Visiting the scattered graves, memorial plaques, and the grave of Aeneas Gunn, ‘The Maluka’, under the red flowers and pods of the bauhinia trees, brought Jeannie’s characters to life for me: William Neaves, the Dandy Stockman, the Sanguine Scot, Mine Host, the Fizzer, Horse Teams, an unknown traveller, and Dolly Bonson known as Bett-Bett (The Little Black Princess) and others who lay in this secluded cemetery.
Jeannie’s husband Aeneas died from malarial dysentery on 16 March 1903 and Jeannie returned to Melbourne, 13 months after her arrival at Elsey Station, never to return. Despite her short time at Elsey, and the death of Aeneas, Elsey Station and the people made an enormous impression on Jeannie, who died in 1961.
Visit the Never Never Museum in Mataranka to learn the rich…