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  • 2 weeks ago
A neon clock once thought destroyed in the 1975 Niagara Café fire has resurfaced decades later in rural NSW, stunning locals and the family who first installed it.

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00:00Today, if we want to know the time, we simply glance at our smartphones.
00:05But in 1938, the public clock was an important landmark.
00:09Every town had one.
00:11Gundagai had several, including one mounted on the awning outside the town's iconic Niagara Café.
00:18After a fire badly damaged the café in 1975,
00:23Peter Kastryshen, whose family established and ran the café for many decades,
00:28remembers seeing the clock thrown into the back of a truck destined for the local tip.
00:36Half a century on and the iconic clock has risen from the dead and Peter can't contain his excitement.
00:43It was gone. 50 years. Gone. And it's back. So what can I say?
00:50You thought it had gone when you saw it go on the back of a truck towards the tip
00:54at the back of the Niagara way back in 1975, and just recently it's been rediscovered.
01:00Exactly right. And it just happens that my friend Ron Moses, who was with me the day we saw it go,
01:08came across a photo of it in one of the pubs in Gundagai in June last year
01:14and sent it to me, and I nearly fell off my chair saying,
01:19God, who's got it? And we found out it was not far from Gundagai at all.
01:24So all those years that had only been like 20 kilometres or so from Gundagai
01:28and you thought it was rotting in the bottom of the local tip.
01:31Exactly. Exactly.
01:33And does it keep good time?
01:35Perfect time.
01:36Three o'clock, yeah?
01:37Three o'clock.
01:38Three o'clock.
02:02Three o'clock.
02:03Two o'clock.
02:04Four o'clock.
02:04Three o'clock.
02:06Three o'clock.
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