Tag Archives: Jane Falls

Murder in the Underworld: a Mystery Tour of Jenolan Caves

The second stop in a series of literary excursions examines how one of the world oldest cave systems inspired a crime novel


THE WAY TO Jenolan Caves within the Blue Mountains National Park of New South Wales has always been long and winding. The Burra Burra clan group of the Gundungurra nation, the region’s Indigenous custodians, tell a Dreamtime story of ancient spirits journeying there via the waterways and valleys. European settlers descended the steep ridges on foot and horseback from the 1830s, and visitors have traversed a variety of precarious access roads ever since.

The approach gives you plenty of time to cast off the everyday world. As a casual tour guide between 2008 and 2012, I used the inspiring commute to ponder the extensive stories of the place.

Like many trainees before me, I’d gleaned the local tales from my more experienced peers. It didn’t take long to realise that the job had granted me rare access to a unique oral history, although my journalistic experience told me it was a paradoxically flawed mish-mash based on limited primary evidence.

Almost instantly I felt there was a novel in this massive well of storytelling, and to find it I eventually decided to cut through Jenolan’s tourist tales to recreate a time when the caves sat on the edge of the colonial frontier. A place that settlers viewed with suspicion, not wonder, very often through a lens of faith.

What drove me were the stories few wanted to talk about, particularly First Nations peoples’ connection to the region; the cattle farmers who gradually occupied the same countryside; the Wesleyan Methodist community of the nearby region once known as Fish River Creek, now Oberon, and the role of women in early cave exploration.

Crime was never far from the colonial experience. The massacres and random killings of Aboriginal people and reprisals against settlers are now referred to as the Frontier Wars. The occupation of the land was not possible without the importation of convicts to build roads and towns, a mounted police force to impose British law, and Christian missionaries to uphold ethical standards.

Long before I embarked on a first draft, I interviewed Gundungurra elder Aunty Sharyn Halls at Echo Point in Katoomba, listening to her share knowledge about the pathways and waterways used by her ancestors between the Oberon region and the Southern Highlands. It helped me to understand how different the approaches to the caves were in the 19th century, and that new perspective encouraged me to question everything we think we know about Jenolan.

Errors and Conundrums

Jenolan’s oral tradition tells stories of two early female explorers. The more recent was Catherine (‘Katie’) Webb (1861-1941), daughter of a local businessman and visitor to Jenolan in its Victorian heyday.

Women visiting Jenolan in the 1800s.

Katie’s 1881 discovery of the chamber that bears her name in the Chifley Cave took place at a time when women were regularly photographed in caving attire. But another woman whose exploration pre-dated Katie’s by two decades hangs barely visible in the Stygian gloom.

I first heard about Jane Falls while on a training tour of the Lucas Cave. She sometimes rates a mention when Jenolan guides interpret the soaring Cathedral Chamber into which the first European explorers stumbled in January 1860. Some will tell you she assisted in that expedition, while others credit her with the discovery at an earlier date.

A person known as ‘J. Falls’ was mentioned in the letter written by George Whiting to the Bathurst Free Press and Mining Journal about that expedition. This could be Irish emigrant and Oberon resident Jane Falls (1829-1911), or her mother Jane Falls née Nelson (1802-1893). It could also be Jane’s brother James Falls (1834-1911) or his twin George Falls (1834-1867) recorded with the wrong initial, because when it comes to giving credit for cave discoveries, Jenolan is full of errors and conundrums.

The use of initials instead of full names was common on hand-engraved memorials and in newspaper typesetting. Catherine ‘Katie’ Webb’s 1881 discovery resulted in her name being inscribed on an early plaque (now long gone) as ‘C. Webb’ in a list of ‘before-mentioned gentlemen’, her sister sister Selena among them, recorded as ‘S. Webb.’

But in 1995, according to what became known as the Historical Inscriptions Project (kept by Jenolan Caves Historical And Preservation Society), a full hand-written signature of Jane Falls was discovered in Jenolan’s Elder Cave, dated February 27, 1854. It’s a long way from the Cathedral Chamber in the Lucas Cave, but it’s one of the earliest names inscribed in the entire Jenolan system.

The obvious way to clear up the matter is to fact-check George Whiting’s claim that he and fellow explorer Nicholas Irwin were the first to enter the Lucas Cave. That’s problematic, because when an official plaque about cave discoverers was dedicated in the Grand Arch in the 1920s, neither man got a mention.

Photographs of this event reveal a well-attended ceremony on February 23, 1929. A clock on the rock wall pinpoints the solemn moment, just after three in the afternoon, when first in the line of dignitaries gazing up at the plaque was eminent explorer and geologist Sir Edgeworth David.

TROUBLING MEMORIAL Unveiling of a plaque by Sir Edgeworth David, to commemorate the discoveries of various caves, February 23, 1929 (Photographer: Sam Hood)

The plaque credits N. Wilson, G. Whalan and G. Falls with the co-discovery of the Lucas Cave in 1858, and is still pondered over by cave visitors today. But its veracity was challenged in the NSW papers for a few years after its dedication, and six decades later someone who knew Jenolan better than most made a judgment about it.

In his paper and subsequent book The Men of Jenolan Caves 1838-1964 (1987) speleologist and former Jenolan guide Basil Ralston was quick to reject the plaque in favour of George Whiting’s 1860 letter to the editor.

Whiting’s letter is nothing if not detailed. It reads like he was discrediting another claim when he described he and Nicholas Irwin finding the way in a “… pristine state, unbroken and undilapidated; not the slightest trace or vestige of human being ever having set foot there.”

But that was never the only doorway into the mountain.

Suspended between contradictory oral histories, citizen journalism and widespread speculation, the story of exactly who discovered Jenolan’s Lucas Cave sometime in the late 1850s remains an open case. Jane Falls’ role most certainly cannot be ruled out, but if she was involved, many more questions hang in the air.

Small Obfuscations

Further research on Whiting and Irwin only makes things murkier.

The George Whiting who wrote to the papers about his 1860 exploration party is extremely elusive in the records. Some of what we think we know about him comes from a letter that historian Ward Llewellyn Havard wrote to the The Sydney Morning Herald in 1934, with an aside describing Whiting as “tutor to Charles Whalan’s children”.

Early Oberon settlers Charles Whalan (1811-1885) and his brother James (1806–1854) happened across the caves in the 1830s. Elizabeth Whalan (1810-1899), married to Charles in 1836, was said to be the first white woman in the region.

The couple’s homestead Glyndwr became a popular base for expeditions to visit the underworld. They had many children and there are a few colonial-era George Whitings who could have educated them.

The closest candidate is George Robert Whiting (1834-1922), whose obituary locates the Oxford-born settler on the Turon River during the Gold Rush of the 1850s, not far from the Whalan family at Oberon. His later role as a teacher at Sydney’s ‘ragged school’ for destitute children suggests he had tutoring experience.

Explorer Nicholas Irwin is even sketchier because his name began to get mis-spelled at an indeterminate time, possibly in George Whiting’s 1860 letter that describes “Irwin” as “an old experienced guide”. Yet Charles Whalan’s son Alfred wrote to the Lithgow Mercury in 1899 describing the same man as “Urwin” and calling him Whalan’s “servant” who accompanied his master to the caves on an exploration in the early 1840s.

Report on the trial of Nicholas Urwin (British Library)

Nicholas Urwin (1808-1899) was in fact a former convict sentenced to hard labour in the burgeoning colony, but he was no petty thief. He was a lifer, transported to NSW after avoiding the noose. His crime: the rape of Mary Dodds, aged 77, in Country Durham in 1835.

Little wonder that his name never ended up on any plaque at Jenolan.

Yet after being granted a ticket of leave in 1845 and a conditional pardon in 1853, Urwin could be said to have attained something of an unconditional pardon in 1870 when Annie Mary Wild agreed to marry him. They produced twelve children prior to his death at Peelwood, aged over 90.

There can be no doubt the Whalans knew of Urwin’s crime. A convict’s record stayed with them through each transition towards their freedom. We know more about convicts than we ever could about many free settlers, simply because a description of their appearance may have been required had they escaped or reoffended, something it appears Nicholas Urwin never did.

George Whiting might have altered the spelling of Urwin’s name to Irwin as a means of disguising a known sex offender in much the same way as a convict could be construed as a “servant”; or a female explorer concealed by recording her initial only. Once again, small obfuscations resulted in huge ramifications for Jenolan’s view of itself and its history.

Female Gaze

Jane Falls’s story probably got a bit lost in Jenolan’s oral tradition for the most obvious of reasons: According to obituaries, she lived in the Oberon district from the 1850s until her death in 1911, but for the bulk of that time she went by her married name Jane Eaton.

After her husband William’s death in 1874, she emerged in reports about her wool and hops growing operations, and while her mother Jane was eulogised as fervently devout in 1893, Jane Eaton was remembered in 1911 as ‘well respected’ without any religious fanfare. Her grave remains unmarked in Oberon’s Old Methodist Cemetery and her progeny occupied the region for another century.

Unlike the stories of Katie Webb there is little detail, however mythical, about the cave explorations of Jane Falls. Faced with recreating what she might have achieved, I was left to imagination.

A dose of allegory allowed my early drafts to take shape. I was inspired by the classical Greek legend of Eros and Psyche. E. M. Forster’s A Passage to India was another influence, and I took a leaf out of a powerful modern Australian myth: Joan Lindsay’s 1967 novel Picnic at Hanging Rock.

Psyche in the Underworld,
1865, by Eugène-Ernest Hillemacher
(NGV)

Psyche is sent to the Underworld; Lindsay’s schoolgirls disappear into a monolith, and Forster’s Adela Quested confronts her hypocrisy in a cave. But just as interesting is what happens above ground, when half-truths take flight.

While mentions in a few newspaper reports and signatures on cave walls give scant evidence for a larger tale about Jane Falls, accepting the limitations freed me to explore what it would take for an unmarried, female, Irish émigré living in a devout Methodist community to participate in the discovery of an Australian cave in the mid-Victorian period; and why she would leave so few traces of her achievements.

If the rather abstract figures of George Whiting and Nicholas Irwin warrant a place in the interpretation of Jenolan Caves, then so too do Jane Falls, Katie Webb, and the generations of women who hosted its visitors, from Elizabeth Whalan and Lucinda Wilson to Barbara Chisholm of Caves House. Writers such as Margaret Isabella Stevenson and Agatha Christie also recorded their cave tours in detail and give a female gaze to Jenolan that is often lacking.

Border land of Error

The Methodism running through Jenolan’s settler history led me to research the teachings and principals of cleric John Wesley (1703-1791).

James Colwell’s Illustrated History of Methodism in Australia (1904) outlines the mission to assist the Aboriginal population of Bathurst, which was declining in the wake of the Bathurst War fought in 1824 between the Indigenous Wiradjuri nation and the British militia. It also paints a troubled picture of the Bathurst and Fish River Methodist circuits between 1849 and 1852.

The Reverend John Pemell reported, “the Circuit was low in piety, for there had been a fourth year’s appointment against which the people protested. Great discord existed,” and detailed the abandonment of congregations as a result of the NSW Gold Rush.

Methodist support for Aboriginal people eventually became less of a priority than the survival of diminishing congregations. Many historians describe the broader Methodist mission to support Indigenous people as a failure.

Yet early European settlers thrived on it, and Philippa Gemmell-Smith in her 2004 Thematic History of Oberon Shire directed me to Pemell’s mention about the construction of a sod-walled chapel at Jenolan Caves in 1851.

Illustration from The Circuit Rider.

This apparently pre-dates other buildings at the caves. If it had been raised in the Jenolan valley this soil-constructed chapel was likely washed away by floods years ago. Its disappearance speaks to the broader vanishment of 19th century circuit riders who engaged in “field preaching” and tent revivals, which seemed more of a tradition on the American frontier.

But not so. Up at old Oberon when it was known as Fish River Creek, the Wesleyan circuit saw revivals, conversions and chapel-raising. According to a preacher who knew him, Charles Whalan experienced a conversion to the Methodist faith on the banks of the Saltwater Creek near Glyndwr on his return from a revival at Bathurst in around 1842.

“He was something of a mystic, too. The look into eternity made spiritual things real to him. He had those revelations of the unseen, which only come to those who live in close touch with God. He had dreams and visions, and suggestions which he had no doubt came from God for his guidance; and sometimes perhaps the workings of an active imagination influenced by strong feeling or unconscious bias may have been mistaken for the Divine Voice. There is a border land of error that lies close to the truth, and the step over is taken easily enough and without conscious default.”

This portrait of Charles Whalan by Reverend Matthew Maddern appeared in a comprehensive biography of Whalan in The Methodist in July, 1911, foregrounding Whalan’s work for the Wesleyan faith and leaving his connection to Jenolan as an afterthought.

William ‘California’ Taylor. 

Tent revivals were common in frontier communities throughout the 19th century, and visiting American preachers were not uncommon during the Gold Rush. Evangelical missionary William ‘California’ Taylor (1821-1902) hosted revivals throughout regional Australia in the 1860s.

Many Irish Methodists practiced being “slain in the spirit” or falling prostrate in ecstasy during preaching. Wesley himself encountered this form of rapture in his travels, as stated in his journal entry of July 14, 1759:

“In the afternoon, Mr B was constrained, by the multitude of people, to come out of the church, and preach in his own close. Some of those who were here pricked to the heart, were affected in an astonishing manner… One woman tore up the ground with her hands, filling them with dust and with the hard trodden grass, on which I saw her lie, with her hands clinched, as one dead, when the multitude dispersed. Another roared and screamed in a more dreadful agony than ever I heard before… I saw one who lay two or three hours in the open air, and being then carried into the house, continued insensible another hour, as if actually dead. The first sign of life she showed was a rapture of praise intermixed with a small joyous laughter.”

If it seems outlandish to equate such phenomena with Jenolan, consider that Havard also wrote about a young stockman, Luke White, who claimed to have seen the Devil parking his horse-driven coach inside a cavern at Jenolan Caves in the 1830s.

White was a convict transported to NSW for seven years before his release in 1834, after which he took up work with various cattle farmers in the Oberon region, including a stint as an employee of Charles Whalan’s. By 1840, he was before the courts again, charged with cattle theft.

Whalan appeared as a witness, although his association with White dealt him a counter accusation of cattle thievery too, for which he was committed and bailed at the time of giving evidence at White’s trial.

White was found guilty and transported to Norfolk Island, but Whalan found god. His biographer Maddern described this as “the great change” of Whalan’s life, after being “more than careless about the concerns of his soul.”

Maddern was very understanding about his old friend Whalan when he eloquently skated around the man’s mystical beliefs, outlining how his “active imagination” traversed a “border land of error”.

There are perhaps no better terms to define Jenolan Caves as a tourism experience and a subject to research and write about.

Look no deeper than the enduring reminder of White’s hellish vision, remembered to the present day in the name of Jenolan’s enormous daylight cavern: The Devil’s Coach House.

Connecting Dots

My literary journey to Jenolan was enriched by listening to Aunty Sharyn, who gave new perspective to my many years of research about the history of Aboriginal life in the region.

As the manuscript came together, Gundungurra traditional owner Kazan Brown assisted me in depicting Burra Burra history, place and cultural practice. I also relied on aspects of Burra Burra culture at Jenolan Caves that have been shared by the Gundungurra Tribal Council.

My experience of guiding groups along thousands of steps inside the caves was a constant inspiration, considering how the winding caverns bind everyone who enters into a common experience, often filled with wonder yet tinged with anxiety.

The underground settings in my book are based on real caverns, although I have engaged a bit of dramatic license in depicting some of the chambers, and how far the characters reach into the mountain and by which means, considering the novel is set in the early 1850s.

But what can we ever really know with absolute accuracy in Jenolan’s “border land of error” when so many tales have been told and tracks covered?

To connect the dots left by history, I re-imagined a fiction of all these lives.

Readers sleuthing after facts will hopefully set themselves free to enjoy my speculation about Jenolan’s discordant year of 1852, and the way the place baffled European settlers who stumbled into the dark, heads full of powerful scripture.

Main image: Souls on the Banks of the Acheron, Adolf Hirémy-Hirschl, 1898 (The Belvedere)

Searching for signatures in the dark

IF YOU’VE ever been caving, even one of those walk-in-walk-out tours where you don’t have to get your feet too dirty, you’ll know the experience does something to the soul.

“I was about to turn back as my light passed over a patch of stone higher up when I thought I spotted a cursive ‘F’.”

Perhaps it’s primal, a DNA memory from millennia ago when our ancestors found shelter underground? Perhaps it’s all those fairy tales reminding us that once upon a time there might have been something more in the dark than our elders were letting on?

It’s a frisson that people across the globe subject ourselves to daily, as tourism cave operators everywhere will tell you.

I had the chance to work at a cave system, one of the world’s largest, when I was a cave guide at NSW’s Jenolan Caves. Taking people into the dark recesses of the mountain was always a thrill, and I was lucky enough to be guided on a very special tour recently that was a real highlight.

Jenolan’s Arch Cave has been closed to the public since the 1930s, but late in 2017 I was granted access during a scientific inspection in order to find one name written on the cave wall in the 19th century.

Finding J. Falls

As a guide, the most intriguing stories I came across in my time at Jenolan are those that tell the tales of the people who went into the dark long ago.

SIGNATURE SPOTTING Dr Anne Musser, paleontologist and Jenolan guide, reading names on the crystal.

The first people of the area, the Gundungurra and Dharug, had long traversed the passageways and underground rivers, and their Dreamtime mythology included several of the cave systems in the NSW Central West.

By the middle of the 1800s, settlers were regularly visiting the caves under the guidance of the local Whalan family, whose property at Oberon was one of the closest ‘gateways’ to the valley. They started the tradition of leaving names to record visitation, and, on occasion, the discovery of caves.

Most of what Jenolan guides related at the time I worked there came from the surviving oral traditions handed down by generations of guides before them, and one of the strongest stories concerned the discovery of a major section of the cave system by a local woman, Katie Webb.

I explored as much of her story as I could find, but there was another name that interested me, that of Jane Falls, whose legend at Jenolan include the possibility that she was one of the explorers to discover the system’s largest publicly open cave, the world-famous Lucas Cave, in around 1860.

The name Jane Falls polarises Jenolan guides. I’m not going to beat around the bush, it’s been bit of a male-dominated place in its time. Women have only been officially guiding tours since the 1980s, and between Katie Webb’s exploration in the 1880s and the next discovery of a cave by a woman there is a gap of more than a century.

The very idea that a woman might have discovered the Lucas Cave is confronting for some, which is one reason I suspect the issue of where Jane Falls’s signatures are remains a bit of a muddle.

‘J. Falls’ is credited as being one of the first European visitors to enter the Lucas Cave in newspaper reports from January 1860, but if that was Jane, she presents a conundrum for researchers. As was common practice, many of the signatures on Jenolan’s walls are initials only, so any appearance of ‘J. Falls’ could be one of three people: Jane Falls, her mother (also Jane), or Jane’s brother James, all Irish emigrants in the 1850s.

Nevertheless, a former colleague came across one trace of the Falls family in the Arch Cave, and so we went to see it for ourselves.

Graffiti

What became quickly apparent in the Arch Cave is that it’s a signature-rich chamber. Situated high in the Jenolan limestone, it was one of the earliest caves entered by European settlers, since it was easily accessed from the surface.

Like all caves, the major formations were named. By the time we were standing at the Assyrian Lion, identified as such for its similarity to those in the British Museum, we were looking at signatures scrawled in every direction, on walls, on crystal, and on the ceiling.

People left their mark using graphite pencil, or charcoal, or even the smoke from their candle, and in some places the names have quickly deteriorated.

I was struck by the possibility that we’d never find Jane’s name in this mass of graffiti!

A couple of side chambers required us to squeeze through into a narrower space where 19th century explorers had gone before, and I immediately saw the name ‘Edwin Whalan’ written boldly on a promontory of rock.

It made me chuckle. The Whalans earned their place in Jenolan lore, no doubt, but compared to some tiny signatures, the size and passion of this lustily scrawled Whalan moniker smacked of ownership.

A sweep of the torch above revealed other familiar names, but once again there were just so many. The Arch is a small cave but even so it would take hours and hours to search them all.

Some visitors had inscribed more than just names, also. Short poems, or expressions of how they felt, were touching reminders of the mysteries of the underworld, begging that question again, about why we come to gather in the dark and remember those who were here before us?

Curlicues

I was about to turn back as my light passed over a patch of stone higher up when I thought I spotted a cursive ‘F’. I stepped up for a closer look, and a shadowy word came into sharper focus. Most definitely ‘Falls’… my heart thumped. Most definitely a ‘J’ and an ‘A’. This was it! But standing there in wonder I had to admit immediately, this could be ‘Jane’ or ‘James’ Falls.

JANE’S NAME? The elusive signature of Jane or James Falls in Jenolan’s Arch Cave.

I grumbled at myself, and at poor handwriting, and the passage of time, then got a bit hopeful at the possibility of another name starting with ‘J’ and ‘A’ slightly above. Could this be Jane and James Falls, siblings on an expedition?

We took plenty of pictures and mused over the curlicues of the Falls signature. Nobody wanted to dash my hopes, but as our tour concluded and we journeyed out, I had to admit that it was not a conclusive sighting of Jane, not yet.

My search for her goes on, and will feature in plenty of writing to come, but to have stood in the dark where the Falls name was written, I feel closer than ever.

© Michael Burge, all rights reserved.

Katie Webb and the cave girls

THE CAVE GIRLS An image which may include Katie Webb, her sister and mother.
THE CAVE GIRLS An image which may include Katie Webb, her sister and mother.

A Writer’s day job leads to an encounter with a legend.

IN late 2008 when I trained as a guide at Jenolan Caves, probably Australia’s best-known cave system, I embarked on a fascinating journey.

Jenolan is a world of its own, with its own folklore, and within the network of caverns resides a collection of intriguing stories.

“I was enveloped in a dreadful skirt that made me look like some disreputable old charwoman.”

For a theatre worker, the task of taking tickets at the door, leading guests on adventures in the dark, retelling stories, playing with light and sound to enhance the experience, in underground chambers of acoustic perfection, often followed by a round of applause, felt like a return to the magic backstage world of a real theatre.

Jenolan guides, when I trained, were given little written material on the history of the place. We needed to glean the legends of the caves from our more experienced peers. I realised very quickly that the men and women who hold Jenolan’s stories were taught the same cycles by their peers, and that I was being given access to a unique oral history with a very immediate link to the past.

The story which intrigued me the most was that of Katie Webb, and her cave exploring sisters, long ago dubbed ‘The Cave Girls’.

This article was published in Blue Mountains Life (Vintage Press) in October-November 2010.

CAVE ART Possibly the earliest surviving image of the Grand Arch of Jenolan Caves, known in 1861 as Fish River Caves.
CAVE ART Possibly the earliest surviving image of the Grand Arch of Jenolan Caves, known in 1861 as Fish River Caves.

What Katie Did

The Legend of Katie Webb & Jenolan’s female explorers.

Of his visit to Katie’s Bower in Jenolan’s Left Imperial Cave during the 1880s, Samuel Cook wrote: “Descending 14 steps into the Bower there is a fountain full of lime-water, and a plate suitably inscribed conveys the information that Katie’s Bower was discovered on the 7th February, 1881, by Jeremiah Wilson (guide), C. Webb, H. Fulton, C. West, J. Bright, E. Webb, E. T. Webb, J. Thompson, W. H. Webb, E. Bowman, W. Thompson, J. M’Phillamy, R. Thompson, J. Webb, and S. Webb. The before-mentioned gentlemen were the first to enter the Bower after its discovery”.

Despite the placement given to Jeremiah Wilson, persistent legends credit the second name on the list – ‘C.Webb’ – with the discovery of the chamber.

This person was not a ‘before-mentioned gentleman’, but Catherine, or ‘Katie’ Webb.

For the 170 years that Jenolan has attracted tourists, there has been a hunger for guides to interpret their mysteries, and cave discovery tales rank amongst the most retold.

Years of tradition have made Jenolan’s guiding staff into the keepers of the Caves’ stories.

Rebecca Lewis has been a Jenolan guide since 2006, and has collected information about the first woman credited with the discovery of a Jenolan cave.

“This story is all oral history, and it varies depending on who you talk to,” Beck says.

“I believe Katie and her family were visiting the Left Imperial Cave (the original name of the Chifley) with Jeremiah Wilson, who had discovered the cave the year before. The group was admiring the beauty of the Lucinda Cave, named after Jeremiah’s wife. Jeremiah was about to lead the group out, but Katie, about 19 at the time, decreed that she did not wish to return the way they entered. Instead, she wished to continue down a large and steeply sloping passage that none had yet been down. Jeremiah, who was a curious man himself, decided to lower her down the passageway with a rope tied around her waist. With only a candle to light her way as she slid down the passage into the unknown, she found the largest chamber yet to be discovered in that area.”

Katie Webb was not the first female explorer at Jenolan. Thirty years before, legend tells of the caving exploits of Jane Falls.

“Everything we know about her is basically guesswork from piecing together the signatures she left behind in the caves,” Rebecca explains. “It was common practice for the visitors of her time to sign their names on the cave walls to prove they had been there, like leaving our names in a visitors’ book today”.

“The most talked-about signature of Jane is at a place called ‘Signature Rock’ in the Elder Cave (also referred to as ‘The Plughole’).

“The signature reads ‘J Falls 27th December 1854’,” Beck outlines.

“The interesting fact about this particular signature is that she did not sign her name ‘Jane’. She probably did this because she knew it might not remain on the rock if passing visitors realised it was a woman who wrote it. Writing ‘J. Falls’ leaves the assumption that the writer was a male. We know it is Jane’s signature because we have found her name in other caves and we can match dates and handwriting.”

One appearance of a ‘J. Falls’ signature has challenged the discovery of Jenolan’s popular Lucas Cave.

“A signature of hers remains in the original entrance of the Lucas Cave, known as the ‘Sole of the Boot’. It’s been sighted many times over the years, however, every time we mount an expedition to photograph it we cannot relocate it to do so!” Rebecca says.

According to some guides, the signature is dated 1858, predating the established discovery of the Lucas Cave by Nicholas Irwin and George Whiting by two years.

While researching for newspaper reports of the Lucas Cave’s discovery (which might clear up the mystery), Jenolan guide and historical researcher, David Hay, found that the originals in Sydney’s Mitchell Library have disappeared. “It’s almost as though someone pinched them,” he laughs.

Tantalising myths and very little evidence leaves us to explore the possibilities.

CAVE DISCOVERER Catherine 'Katie' Webb, the woman who discovered Jenolan's Chifley Cave in the 1880s.
CAVE DISCOVERER Rebecca Lewis as Catherine ‘Katie’ Webb, the woman who discovered Jenolan’s Chifley Cave in the 1880s.

“‘The Cave Girls’ is a name that was given to a group of women in an old photo and the name just kind of stuck!” Rebecca explains.

“The thing that we all find interesting is that they are all wearing men’s clothing! We don’t know for certain who any of the women are, but we believe Katie and her sister Selena are amongst them.

They must have been fairly influential women for their time not only to be wearing men’s clothing in the first place, but to also have a photo taken wearing them.”

Comparison with later photographs suggests Katie and Selena (known as Nellie) are the central figures seated on rocks, with their mother (also Selena) standing at the left.

Katie Webb’s father Edmund Webb accompanied his family to Jenolan on the day of Katie’s discovery – his name and those of Katie’s siblings Selena and Edmund Thomas Webb appeared on the plaque seen by Cook.

Webb was a prominent Bathurst businessman and politician, whose empire included the supply of clothing, footwear and millinery to the Central West. The uniform clothing of the three women at the top of the ‘The Cave Girls’ image might indicate they were supplied by Webb specifically for the purposes of cave exploration.

In her often humorous Letters from Samoa (1891-1895) Margaret Stevenson (mother of writer Robert Louis Stevenson) sheds light on how visiting female tourists were attired at Jenolan.

“We had to take off our good dresses and get the loan of dirty old clothes; Miss B- wore a pyjama suit, and made a very nice boy, but I absolutely declined to go to that length of juvenility. In consequence I was enveloped in a dreadful skirt that made me look like some disreputable old charwoman.”

Described as a “dedicated Wesleyan Methodist”, if Edmund Webb was anything like American Wesleyans, the rights of women would have been firmly entrenched in his family principles, enough for his daughter’s name to be forever linked with her discovery in the way Jane Falls’ may not have been.

The plaque observed by Cook in the 1880s is long gone, but a signature which may be Katie’s remains by the steep entranceway to her bower, reading ‘C. J. Webb’.

In what is now known as ‘Upper Katie’s Bower’, someone wrote ‘Katie’s Bower’ and the date matching the plaque. The original floor level below the writing was lowered in the 1920s to allow for a new exit from the cave. Allowing for this alteration, the writing would originally have been about the right height for a young woman to record her own name and the date of her discovery.

Jenolan guides’ oral histories vary on the approach Katie took from Lucinda’s Cave into the bower which still bears her name, with two possible routes.

One is the steep slope with a very deep chasm at the bottom (now followed by the stairs). The other is a hole below what is known as Lucinda’s Column, which requires a significant abseil.

The two dates recorded allow for the possibility that Katie’s discovery over more than one day’s exploration, and that both passageways were attempted.

And what did Katie do next?

Another name on the original plaque was ‘E’ or Ernest Bowman, the man Katie married just over a year after her discovery of Katie’s Bower. The two lived their married life in the Central West, and as Catherine Bowman, Katie was awarded an MBE in 1924 for “her many years of devoted service to the community”. In 1925 she and her daughter were presented to King George V at Buckingham Palace.

The next time a woman was credited with the discovery of a cave at Jenolan was almost 130 years after Katie.

“Deborah Johnson, a member of the Sydney University Speleological Society, discovered a cave in Jenolan’s Southern Limestone in January 2009,” Rebecca explains.

Within Jenolan’s Guides Office an honour board lists long serving guides back to Jeremiah Wilson. Both men and women are identified only by their first initial (the same as most signatures on cave walls), making it hard to identify the first female guides employed in the 1980s.

CAVE GIRLS 2
CAVE GUIDES Rebecca Lewis (top, middle) and a group of long-term female cave guides.

“It wasn’t until 2005 that the number of female and male employees reached equilibrium, with female staff undertaking all the same regular duties as male staff,” recalls Domino Houlbrook-Cove, who started as a guide in 1989 and is now manager of corporate, functions and events.

On occasion, visitors to Jenolan can still experience the courage of Katie Webb, played by Rebecca Lewis on a history tour.

“It’s so much fun! I get a great response from people who even today are amazed at what Katie did, especially for her time,” Beck enthuses. “People love stepping back in time to do a tour with someone from that era. I find I get asked more questions about the women cavers when I’m dressed as Katie than what I do when I’m guiding normally”.

“Jenolan has been a great place to work for a number of reasons. Mainly, though, it keeps you on your toes. It’s never like giving a speech where the words are there in front of you, you have to always be ready to answer any question that comes your way. It means you have to hold a huge store of information ranging from geology to history to everyday guiding and maintenance activities. You’re always learning and updating your information as a guide, not to mention ~the physical side of things.

“Of course the Cave Girls, whoever they were, would have all been great cavers, there is no doubt about that! Women make great cavers, and we have proof of that today.”

pluck-cover
BUY NOW

Thanks to Jenolan guides David Hay (cultural initiatives) and Keith Painter for historical information. Details about Catherine Bowman from ‘Written in Gold: The Story of Gulgong’ by Eileen Maxwell (1978).

© Michael Burge, all rights reserved.

This article appears in Michael’s eBook Pluck: Exploits of the single-minded