"Chinkie's Flat" / 1904
TO MY DEAR OLD COMRADES North Queensland. December, 1908
“Chinkie's Flat,” In its decadence, was generally spoken of, by the passing traveller, as a “God-forsaken hole,” and it certainly did present a repellent appearance when seen for the first time, gasping under the torrid rays of a North Queensland sun, which had dried up every green thing except the silver-leaved ironbarks, and the long, sinuous line of she-oaks which denoted the course of Connolly's Creek on which it stood.
“The township” was one of the usual Queensland mining type, a dozen or so of bark-roofed humpies, a public-house with the title of “The Digger's Best,” a blacksmith's forge, and a quartz-crushing battery.
The battery at Chinkie's Flat stood apart from the “township” on a little rise overlooking the yellow sands of Connolly's Creek, from whence it derived its water supply—when there happened to be any water in that part of the creek. The building which covered the antiquated five-stamper battery, boiler, engine, and tanks, was merely a huge roof of bark supported on untrimmed posts of brigalow and swamp gum, but rude as was the structure, the miners at Chinkie's Flat, and other camps in the vicinity, had once been distinctly proud of their battery, which possessed the high-sounding title of “The Ever Victorious,” and had achieved fame by having in the “good times” of the Flat yielded a certain Peter Finnerty two thousand ounces of gold from a hundred tons of alluvial. The then owner of the battery was an intelligent, but bibulous ex-marine engineer, who had served with Gordon in China, and when he erected the structure he formally christened it “The Ever Victorious,” in memory of Gordon's army, which stamped out the Taeping rebellion.
The first crushing put through was Finnerty's, and when the “clean-up” was over, and the hundreds of silvery balls of amalgam placed in the retorts turned out over one hundred and sixty-six pounds' weight of bright yellow gold, Chinkie's Flat went wild with excitement and spirituous refreshment.
Louis Becke
CHINKIE'S FLAT AND OTHER STORIES
Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company 1904
CHAPTER I ~ “CHINKIE'S FLAT”
CHAPTER II ~ GRAINGER MAKES A “DEAL”
CHAPTER III ~ JIMMY AH SAN
CHAPTER IV ~ GRAINGER AND JIMMY AH SAN TALK TOGETHER
CHAPTER V ~ THE RESURRECTION OF THE “EVER VICTORIOUS”
CHAPTER VI ~ “MAGNETIC VILLA”
CHAPTER VII ~ SHEILA CAROLAN
CHAPTER VIII ~ MYRA AND SHEILA
CHAPTER IX ~ DINNER WITH “THE REFINED FAMILY”
CHAPTER X ~ THE “CHAMPION” ISSUES A “SPECIAL”
CHAPTER XI ~ A CHANGE OF PLANS
CHAPTER XII ~ SHEILA BECOMES ONE OF A VERY “UNREFINED” CIRCLE
CHAPTER XIII ~ ON THE SCENT
CHAPTER XIV ~ “MISS CAROLINE” IS “ALL RIGHT” (VIDE DICK SCOTT )