skimpies – Michmutters
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Australia

Roebuck Bay Hotel in the Kimberley on the market for the first time in decades

The Roebuck Bay Hotel is one of the Kimberley’s most well-known landmarks, with its Thursday night wet T-shirt competitions as popular among tourists as a sunset camel ride on Cable Beach.

The infamous watering hole has survived cyclones, fires, world wars, bankruptcies, economic recessions and a depression, and most recently a global pandemic.

Heritage Photo - The Roey
The Roebuck Bay Hotel was established in 1890 and was one of the first buildings in Broome.(Supplied)

Now, it is on the market for the first time since 1985 as the current owners, the Coppin family, test the waters after a busy post-COVID boom in business.

The iconic pub is believed to have been the first building in Broome with flushing toilets and one of the first to have electricity.

And it has played host to brawls between indentured pearlers and the gross murder of a senior police officer in 1912.

For a brief period in the 1950s, patrons could even get a haircut at the bar while they sipped on a middy in exchange for a beer in return.

A dash of sin and debauchery

Indeed, ‘The Roey’, as it is affectionately known, has had a colorful 132-year history, which published Peter Coppin admits has involved plenty of “sin and debauchery”.

“It hasn’t changed in a long time. We still try and allow people to have fun,” he said.

“If you’re not having fun, you may as well go home.”

Bill and Agnes Ward outside the front of the Roebuck Bay Hotel.
Bill and Agnes Ward were the proprietors of the Roebuck Bay Hotel from 1922–37. (Supplied: Broome Historical Society, Ward Collection)

The Roebuck Bay Hotel had the humblest of beginnings, built on a bush block that was bought at auction with a reserve price of just £20 sterling in 1883 on country belonging to the Yawuru people.

Edwin William Streeter, a pearl merchant of London, went on to open the establishment in 1890 after buying the block from James William Hope.

The new pub was made of little more than a few sheets of tin.

Beers for the pearlers

Streeter had identified a potentially lucrative business opportunity in supplying liquor to the hundreds of hard-working laborers servicing the then-thriving pearl shell industry.

Most of the workers had arrived in Broome from Japan, Malaysia and Manila, traveling thousands of kilometers to an alien landscape of bright red pindan and sparkling blue waters.

A close up of bar taps at the Roebuck Hotel.
The Roebuck Bay Hotel is considered a ‘local’s bar’ but it attracts visitors from all over Australia and the world. (ABC Kimberley: Jessica Hayes)

After days at sea, they would seek refuge in the bars and gambling schools which lined the road now known as Dampier Terrace.

“The pearlers would come ashore and relax during the neeps,” Broome Historic Society member Ron Johnston said.

“Broome was the capital of the pearl shell industry of the world, which up until the introduction of plastics was the predominant button [material].

Roebuck Hotel Trove
The Roebuck Bay Hotel has survived several devastating disasters including a fire in August, 1904. (The Daily News: Trove)

“Today, WA couldn’t do without royalties from the iron ore industry. In those early days it was pearl shell.”

The Roebuck was one of just two hotels in its first decade, but by the turn of the 20th century it was one of six.

“People love a beer and there was a quid in it so people built these little places for them,” Mr Johnston said.

“In the early days, pubs were probably just a couple of sheets of tin and a few poles, and people who sell grog.

“But those pubs have obviously disappeared.”

Today the Roey is the only original pearling-era pub that remains, with the others succumbing to the boom and bust waves of the local economy.

Locals enjoy a sunday session at the Roebuck Bay Hotel in the 1980s.
Locals enjoy a Sunday session at the Roebuck Bay Hotel in the 1980s.(Supplied: Broome Historical Society Collection)

A national treasure

The National Trust, one of Australia’s chief conservation organisations, describes the beloved local institution as “legendary” in a statement of significance.

“[The Roebuck Bay Hotel] has always been a social and cultural focal point in Chinatown,” the statement reads.

Its ownership has passed through the hands of successive proprietors many from faraway places with curious stories.

Most recently it has been owned and operated by the Coppin family, when Peter’s father Brian purchased the property in 1985.

Beer Closeup
Pearlers, locals and tourists have gathered for an ice cold beer for more than a century at the Roey.(ABC Kimberley: Jessica Hayes)

The younger Coppin, who grew up in and around the bar, describes the hotel as “the last piece of memorabilia which connects us to why Broome actually exists.”

“Pubs are probably the greatest place that captures living history,” Mr Coppin said.

“With every old pub being torn down or renovated to be something new and sterile you lose a piece of that history.

“But the history is not just in the bricks and mortar, it’s in the people, and it’s a time capsule of people new, old and everyone in between.

“You can go to museums, and you can see dummies, artifacts and replicas, but to walk into an old pub, that’s where you find real history.”

fun and scandal

The Coppins’ tenure has been characterized by equal parts fun and scandal including a ban on the wet T-shirt competition after a 16-year-old won the event in 2011.

The tradition was resumed two months later after its ‘immodesty license’ was reinstated.

It continues today, defining the #metoo era and changing social norms.

“Well, I always say it’s like an 80:20 rule, 80 per cent can’t believe it and have the greatest time and 20 per cent somehow can’t believe that it’s still going on and think it’s demeaning to women,” he said.

The Roebuck Bay Hotel before undergoing major improvements in the 1970s.
The Roebuck Bay Hotel before undergoing major improvements in the 1970s.(Supplied: Broome Historical Society, Jean Haynes Collection)

“Our biggest defenders of the wet T-shirt competition are actually women and most of them are in their 60s.”

Mr Coppin said the Roey had stayed true to some of its more sordid traditions while adding some new ones.

“We’ve still got skimpies. We’ve also had himpos or himpies,” he said.

“I don’t think we would have ever thought we’d have done a wet jockstrap, wet tradie or a wet drag queen competition but they’re now fairly prominent fixtures.

“You’ve got to try and keep true to your traditions and your heritage but at the same time you’ve got to try to change and roll with the times.”

Craig Godfrey sitting at the Roebuck Bay Hotel bar.
Broome local Craig Godfrey has been visiting the Roebuck Bay Hotel for 15 years.(ABC Kimberley: Jessica Hayes)

Camaraderie and longevity

If you ask the regulars who frequent the infamous Roebuck Bay Hotel what the secret to the hotel’s longevity is, many will struggle to put their finger on exactly what brings them back to the bar stool.

Broome resident Craig Godfrey has been frequenting the Roey for the past 15 years, which he describes as a proud locals bar.

“[I love] the camaraderie with mates that I’ve been drinking here for years with,” he said.

Mr Godfrey said he had “too many memories” from his time in the pub, including “a couple of shockers”.

“What about the bar manager running around the street naked out the front… the accountant that was naked down the street and the police brought him back and said, ‘I think he’s one of yours’.

“There used to be a lot of that sort of stuff going on.”

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Categories
Australia

Kalgoorlie’s skimpy barmaids featured in new photographic exhibition

A photographer has shed some light on Kalgoorlie-Boulder’s famous skimpy barmaids in a new exhibition, which was 18 months in the making as she documented the nightlife in pubs in the historic gold mining city.

Known as Mellen, a pseudonym of her real name, the photographer originally from Sydney shares her anonymity in common with skimpies who typically work under an alias.

The scantily clad barmaids arrived on Kalgoorlie-Boulder’s pub scene in the 1970s and have since become part of the hard-working, hard-drinking culture of mining towns across Western Australia.

While one Kalgoorlie pub briefly flirted with the concept of male skimpies, or so-called himpies in 2018, the job has predominantly been the domain of young women working on a fly-in fly-out basis.

Most wear lingerie or bikinis and sometimes go topless, but all of the skimpies pull beers and chat to patrons to keep the amber fluid flowing.

As Mellen explains, the idea for her skimpy exhibition was born when she was hired as the house photographer for Kalgoorlie’s aptly named Gold Bar nightclub where she befriended many of the skimpy barmaids.

“It just gave me a license to photograph the girls working … with their consent of course,” she says.

“Then I started going to some of the other venues once I started to get to know the girls, follow them around and take their photos… I hadn’t seen many pictures of them around.

“It’s behind closed doors yet such a widely known thing about Kalgoorlie that I thought, why not meet some of the girls and see if they’d be interested in having their portraits taken?”

A woman pasting a black and white poster of a girl in lingerie to the wall
Photographer Mellen set out to tell the stories of some of Kalgoorlie-Boulder’s skimpy barmaids.(Supplied: Mellen)

More than money

Her photography work has garnered her hundreds of followers on Instagram, where her handle @nophotosofthegirls reflects the signs that typically hang behind the bar of every pub with skimpies on duty.

More than a dozen skimpies gave their permission to be included in the photographic exhibition, underlining the trust Mellen built over more than a year.

Each image in the exhibit has a QR code linking to interviews she recorded with the skimpies that detail some of their personal experiences on the job.

“There’s a lot of different stories to how the women have gotten into this profession,” Mellen says.

“The common themes were the camaraderie between the women, and of course the money, but there’s a lot of jobs where you can make a lot of money, so it’s got to be more than that, especially these days.

“Maybe back in the 70s when women weren’t allowed to work in the mines, but these days there are so many other elements — the self-confidence was another common trait.”

Authentic portrayal of skimpies

The exhibition is a mixture of documentary photography and portraiture.

Mellen says she did not want to portray the industry as glamorous, but as authentically as possible.

“I try and get a balance of what is real, not too glam, but also a nice portrait,” she says.

A woman in denim cut off shorts holding a dog against a white background.
Photographer Mellen says she set out to tell the stories of the women as authentically as possible.(Supplied: Mellen)

“I love the one-on-one interaction of taking a formal portrait, but to be able to capture what’s going on is also a pretty amazing privilege.”

The project has also sparked Mellen’s interest in the history surrounding skimpies in a city that was home to Australia’s biggest gold rush in 1893.

“I have been looking at the history while doing the project, just to try and get a bit more depth of my understanding so I could represent it in a well-rounded way,” she says.

“I am from Sydney and we don’t have skimpies over there, so it was just something that stuck out as a bit unusual for so many venues to have skimpy barmaids here.

“I had been living here a year before I stepped foot in a pub … we have rough and tumble pubs in Sydney, but I didn’t find it [skimpies] jarring at all.”

The exhibition at Kalgoorlie’s Black Crow Studios is open until August 14.

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