I remember Cyclone Tracy, it was Chrismas 1974, my step sister Marilyn lived up there and she was working at the Darwin Hospital when Tracy struck. Two weeks after Cyclone Tracy Marilyn and her husband decided like alot of others to move away from Darwin. Unfortunantly she did not make it back to Adelaide, the car they was driving collided with a Road Train, the car went off the road and rolled several times, she did not survive... R I P
@grantwalker485911 күн бұрын
I remember a young girl who was evacuated from Darwin coming to our school in Thornlie (just outside Perth) just after Tracy and apart from the clothes she had on her, she had a Teddy bear that was in an awful state. Turns out that was the only thing she had left after the cyclone. Didn’t mean much to me as a kid at the time, apart from the fact that it was something different. Nowadays, it’s seared into my memory and is one of my saddest memories.
@meredithpope33311 күн бұрын
That siren will always give me cold shivers up my spine and looking out and finding no trees. Seeing these pictures brings back the trauma of not knowing whether we would survive.
@prudencepineapple944811 күн бұрын
It was our Christmas tradition to spend it at our grandparent's holiday home at Avoca Beach near Gosford. I remember all the adults listening to the radio as this was breaking/unfolding event on the ABC. As the holiday home was built @ 1900 and kept in our family since then, it had no bathroom and more importantly to us kids, no TV at the house. It didn't have one. We had Avoca beach and the sea baths at the inlet to swim in. I looked forward to it each year, but not that year. I still have the daily newspaper coverage, as my mum was a hoarder of history.
@mindimoom914211 күн бұрын
This is one of the first news stories I remember watching on TV as a child. Also the Queensland floods that year.
@JohnWilliams-iw6oq11 күн бұрын
I've only ever seen a few natural disasters, no matter how good the cameraman you can never get the same feelings you get when you see the true scale of destruction in person. Trees shattered into match sticks for mile after mile or nothing but ashes for mile after mile. It lets us know just how impotent we truly are.
@avidutubewatcher10 күн бұрын
Throughout 1974 my mother as an Artist was commissioned by Major General Alan Stretton, at the time who ran the the evacuation and cleanup efforts at Darwin after Cyclone Tracy on Christmas Day 1974. He was head of the National Disasters Organisation and managed the evacuation of tens of thousands people in a week, including military aircraft, every airline in Australia assisted. Television telethons were run raising millions to assist people from Darwin, every government department at the Federal and State level assisted in the recovery and reconstruction of Darwin. What was the National Capital Development Commission (the organisation that designed and built Canberra), was put in charge of designing and red building Darwin. Later, in 1975, after a very busy year for Major General Stretton, he came back to our home and did a last sitting for his self portrait 🇦🇺🌲
@robdyer3311 күн бұрын
Remembering all the lives lost in this devastating event.
@lachlanjenkin165912 күн бұрын
Now it’s been 50 years since this tragedy happened and it’s happened again last year in Queensland rip to all those lives lost on Christmas Day 1974-2024 50 years later
@BarkingSpyda11 күн бұрын
As a kid, I remember the song, _'Santa never made it in to Darwin'._ It actually gives me _spine tingles_ hearing it now.
@lachlanjenkin165911 күн бұрын
@@BarkingSpyda especially after the storm came back last year and devastated Queensland
@carlwhiston867211 күн бұрын
“A big wind came and blew the town away”🎼
@jesusislukeskywalker429411 күн бұрын
66 people lost their lives 😳 ..... we shall remember them 🙏
@BRUMMS11 күн бұрын
4:16 is a great example of Darwin humor having lived there.
@danrobinson57212 күн бұрын
Great 👍 video
@H3avyHaul3r11 күн бұрын
possibly the first known footage of the aftermath of a cat5 in australia…..
@steveskrobot949611 күн бұрын
Bloody horrifying Christmas day for those poor people
@martincreely630611 күн бұрын
Yeah, had a mate stationed in the RAAF up there at the time..Spent the night in his bath with a mattress over his head and a bottle of Jack for company..Fing nightmares for years afterwards..
@hoilst26511 күн бұрын
My mum went through this. I'll show her tonight.
@johnphillips51911 күн бұрын
I remember my sister flew into Darwin Xmas eve with her two little kids, We put them back on the first RAAF Hercules' C130 available, She is still pissed off to this day that she never got to see Darwin : (
@sarah-janegalipo399511 күн бұрын
This was the year I was born. I live in Perth. Growing up we were told year after year. What a disaster. 😢
@poeterritory11 күн бұрын
Santa never made it into Darwin.
@michaelhatherly650811 күн бұрын
Great History - Shared/Scheduled
@territorygal11 күн бұрын
Gotta say, the dramatic background music over real footage of such devastation and loss just comes off as super inappropriate in hindsight. :/ I know it was a standard part of filmmaking at the time. I lived many years in the Top End; Tracy was before my time, but I've known many survivors, and the trauma of that night continues to this day. If there's a bright side, it's that we learned a lot of lessons with regards to construction and safety... the city today looks far different from the one in the film, and IMHO much better prepared for the next inevitable "big one".
@LeftIsBest00111 күн бұрын
They learned a harsh lesson about the importance of proper building codes and good safe construction.