On Monday, March 3, 1913 the Minister of Public Works, William Edgar; the Honorary Minister, James Cameron; Carlo Catani, chief engineer of the Public Works Department and George Kermode, the assistant engineer, set off for East Gippsland in the State motorcar. They were destined for Mallacoota as -
For a considerable period there has been an agitation that the Department of Public Works should construct a permanent entrance to Mallacoota Inlet at an estimated cost of £60,000. Mr C. Catani, chief engineer for the Department, expressed the opinion that if a harbor were made at Gabo Island, and a connecting causeway constructed with the mainland, the same purpose would be served, while the cost of maintenance, through the liability to silting up of the Mallacoota Inlet would be considerably less. A departmental surveyor has been at work for some time surveying a tram route between Mallacoota and Gabo. Mr Edgar, Minister for Public Works; Mr Catani, and another Public Works official are leaving to-day for Mallacoota to make a complete inspection (1).
The next day, Tuesday, they arrived in Orbost at 6.45pm. They inspected an island which had formed in the centre of the Snowy River, which impeded water flow, and later that evening a deputation of councillors waited upon the Ministry at the municipal chambers with a view to getting a new bridge erected over the Snowy River at Orbost, also Bridges over Tonghi Creek and Delegate River and further road works on the Genoa-road (2). The official party left Orbost on Wednesday for Mallacoota, a distance of 145 km. The tour, however, was attended by several unexpected incidents which have interfered considerably with the programme of the trip (3).
Unfortunately the car broke down at a way-back place called Cabbage Tree, as The Argus reported (4). They then continued on horseback to Mallacoota, about 120 km, which seems to me to be an extraordinary thing to do, but clearly at the time not beyond the endurance of Ministers of the Crown and Public Servants.
There was much interest in the papers about their situation and The Herald took a light-hearted view -
Ministers complain of the stress of work, but excessive work is often brought about by want of thinking beforehand, and so a Minister is much occupied by undoing the work of his predecessor. Mr Edgar at Mallacoota has a fine opportunity for a quiet think, "on man, on nature, and on human life," including the public works of his department. It is rather a pity that Ministers do not get marooned regularly. There ought indeed to be an official island to which Ministers could go every year, for a month or so deprived of all official papers. Its library should consist of the Bible, Shakespeare, one or two more of "the hundred best books." A stock of fowling pieces, fishing rods, axes, a boat or two, and something equivalent to Friday for a servant might be allowed.... If a man and a Minister could not be happy under such circumstances, then he should for ever hold his peace about the worry of work. He would have no deputations to nag at him, no unfulfillable promises to make, no press or other criticisms to annoy him. From his island home he could see life steadily and see it whole, and recover probably what men in cities so often lose, the power of original thinking. It is gratifying for Victorians, too, to learn that in their small country, sometimes sneered at as a cabbage garden, there is yet ample room and verge enough for isolation for from the madding crowd. Mr Edgar, with his two engineers, returning from the wilds clad in the skins of wallaby, and native bear, will be a concrete proof of this when they land at No. 8 Wharf by the steamer they may catch at Gabo (6).