Moodie came to
South Australia from South Africa around 1869, and soon found employment with the Customs Department at
Port Adelaide. In 1870 he was nominated for the
Humane Society's medal when he dived into the river fully clothed to rescue a young man who had fallen overboard from the
Coonatto. The story that he was subsequently sacked because his tally-book was spoiled by the immersion gained credence with repetition. Moodie founded the weekly newspaper
The Portonian (1871 – May 1879) as a forum for news about Port Adelaide, but much of the paper's content was devoted to criticising the Parliament, the Governor and just about any other authority figure. His racy, vigorous style of writing won for the paper a large and loyal circulation. He employed a talented cartoonist in "Cerberus" (
John Eden Savill, better known as a racehorse owner), and journalist
Spencer Skipper, who later, as "Hugh Kalyptus", gained fame for his satirical column "Echoes and Re-Echoes". M He contributed news items from South Africa, in particular the Anglo-Zulu War early in 1879. Portonian ceased without notice in May 1879. Moodie was not one to settle down however, and publication of
The Portonian in the last years became intermittent and ceased entirely in May 1879 without announcement or apology. Savill's political cartoons had almost completely disappeared; in their place were works by W. Wyburd and W. Pyndar Willis.
The Portonian was printed by Webb, Vardon & Pritchard, and the artwork lithographed by the firm of Penman & Galbraith. :Other satiric newspapers of the period in Adelaide were: :*
F. S. Carroll's
The Lantern; :*
H. C. Evans's
Quiz (became
Quiz and The Lantern) :*
J. C. F. Johnson's
Adelaide Punch :*
H. A. Grainger's
Australian Star Moodie was an excellent swimmer, and on one occasion in 1880 outlasted the renowned "Professor"
Frederick Cavill (1839–1927) in a swim from the
Semaphore to
Glenelg, a distance of . Cavill was accompanied by a friend in a rowboat, and Moodie by his Zulu friend Ugende in a
catamaran. Moodie, older, "blue-blooded and scarlet-faced" and somewhat corpulent, kept up with his rival and continued for several miles after Cavill was forced to retire due to eye inflammation, but did not complete the distance. Cavill did complete the distance (in the other direction) a week later. Persistent rumours that Moodie had cheated by touching the bottom and so dishonestly propelling himself were rebuffed by referees who had accompanied the pair in another boat. He took offence at an article in the
Williamstown Advertiser of
Williamstown, Victoria on 15 May 1880 in which
Queen Victoria was called an "obese, not overburdened with brains, old woman". He and Ugende took a steamer to Melbourne with the avowed intent of giving
Alfred Thomas Clark, the paper's prominent co-owner, a caning. He was convicted of assault and fined £3. Not having sufficient funds for the return passage, the pair walked back to Adelaide, taking 17 days, crossing the
Ninety Mile Desert in five. On his return he found that solicitor
Alfred Knight Whitby had given advice to Mrs. Moodie regarding separation from her husband. Moodie promptly sought out the lawyer at
Aldridge's Prince Alfred Hotel and in front of witnesses knocked him to the floor. For this assault he was fined £5. He wrote lyrics, to which Jules Meilhan BA ( –1882) composed the music, for a patriotic
cantata which was performed at the opening of the Adelaide Exhibition of 1881 (not to be confused with the
Jubilee Cantata, or
Victoria Cantata, written (words and music) by
Carl Puttmann for the
Adelaide Jubilee International Exhibition of 1887). Genial and sociable but erratic, "Zulu" Moodie as he had been dubbed seemed to be continually in the public eye: he put himself forward as candidate for the seat of
Encounter Bay, but was hissed down; he offered to lead a contingent to fight in the
Transvaal, then to organise a South Australian Guerrilla Force; he wrote "Letters to the Editor" on subjects as diverse as decoding the Biblical
666 and the ban on ostrich farming. He was in the forefront in organising a Literary Society, then after being elected Secretary, claimed to have lost the minute book and resigned. ==Return to British Africa==