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Phoebe
Elizabeth Farrar (1869-1960), stockwoman, was born at Albury, New
South Wales, daughter of Martha and Henry Wright. In her late teens
she accompanied the Farrar family on their great treks which spread
cattle and horses across vast tracts of north-western New South
Wales, western Queensland and the Northern Territory.
Jack Farrar was an experienced and valued stockman who worked for
John Costello and his brother-in-law Patsy Durack. From Bourke in
the 1860s, the families began a serial occupation of land, leasing
stations which they stocked and sold, moving on with sufficient
cattle and horses to meet leasing conditions on the next expanse
of unclaimed land. In the early 1870s Costello held 3.5 ha in the
Cooper's Creek-Diamantina River region. Ten years later he had established
stations in the Gulf area of the Northern Territory, but in 1890
he was forced to retreat to his 'Lake Nash' property in the face
of drought and a drying up of investors' interest in marginal country.
The Farrars were left to manage his 'Valley of Springs' station
in the Territory, as to retain the leasehold, residency requirements
had to be met. Conditions were extremely harsh.
Phoebe Wright married Farrar's son Bob in Palmerston (Darwin) on
30 August 1904. Their first child Henry was born at 'Nutwood Downs'
station in 1901. Another son and two daughters were born but one
of the girls died. Bob and Phoebe worked on various properties and
were among the few Europeans who settled into isolated station life.
Phoebe was a competent stockwoman, like many Aboriginal women then
working on cattle properties. A skilled horsewoman, she broke horses,
tailed cattle in wild scrub country, worked on musters and on all
of the arduous jobs involved in stock work under the trying conditions
of Australia's final cattle frontier.
Phoebe Farrar was still working in her seventies when a fall from
a horse left her with a broken hip. This repaired, she returned
to work until again hospitalised, aged 86. She died in Darwin Hospital
on 19 August 1960, her occupation listed as 'housewife'. Like many
of the pioneer women of remote Australia her life and work have
no memorial in any hall of fame, her other activities swept over
in the historical record by the word 'housewife'.
Lenore Coltheart
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