Social History in Southern NSW
by Natalie Bennett
This section of the website contains a few of the stories written while I was a journalist on an Eastern Riverina Observer, based in Henty but also covering the towns of Lockhart, Culcairn, Walla Walla, Urana, Boree Creek, Yerong Creek, and other hamlets in between.
This is the only male life I've posted, but it is one that I think deserves to be recorded. You can see me struggling to get a response - Curly was, for understandable reasons, quite taciturn.
'Curly' Heckendorf
When I called to find
Curly Heckendorf for
this interview he was in
the place where he is
now probably most
commonly found, his
beloved Lockhart
museum.
He was working on a
photo of the 1935 Lockhart Show Committee, attempting to identify its members.
Curly said with a chuckle there was only
three or four people he could not identify, so he
was doing better than
anyone else who had
looked at the photo.
Ernest Heckendorf,
universally known
around Lockhart as
"Curly", has been one of
the town's leading
citizens for many years
and there is hardly an organisation in which Curly has not played a part at
some time or another.
"I have been interested in pretty well everything in town, since the
war particularly," Curly
said.
Curly served five years
in the army World War II, including over
three years as a prisoner
of war of the Japanese on
the Burma Railway.
"We were thrown together as a group. You
begin to feel a part of someone else. That is a
sense of togetherness you
don't normally get in life.
"It produced a very
considerable change in
my outlook".
Curly served 12 years on the Lockhart Shire
Council and 25 years as a director of the Pastures
Protection Board.
"It has always been a
philosophy of mine that
you should never be critical of something unless
you take part in it".
"I don't like people
who sit on the outside of
meetings and criticise
what happens".
Curly said all of this
work would not have
been possible without the
support of his wife. "For anyone in public
affairs the support of their
wife is vital".
Curly recalls that he
thought about the Museum and tried to get people interested for five or
six years before finally
"taking the bull by the
horns" and calling a public meeting in 1971.
"For a few years before the Historical Society had run displays at the
show which built up interest".
In October 1972 the museum officially opened
when the Society purchased what Curly
described as a "ramshackle, broken down old
building" for $2,000
with the help of a Council loan.
Curly said he has always been interested in
history and geography
and his interest in the
museum has grown from
that.
According to Curly the
most important things in
the museum are photos
and documents.
"Once these are destroyed they can never be
replaced. Heavy articles
are not so important because they will survive
for quite a while
anyway".
But Curly said that he
does not have a favourite
item in the museum.
"I like it all. Everything is presented as it
was used in the district.
There is very little that
has not been in use in the
Lockhart district."
Curly said by doing
this the museum traces
the development of the
area through people and
organisations.
Since moving to Lockhart from the family farm
about three months ago.
Curly said he is spending
more time in the museum, on average "a couple of half days a week".
'"We are replacing an
old shed at the moment
and we continually get
documents, photos and
articles which have to be
numbered, listed and
displayed".
Curly said from virtually nothing the museum
had grown to a good
building and four sheds which would probably be
worth $80,000.
"That is not what it
cost us. Most of the value
came from voluntary
labour, although we did
raise $10,000 to put a
new roof on it".
Curly said school holidays are the busiest periods in the museum.
"We rely very heavily on the travelling public for support, although
we often get people in who say they have been
told to come to look at Lockhart's museum".
Curly said he enjoyed the challenge of his 12
years on Council.
"You are always coming up against something
which needs doing that you can't afford to do it".
Curly said a lot of things had been achieved
during his time on Council, although not necessarily by him.
"All my time on Council I fought for the Green
Street verandahs. I didn't succeed while I was on
there, but I am pleased they are being preserved
now".
"They will be a tremendous asset to the
town of Lockhart".
Curly said he believed
his greatest achievement
in public life was the control of flood waters along
the Old Man Creek Basin.
"We had country
flooded in about 1933 and a scheme was evolved to
dry some of it".
"We got the support of the Water Commission
and overcame local objections".
"It was successful and after the war was extended so it now protects
many thousands of acres. Places where you could
once boat are now being
farmed".
Curly said his other main continuing interest
is the development of Galore Hill.
"It has been a long-standing love of mine.
We lived near it and used to climb it on picnics".
"I always had a vision of tracks and roads which
would open it up to many people".
"I probably planted the first trees up there,
although Frank Pritchard was responsible for the
first main plantation".
Curly said from now until about November,
Galore Hill "is going to be a picture".
"The wattles are coming out and the native
grevillias will be in profusion".
On being asked if he had the chance if there
was anything in his life he would change. Curly said
he did not think so.
"I have had good health and enjoyed the
things I participated in. I
think that is all you can
hope for in life".
Postscript: Curly died in 1991.
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