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I like that story too. I have a photo copy of that 
publication here. My Dad picked it up from Norseman when he was there a few 
years back. 
Annie 
  ----- Original Message -----  
  
  
  Sent: Tuesday, November 30, 1999 6:53 
  PM 
  Subject: Re: Mr Sinclair entertains Bush 
  Rangers 
  
  There is another interesting story about a Sinclair gold 
  prospecting in Australia (as elsewhere).  It concerns the town of 
  "Norseman".
  During the year of 1894, a Laurence Sinclair returned to 
  Dundas from Coolgardie and was soon to learn that his brother, George, 
  together with John Allsop were prospecting in an area 14 miles to the 
  North.  With this in mind, Laurie (as he was called) left Dundas to 
  visit his brother George and John Allsop.
  Upon reaching George's camp, 
  Laurie tethered his horse to a tree for a well deserved rest. During the 
  night the horse became restless and pawed the ground.  The next 
  morning, when Laurie was attending to his horse's needs, he noticed that 
  the animal appeared to be lame and he immediately began to inspect the 
  horse's hooves to find the cause.
  It was soon apparent that a rich 
  specimen of gold bearing quartz was stuck in the animal's hoof.  Full 
  of excitement, Laurie told his brother of the find and they both agreed that a 
  rich gold bearing reef of quarrtz existed in close proximity to the area 
  the horse had pawed.
  After much labour of picking and shovelling the 
  ground around the pawed area, a rich quartz reef was located by the 
  brothers Sinclair and John Allsop.
  Laurie Sinclair originally came from 
  Shetland and he was proud to call himself a "Norse-man" - having named his 
  horse after the origins of the Clan Sinclair.  Laurie named the 
  new goldfield "Norseman" which is still the name of the town which sprang 
  up around the find.
  Laurie filed the First Reward Claim of the new 
  filed at 3 p.m. on the 13th day of August, 1894
  There is a 
  photograph of Laurie Sinclair and his horse, "Norseman" in a small 
  publication which was produced to commemorate the centenary of the town of 
  Norseman in 1994. Needless to say, the emblem of the town is a horse in an 
  acknowledgement of the part "Norseman" played in the founding of the town 
  but also in appreciation of all the other magnificent 'beasts of burden' 
  which allowed those early pioneers to tame the wilderness and to bring 
  prosperity to Australia.  
  Man (in his arrogance) should never 
  forget his debt to the horse.
  Niven 
Sinclair.
  
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