Polish lady, Pela Behrendt came to Ewlyamartup with her husband and young daughter in 1950 from the Northam Migrant camp when her husband got a two-year contract to work on the railway. Luckily for us Pela was interviewed about her experiences in the 1990s and that interview has been digitalized by SLWA1 .

Pela found Australia in the 1950s to be a primitive place to live. Moving to Ewlyamartup, a siding on the Nyabing Katanning train line, probably reinforced that impression. The local farmers used to load their produce on the train at Ewlyamartup for transportation to Katanning and beyond.
Accommodation for Pela’s family and the other eastern European families living there consisted of tents with their own kitchen block. There was no electricity or refrigerators and drinking water was delivered once a week from Katanning. Kerosine lamps were used for lighting with heating provided by kerosine heaters.
Katanning was 11 miles away. If Pela needed to go into town, she caught a ride on the school bus that passed by. Her husband used to ride a push bike into town. One of things he did in Katanning was deposit their savings into the bank. Pela was a good manager of money. She was also very resourceful. As she had brought her
sewing machine from Europe, she bartered her sewing skills for fresh produce for her family. As a result, Pela rarely needed to buy milk, eggs, vegetables, or fruit and could give her husband £5 each Friday to bank, as she only needed £2 pounds, (out of his weekly salary of £7) to live on.
In 1951 Pela’s family moved away from Ewlyamartup to another railway siding, Elleker, which was closer to Albany. A few years later they were able to buy a parcel of land in Albany and and eventually built a house there. Their time in Ewlyamartup was a stepping stone for them to achieve their Australian dream.

A note from the author, Josie Milwood:
After a recent trip to Lake Ewlyamartup, where I discovered that a railway settlement with a school had previously existed by the lake, I went searching to see what I could find out about Ewlyamartup. Ewlyamartup was one of the first settled districts out of Katanning with an ambitious town plan drawn up in the 1890s. Prior to that Ewlyamartup was a significant place for the local Indigenous people, a fact that has only been acknowledged in recent years when interpretive signage has been placed near the restored lake. As the Ewlyamartup area was settled by farmers there was a need for a school. The first school opened in 1905 but closed in 1908. It reopened in 1912 and remained open until the end of 19432.
Sources
- State Library of Western Australia, 1996. Interview with Pelagia Behrendt. Sound Recording https://encore.slwa.wa.gov.au/iii/encore/record/C_Rb1756184_Sewlyamartup ↩︎
- Lost Katanning, 2021. Ewlyamartup School. https://www.lostkatanning.com/ewlyamartup-school/. Accessed 30 Oct 2023 ↩︎