
A close-up of a ‘modern stud’ sheep is shown to be the product of a ‘century’s breeding’. Sheep are hand-shorn by manual clippers; a flock of sheep at shearing season is shown; sheering sheds are filled with men shearing sheep with electric clippers; the discarded wool is carried off; and the shorn sheep are released back into the paddock. The grading and classifying of the fleeces takes place in the sorting room where the wool is laid out on tables before being bailed, branded and sent off for export. Summary by Poppy de Souza.
Hurley used excerpts from his other films for Cinesound throughout A Nation is Built. A sheep-drive sequence that precedes this clip was taken from the 1933 feature The Squatter’s Daughter. The integration of previously used footage with the sequence seen here demonstrates Hurley’s familiarity with the subject matter.
This sprawling and patriotic documentary uses actuality footage, historical re-enactments, fictionalised scenes and propaganda to chronicle Australia’s development and progress as a nation. It was sponsored by the Government of New South Wales and made by Cinesound Productions to celebrate Australia’s sesquicentenary – marking the 150th anniversary of the arrival of the first fleet of European settlers.
A Nation is Built begins with an extended prologue which, through explanatory title cards, contextualises white settlement history from the moment Captain Arthur Phillip landed at Port Jackson. This is done with the patriotic British 'Pomp and Circumstance’ playing in the background which creates the mood of the film (it is also reprised for the closing sequence). The film then moves into a short series of historical re-enactments which serve to provide the colonial context in pictures before detailing a ‘panorama of nationhood’ which focuses on the developments across primary industry in New South Wales, showcasing wool, mining, timber, dairy and wheat as well as the state’s natural resources, landscape and fauna.
This film conveys a patriotic view of Australia’s history by conflating the ideas of nation, land and people. One of the original daybills advertising the film declared it ‘Australia’s own romantic story of a century and a half of national progress and achievement’. This romanticism is helped by the cinematography of Frank Hurley. Hurley was the chief cameraman for Cinesound Productions and by the time this film was made had been working for them for six years. By this time, he had virtual creative rein over Cinesound’s newly created industrial division and his creative mark on this film is pronounced – he shot, scripted, directed and produced it. Hurley spent over six months in production and travelled over 19,000 kilometres throughout New South Wales and shot approximately 20,000 feet of film.
A Nation is Built had its theatrical release in February 1938 at the Prince Edward Theatre in Sydney and was a ‘big hit with local audiences’. To a contemporary viewer, the ideas of nationhood portrayed in this film have been altered by recognition of Indigenous communities, subsequent waves of immigration, increased engagement with the Asia-Pacific, and changes in the geopolitical landscape. It is very much a film of its time.
Notes by Poppy de Souza
This black-and-white clip shows aspects of the New South Wales wool industry, including a shearer using hand clippers to shear a merino stud sheep. A number of sheep are then herded from a holding pen into a large woolshed where shearers use mechanical shears to remove their fleece. The footage includes men sorting and grading fleeces before the compacted bales of wool are branded according to grade and loaded onto trucks for transportation to wool stores located close to the port of Sydney.
Education notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
This clip starts approximately 22 minutes into the documentary.
We see a close-up of a ‘modern stud’ sheep. Coronation Charles is being shorn with manual shears.
Narrator The modern stud animal is in striking contrast to the earlier types and the secret of Australia’s production of recent years is largely in the extra weight and quality of fleece which a century’s breeding has developed. At the outset, Macarthur paid four pounds per head for his stud rams. Today, ram champions, similar to Coronation Charles of the famous Bundemar Stud who is being shorn with such exquisite care, have changed hands for 5,000 guineas. Just think of it – 5,000 guineas.
We see a paddock and pen full of sheep.
Narrator During the shearing season, the scene around a sheep station is an inspiring one. A quiet routine of grazing life changes to bustle. The shearers, a highly organised body of experts, arrive and the quiet sheds whir with activity. The average number of sheep shorn per day by a shearer is 130.
Men are shearing in a shearing shed with electric shears.
Narrator When the pens are full, a tally is made, and the respective counts are credited to the individual shearers. Relieved of their heavy winter fleeces, the animals seem imbued with that spring feeling as they leap buoyantly away, to jump back into the business of growing more wool. The sorting room is generally adjacent to the shearing section, and here the grading and classifying of the fleeces is carried out by technical experts.
These scenes, depicting activity at Windy Station, Quirindi, are characteristic of modern wool-growing practice in Australia. The original merino cut a fleece of two and a half to three pounds per head. Today, we have an average of 8 pounds with individual flocks cutting up to 12 pounds and more. Great credit must be given to our stud breeders for improving standards of quality.
The wool is baled, branded according to content, and railed to the nearest selling centre for marketing to the wool-using countries of the world. The clip for the Commonwealth approximates 3,200,000 bales, of which the State of NSW contributes a half.
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.