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Image Not Available for Reference for Charles Scott from W S Rayment of Scottsdale, Binya
Reference for Charles Scott from W S Rayment of Scottsdale, Binya
Image Not Available for Reference for Charles Scott from W S Rayment of Scottsdale, Binya

Reference for Charles Scott from W S Rayment of Scottsdale, Binya

Date10 August 1926
Object numberANMS1338[005]
NameReference
MediumPaper
DimensionsOverall: 248 x 195 mm
ClassificationsEphemera
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from Robin Scott
DescriptionThis letter of reference from W S Rayment certifies that former youth migrant Charles Scott was employed for 18 months at Scottsdale farm, worked well and conscientiously, and is qualified in any branch of farming work.HistoryCharles Tempest Steward Scott was born on 13 July 1905 in York, England and grew up in the midst of World War I. In the aftermath of the war, there were few suitable jobs available, especially for boys, so he applied to migrate to Australia with the Dreadnought Scheme for British youth migrants. Charles selected Australia over other places as he was very fond of cricket. Unfortunately, as he recorded in his memoirs, 'On arrival and afterwards I never saw a cricket ball.' Charles sailed from London on the Aberdeen Line vessel TSS EURIPIDES on 4 January 1924. EURIPIDES was a 15,000 tonne ship built in 1914 by Harland and Wolff, Belfast. Launched on 29 January 1914, EURIPIDES was the Aberdeen Line's largest ship, with accommodation for 140 first, 334 second and 750 third class passengers. On 1 July 1914 EURIPIDES embarked on its maiden voyage from London to Brisbane, arriving on 24 August. Two days later it was requisitioned as a troopship, carrying the first convoy of Australian troops to the Dardanelles. EURIPIDES would carry over 38,000 troops during the World War I. In 1932 EURIPIDES was acquired by the Shaw Savill and Albion Line and renamed AKAROA. Following extensive alterations it entered the Southampton-Panama-Wellington service on 28 February 1933. AKAROA was scrapped at Antwerp, Belgium in 1954. Many migrants from Britain in the early 1920s would have sailed on Aberdeen Line ships to Australia. The ships were named after Greek heroes and travellers and carried both first class passengers and migrants on third class tickets. Charles Scott's passenger contract ticket, issued 11 December 1923, shows he paid 33 pounds for the third class passage on EURIPIDES. He was 18 years old at the time. On arrival in Sydney, Charles was shipped out to the Dreadnought Scheme's training farm Scheyville (near Windsor) with a group of 'public school fellows who like myself could not get a job with prospects.' Established in 1911, the Dreadnought Scheme, like the later Big Brother Movement, recruited British boys to be trained on Australian farms and also to populate Australia's wide open spaces with young people of white British stock. Between 1911 and 1939, 5,595 Dreadnought boys arrived in NSW. The boys were provided with six months farm training at Scheyville to adapt to Australian conditions. Charles completed a basic agricultural course in riding, driving, dressing sheep, single and double furrow ploughing and milking. He left Scheyville after only two months to run a farm belonging to Mr McDonald at Little Plain near Inverell. Charles writes, 'My bed was a trestle camp bed affair in a dirt floor shed with a Hessian partition that made a pretence of some privacy. My wages were one pound per week and keep. I stayed there long enough to get my train fare somewhere.' Charles wrote to one of the boys he had met onboard EURIPIDES, who eventually got him a job on a wheat and sheep farm near Binya, which 'was heaven after Little Plain. Beds with sheets, a bath or a shower. Clothes washed by [owner Bill Rayment's] housekeeper and adequate food and the usual wage of two pounds per week to start.' Charles worked various jobs in Queensland and New South Wales until receiving word that his mother was ill at home in England. On 24 May 1930, Charles returned to London on the Orient liner SS ORSOVA.SignificanceThis reference relates to a significant period in Australia's migration history, when thousands of children and youths emigrated from the UK through various church and philanthropic schemes as labour for rural Australia - all while bolstering the population with 'good British stock'.