• ‘It’s a terrible crime to be a scab. A scab is worse than a murderer’

  • Jun 28 2024
  • Length: 38 mins
  • Podcast

‘It’s a terrible crime to be a scab. A scab is worse than a murderer’

  • Summary

  • SEASON 1, EPISODE 8

    One day 1970, in the Outback town of Broken Hill, I was standing on a street corner, tape recorder in hand, grabbing sounds for a radio documentary. A short, energetic little fellow wandered up and said, ‘Hello son, what are you doing here?’

    It was Frank Bartley, born 1888, who like his father before him became a miner at the Broken Hill mines.

    Broken Hill, they say, is the richest source of lead, zinc and silver in the world. It was also the site of three long-running workers’ strikes, that after tough battles, created Australian industrial relations history.

    Frank Bartley was a lively encyclopaedia for the rich history of Broken Hill. He gave highly memorable, graphic descriptions of the tough working conditions, the illnesses from bad mine practices and poor hygiene, and the bitter, protracted struggles between workers and bosses.

    We also hear excerpts from my old Broken Hill documentary, going deep underground, and visiting a School of the Air classroom when isolated Outback children were taught via radio.

    We finish with the title song from a new album, ‘Threeways’, by Australian Country singer-songwriter Kevin Sullivan.

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