Jackie Howe

Australian sheep shearer (1861–1920) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jackie Howe

John Robert Howe (10 July 1861 – 21 July 1920) was a legendary Australian sheep shearer at the end of the 19th century. He shot to fame in pre-Federation Australia in 1892 when he broke the daily and weekly shearing records across the colonies.

Quick Facts Jack "Jackie" Howe, Born ...
Jack "Jackie" Howe
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Gravesite memorial inscription for Jack Howe in Blackall cemetery
Born(1861-07-26)26 July 1861
Died21 July 1920(1920-07-21) (aged 58)
OccupationShearer
Known forSheep shearing
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Howe was considered one of the three wonders of Queensland, along with Eulo publican and personality Isabel Gray (c.1851–1929), and the cook and Barcaldine hotelier Jimmy Ah Foo.[1][2]

Life

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Jackie Howe newspaper cuttings, 1890s

Howe was born at Killarney near Warwick, Queensland. Jackie Howe's father, Jack Howe, was also a shearer and a clown with La Rosier's circus,[3] claiming to be the first clown to travel the Australian colonies, and was town-crier in Warwick.[4][5] His mother, Miss Stokes, was a lady's companion in 1840 at Canning Downs station and one of the first European women in the area, before marrying a second time to Jack Howe senior.[3] He grew up as a shearer around Warwick and the Darling Downs, before a short time at Tambo, trying gold prospecting.[3] It was there that he commenced professional shearing.[3]

Howe was active during the shearer strikes of the 1891[6] and 1894, and was a committed trade unionist.[7][8]

Later on Howe owned a public hotel, The Barcoo Hotel, in Blackall, Queensland.[5][when?] There is now a statue there of him holding a sheep.[9] He also at one time was a licensee of the Universal Hotel.[5] However publican life was not for him,[7] and he went onto purchase the property Shamrock Park, and then Summervale.[5]

After an extended illness, Howe died at Blackall in July 1920, leaving behind a widow, six sons, and two daughters.[5] After Howe's death, friend Queensland Premier T. J. Ryan[3] said, in a telegram to Howe's widow, "I have lost a true and trusted friend and Labor has lost a champion".[citation needed]

One son was John Henry Howe, but also known as Jack Howe.[5] He started as a chemist, but also went into shearing, and wrote a book on his father.[5] He later became a publican.[8] Another son, Leslie John Howe got married in March 1925.[10] The second son, Darsey John Howe, wed in September 1927.[11]

Shearing record

Howe was described as being "one of the best physically built men in Australia".[5] Weighing about 14 stone (200 lb; 89 kg), he measured 47.5 inches (1,210 mm) around the chest and 26 inches (660 mm) around the thigh.[3]

On 10 October 1892, Howe had shorn 321 sheep in seven hours and 40 minutes at Alice Downs station, near Blackall, Queensland.[12] This was a faster tally than any other shearer had achieved before. In the week beforehand, Howe also set the weekly record, shearing 1,437 sheep in 44 hours and 30 minutes.[12] Howe's daily record was beaten by Ted Reick in 1950,[13] but Reick was using machine shears, while Howe's hand shears were little more than scissors.[5][3]

Legacy

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Jack Howe's gravesite in Blackall cemetery

Jackie Howe is depicted by a bronze statue in Blackall.[citation needed]

After his death in 1920, a poem was penned in 1940 in his honour, as King of the shearers.[14]

In October 2015, Howe's record was reported as still unbeaten after 123 years.[15]

Howe became the name given to navy blue singlet tops.[16][17] According to legend,[citation needed] this is what Howe was wearing on the day he broke the shearing record. It has also been indicated in a woolshed, a big shearer took his shirt and snipped off the sleeves with a pair of shears, saying "I'll make a Jackie Howe of it", with the name associated since.[3]

References

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