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FRANK HANN.

NOTED EXPLORED DEATH. ‘ LIFE GF ADVENTURE. CENTRAL AUSTRALIAN PIONEER. Perth, Aug. 23. A great Australian pioneer, Frank 11. Hann, who spent his life in the Baek of Beyond, died yesterday at a private hospital at Cottesloe, West Australia, at the age of 75 years. Frank Hann was born in Dorsetshire, and came to Australia 70 years ago, travelling overland from the Gulf of Carpentaria to HaH’s Creek, thence to Mount Dockerell, where he found good gold. Later he travelled all over Western Australia, and was the first white man who went to the top of Mount Broome. He named Mount Ord, Mount Clifton, Mount Smith, Mount Elizabeth, Synnot Range, and other places now well known. He also put on the map Isdell, Charley and Spriggs rivers, and he reported the first rabbits at Southern Cross, which led eventually to the erection of rabbit-proof fences. He located the good mineral country <m the Phillips river and at Ravensthorpe. In 1901, near B rummer Range, he was four days through the desert to Warburton Ranges, and came upon many minerals, including agates. One of these he presented to Sir Joseph Ward, who had it made into a brooch for Lady Ward. In addition he located the copper lodes at Warburton Ranges, and found the stock route to Oodnadatta. In 1918 he broke his, hip in two places at his camp eight miles from Lavender. He complained that for all his work he only received £6OO from the West Australian Mines Department. “NOTABLE AMONGST NOTABLES.” Possibly no other man knew more about the Back of Beyond than this modest but splendidly practical explorer, whose name will not be found in any book of Australia’s notabilities, though he was a notable amongst notables. Fox/ half a century and more he pioneered in the spacious distances of Central Australia, searching to the mouth of , the Murray, and from Lake Torrens to the arid hinterland of the West. A magnificent stockman and tireless toiler, he studied the aboriginals of the interior, and earning their goodwill learned some of their strange secrets. In physique small and frail of body, nothing daunted him. “Ginger for pluck”—for he was red-headed with bushy eyebrows — had full value in his compressed energy. Many times effort was made to persuade him to settle in the big cities after his traffic in the wilderness, but always the stock routes and the track- . less plains called him. At intervals of months or years he would breeze in from Over There, be inveigled into a yarn of thrilling adventure, and then disappear as quietly as he arrived, and remain beyond reach until a wire from some forlorn desert station would disclose that he was again immersed in ••his pursuit of knowledge. Frank Hann, almost unknown, always shunning the limelight, was one pt Australia’s most fruitful explorers.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19211022.2.71

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Taranaki Daily News, 22 October 1921, Page 9

Word count
Tapeke kupu
473

FRANK HANN. Taranaki Daily News, 22 October 1921, Page 9

FRANK HANN. Taranaki Daily News, 22 October 1921, Page 9

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