Julie, near Silverton |
This was my first visit to Hay, where my grandmother, May Queenie Tyson, was born in 1901. Hay is in the western Riverina region of south-west NSW, described in Wikipedia as “the centre of a prosperous and productive agricultural district”.
We
drove 170km to Hay from Narrandera on a crisp, sunny winter morning, through
very flat country along the Murrumbidgee river. Hay is smaller than I imagined
but is busy and lively.
With
the kind help of Pat Howard at the public library in Lachlan Street, we found and
visited a number of sites in town with Tyson associations. Some descendants still
live in the Hay district, including Beverley McGuffick. Beverley is featured in
a book Pat showed us - The river people
(Cowan and Beard, Reed, 1983).
James
Tyson was a nephew of the other James Tyson (1819- 1898), the famous pastoralist. The
nephew was a wealthy man, having been involved in his uncle’s business, then inheriting
some of his estate. The nephew James’ deceased estate file makes interesting reading (the file in the NSW State
Records Office detailing his assets for the assessment of NSW estate duty).
We drove to Boon Street, South Hay, at the end of which was the site of Riverton. The original house had been replaced by a new one, with the same name. There is also a B&B on a subdivision of the old block. Even though the house is long gone, I have a precious few minutes of B&W film taken in 1935 (I think) of a family gathering at Riverton, to celebrate my father’s seventh birthday.
Riverton, Hay, 1935. Back row from left: Queenie, with Edwin jnr; Rose Tyson; unidentified girl. Front: "Wooz" (Ethel Carr); Alice Tyson with Tom Carr.