Dictionary Definition
swagman n : an itinerant Australian laborer who
carries his personal belongings in a bundle as he travels around in
search of work [syn: swagger, swaggie]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
swagmanRelated terms
Extensive Definition
A swagman is an old Australian term
describing an underclass of transient temporary workers, who
travelled by foot from farm to farm carrying the traditional
swag. Also characteristic
of swagman attire was a hat strung with
corks to ward off flies.
Particularly during the Depression of the
1890s and the
Great
Depression of the 1930s, unemployed men
travelled the rural areas of Australia on foot, their few meagre
possessions rolled up and carried in their swag. Typically, they
would seek work in farms and towns they travelled through, and in
many cases the farmers, if no permanent work was available, would
provide food and shelter in return for some menial task.
History
Before motor transport became common, the Australian wool industry was heavily dependent on itinerant shearers who carried their swags from farm to farm (called "sheep stations" in Australia), but would not in general have taken kindly to being called "swagmen." Outside of the shearing season their existence was frugal, and this possibly explains the tradition (of past years) of sheep stations in particular providing enough food to last until the next station even when no work was available.A romanticised figure, the swagman is famously
referred to in the song "Waltzing
Matilda," by Banjo
Paterson, which tells of a swagman who turns to stealing a
sheep from the local squatter. Yet the song wasn't
originally about swagmen: before Banjo Paterson rewrote the song,
it was actually a traditional bush song.
Early accounts of swagmen are from the Australian
gold rush days of the 1850s when the population increased
dramatically. The economic depressions of the 1860s and 1890s saw
an increase in these itinerant workers. During these periods it was
seen as 'mobilising the workforce'. At one point it was rumoured
that a "Matilda Waltzers' Union" had been formed to give
representation to swagmen at the Federation
of Australia in 1901.
During the early years of the 1900s the
introduction of the pension and the dole reduced the numbers of
swagmen to those who preferred the free lifestyle. During World War
One many were called up for duty and fought at Gallipoli
as
ANZACs. The song
And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda tells the story of a
swagman who fought at Gallipoli.
The numbers of swagmen have declined over the
20th century but still rising in times of economic depression.
Although some say they were still common in some areas up to the
late 1970s, however today, it is rare to find the type of character
that will take on the challenges of the lifestyle. There is little
doubt that the humble swagman will remain a romantic icon of
Australian history and folklore.
Lifestyle
The swagman's lifestyle would have been a
challenging one. Often they would have been victims of circumstance
who had found themselves homeless but there were certainly those
who were 'rovers' by choice.
Their circumstances would have included a variety
of backgrounds from; European and Asian migrants, indigenous
people, and ranged from teenagers to the elderly. They would have
sometimes been scoundrels on the run from police but we'd like to
believe that most were characters that wandered the bush telling
yarns of the places they'd been and things they'd done. It would
have been hard to find a 'swaggie' without a tendency to exaggerate
for effect. Other swagmen would have been loners who preferred to
keep to themselves. Some would have been alcoholics.
Some periods would have made it common to see
them in and around urban areas looking for work or a handout. The
most common descriptions are from the period when the country was
'riding on the sheep's back'. At this time rovers were offered
rations at police stations as an early form of the dole payment.
They roamed the countryside finding work as sheep shearers or as
farm hands. Not all were hard workers. There are reports of swagmen
arriving at the homestead at sundown when it was too late to work,
taking in a meal and disappearing before work started the next
morning. For these antics they coined the name 'sundowners'.
Most existed with few possessions as they were
limited by what they could carry. Generally they had a swag (canvas
bedroll), a tucker bag (bag for carrying food) and some cooking
implements which may have included a billy can (tea pot or stewing
pot). They carried flour for making damper and sometimes some meat
for a stew. They travelled with fellow 'swaggies' for periods,
walking where they had to go, hitch hiking or stowing aboard cargo
trains to get around. They slept on the ground next to a campfire,
in hollowed out trees or under bridges. It would have been a
challenging lifestyle in any period of history, avoiding snakes,
evading bushfires and getting lost.
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Arab,
Bowery bum, beach bum, beachcomber, beggar, beggarly fellow, blighter, bo, budmash, bum, bummer, caitiff, derelict, devil, dogie, drifter, drunkard, fence, floater, gamin, gamine, good-for-naught,
good-for-nothing, guttersnipe, hobo, homeless waif, human wreck,
idler, landloper, lazzarone, loafer, losel, lowlife, mauvais sujet, mean
wretch, mucker, mudlark, no-good, pauvre diable,
piker, pilgarlic, poor creature, poor
devil, ragamuffin,
ragman, ragpicker, receiver, roadster, rounder, sad case, sad sack,
shack, ski bum, skid-row
bum, stiff, stray, street Arab, street urchin,
sundowner, surf bum,
swagsman, tatterdemalion, tennis
bum, tramp, traveler, truant, turnpiker, urchin, vag, vagabond, vagrant, vaurien, waif, waifs and strays, wastrel, worthless fellow,
wretch