Curious story of the man who tried to mail himself to Wales from Australia after getting homesick
A pensioner from Cardiff is looking for two Irishmen who helped him escape Australia by mailing him off in a wooden crate.
Brian Robson was 19 years old when he decided to go ahead with the ‘stupid’ plan to get home to Wales in 1965.
After 11 months Down Under, he was feeling desperately homesick, but the £40 a month he made working for Victorian Railways wasn’t nearly enough to cover a £700 plane ticket.
But after being talked into it for about a week, two Irish friends and colleagues, known to Brian only as Paul and John, helped pack him into a box ‘the size of a mini-fridge’.
They nailed it shut and send him off as cargo on a Qantas flight from Melbourne to London – at least that was the plan.
Brian says he needed their help because Paul had access to a typewriter to fill out the paperwork to send him off as post.
He told the Irish Times: ‘Paul really was 100% against it…but John said “don’t worry about it, I’ll persuade him”. And so, they both went ahead and helped.’
Into the tiny box, Brian brought with him pillows, a torch, his suitcase, a book of Beatles songs and two bottles – one for water and the other for urine.
Brian, now 75, wasn’t expecting a luxurious trip, but what should have been a 36 hour direct flight ended up as a four day long ordeal.
The Qantas flight was full, so the crate, labelled by the escapee as containing a ‘computer’, was put on a much slower PanAm flight that ended up in Los Angeles.
Brian says The airplane’s hold was both freezing cold and boiling hot and that he struggled to breathe during the journey.
When the plane landed in Sydney he was left upside down for 22 hours, despite several ‘this side up’ labels on the crate, causing him to suffer blackouts.
After leaving Sydney and landing again, Brian thought he was finally in London.
But after being carted off to a freight shed, he peaked through a hole in the chest and caught eyes with a frightened US customs official who thought there was a dead body inside.
He was then interrogated by the FBI, who wanted to make sure he wasn’t a Cold War spy.
Once they were satisfied he wasn’t a threat, authorities decided not to press charges, instead flying him to London on a regular commercial flight.
Brian’s legs had seized up inside the box so he had to recover in hospital first before his journey.
Australia’s then-acting minister for immigration, Leslie Bury, said the government would not take any action against him.
Brian says he had written to Paul and John to thank them for their help, but never heard back from them.
He remembers that the pair went to school together in Ireland, although he isn’t quite sure where.
The stowaway added: ‘If I met them again, I’d just like to say that I’m sorry I got them into this and that I missed them when I came back. I’d like to buy them a drink.’
After returning to Wales Brian spent his life working in retail and will now tell his story in a book, The Crate Escape, which is set to come out in late April. A film depicting his near-fatal journey is also in the works.
Looking back at his plan, he told the BBC: ‘It was stupidity. If my kids tried it, I would kill them. But it was a different time.’
*Metro
A pensioner from Cardiff is looking for two Irishmen who helped him escape Australia by mailing him off in a wooden crate.
Brian Robson was 19 years old when he decided to go ahead with the ‘stupid’ plan to get home to Wales in 1965.
After 11 months Down Under, he was feeling desperately homesick, but the £40 a month he made working for Victorian Railways wasn’t nearly enough to cover a £700 plane ticket.
But after being talked into it for about a week, two Irish friends and colleagues, known to Brian only as Paul and John, helped pack him into a box ‘the size of a mini-fridge’.
They nailed it shut and send him off as cargo on a Qantas flight from Melbourne to London – at least that was the plan.
Brian says he needed their help because Paul had access to a typewriter to fill out the paperwork to send him off as post.
He told the Irish Times: ‘Paul really was 100% against it…but John said “don’t worry about it, I’ll persuade him”. And so, they both went ahead and helped.’
Into the tiny box, Brian brought with him pillows, a torch, his suitcase, a book of Beatles songs and two bottles – one for water and the other for urine.
Brian, now 75, wasn’t expecting a luxurious trip, but what should have been a 36 hour direct flight ended up as a four day long ordeal.
The Qantas flight was full, so the crate, labelled by the escapee as containing a ‘computer’, was put on a much slower PanAm flight that ended up in Los Angeles.
Brian says The airplane’s hold was both freezing cold and boiling hot and that he struggled to breathe during the journey.
When the plane landed in Sydney he was left upside down for 22 hours, despite several ‘this side up’ labels on the crate, causing him to suffer blackouts.
After leaving Sydney and landing again, Brian thought he was finally in London.
But after being carted off to a freight shed, he peaked through a hole in the chest and caught eyes with a frightened US customs official who thought there was a dead body inside.
He was then interrogated by the FBI, who wanted to make sure he wasn’t a Cold War spy.
Once they were satisfied he wasn’t a threat, authorities decided not to press charges, instead flying him to London on a regular commercial flight.
Brian’s legs had seized up inside the box so he had to recover in hospital first before his journey.
Australia’s then-acting minister for immigration, Leslie Bury, said the government would not take any action against him.
Brian says he had written to Paul and John to thank them for their help, but never heard back from them.
He remembers that the pair went to school together in Ireland, although he isn’t quite sure where.
The stowaway added: ‘If I met them again, I’d just like to say that I’m sorry I got them into this and that I missed them when I came back. I’d like to buy them a drink.’
After returning to Wales Brian spent his life working in retail and will now tell his story in a book, The Crate Escape, which is set to come out in late April. A film depicting his near-fatal journey is also in the works.
Looking back at his plan, he told the BBC: ‘It was stupidity. If my kids tried it, I would kill them. But it was a different time.’
*Metro
A pensioner from Cardiff is looking for two Irishmen who helped him escape Australia by mailing him off in a wooden crate.
Brian Robson was 19 years old when he decided to go ahead with the ‘stupid’ plan to get home to Wales in 1965.
After 11 months Down Under, he was feeling desperately homesick, but the £40 a month he made working for Victorian Railways wasn’t nearly enough to cover a £700 plane ticket.
But after being talked into it for about a week, two Irish friends and colleagues, known to Brian only as Paul and John, helped pack him into a box ‘the size of a mini-fridge’.
They nailed it shut and send him off as cargo on a Qantas flight from Melbourne to London – at least that was the plan.
Brian says he needed their help because Paul had access to a typewriter to fill out the paperwork to send him off as post.
He told the Irish Times: ‘Paul really was 100% against it…but John said “don’t worry about it, I’ll persuade him”. And so, they both went ahead and helped.’
Into the tiny box, Brian brought with him pillows, a torch, his suitcase, a book of Beatles songs and two bottles – one for water and the other for urine.
Brian, now 75, wasn’t expecting a luxurious trip, but what should have been a 36 hour direct flight ended up as a four day long ordeal.
The Qantas flight was full, so the crate, labelled by the escapee as containing a ‘computer’, was put on a much slower PanAm flight that ended up in Los Angeles.
Brian says The airplane’s hold was both freezing cold and boiling hot and that he struggled to breathe during the journey.
When the plane landed in Sydney he was left upside down for 22 hours, despite several ‘this side up’ labels on the crate, causing him to suffer blackouts.
After leaving Sydney and landing again, Brian thought he was finally in London.
But after being carted off to a freight shed, he peaked through a hole in the chest and caught eyes with a frightened US customs official who thought there was a dead body inside.
He was then interrogated by the FBI, who wanted to make sure he wasn’t a Cold War spy.
Once they were satisfied he wasn’t a threat, authorities decided not to press charges, instead flying him to London on a regular commercial flight.
Brian’s legs had seized up inside the box so he had to recover in hospital first before his journey.
Australia’s then-acting minister for immigration, Leslie Bury, said the government would not take any action against him.
Brian says he had written to Paul and John to thank them for their help, but never heard back from them.
He remembers that the pair went to school together in Ireland, although he isn’t quite sure where.
The stowaway added: ‘If I met them again, I’d just like to say that I’m sorry I got them into this and that I missed them when I came back. I’d like to buy them a drink.’
After returning to Wales Brian spent his life working in retail and will now tell his story in a book, The Crate Escape, which is set to come out in late April. A film depicting his near-fatal journey is also in the works.
Looking back at his plan, he told the BBC: ‘It was stupidity. If my kids tried it, I would kill them. But it was a different time.’
*Metro
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Curious story of the man who tried to mail himself to Wales from Australia after getting homesick
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