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A Social History of Richmond

Citation

Macfie, Peter H., 2003, A Social History of Richmond, 1820 – 1855. https://petermacfiehistorian.net.au/publications/social-history

Abstract

The life and times of Richmond from 1820 to 1855 as recorded through the evidence presented at the Richmond court during those years.

Details

60 page document formatted to print on A4 paper.

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Contents

 

Excerpt

The village of Richmond was similar yet so very different to today’s tourist town. Horses were the main method of transport, pulling waggons, carts or more fashionable gigs. Poorer people walked everywhere or caught a coach to Hobart Town. There were eight inns for travellers. Until 1850, convict road gangs, some with men wearing leg irons, worked in the streets and on roads approaching the village. Flocks of sheep were driven through the village to the sale-yards. Assigned servants assembled on the Muster Ground, now the Municipal Park, to have their names checked, observed carefully by constables and the Police Magistrate, based in the Watch House. Here offending assigned servants, convicts under sentence and occasional free settler were charged before magistrates, and held in the holding cells.

At the Court House nearby, charges were heard by magistrates and ‘justice’ handed out, by today’s standards, harsh and without feeling.

From being a pioneering district, after 1850 the town gradually became a town left behind by the spread of settlement to the north and the new colonies of Victoria and New Zealand. First the Victorian gold rush attracted settlers away, then in 1874 the town was by-passed by the Mainline Railway to the north and the Sorell Causeway to the south. Richmond became a quaint village, preserved by default. From the start of the first Jury Act in 1855 to the introduction of Municipal Government in 1864, the Richmond district was under the jurisdiction of affluent locals, rather than government appointed magistrates. Sentences were just as harsh, although flogging became a thing of the past. Richmond became the centre of local government for the Coal River Valley, holding council and court hearings, for cases stretching from Dulcot through Richmond to Campania and Colebrook.

Meanwhile, a new generation of settlers had moved into the village – Jacobs, Kellys, Andersons, Nichols, Ross and other families who stayed. Immigrants, including some German families plus military pensioners used the former barracks for temporary accommodation.

While the streets were home during the 1870s to elderly emancipist – former convicts – who lived in cheap rent or in huts in the bush at hamlets like Dulcot, most families tried to over-look their own convict origins.

The Catholic -Protestant divide continued, with the Bridge Inn being the Catholic pub and the Lennox Arms/Commercial the Protestant/visitors hotel. A deferential relationships between farm-hands and farm owners continued; but behind closed doors, another world existed.

End of Excerpt

Index

 

Dulcot

A Tale of Two Schools at Dulcot (Unpublished book)

Note:

This manuscript is complete but Pete was trying to organise maps when he fell ill. The book on the Wesleyans at Port Arthur is finalised and published, Peter’s childhood autobiography is just done, and the Dulcot book will be next. Hopefully before the end of 2022.

Pete had this ready, but then wanted to add two more chapters. He has said they are complete, and it will be published once the formatting, indexing and so forth is complete.

Underground Hobart

Underground Hobart

The World Beneath the City

An exploration of subterranean Hobart. The rich and colourful history of the once open but now buried waterways – including the Hobart Rivulet, Domain Park Rivulet, and Sandy Bay – Wellington Rivulet.

The book includes details of tunnels and drains stretching back to the very start of Hobart’s first settlement in Sullivans Cove. Some of these have only recently been rediscovered. Other topics examined are burial grounds, the installation of water, gas and sewerage systems together with basement shops, homes and places of entertainment.

Unexpected events revealed include the formation of the Liberal Party in Tasmania, and the excavation of graves on the site of an old Campbell Street convict era cemetery. Underground Hobart contains an excellent range of photographs highlighting all aspects of the world – and life – ‘beneath the city’.

Details

104 A4 pages, plus maps, photographs, footnotes, bibliography and detailed index.

ISBN: 978-0-9805139-2-9

Purchase

The book is available from “Cracked & Spineless” in Imperial Arcade, 9/138 Collins St, Hobart

03 6223 1663

https://www.facebook.com/CrackedNSpineless

If they can’t help you, use the ‘contact’ page on this website (on left) to send us a message.

Contents

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Index

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Libraries Tasmania

Libraries Tasmania Catalogue – Underground Hobart

Reviews

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Further Discussion and Information

Additional information on Underground Hobart

Misleading Maps

Citation

Cite this essay as “Peter Macfie, 2014, https://PeterMacFieHistorian.net.au/publications/misleading-maps”

Misleading Maps? :The WHA Extension In The Styx Valley & Florentine Valley 2013

Peter MacFie, historian © 2014

Recent publicity over additions to the WHA – available via the map on the ABC website online – are further indications of the lack of research by organisations involved – on both sides of the argument – into the history of forest practices in southern Tasmania.

The dispute highlights the complete lack of use by the protagonists of the expertise of historians – a deficiency in Tasmanian public affairs which has led to much un-necessary conflict – with inaccurate claims and counter claims. Apart from brief contracts, there are no historians employed by P.W. & H. /DELM – or other government departments – and apparently none during the secrecy surrounding the WHA negotiations.

To my mind, the historian’s role is one of the dispassionate observer, offering informed critiques and insights with empathy but without bias.

Maps & Forests

The area shown in the online map of the WHA indicates extension over supposedly “Old Growth Forests” in the Styx and Florentine Valleys.

WHA Extension In Former ANM Concession

Extract From World Heritage Places – Tasmanian Wilderness Resources

Map 4: Proposed boundary relative to 2013 boundary

These however were once part of Australian Newsprint Mills Concession (1934-1997) and were logged in the 1940s and early 1950s by the Company to provide timber for the Boyer Newsprint Mill south of New Norfolk. Sawlogs were also produced. The Concession was granted by former State Labour Governments as part of an agreement to supply timber to the newsprint mill at Boyer – which began production in 1941. The following map shows the extent of the ANM Concession.

ANM Concession 1938-1990

(Peter MacFie, Maydena Project © 2014)

The extent of ANM’s Concession is also available online – as part of the nomination by Engineers Australia (Tasmania) of Boyer Mill for the National Heritage Register.

(The Boyer Newsprint Mill – Nomination for a Heritage Recognition Award) Based on several years of research, the area in the Florentine Valley claimed as “old growth” is today 60+ year old regrowth, while in the Styx Valley, equivalent forests are 70 year old regrowth forests planted by ANM. Some of the tall trees in the Styx Valley were set aside in small reserves by ANM, and are shown in a plan of the former Company’s 10 ‘tall tree reserves.’

(ANM Library) A 1987 map of logging coupes in the ANM Concession also shows rotational logging operations. These ranged from Wayatinah to the north, the Florentine Valley to the west and Mt Lloyd to the south. These appear to contradict the “Old Growth” claims for areas recently added to the WHA extension. At the very least, their true history needs a full examination.

(ANM Library)

Professional Interest – Peter MacFie & the Maydena Project 1995-99

Working as site historian at Port Arthur Historic Site (1983-91) I became interested in timber extraction, and later conflict over land use/conservation vs utilitarian values. (see website list of relevant published papers.) My 1992 study on Mt Field National Park brought out this dilemma. From this research I was approached by ANM to undertake the Maydena Project.

During the oral history-based Maydena Project I became aware of the above details – and many other aspects of the life of former ANM Concession work-force and its operation in the Concession. I interviewed men who had built the Styx Valley rail spur during World War II, and worked with complex and dangerous machinery there and in the Florentine Valley. A paper based on initial research and interviews was given at the Australian Forest History Society conference at Gympie, Queensland outlining the Maydena Project (Maydena the Logging Town in the Colonised Valley) and subsequently published in conference proceedings in 1999. (available online at Digital Collections: Australia’s ever-changing forests).

The Styx Valley Rail Spur Line. 1941-48

The Styx Valley was logged during World War II using a 16 km rail spur line which branched at Karanja. Former workers I interviewed for the Maydena Project who worked on the Styx Valley spur line lived in a temporary village named Tent City near Cataract Creek. A large trestle timber bridge was built over this deep ravine to carry the 16 km rail line past Diogenes Creek.

Styx Valley Rail Spur Line 1942-49, Cataract Creek Trestle Bridge

(ANM Library)

This was inspected in 1943 by ANM’s chairman of directors, Sir Keith Murdoch, when the line was opened in February 1943. (see attached newspaper report) Later that year, a group of State parliamentarians (including Devonport based H H McFie MHA (my great-grandfather)) also inspected the Styx Valley workings and railway.

(Mercury 17/2/1943, p. 4., via Trove)

With Japan now entering the War, (preventing supplied of newsprint from North America) Murdoch warned that without the Boyer Mill, Australian newspapers would be reduced by half. During the mid 1950s the Upper Styx valley was also logged by road using imported Caterpillar bulldozers.

Logging the Florentine Valley 1948-70

Post World War II the massive stand of 200 year old mature Euc. regnans – Swamp gums – covering over 2000 acres under Mt Field West was logged by ANM. Controversy over the company’s acquisition of this area on the western boundary of Mt Field National Park was first documented in my 1992 study, ‘A History of Mt Field National Park’. Despite a very vocal public campaign against the loss of the Florentine Valley area led by the Hobart Walking Club, the Cosgrove government passed the extension to the Concession.

Max Gilbert’s unique PhD thesis into the life cycle of the wet eucalypt forests found that the 200 year old regnans in the Florentine Valley were the result of a massive natural fire around 1800 – creating an ash bed for the later mature one-generation stand. His research was the basis used for regeneration of the Euc. Regnans stands after logging. (Gilbert as also a founder member of the Hobart Walking Club.)

Instead of a rail line to extract timber from the Florentine Valley post World War II, (due to the cavernous limestone nature of the area) a series of well-made roads were built. In 1952 a series of high quality photos were taken by the Education Departments Teaching Aids depict the logging operation, some showing Mt Field West in the background.

1952 Logging Truck, Florentine Valley Vicinity of Mt Field West

(Ed Dept – Teaching Aids Centre – AB713-1-1040)

1952 Florentine Valley Logging Vicinity Mt Field West

(Ed Dept – Visual Aids-AB713-1-1014)

Reforestation

Once logged, the Styx and Florentine Valleys underwent reforestation – and the large forests now claimed as “Old Growth” are actually regrowth from the planned seeding programme (part of ANM’s policy initiated by Boyer Mill manager Kessell – a trained forester and leading advocate of replanting for the future). ANM became well known for its progressive silviculture program.

(ANM Library)

1952 Florentine Valley Logging

(Ed Dept – Teaching Aids Centre – AB713-1-6881)

1960s Regrowth, Florentine Valley

(ANM Library)

Background History Of The ANM Concession 1934-1997

Peter MacFie

Until the opening of Boyer Mill in 1941, all newsprint for Australian newspapers was imported from Scandinavia. Using North American technology, the new mill was the brainchild of several leading scientists, (especially LR Benjamin) & newspaper owners – among these were Warwick Fairfax and Sir Keith Murdoch of the Herald & Weekly Times group. As a young journalist, Keith had seen the rationing placed on newspaper printing by limited access to newsprint during World War I (As war correspondent, he had also reported secretly on the appalling mismanagement of the ANZAC troops at Gallipoli.)

Forest Surveys Florentine Valley & Styx Valley 1912-60

  • Initial exploration of these timber resources began before World War I; early conservators were concerned about the needless destruction by fire.

Pre ANM – Uncontrolled Fires

1920 Settlers Cottage, Florentine Valley (Henry Allport)

(Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts, ADRI: AUTAS001126251214)

  • First serious surveys into the timber resource in the Florentine Valley and the Styx Valley stook place in the 1930s for the inaugural company, the Derwent Valley Paper Pulp Co., to which the Tasmania Government granted first areas of Concession.
  • The first successful large scale trials of newsprint using Tasmania eucalypts took place in Ocean Falls, British Colombia, Canada in 1934.
  • The first edition of an Australian newspaper printed on newsprint made from eucalypt was the Hobart Mercury of 12 May 1934.
  • The 1934 Bushfires in the Derwent Valley triggered concern for the new company over the security of the timber resource. From 1936 fire lookouts monitored wildfires in the Styx Valley and at Fitzgerald.
  • The re-formed Australian Newsprint Mills Co. (ANM) (1938), as well as establishing Boyer Mill, was given an enlarged Concession and enforceable authority over access.
  • Sir Keith Murdoch was well aware of the scope of these assets – of both the Florentine Valley and the Styx Valley – as he and his youthful wife, later Dame Elizabeth Murdoch, trekked on horse-back there in 1937, as a photo in Dame Elisabeth’s biography indicates.
  • Initially supervised by Canadian employees, Boyer Mill was opened for production in 1941.

Newsprint For Australia 1941 (Pix Magazine 31.5.1941, P34, via National Library of Australia)

  • On 10 May 1941, ten Australian newspapers were all published on Australian newsprint made at Boyer Mill.
  • ANM also acquired sawmilling concessions in the Tyenna Valley on the southern flank of Mt Field National Park; former sawmill workers transferred as the nucleus of ANM’s bush workforce.
  • The Pioneer Woodware Concession was acquired. This small company based at Kallista from 1926 – begun by a German migrant – had timber reserves from which sassafras was logged for peg making at the New Norfolk Peg Factory – an industry employing over 60 local women.
  • The Concession was returned to Forestry Tasmania’s management in 1997.

A WHA Reappraisal?

The Florentine Valley & Styx Valley do have significant heritage values – cultural heritage values – in the form of tramways, train lines, sawmill sites, camps and huts. The potential location of these are documented as a result of the Maydena Project – documented in original maps to be published – and particularly in the wonderful field work undertaken by archaeologist Parry Kosteglou into the forest history of these (and many other similar work sites) for Forestry Tasmania.

These activities should not be regarded as having “degraded” the heritage value of such localities – whatever the outcome of a proposed revue, historians, railway enthusiasts plus former locals whose formative years were spent there – value these sites as “special places” because of working lives spent there which gave them and their families a sense of worth – as well as income .

Working Forests As Well As Wilderness?

In addition to wilderness, there’s a need to include working forests as part of a reservation system- such is the case in Europe, where working forests for logging exist with others for mountaineering & bushwalking, horse & mountain bike riding as well as others for hunting.

Old Skills

Could old skills be kept alive? Could draught horses be used, for example, to extract specialty timbers – as sassafras was hauled out on rail trolleys along the Kallista line northwest of Maydena by the ‘Sassy Kings” I interviewed?

Copyright Peter Macfie ©2014

North West Bay and Margate

A History of North West Bay and Margate, Tasmania 1792 – 2000

A detailed study of this locality south of Hobart includes the first contact with the indigenous people by the French Baudin expedition in North West Bay on 1802, the 1814 land grants to Marines authorised by Lachlan Macquarie, the nearby 1823 convict sawing station, the rock walls mystery, the early ship building industry. In addition, the local schools are examined plus farming and old settlement families are also documented.

The study also contains photographs, plus historic maps, including some unique maps which use a techniques suggested by Peter MacFie and Marie Giblin, where historic maps are overlaid over current satellite image maps.

Details

148 A4 pages, over 30 photographs, plus 22 historic maps & charts, plus footnotes, bibliography and detailed index.

Purchase

The first printing of this book sold out. It is now available from Lulu.com through ‘print on demand’.

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Contents Page

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Index

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Sample Page

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Library

LINC access to Margate book