Roy Vincent's efforts protected the Dorrigo National Park at critical stages in its history.This is the second in a short series on the early days of the Dorrigo National Park.
Administrative history
can be very boring, a list of dates and changes. Yet when you dig in, you find
that those changes tell us much about our history.
You can also find
yourself taken in unexpected directions, highlighting aspects of our history
that extend far beyond the original question. Both are true of the early
history of the Dorrigo National Park.
The 1901 gazettal of
the two small reserves intended to protect waterfalls was followed by the 1917
reservation of a larger mountain area that now forms the core of the National
Park. Separate trustees were appointed covering the two small reserves and the
larger reserve.
The trustees appointed
to the larger reserve included brothers Roy Stanley and Reginald Henry Vincent,
members of that remarkable Vincent newspaper dynasty that played such a role in
the history of the New England press and community life more generally.
In 1910, the brothers
had established the Don Dorrigo Gazette
and Guy Fawkes Advocate. Both were active in community life, including the
campaigns for Northern development and the creation of a new state in Northern
New South Wales. Both were committed to the preservation of the Dorrigo
mountain reserve.
While Reginald Henry
would remain as editor of the Don Dorrigo
Gazette, in 1922 Roy was elected to the NSW Parliament as Member for Oxley.
There he joined Michael Bruxner’s “True Blues”, the precursor of the NSW
Country Party.
Roy would remain an MP
until 1953. From June 1932 to May 1941 he was Secretary for Mines and Minister
for Forests, providing a degree of top cover that was important to the
preservation of the Dorrigo reserves.
The new trustees faced
problems. They had to deal with the spread of blackberries and other noxious
weeds, as well as local pressures to log and develop the land. They also wanted
to develop facilities. However, they had no money to do any of this.
These problems came to
a head in 1923.
On 18 May 1923, Roy
Vincent wrote to the Department of Lands as local member and a trustee seeking
approval for the Trust to lease a small portion at the top of the Mountain
Reserve for grazing purposes. This would provide the trustees with a small
income and also help in blackberry control.
The following month, 8
June, the Secretary of the Trust (W H Jarrett) wrote to the Minister for Lands.
Given problems with blackberries and fallen trees, he stated that a meeting of
the trustees had decided to ask the Department to send an inspector to visit
the reserve with a view to alienating the whole reserve for development.
This move blind-sided
Roy Vincent. On 2 July he wrote to the Minister in protest. Had all the
trustees been consulted? As a trustee, he was totally opposed to the alienation
of a single acre of this magnificent reserve, apart from the previous request
to lease a portion for grazing.
Roy Vincent prevailed.
Dorrigo was saved, but problems still lay ahead.
Note to readers: This post appeared as a column in the Armidale Express Extra on 4 December 2019. I am repeating the columns here with a lag because they are not all on line outside subscription. You can see all the Belshaw World and History Revisited/History Matters columns by clicking here for 2009, here for 2010, here for 2011, here for 2012, here for 2013, here for 2014, here for 2015, here for 2016, here 2017, here 2018, here 2019
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