparkled amid the surrounding darkness as more than 120 children excitedly greeted Father Christmas, (Oliver Edwards), who arrived in a car to distribute a toy and stocking to each one. There was plenty of fruit, lollies, and cool drinks for the children and the adults enjoyed the music and dancing.’

Rest in peace Maxwell George Pearson

Max Pearson, who has inspired much of my work on researching lock and weir construction history, passed away a week ago; a man with a kind and generous heart and a passion for the River Murray, with always a story of life in the lock camps to share. He will be greatly missed.

Max Pearson sharing a story from lock-building days.

Max Pearson sharing a story from lock-building days.

My association with Max began in 1998, when I telephoned him in response to an advertisement placed by a committee he had formed to arrange a reunion of lock-builders’ families. (I had intended to take my mother whose father was also a lock-builder.) My initial phone call to Max alerted me to his passion to tell the stories of the transient lock-building communities. Reflecting on this conversation ten years later, Max seemed a very suitable subject for my Oral History Unit interview, which was part of my Masters in History program in 2009.

After the initial interview and project, I was inspired to pursue my research on the subject of lock and weir construction, and Max put me in touch with others who would have memories to share.

The friendship with Max developed over the years as I undertook the writing of a book, Harnessing the River Murray, the stories of the people who built Locks 1 to 9, 1915-1935, due for release on 5 June 2015, the centenary of the foundation stone for Lock 1 at Blanchetown.

I enjoyed many conversations and phone calls with Max.When my archival research threw up a question, I would ring Max and get an eye-witness answer if I could.

On several occasions, I met Max at Lock 7 site, where the little township once stood during lock construction, and he would point out the locations of the various parts of the camp, the school, the oval, the houses etc.

Max Pearson loved the Murray River and its history. He treasured its presence in his life, and I treasure the memories I hold of Max and our shared love of Lock and weir construction history. Thank you Max! RIP.

Can you help with a song?

OK I need your help. Put on your thinking hats! I have this photo from Lock 7 school taken about 1932. The girls are dressed as fisher-women and holding cut-out cardboard fish. (herrings) Somebody who was there could remember words to this effect: “where are you going to my pretty lass, we’re going to sea, sea. After the …. Into the sea of jewels.” I would like to find out the name of the song so I can look it up and possibly find the words and tune. (Maybe you can even identify some of the girls: the girl second from right at back is my mother Evelyn Rains.)

Lock 7 school girls as fisherwomen c 1932

Lock 7 school girls as fisherwomen c 1932