Broken Hill, a town born from the sweat of explorers and the grit of miners, carries a history that stretches back to 1844. It was then that Charles Sturt, a British explorer, set foot in the region. Sturt wasn’t alone on this journey; he had the wisdom of an Indigenous teenager named Topar from Menindee. Topar led him along Stephens Creek, a place the locals knew well. They pressed on together, and as they reached the Barrier Range, Sturt realized something crucial. The mountains in front of him weren’t just any mountains—they were a barrier, one that blocked his path to an inland sea he sought. And so, he named them the Barrier Range.
In the years that followed, the area drew the attention of settlers. Pastoralists began to move in during the 1850s, bringing their flocks and livelihoods with them. Their journey wasn’t easy, but the Darling River provided a reliable trade route, a lifeline connecting them to the outside world.
Then, in 1883, a man named Charles Rasp changed everything. He wasn’t an explorer or a soldier. He was a boundary rider, patrolling the fences of Mount Gipps Station, a remote patch of land. One day, while out on his patrol, Rasp noticed something curious in the rocks. He thought it might be tin. But he was wrong. It was much more valuable than that—silver and lead, glittering beneath the sun.
Rasp didn’t keep this discovery to himself. He gathered a group of six others, and together they formed the Syndicate of Seven. This group would go on to establish the Broken Hill Proprietary Company, known to the world today as BHP. The orebody they had uncovered was vast, the richest of its kind anywhere. By 1885, the small venture had grown into something huge. BHP became a giant in the mining world, and Broken Hill became the heart of it all.
Yet, by 1915, the ore reserves began to dwindle. BHP shifted its focus to steel production, and by 1939, the mining operations under BHP had stopped altogether. But mining didn’t die with BHP. Other companies continued to dig into the ground, and the mining legacy endured.
This is the backdrop of Broken Hill’s history, but it’s only part of the town’s story. The people of Broken Hill—miners, explorers, and everyday folk—wove their lives into this place. One of those people was an old miner named Tom Barrett. He didn’t discover silver or lead, but he found something just as valuable.
Tom arrived in Broken Hill long after the Syndicate of Seven had made their mark. He came from the coast, seeking work like so many others. The mines were his destination, but he soon realized that life underground wasn’t for him. The dust, the heat, the confinement—it all wore on him. So, Tom left the mines and opened a small shop on Argent Street. He sold tools to the miners and shared stories of his days in the pits.
One hot summer afternoon, an old friend from the mines, Jack, came by the shop. Jack had a look of frustration on his face, his brow furrowed from years of labor.
“Tom, I’m thinking of leaving the mines,” Jack said, slumping into a chair. “My back’s giving out, and the work’s getting tougher.”
Tom nodded. He understood. “It’s no easy life down there. But what will you do?”
Jack shrugged. “Don’t know. But I’ve had enough of being underground.”
Tom leaned back in his chair and thought for a moment. Then he spoke, his voice calm and steady. “You’ve spent your life digging into the earth, Jack. Maybe it’s time you did something different. Something above ground.”
Jack looked at him, puzzled. “What do you mean?”
“Think about it. The earth down there has given us all we have. Silver, lead, wealth. But it’s also taken a lot from us—our health, our time, even some of our mates. Maybe it’s time we gave something back.”
Jack raised an eyebrow. “And how do you suppose we do that?”
Tom smiled. “We plant something.”
The idea seemed odd at first, planting trees in the hard soil of Broken Hill. But Tom believed it was what the town needed. He wasn’t wealthy like Rasp, and he didn’t have grand ambitions of changing the world. But he could change the street he lived on. So, Tom started small. He cleared a patch of land behind his shop and began planting trees. Eucalyptus, mulga, anything that could survive the harsh conditions.
People thought he was wasting his time. “Nothing grows here, Tom,” they said.
But Tom didn’t listen. He watered the trees every day, even when water was scarce. Jack helped him, as did a few other miners who had also left the pits. Slowly, the trees began to grow, their roots digging deep into the soil, just as the miners had once dug deep for silver.
One day, a young boy named Sam walked by Tom’s shop. He watched Tom work the soil, sweat dripping from his brow.
“Why are you planting those trees?” Sam asked.
Tom wiped his hands on his pants and looked at the boy. “Because this town needs something that lasts. The silver will run out, but these trees—they’ll keep growing long after we’re gone.”
Sam didn’t quite understand, but he nodded and ran off to tell his friends.
Years passed, and Tom’s trees grew tall. They provided shade for the workers who walked by on their way to the mines. They cooled the street, offering a small reprieve from the scorching sun. And in time, people stopped doubting Tom’s efforts.
When Tom passed away, the townsfolk gathered by his trees to say their goodbyes. Jack was there, standing under the shade of the eucalyptus, remembering the day Tom had suggested they give something back.
“He was right,” Jack said quietly, speaking to no one in particular. “These trees—they’ll outlast the mines.”
And they did.
Tom Barrett never became famous like Charles Sturt or Charles Rasp. His name didn’t appear in history books. But his trees still stand today, a quiet reminder of the man who believed that Broken Hill’s future lay not in what they took from the earth, but in what they gave back to it.