| R. H . (Bob) Shadforth died at Riversleigh Station 21st April
1934, aged 74.
Exit Bob Shadforth
"Gregory": Bob Shadforth, of Burketown, just on 80, is dead. He was
the eldest son of F. H . Shadforth, who, with his wife and family, left
Victoria in the 'seventies and traveled overland to the Gulf. He stayed
awhile, and built a homestead on what is now Austral Downs (N.T.)' but,
owing to doubt about the borderline between Q'land and the Territory, he
surrendered the property and took up Lilydale (now Riversleigh) on the
Gregory River.
Bob, the eldest of a family of 11, worked in the
Gulf country all his life. He helped on the home station, took up a property
of his own, married twice (each of his wives brought him children), was
speared by blacks, acted as shire clerk and commission agent, and remained
the same modest, carefree, happy and quiet person he always was. A broken
nose and old spear wounds affected him not at all, and up to within a few
years of his death he was as keen on sport as any boy - and few, if any,
knew the ways of the 'gator as well as old Bob did.
The story of his main spear wound as he told it
to me: He was managing-owner of Wollogorang, a wild and lonely spot. A
gang led by a notorious buck was after Bob. It attacked the homestead at
night. The verandah was enclosed with diamond-paned netting, which Bob
averred, from long experience, was the best protection possible from the
thrown spear. A spear glanced and hit Bob on the back. he fired both barrels
and turned to go through the door. He couldn't! The spear had passed through
his back, and projected on either side. The pulled the spear right through
- the barb wouldn't allow it to be pulled back - beat off the blacks and
carried on.
The Shadforth family bred one well-known Bulletin
contributor. Bob's sister married Sub-inspector Lamond, of the mounted
police, and her son, H. G. Lamond, the naturalist, was the first white
child born on the Riversleigh country half a century ago.
Transcribed from an unattributed article (quite possibly from the
Bulletin) in the possession of Amanda Wilkinson of Burketown.
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