G’day Pheno, welcome to the puzzle!
There was a (NSW) Deserted Wives and Children Act 1901-1964, and the Children’s Court (of NSW) was established in 1905 with courts set up in Sydney, Newcastle, Parramatta, Burwood and Broken Hill.
An educated guess: Perhaps, although there were no children involved in Effie and Donald’s case, it came under the jurisdiction of the 1901 Act, so was tried in the Children’s Court. I doubt there would have been a dedicated court set up in Inverell, but perhaps there was a travelling Special Magistrate and the next convenient sitting was to be in Inverell. (In those days I think Inverell as a country centre loomed much larger than it does today.)
Thanks, Pheno.
JM, sorry to duplicate some of your advice. You learn so many things you never thought you’d be interested in, stimulated by the thrill of the chase!
To other Rootschatters following this case, Pheno also PM’d me some personal details of a relative of theirs, regarding army paybooks and why they could be carrying one around many years after leaving the army (identity proof/medical record etc). Thanks again, Pheno.
I think the verbal history in this case is a two-edged sword. You don’t know what parts of remembered detail are facts and what parts are red herrings. An example is the reference to the Riverina. All documentary evidence suggests he moved around the north-west of NSW (Wauchope/Inverell).
My current thoughts/speculation (!) are, considering all the evidence that’s come to light so far:
Donald either accidentally or suicidally drowned in a river near Inverell.
That a badly deteriorated body was found.
That an army pay book was found either in clothes on the body or nearby.
That the body was officially not identified but the family were informed that they’d also found Donald’s pay book pay book and that it could be him.
That someone in the family, unfamiliar with Inverell, heard the words “river near Inverell” but reinterpreted this as “in the Riverina”.
Cheers, Peter