20 December 2019

Raising a great war horse called ‘Bill The Bastard’

| John Thistleton
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Carl Valerius

Sculptor Carl Valerius working on a wax head of Bill. Photos: Keith Ward.

Earlier this month a small group of people from Harden-Murrumburrah set off in their cars and by train to Victoria for the running of the Jericho Cup. Their 1634-kilometre round trip to and from Warrnambool was quite a trek. Those on the train hired a car in Melbourne to complete their journey, while others made a holiday of it, taking a week.

Why? Because a legendary Australian war horse connects the two towns.

In Warrnambool, a race commemorates the horse.

In Murrumburrah, a life-sized bronzed statue will also pay tribute to ‘Bill the Bastard’, a 17.1 hands high waler.

The three-mile Jericho Cup celebrates Bill the Bastard winning a feature race at Jericho in 1917. That event was a ruse to allow Lieutenant General Harry Chauvel to amass some 34,000 soldiers and light horsemen. They were hidden in orange groves while a five-event race meeting took place in full view of the Turkish Army, watched by over 10,000 spectators. The main event was the Jericho Cup, which Bill the Bastard won.

The organisers of Warrnambool’s Jericho Cup have donated $25,000 for Murrumburrah’s sculpture which is nearing completion and will be on permanent display in the town, 130 km north-west of Canberra. A small committee, Bronze Bill the Bastard, set up to help immortalise Bill, has raised $790,000, including $36,000 from local sculptor Carl Valerius.

Carl Valerius and Dr Rhys Gray

Carl Valerius and original convenor of Bronze Bill the Bastard Dr Rhys Gray at Carl’s original small BTB statue in Murrumburrah.

No stranger to re-creating famous Australians, Valerius, who previously made a life-size statue of Sir Donald Bradman, built the statue of Bill. The horse, which was handled en route to the Middle East by writer and poet Banjo Paterson was a huge, fierce, stubborn animal. He was so named because no one could ride him. He bucked everyone off, except Michael Shanahan. He became a legend after the Battle of Romani, where he carried Shanahan and four Tasmanian troopers across heavy sand, saving them from certain death on the battlefield.

Major General James Kenneth Mackay (1859-1935), soldier, author and member of the NSW parliament formed the first muster of the 1st Australian Horse in 1897 at Murrumburrah. His efforts are commemorated in a recent statue by Melbourne sculptor Louis Laumen, unveiled in Murrumburrah in August this year. After Federation, equivalent light horse units from around the colonies were amalgamated into the Australian Light Horse of which Mackay was in command.

Sydney’s fine arts foundry Crawford’s Casting is bronzing Bill the Bastard and the troopers he carried to safety in World War I. The statue is expected to be unveiled in 2020.

Last week a new committee was elected to succeed the original Bronze Bill the Bastard committee. Veterinarian Graham Taylor is president, former Harden Mayor Chris Manchester is treasurer, Karen Kemp is secretary, assisted by Andrew Kelly.

A Hilltops councillor, Chris Manchester will convene a meeting in January with the council and owner of the old Murrumburrah Mill, opposite the Light Horse Memorial, to discuss a permanent site for Bill the Bastard. If all parties agree, Mackay will appear as though he is looking at Bill across the road.

The former commercial hotel in Murrumburrah was re-named The Light Horse Hotel when the smaller ‘life-like’ model of Bill the Bastard was unveiled. A ‘Bill the Bastard Burger’ now features in the hotel’s bar and restaurant called ‘Shanahans’.

A detail-rich timeline and app are planned to highlight the story and strategy for the 1st Australian Horse and Bill the Bastard from 1897 to 2019.

Original Article published by John Thistleton on The RiotACT.

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Cheryl Harris5:35 pm 17 Jun 20

Well I certainly hope that Major Michael Shanahan is mentioned on any plaque attached to Bill the Bastard, as without him, Bill would not have survived. Bill allowed no one except Major Michael to ride him and was possibly in a bit of danger of being destroyed without Major Michael’s input. He often gave the horse treats to encourage him to let him ride him. Major Michael Shanahan was actually shot in his leg when riding Bill into battle to rescue his 4 men and eventually his leg was amputated due to this wound.
I am one of Major Michael Shanahan’s grand daughters, and will be making a trip down to see the statue when our borders are open again and we are once again allowed to travel. We have also travelled to Warnambool for the Jericho Cup, which was great fun for quite a few of our family members and wonderful to see the light horses on parade.
It is quite wonderful and emotional to see these occasions for the families left and also for future generations to see what happened in our past history and what these brave men went through to make sure their families were safe in the future.
We look forward to travelling down from Brisbane to see Bill, and also to perhaps visit “Shanahan’s”.
Cheryl Harris (née Shanahan)

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