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Author's note: The story about Bas Wie which forms part of Chapter 6 in this book won first prize of 1,000 pounds in a competition for the World's Strangest Story conducted by the Evening News, London, in 1957.
Contents
* Contents derived from the London,
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England,
c
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United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe,Europe,:Cassell,1959 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Lockwood sketches the colourful characters who are the crocodile hunters of the Northern Territory and recounts stories, tall and true, of their adventures.
Lockwood discusses the nature of Northern Territory buffaloes, the history of their arrival there, buffalo hunts and hunters, and adventures he has incurred among them all.
Lockwood discusses the nature of Northern Territory brumbies and of his experiences participating in their capture for use as stock horses on Elsey Station.
Lockwood recounts stories from, and antics of, drovers he has encountered in country towns. He describes how violent brawling is considered a normal social and recreational activity among the drovers.
Lockwood describes the unusual circumstances of some court cases in isolated outback locations that he has reported on, and characters he has met along the way.
'Darwin', says Lockwood, 'is a cosmopolitan, sometimes bohemian town where anything is more than likely to happen', and supports his claim with amusing stories.
Enjoying a cool evening with his family at Darwin's wharf, Lockwood's attention is drawn to a man gazing fixedly out to sea, with a crude raft in the water below him. The next evening the man is there again, gazing just as intently at the horizon. Lockwood describes his observation of the remarkable Ian Fairweather, and the ambitious raft journey to East Timor the eccentric artist embarked on shortly thereafter.
Lockwood describes the cavalier antics of a friend and former schoolmate, Clyde Fenton, who followed his own impulses with a cool disregard for authority but was also a dedicated medical officer in the R.F.D.S. The contributions of other dedicated men and women to the service of the R.F.D.S. is also discussed.
Lockwood discusses the high rate of crime and violence in N.T. and describes many notorious and lurid examples he has reported in his role as journalist.
Lockwood describes attempts by Christian missionaries in the Northern Terriory to convert Aboriginal people to Christianity. He focuses on the lives and efforts of two missionaries, one being Roman Catholic missionary, F. X. Gsell, and the other, F. W. Albrecht.
By following the birth and life of an Aboriginal man, Maroowanna, Lockwood presents a sketch of Aboriginal culture, the impact of European settlement, and Government attitudes towards the welfare of Aboriginal people, especially in the Northern Territory.