History Out There

Discovering history out there everywhere you go | Harold Peacock | Author | Historian | Detectorist

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Category: Ghosts

September 26, 2021May 7, 2022History Out There

Metal detecting unearths a gruesome connection

April 11, 2021April 11, 2021History Out There

Family with bushrangers, hand grenades and Netflix

February 10, 2019February 10, 2019History Out There

Sherlock’s pocket watch mystery

August 17, 2018January 10, 2021History Out There

This Tommy Dodd has seen it all

February 3, 2018July 30, 2020History Out There

Why ghostly memories are flooding back

January 1, 2018January 13, 2018History Out There

The bowling ghost that no one was expecting

January 26, 2017January 21, 2024History Out There

Captain Phillip’s 230th Australia Day

January 4, 2016August 2, 2019History Out There

The Colleen Bawn

September 25, 2015November 25, 2019History Out There

Ipswich visitation

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The first major sporting travesty in Queensland happened in 1865 and it changed the course of the colony’s sports history. Please follow the link on my profile for the story, "The Foden Affair." In 1866 the constable’s wife was a key witness in great fowl affair. Read, hear, like, share and follow the full and fowl details via the link on my profile and the story, "The Dalby Fowl Affair." This week I ventured out to the Western Australian wheat belt to scramble to see the rock art tens of thousands of years old in Mulka’s Cave. The art was beautiful. In contrast, the dreamtime story was an awful warning of inbreeding, child murder and cannibalism. This week I ventured out to the Western Australian wheat belt to scramble to see the rock art tens of thousands of years old in Mulka’s Cave. The art was beautiful. In contrast, the dreamtime story was an awful warning of inbreeding, child murder and cannibalism. In 1851 this cricketer arrived in Moreton Bay with the swagger of a man convinced history would remember him. Read, like, share, and follow the story of the first 100 scored in Queensland via the link on my profile, "Jack Slack and the Phantom Hundred." This week I went face-to-face with Dutch explorer Willem de Vlamingh who in 1697 was 
In the 1860s there was a man who made it his business to keep convicts out of gaol. Please follow the link on my profile for the story, "The Convict Postman Who Delivered Freedom." Corrigin citizens in Western Australia's wheat belt love their utes, dogs, and world records. I'm here to pay homage to their dogs in utes as well as their amaxing dog cemetery. It's a magical place. I've come to the historic 1831 town of York in the West Australian wheat belt, and the big event today is the annual motorbike festival!
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