A Jackaroo is a young man working on a sheep or cattle station, to gain practical experience in the skills needed to become an owner, overseer, manager, etc.[1] The word originated in Queensland, Australia in the Nineteenth Century and is still in use in Australia and New Zealand in the twenty-first century. Its origins are unclear, although it is firmly rooted in Australian English, Australian culture and in the traditions of the Australian Stockmen.
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The word 'jackaroo', also formerly spelled 'jackeroo', has been used in Australia since at least the middle of the nineteenth century and passed from there into common usage in New Zealand. Its use in both countries continued into the 21st century. The origin of the word is obscure and probably unknowable, but its first documented use was in Queensland. Several possibilities have been put forward:
The word 'jillaroo' for a female landworker was coined in the 1939-45 War[12] and persisted into the 21st century. During the war it was necessary for women to take on all the occupations followed traditionally only by men. Jillaroos were the female equivalent of jackeroos. Jack and Jill was a widely known children's nursery rhyme at that time and suggests the derivation of Jillaroo from Jackaroo.
An early reference to Jackaroos can be found in Tibb's popular song book, published between 1800 and 1899.[13] This book[14] begins by describing itself as: "Containing the latest hits on Busy in town, Australia's carsman, The Chinese and federation, Squatters' defeat, Australia's happy land, The Jackaroo, &c., &c.,"
In 1878 ‘Ironbark’ stated "Young gentlemen getting their ‘colonial experience’ in the bush are called ‘jackeroos’ by the station-hands. The term is seldom heard except in the remote 'back-blocks' of the interior."[15]
In 1933, A.J. Cotton stated "Today the Arbitration Court (Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration)[2] says that a jackeroo must be paid 25/- [shillings] per week. If an ordinary jackeroo paid the station 25 shillings per week for the first twelve months, he would not compensate them for the damage he does (just through want of experience), no matter how willing he may be. It just happens that way, and all the Arbitration Courts, the curse of Australia, won't alter it."[16]
Cotton was a self-made man and landowner (at Hidden Vale), who had left home at 14 to become a seaman. Later he became a member of the Queensland Club and included a thank you letter from the Governor of Queensland, John Goodwin, in the introduction to his own autobiography[17]
Bill Harney states[18] that there was no division of rank in the outlying camps, "all ate around the same fire and slept in the open. But at the head-station a change came over all this. The social strata of station life, reading from top to bottom, was bosses, jackaroos, men and blacks. This was a carry-over from the early days, when a rigid caste system ruled the land."[19]
This was most clearly evident in the segregated eating arrangements, "The boss and the jackaroos ate meals in the 'big' or 'government' house. [...] The men - that is, the stockmen, teamsters, blacksmiths, etc. - ate their tucker in the kitchen and slept in the huts, while the Aborigines were given a hand-out from the door of the kitchen and ate it on the woodheap [firewood]."
"And strangely enough, this division of caste had caste bells which called us to our meals - a tinkling bell for government house, a horse bell for the kitchen men, and a triangle for the blacks on the wood-heaps." ... "In keeping with this system, the bush towns maintained a social tradition of coffee rooms for the gentry and dining rooms for the workers."
By 1936 Vigars[20] said "A jackeroo may be called upon to do all manner of work on a station, such as clerical work, boundary riding, mustering sheep and cattle, fencing [repairing fences], and generally any work there may be about the place, so that he not only needs a fair education, but intelligence and adaptability". Vigars continues, "A jackeroo is a title signifying a youth under training for the pastoral profession, and corresponding to the midshipman on a warship - an apprentice in the Mercantile Marine Service - or in a commercial house - an articled clerk in a solicitor's office, and so on."[21]
The traditional method for training young men for practical occupations had been the apprenticeship, and this began to be replaced by programs of formal schooling. The Jackaroo, as a form of apprenticeship, followed the trend.
[1975] - Michael Thornton wrote a small book[22] hoping to contribute "to the memories of what might well become a dying avenue of Australian tradition".
Dissatisfaction with the existing practices began to be expressed:
[1978] - "Jackaroos are, or were, sweated labour. The legend is that they are social equals with the station owners, and are virtually treated as belonging to the family. Because of this, they receive only about half the pay of a station hand, and are liable for duty at any time."[23]
Most jillaroos returned to the cities after the 1939-45 War ended. But during the '70s, as a consequence of feminist thinking, a new source of jillaroos began to appear. Susan Cottam,[24] an English woman, described her experiences in Western Queensland from 3 March 1966 to 3 March 1968, in the form of a journal.
Dubbo and Kimberley Technical and further education (TAFE) centres provides a certificate course of practical experiences for people who want to work as jackaroos or jillaroos on rural properties. The course covers practical aspects of farm work at an introductory level.[25][26]
The jackaroo and jillaroo tradition was still active in 2010, with some training provided in dude ranches,[27] where some students go on to paid positions on "stations".