Linklater was born in
Adelaide and was the son of William Robertson and Eleanor Wemys Linklater and his father worked as a baker. They were a Scottish Presbyterian family and, as a child, Linklater found Sundays "purgatory" and struggled with his strict upbringing and his father's desire for him to become a pastor. When Linklater was a young man, his father discovered that he was planning to run away from home, to go work on the sea, and beat him. Soon after, at the age of 13, Linklater did leave but instead headed to inland Australia and more remote places. For the next few years, Linklater took any work that he could get and, by the age of 16, was working as a drover and had taken on the name of "Billy Miller" which was a version of the name "Billamilla" which had been given to him by, what he called, the Yanta Wonta tribe. This was their word for waterhole and he took the name, in part, to avoid being traced and brought back home to his family. During the 1880s Linklater travelled extensively in
Western Australia and
Queensland and, by the turn of the century was working for
Tom Nugent on the newly established
Banka Banka Station in the
Northern Territory. The pair were involved in cattle stealing here and drove them to
Halls Creek where Linklater remained as a prospector. == Life in the Northern Territory ==