AustLit logo

AustLit

Tom Cole Tom Cole i(A152605 works by)
Born: Established: 1906
c
England,
c
c
United Kingdom (UK),
c
Western Europe, Europe,
; Died: Ceased: 1995
Gender: Male
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Works By

Preview all
1 Tom Cole Tom Cole , 1995 single work correspondence
— Appears in: With Fond Regards : Private Lives through Letters 1995; (p. 92-97)
1 y separately published work icon The Last Paradise Tom Cole , Pymble : Angus and Robertson , 1993 Z1922352 1993 single work autobiography 'Tom Cole hunted crocodiles and buffalo, was a horse-breaker, brumby runner and drover, owned and managed cattle stations and a coffee plantation.

The Last Paradise is the sequel to Tom Cole′s bestselling autobiography Hell West and Crooked and recounts his story of thirty years in New Guinea amongst "crocodiles, cannibals and coffee".

Operating as the first professional crocodile shooter in New Guinea, Tom Cole risked life and limb hunting from frail canoes in wild and sometimes unexplored country, working with everyone from cannibals to missionaries to government officials, and the larger-than-life characters still drifting around the Pacific after the war.' (Publisher's blurb)
1 2 y separately published work icon Hell West and Crooked : A Living Legend, a Real-Life Crocodile Dundee Tom Cole , Sydney : Collins , 1988 Z1922348 1988 single work autobiography 'Hell West and Crooked is the autobiographical account of a young Englishman's life in the Outback during the 1920s and 1930s, from his days as a drover and stationhand in the toughest country in Australia to his experiences as a buffalo shooter and crocodile hunter in the Northern Territory before the war.' (Publisher's blurb)
1 form y separately published work icon Something of the Times Tom Cole , ( dir. Kim McKenzie ) 1985 9061520 1985 single work film/TV

'Using a wealth of archival photographs, this documentary reconstructs the life of buffalo hunters in the remote wetlands of the Northern Territory in the 1930s – both the white hunters and the Aboriginal labour that supported their operations.'

'Tom Cole was one of the hunters, now retired in Sydney. With the filmmakers, he visits the sites of hunting camps that he had built before the war in what is now Kakadu National Park. He reminisces on the old buffalo trade and meets some of the Aboriginal men and women who still live in the area who worked for him and on whom he was dependent.'

'He also visits Victoria Settlement (Port Essington): one of “the most heroic and hopeless” ventures in the history of the British Empire, established in the 1830s, now in ruins, where buffalo were first introduced.'

'For the film, Tom and his former Aboriginal team build a new camp in the way they did in the 1930s, and demonstrate the skinning of buffalos, the washing of the hides, and salting and drying.'

'Hunting was on horse-back in those days, unlike the present-day hunting by helicopter, and “Yellow Charlie” Whittaker was one of the great horse-back hunters. With other veterans, he comments on the tough life of the camps, when conditions were extremely rough and when they were often paid with food, tobacco and other commodities.'

'The hunters remember the wartime bombing of Darwin and the explosion in buffalo numbers when hunting was abandoned during the war. Nowadays, the buffalo is being eradicated from Kakadu, and rangers such as Dave Lindner, Environmental Manager for the Gagudju Association of traditional owners, explain the modern methods of control.' (Source: Ronin Films website)

X