Object statement
Wool specimen, stud ram, bred by George Clark, East Talgai, Hendon, Darling Downs, Queensland, Australia, 1889
The wool collection held by the Powerhouse Museum contains thousands of wool samples collected between 1804 and 2003. These samples provide a record of wool growing in Australia. The different fleeces reflect the breeding programs and environmental conditions under which the fleeces were grown and, as such, they provide a valuable history of the areas of Australia in which sheep were grazed.
Sheep were introduced into Australia in 1788 from Cape Town in South Africa. Since then sheep from other countries, including the Spanish Merino were imported into Australia and selectively crossbred. Careful crossbreeding, paying particular attention to the impact of the environment on both animal and fleece, led to the evolution of the Australian Merino. It is an excellent example of the engineering, through selective breeding, of a domestic animal. Wool went on to become the mainstay of the Australian Economy from 1807 to 1960.
This particular wool specimen came from a sheep bred at East Talgai station in the Darling Downs region of Queensland. East Talgai was an influential sheep station established in 1867 with ewes and rams from Victoria. These sheep did not prosper well and subsequently Tasmanian-bloodlines were introduced. One of the Tasmanian rams chosen to breed from was the famous sire Sir Thomas which proved hugely beneficial to the station. The quality of the station's stock became so popular that, by the 1880s, East Talgai was sending stud rams back to the best of the Tasmanian studs and into New South Wales and Victoria. By 1883 it was turning out more than 2000 rams a year, which qualifies it as one of Australia's great and influential studs in the late nineteenth century.
Erika Dicker
Assistant Curator
September 2007
Reference:
Charles Massy. 'The Australian Merino', Penguin Books Australia Ltd, Victoria, 1990.
The wool specimen was produced in 1889 by George Clark in East Talgai, Hendon, Darling Downs, Queensland, Australia.
In 1890 Alfred Hawkesworth, honorary wool-classer to the Museum, noted the following about this specimen:
Showing less quality than the previous; not so well grown; staple full and even; good condition. Spinning quality 60s, value 10d per lb. (Alfred Hawkesworth's valuation)
This is a most extensive collection (F1-F27), and interesting, especially taking into consideration the great disadvantages, under which the wool was grown, having passed through a nine months drought. I find that the wool retains its quality, lustre and density, but naturally has not that lengthy staple found in specimens sent some time since to the Museum.
Alfred Hawkesworth, Technological Museum, Sydney, Descriptive Catalogue No 1. Raw wools and specimens to illustrate the woollen manufacture. Sydney Government Printer. 1890.
Originally donated by George Clarke, East Talgai, Hendon, Darling Downs, QLD, 1889
This wool specimen is part of the Bill Montgomery Wool Collection which consists of approximately 7000 samples. In the older part of the collection there are 5000 samples from Australian sheep fleeces grown between 1856 and 1906. The samples were collected by the Museum at a time when scientific research was prominent in the Museum's activities. In 1979, when the Museum's focus changed, most of its wool collection was transferred to the teaching collection of Mr Bill Montgomery, a wool classing teacher at Newcastle Technical College. When Bill retired from the College, the collection was again in danger of being thrown away. He took the entire collection home and stored it in his garage for 15 years. His Collection also contains approximately 1500 wool samples grown between 1950 and 2000 and collected by Bill himself. It includes 147 examples of faults and stains occurring in Australian flocks, 20 pigmented wools and 33 rare and extinct breeds from around the world. The Museum purchased the entire collection in 2003. Bill Montgomery died on 7th July, 2007.