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Jack
O’Hagan who went on to become Australia’s most prolific song-writer for over
four decades was born in 1898 at Fitzroy, the son of Pat O’Hagan, a
hotelkeeper and Alice née Quinlan. Educated at St. Patrick’s and
later Xavier College, O’Hagan began his musical career as a song plugger at
“Allan’s Music Store” in Melbourne where he played sheet music on the piano
to customers. One day, a fine English operatic star noticed a copy of “Along
the Road to Gundagai” (1922) and asked for it to be performed then said
“That song will make you famous!”.
“There’s a
track winding back
To an
old-fashioned shack,
Along the
road to Gundagai;
Where the
blue gums are growing,
And the
Murrumbidgee’s flowing
Beneath
that sunny sky,
Where my
Daddy and Mummy are waiting for me
And the
pals of my childhood once more I will see;
Then no
more will I roam,
When I’m
heading straight for home
Along the
road to Gundagai”.
A distinctly
sentimental Australian melody, the song was first performed by Peter Dawson
in 1924 and recorded in London before selling some 40,000 to 50,000 copies
in the first three months. But O’Hagan wasn’t what contemporaries would
describe as a “one hit wonder”; during his career that spanned from 1916 to
1961 he wrote over 600 songs with more than 200 published many of which are
still performed in distant countries. His songs were proudly Australian
about Australian people and places, many of which featured famous
identities: “Kingsford Smith (Aussie is proud of you)” (1928), “Our
Don Bradman” (1930), and “Our Marjorie (Jackson)”
(1952). Other classics include "Where the dog sits on the tuckerbox
(five miles from Gundagai)” (1938) “Ginger Meggs” (1948), “Things
is crook, in Tallarook” (1952), the war-time hits “When a boy from
Alabama meets a girl from Gundagai” (1942) (“That one came out when the
streets of Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane were packed with American troops.
It couldn’t miss”.) and “Little ships will sail again” (1943); and “Josie
and me” (1929) dedicated to his wife Josephine née Weichard (d
1983), the daughter of a musician. Recalling his most celebrated song in
1974, O’Hagan revealed “Back in those days, the early 20s, people weren’t
interested in songs about Australia. So I called one of my songs ‘Down
Carolina Way’ and took it to Hugh D. McIntosh, the great entrepreneur of
the day, Very colourful he was - used terrible language. He looked at
‘Down Carolina Way’ and exploded. ‘Why don’t you write a blank, blank,
blank Australian song?’ So I went away and wrote ‘Along the Road to
Gundagai’; as guest of honour at Gundagai’s centenary celebrations in
1956 O’Hagan was to confess it was his first visit to the town. With the
advent of television O’Hagan’s unashamedly nostalgic songs were considered
outdated. A keen golfer and ardent supporter of St. Kilda Football club,
O’Hagan was awarded the O.B.E in 1973. He died on 15 July 1987 aged 88
years old and was interred in the Brighton General Cemetery after a service
at the local St. Finbar’s Catholic Church. |

Monumental Headstone (enlarge
image) |