Western Australia: East-west - 1877.
The line from Albany to Eucla.


A major issue for Western Australia was that, since the Colony was formed as a part of NSW to stop any colonisation activities by the French, Western Australia was the first and last port at which ships carrying the mails would stop. The possibility that Western Australia's role in the distribution of English mails and news was quietly being reconsidered by 1867 in preparation for an Inter-Colonial communications conference. The Fremantle Herald of 18 May 1867 reported a major possibility which few in the Colonies had yet considered:

"It has been suggested, while public attention is still fixed upon the subject of intercolonial communication, that instead of Memorialising the Home Government for the purpose of preventing what, after all, may have never been contemplated, the Memorialists should endeavor to get the country surveyed for the establishment of a line of Telegraph between King George's Sound and Adelaide.

The expense of carrying a line across would doubtless be heavy; but, it might very fairly be borne by the South Eastern Colonies in connexion with ourselves, in proportions calculated upon the basis of our respective trade returns. If such a line were opened, the other colonies would be enabled to receive English News, via King George's Sound, several days earlier than at present. While, if the line were extended to Fremantle, the Steamers might put in here, when the time would be still further abridged.

If Telegraphic communication could be established to this extent, it would soon be carried still further. A line, carried, so as to connect our colonist settlements together, onwards to Nicol BayRoebourne. , would be completed by an extension to Java, and Singapore. This is a subject well worth the attention of the Australasian group. If we are willing to do something at this end, no doubt the Dutch, said the Straits Governments, would do something at theirs.

Great achievements are not effected of themselves; someone is needed to put the machinery in action. We cannot do much in the way of contributing funds; but we may do something by pressing the subject upon others equally interested with ourselves, and who are able to organise a company. The Conference would not have labored in vain, if its sittings gave rise to nothing more than such a scheme as this—provided always, the scheme were carried into effect".

This statement was made TWO YEARS before the first line in WA - Perth to Fremantle - was constructed!!! The 1876 Report on the Eucla Telegraph Line by the Postmaster-General and the Superintendent of Telegraphs is included elsewhere.

The opening of the Overland Telegraph Line in 1872 then meant that not only would Western Australia lose the advantage of receiving news from England first, but it would receive no current news and would have to wait weeks if not months for any news because of the lack of telegraphic facilities.

In addition to that communication problem for the West, was the view that there was nothing in the West anyway to even attract settlement. Reflecting views held for some time, the Western Australian Times of 26 April 1878 reported the following from the London Times and the Sydney Morning Herald:

"though east of the overland telegraph line there is not much unoccupiable territory, there is west of that line half a million square miles of waste howling wilderness. One-fifth of the continent, therefore, is unfit for human occupation.

How far this sombre view is to be accepted as final, observes the Sydney Morning Herald, it will be for subsequent generations to determine. In our age there is no probability whatever of the wretched sandy waterless spinifex country being profitably occupied. This desert, which occupies the centre of the western portion of Australia, makes a great barrier between the western and the eastern half. Communication through the centre of it is practically hopeless. Explorers have managed to get through at the risk of their lives - but that is all. And though here and there an oasis has been found to serve as a stepping-stone, they have been too few to serve the purpose of stock routes.

The only practicable lines of communication will be south or north of the desert tract. And it will take time and expense to make a practicable passage for stock by the southern side. The line of telegraph along the shore of the Great Australian Bight has been just completed, and communication between the stations will be permanently kept up. But the difficulties that the contractors have had to deal with for want of water have shown that there was no exaggeration in Mr. Eyre's account of the first journey by white men along that coast. If the water difficulty, however, were overcome, a large part of this district is sufficiently well-grassed to be profitably occupiable. And, though hitherto many of the efforts at well-sinking have proved abortive, there is no reason to suppose that there is no fresh water underground. Fresh water is found on the shore, which is proof that it works its way to the sea below the surface ; and, as the district is not a rainless one, water may hereafter be found below and stored above. When that happens, the grass that now grows to waste will be turned to account, and there may be a continuous line of profitable worked stations all the way along the coast from Port Lincoln to King George's Sound".

Wihin a decade, the nay-sayers from England the the Eastern Colonies were flooding into the "sandy waterless spinifex country".

The Western Australian part of the intercolonial line was constructed along the southern coast from Albany to Eucla in 1876. The main sections describing the creation and the construction of this telegraph line are:

  1. Financing and planning the construction of the link;
  2. Tendering;
  3. Construction:
    3.1: Stage 1: planting the first telegraph pole;
    3.2: Stage 2: Albany to Esperance;
    3.3: Stage 3: Esperance to Eucla;

  4. The 1896 inland line.
  5. The recent 1926 line

 

1. Planning and financing the WA-SA link.

In the Legislative Assembly of 5 December 1873:

"The Colonial Secretary moved that, in the opinion of the Council,

  • telegraphic communication between this colony and other parts of the world by means of a line to connect it with the South Australian telegraphic system via Eucla, is an object of main importance to the progress of the colony;
  • that it is desirable that the Government should at the commencement of next session be in a position to lay definite proposals on this subject before this Council for its consideration, and
  • that such proposals should be then considered in connection with correlative questions of public works and finance.

In explaining the views of the Government upon this subject, he said he could not see that any valid objection could be urged against the adoption of the resolution for two reasons:

  • in the first place because it was a truism, and
  • in the second that it was not intended thereby to bind the Council to any definite line of action.

His advocacy of the proposed scheme was based upon the assumption that this colony owed a debt of gratiude to that of South Australia, for offering to combine with the fomer in so useful a work; that many collateral advantages would accrue to this colony, the value of which advantages it was difficult to estimate at a money value. In support of this latter view, he adduced the overland line from Adelaide to Port Darwin, which, in spite of the enormous difficulties and the cost attending its construction, was now paying its way".

 

1.1: Financing:

The Inquirer of 15 July 1874 reported a discussion in early July in the Legislative Council: "The Colonial Secretary, in moving that the sum of £15,000 stand part of the Estimates for 1875 towards the extension of the telegraph from Albany to Eucla, spoke at considerable length, and with much force, on the undoubted and immense advantages which the proposed line would confer upon the colony and proceeded to show, from facts and figures, that the work when completed would not only be an inestimable commercial boon but remunerative. He estimated that the present trade between this colony and Indian and Eastern ports would ensure at least one thousand messages annually to the Adelaide and Port Darwin line and that, at the lowest, 500-600 messages per month could be relied upon for intercolonial traffic. In addition to this there would also be the business supplied by ships calling here seeking freights and by the monthly passengers by the P. & O. Company's steamers calling at Albany.

The estimates of the cost of construction and of the business likely to be done had been submitted to Mr. Todd, the South Australian Superintendent of Telegraphs — than whom probably no man in the world was more capable of giving an authoritative opinion upon the subject — and Mr. Todd saw no reason to doubt their correctness and fully concurred that the time had arrived when the work should be undertaken.

One of the immediate results of the project being initiated would be the almost certainty of cable communication being extended to our shores by a company already formed and that too, without the expenditure of a single penny by this colony in the work, but merely on condition of a concession of land. Having further dwelt on the merits of the project, Mr. Barlee confidently appealed to the House to support the motion that £15,000 stand part of the Estimates for 1875 towards carrying out the work".

In the Budget speech on 10 July, the Colonial Secretary noted: "the whole expense could be defrayed out of the current revenue without borrowing a sixpence for the purpose and it was calculated that the work could be completed in eighteen months or, at all events, two years from the date of its commencement. A sum of £28,500 would cover the entire cost of constructing the line from Albany to Eucla, inclusive of the erection of stations on the route and all conceivable expense of every nature. As the work, if undertaken, would extend over a period of one year, it was only proposed to place £15,000 on the Estimates for 1875 for the purpose of carrying it on".

 

1.2: Planning the construction:

Little was known of the countryside through which the line was to pass - the same situation as for the Overland Telegraph Line. For example: