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Tuesday 28 February 2023

A Haunting at the Mount Remarkable Hotel – Part IV - Station Hand Suicide.

 A Haunting at the Mount Remarkable Hotel 

– Part IV - 

Station Hand Suicide.

 


On 12 November 1908, Martin Jacobson was doing his rounds as an ostler at about 6am for Moran’s Hotel, Melrose, when he came across August Fix. Fix was an elderly local resident who worked for the Willowie Pastoral Company. Fix was in an outside room of the hotel that Jacobson had neglected to lock. Fix was very drunk, but not disturbing anyone, so Jacobson let him be and got on with his job.
Later that evening, at 8am, Jacobson returned to check on Fix. He found the man dead. Fix had shot himself through the right temple with a small-bore rifle.

Mounted Constable Siggins deposed during the inquest that he had been summoned to the hotel at 9:20am. Siggins examined the crime scene and waited for Coroner Lewis George to arrive.[1]

Dr Hann gave medical evidence that there was,

a small bullet wound in the right temple. Edges of the wound were scorched. The course of the bullet seemed to travel through the base of the brain. There was no wound of exit, but bleeding from the left cut and from the nose and mouth. In his opinion, a cartridge of the size produced would be sufficient to make the wound and to cause death. It was quite possible for the deceased to have fired the rifle according to the direction of the wound.[2]

Mr H. M Mair, manager of the Mount Remarkable Station deposed that Fix had not worked since October 31st. He had taken to drinking heavily and had a wife living in Nuriootpa, to whom Fix had sent a telegram the morning of his suicide. In another report, it is stated Fix’s wife lived in Angaston.[3]

After a short retirement the jury found:

We are unanimously of opinion that the deceased met his death by a bullet wound in the head, fired, from a rifle by his own hand while in a fit of temporary insanity.[4]



Next week: A Haunting at the Mount Remarkable Hotel – Part V – Like Father, Like Son.


Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2023



[1] 'SUICIDE AT MELROSE.', The Advertiser, (16 November 1908), p. 6.
[2] 'THE COUNTRY.', The Register, (16 November 1908), p. 6.
[3] 'SUPPOSED SUICIDE.', The Express and Telegraph, (13 November 1908), p. 4.
[4] Ibid.

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