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The Woolshed: A Virtual Exhibit
Map - click on elements in the map for information on the exhibits.
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| Orientation to the Woolshed |
Jondaryan Woolshed is a living museum. It allows
you to experience the rural life of pioneering Australia.
The first sheep arrived at Jondaryan Station
in October 1843 and construction of the huge Jondaryan Woolshed
began in 1859. It became operational in 1861.
In 1972, after a celebration to commemorate
the centenary of Jondaryan State School, the Woolshed' s then
owner, the Rutledge family, donated it to the Jondaryan community.
Why not enter the Woolshed through the East
Wing, and follow the route taken by the sheep, which emphasises
the actual historical process of the Woolshed.
The second entrance is right here, where the
wool bales finally emerged ready for transportation.

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Transporting Wool

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Jondaryan had up to 28 teams of bullocks and horses pulling
wagons carrying wool down to the port at Moreton Bay.
In the 1860s these heavy wagons could not get up and down
the range so they travelled around it, all the way into New
South Wales.
A bullock wagon could only travel three miles an hour, but
bullocks were much cheaper and more reliable than horses.
Bullocks were tougher and could pull heavier loads.
When Jondaryan railway station was built in 1868, wool was
carried from the Woolshed to the railway head by horse wagons,
then transported by rail.
Once the wool arrived at the port, it was loaded on to a
coastal steamer and taken to Sydney where it was unloaded
and checked by the selling agent. The grower could sell it
to the agent at a much-reduced price and receive payment more
quickly, or ship it off to be sold in Europe.

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Horse drawn wagon with a load of wool bales
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An example which allows visitors to touch it and walk around
it.

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| Stacks of wool bales |
A pile of bales which builds an overall physical picture
of the immensity of the work done here.

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Stenciling

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Every bale is stencilled so that all information about its
wool is clearly visible. The stencilling includes the property'
s name, the class of wool and a number for each bale. The
stencil is applied after the wool has been compacted in the
press. Stencil ink, similar to boot polish, is brushed over
the stencil with a boot brush. Stencil ink comes in the form
of a cake of soap that has to be wet before it' s applied.
Back in the 1860s, the man who operated the main wool press
would also stencil the bales because he knew their contents.
Today, the woolclasser applies the information with a marking
pen.
Many men who worked at the Woolshed stencilled their names
and dates on the rafters. They were not all shearers. Joe
Ladner was a teamster in 1900. He carted wool from the shed
to the Jondaryan railway head three kilometres away. Can you
find his name?

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Real dogs

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Exhibitions of the sheep dogs occur in this space.
The best dogs for working with sheep are the Australian kelpie
and border collies. Both are known as 'sheepdogs' . A good
sheepdog is a valuable asset to any working station.
The dog is the natural enemy of sheep and this is where its
control lies. Two types of sheep dogs are used -- a 'paddock
dog' and a 'shed or yard' dog. The paddock dogs muster the
sheep whilst the shed dogs 'push' the sheep into the yards
and shed, and run along the backs of sheep.

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Scales

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Wool was very valuable. Up to 80 workers handled the wool
on its journey to the port, so Woolshed owners recorded how
much left the station in a log book, to ensure that none went
'missing' .
In today' s woolsheds, the wool press has scales built into
it so the wool is weighed while it' s being pressed. In the
1860s, scales were separate from the press. The men who operated
the press weighed the wool once it had been pressed into bales.

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Real sheep

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The Australian merino sheep originated in the Spanish merino
and is the result of 2000 years of breeding. Originally, the
Spanish jealously guarded their breed, but after their defeat
in the Napoleonic Wars during the 1700s, they saw the French
disperse their precious stock to many different countries,
including Australia.
John Macarthur obtained some and began crossbreeding to produce
the Australian merino. By 1803 he had over 4000 head of almost
pure Australian merinos. He also obtained merino sheep from
England, France, Germany and America, which gave him a diverse
bloodline.
The first sheep arrived on the Darling Downs on 4 June 1840,
when the Leslie brothers brought 5700 sheep from Macarthurs
own flock at Camden. The first sheep arrived at Jondaryan
in October 1843.

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Wilding Screw Press

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All woolsheds have wool presses. When Jondaryan Woolshed
was built in 1861 two wool presses were installed. The Wilding
screw wool press was used prior to the Ferrier wool press.
It used the same principle as the Ferrier wool press but instead
of winching the monkey down it was screwed down. This required
more men to operate than the Ferrier because a number of men
were needed up in the rafters to wind the wheel.

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Woolclassing

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There is only ever one woolclasser in the shed no matter
how many shearers are there.
After the fleece is skirted, it is presented in the most
attractive form possible to the classer. Up to the beginning
of the 1860s, wool was classed on the sheeps back. From
1862 on, it was classed after the fleece had been shorn from
the sheep, as it is still today.
Many qualities have to be assessed:
Strength This is affected by the living conditions
of the sheep.
Fineness Now known as the micron.
Colour The whiteness of the wool.
Vegetable matter Burrs or other vegetable matter mean
the wool will be downgraded.
Length The longer the fibre the more valuable.
Style Does it have a nice, even crimp?
Lustre or brightness This is where a woolclassers
skill is paramount. The classer assesses the feel of the wool,
the brightness of the wool and the general lustre of the wool.
Once all the above has been considered, the woolclasser classifies
the wool. Once classed, fleeces are put in separate bins for
each class until there is sufficient wool to press into bales.

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| Woolclassing table |
The woolclassing table top is just over three metres by about
one-and-a-half metres and is generally made of slats.
The woolclasser has the most important job in the shed. The
woolclasser receives the wool from the skirting table folded
in a certain way and takes one staple of wool from the same
spot in every fleece and determines its class.
High-class wool should never be mixed with low-class wool,
or it simply will not reach its potential value.
After grading, the wool is baled into separate categories
determined by a number of factors, including its strength,
colour and length.

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Woolshed Community

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The Woolshed is the center-piece of Jondaryan, but many other
historic buildings have been relocated here from the district.
The original Jondaryan Station was centred on the far side
of nearby Oakey Creek where the old homestead is today.
By 1859, Jondaryan Station had 25 substantial buildings,
including an accommodation house, church and school. There
was also a large vegetable garden to supply the 200-strong
population, including 30 school students.
The Australian gold rush in the 1850s and 1860s had a detrimental
effect on all grazing communities but Jondaryan fared better
than most because of the enlightened policies of William Kent
I, then manager of Jondaryan. He preferred to employ families
over single men, and even paid the wives of his workers half
the salary of their husband in addition to the husbands
salary. A very enlightened man who was years ahead of his
time.
To have a better understanding of our rural past and how
people on the station lived, be sure to visit the other buildings
and experience their unique atmospheres.

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Skirting table

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After a sheep is shorn the roustabout removes the belly wool
from the board and places it in a basket. The picker-up then
takes the fleece and with a skilled movement throws it out
on the skirting table to be trimmed. Skirting is trimming
the edges of the fleece so that it can be presented to the
woolclasser.
The table is made of rolling slats, which allow the locks
to fall through to an area underneath. Locks are the sweat
ends, dags and short cuts.
There must be access from all sides of the table. Four men
called skirters usually worked the table, assisted by roustabouts
and picker-ups. It takes up to 48 seconds to skirt a fleece.
In the 1860s, Jondaryan Woolshed had three tables operating
at once. The job of a skirter was not physically hard but
very consistent and continuous.
Over the years with better breeding, fleeces have become
larger and so have the tables.

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| Those shears don' t click |
Click go the shears boys, click, click, click
Wide is his blow and his hands move quick,
The ringer looks around and is beaten by a blow,
And curses the old snagger with the bare-bellied yoe.
If you think shears make a clicking noise then unfortunately
youre mistaken. The writer used some poetic licence
to add to the imagery of shearing. When used well, shears
glide through the wool with no clicking noise. The action
of a shearer is to push the razor sharp blades through the
wool with a squeeze. Most shearers had two or
three sets which they sharpened every night.
Fortunately, the rest of Click Go the Shears
does capture the mood of the Australian woolshed. The shearers
blow refers to his arm movement. The ringer
is the shearer who shears the most sheep in that shed and
he is being beaten by one blow. He is cursing
the old snagger who is the eldest shearer in the
shed and the bare-bellied yoe is a ewe with a
completely-bare belly.

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Blades

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Hand-held blades used in the 1860s were seven inches long
and had one long spring. In the 1880s blades evolved to be
double sprung. Blades were usually (and still are) imported
from Sheffield, England.
Mechanical shears using combs were installed at Jondaryan
Station in 1890, only two years after they were first introduced
into Australia. To entice shearers to use them, they were
paid a bonus of 10 shillings per week.
In the 1880s, steam engines drove the mechanical gear. It
wasnt until after World War Two that Jondaryan Station
updated to a motor-driven system. Then in 1968 electricity
was used.
In 1983 there was a shearing revolution. Until then, shearing
combs had always been two-and-a-half inches wide. Some shearers
from New Zealand caused a stir by introducing larger three-and-a-half-inch
combs into Australia. This allowed for more wool to be shorn
with each blow and faster shearing. The width of combs had
always been strictly regulated by the Shearers Union.
But after a massive strike by the Union, the advantage of
a wider comb was acknowledged and accepted.

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| Evidence of Activity |
Equipment displayed to complement the atmosphere of the Woolshed
as a real workplace such as tar bucket, bags, caps, brooms.

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| Who did what? |
Imagine being a SHEARER in the 1860s. In the early
days of Australias pastoral industry the shearers
lot was not easy. Shearing has always been the most physical
back-breaking labour, but particularly so in the blade-shearing
days.
The shearer worked long hours, 6am to 6pm. More often than
not, living conditions were very primitive. But often the
most difficult task was to gain work. The shearer had to travel
long distances by foot or pushbike in search of work and often
would arrive at a woolshed only to be turned away.
But there was a positive side -- mateship. A real bond was
forged amongst the shearers and the shearing community.
The EXPERT sharpens the cutters and combs on a circular
emery wheel, a type of grinding machine. It was driven by
an overhead belt which came down from the line shaft. The
expert also oils the line shaft. Shearers change their combs
after shearing about 20 sheep. The shearers cutter is
changed about every 10 sheep shorn. This makes for a lot of
sharpening. It takes about five to 10 seconds to sharpen a
comb and three to five seconds to sharpen a cutter.
The PENNER-UP pulls the sheep into the catching pens.
There were always a couple of men monitoring the catching
pens and keeping them full for the shearers.
Each catching pen at Jondaryan Woolshed can hold 30 sheep.
There are 26 catching pens and there would have been six penner-ups
working at any one time.
The shearers would yell to the penner-ups Sheep-O
when more sheep were needed in their catching pens.
The PICK-UP BOY picks up the fleece after it has been
shorn, and throws it on the skirting table. There was commonly
one Pick-up Boy for each four or five shearers.
The ROUSTABOUT is the general dogsbody
of the Woolshed. He sweeps the boards of locks
to keep them away from the shearer, keeps the boards clean
and picks up the belly wool and puts it into an open wool
pack.
He also applied tar to sheep flesh wounds after they had
been shorn. When shearers used blades there were often wide
flesh wound cuts that needed tar to seal the wound.
In todays shearing shed, the wounds are not as serious
and needle and cotton are used for the mending.
Being a roustabout was often seen as an apprenticeship to
becoming a shearer.

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Feel the silence, the lanolin and sweat

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This is Queenslands oldest operating woolshed. During
its heyday, the 300-foot long Woolshed accommodated up to
88 blade shearers. Together with the classers, teamsters,
wool pressers and roustabouts, they worked as a team, with
each worker playing their part in shearing over 5000 sheep
a day.
Back in the 1860s, a fleece hit the floor every eight seconds.
Approximately 10 million sheep have been shorn in this shed
yielding approximately 500,000 bales of wool.
Steeped in Australias history and tradition, this Woolshed
offers a vivid insight into our proud rural heritage.
Come here in the early morning and experience the silence.
Then imagine the team of men, the thousands of sheep and the
sheer hard work that made it such a thriving woolshed community.

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Sheep Psychology

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It is true that sheep will always follow. If one moves they
all do. And the Woolshed was designed to put this idea to
work, to help move the sheep efficiently through the shed.
A number of narrow lanes, called races, channel the sheep
into certain directions. Once one sheep starts to travel through
a race, the rest follow. You can see a race at the back of
the east wing where a laneway hits a blocking gate and the
sheep are diverted into catching pens.
In another process called halving, a large number
of sheep are progressively reduced to a small number. The
sheep travel from a race through a gateway and are halved
into two separate pens. These pens lead into another race
which directs them into the catching pens.
Are sheep really stupid? They certainly do tend to flock
together and avoid being on their own, but this is a survival
device, as there is strength in numbers in defending against
predators. Their main predators at Jondaryan are dingoes,
foxes and crows.

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The Slatted Floor

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The slatted floor is an integral feature of the Woolshed.
In the Jondaryan Woolshed it is made from wild apple wood
which doesnt splinter and damage sheep hooves. The slatted
floor lets manure fall through to underneath the Woolshed.
Trap doors around the Woolshed allow the manure to be cleaned
out at the end of the season -- not a popular job.
It is imperative that sheep have empty stomachs by the time
they reach the shearer because they are then more manageable.
It also avoids manure being mixed up with the wool which would
reduce its value.

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Water
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Water was a crucial factor in determining where sheep stations
were established. Early graziers were totally reliant on surface
water for their stock. They needed large areas of land with
enough surface water to maintain their stock numbers.
Jondaryan Station was well situated, with Oakey Creek very
close by.
Up until the 1880s water was used to wash the sheep before
they were shorn, except for rams and pregnant ewes. They were
not washed, for fear of harming them.
On Jondaryan Station the washpool was about two miles downstream
from the homestead and consisted of a stone-paved pool on
the edge of the creek. Water was pumped from the creek up
to a ships tank on high stands.
Sheep were let down a chute to men waiting in a washpool.
The men turned them over and over in the water under the powerful
spout coming from the tanks, until all the dirt was washed
from the wool.

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Branding

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Each grazier or property has a registered, identifying brand
which differs in colour and position on the animal.
After sheep are shorn they are placed in the counting-out
pen. They are then taken to a race and branded. An all-paint
brand is stamped on with a branding iron. Sheep are also earmarked.
Early brands were bitumen tar based and therefore were non-scourable.
In the 1950s CSIRO invented a type of branding paint that
was scourable.

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| Building restoration |
Shearing sheds are necessary because the wool needs to be
dry. Jondaryan Woolshed is 300 feet long (91 metres), and
in it 52 shearers and numerous other workers could process
3000 sheep a day. At one stage the Woolshed housed 88 blade
shearers. In 1892 it was the biggest shed on the Darling Downs.
The Jondaryan Woolshed cost 3300 pounds (equivalent to $2
million today) to construct and, when completed in 1861,
was the finest in
the colony.
The Stations owners, Kent and Weinholt, built the Woolshed
using ironbark, slabs, local red cedar and imported corrugated
iron.
Originally intended to have a shingle roof, Jondaryan Woolshed
used a new material -- galvanized iron prefabricated in England.
The galvanized iron had been hand-rolled, hand-dipped, hand-wrought
and hand corrugated.
It arrived late and the first shearing in the Woolshed took
place under tarpaulins erected over the shearing boards.

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