- Francis Birtles
Francis Edwin Birtles (7 November 1881 in Fitzroy,
Melbourne – 1 July 1941 inSydney ) [ [http://home.iprimus.com.au/crothwell/famous.htm#Birtles.%20Francis Famous Australians ] at home.iprimus.com.au] was the third child of David Edwin Birtles and Sarah Jane Bartlett. Francis was anAustralia n adventurer who set many long-distancecycling anddriving records, including becoming in 1927 the first man to drive a car fromEngland to Australia. Birtles had set a speed record driving from Darwin to Melbourne the previous year.He served in the
Second Boer War , and later was a mounted police officer in theTransvaal . On his return to Australia, he cycled round Australia twice and by 1912 had crossed the country seven times. He was the first person to cross Australia from west to east on abicycle and in 1912 he became the first person to make a west to east crossing from Fremantle to Sydney in a Brush Runabout [ [http://www.oldrhinebeck.org/collection/groundvehicles/Brush%20Runabout.htm Brush Runabout ] at www.oldrhinebeck.org] .As a publicity stunt, Birtles was commissioned by
Barlow Motors , the Melbourne agent for theBean cars , to drive a modifiedBean 14 car from Darwin to Melbourne. With his co-driver Alec Barlow, they left Darwin at 4am on 23 October 1926 and completed the 5440 km (3380 miles) journey in eight days and 13 hours, a record. The car was dubbed the "Sundowner" by Birtles.Following this success, Birtles was asked to make an attempt at becoming the first person to drive from England to Australia. He departed from
Australia House inLondon on 19 October 1927, farewelled by a crowd of wellwishers including the 1927Miss Australia . In an era when there were few roads and gasoline supplies sparse, the epic eight month journey carried him across mountains, deserts and through tropical jungles and included a number of sea voyages - the last being from Singapore to Darwin. He travelled viaEurope ,Egypt , Persia (nowIran ), India, Burma and Malaya.On arrival in Darwin, his car was seized by customs officials demanding import duty, until direct intervention by the Prime MinisterStanley Bruce averted the situation. He continued south viaBrisbane andSydney to the official finishing point of the journey at the General Post Office onElizabeth Street, Melbourne . He was promptly asked to move on by a policeman for obstructing traffic.The journey was not repeated until 1955.
Birtles had completed more than 70 transcontinental crossings of Australia by mid-1927, details of which were described in his book "Battlefronts of Outback" (1955).
In 1929, the "Bean" car was presented to the Australian Government on condition that it be placed in the national museum. As there was no such museum at the time, the car disappeared for many years before being recovered in the 1960s and placed into the National Motor Museum in
Adelaide in 1980 before moving to the National Historical Collection in theNational Museum of Australia inCanberra in 2001.In 1933, Birtles travelled to
Arnhem Land with a prospecting and mining expedition in search ofgold , after having found some several years previously during one of his journeys. He subsequently sold his share in the mining stake and retired a wealthy man.Birtles also made several films of his encounters with the outback and
indigenous Australians including "Across Australia with Francis Birtles" (1912), "Into Australia’s Unknown" (1914) and "Coorab in the Island of Ghosts" (1929).References
* [http://www.nma.gov.au/collections/slideshow_1_6.html Collections ] at www.nma.gov.au
*cite book|author=Peter Luck |year=1989|title=A Time To Remember|publisher=William Heinemann|id=ISBN 0-85561-163-4
*cite book|author=Peter Wherrett |year=2005|title=Grit: An Epic Journey Across the World|publisher=Ibis Publishing Australia|id=ISBN 1-920923-62-4
* [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A070303b.htm Birtles, Francis Edwin (1881 - 1941) Biographical Entry - Australian Dictionary of Biography Online ] at www.adb.online.anu.edu.au
* [http://www.awm.gov.au/events/conference/bigstuff/papers/operating/Preserving%20significance%20-%20Thurrowgood%20and%20Hallam.pdf National Museum of Australia on preservation]
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