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Woodgreen Station

19°03′28″S 136°42′28″E / 19.05778°S 136.70778°E / -19.05778; 136.70778 (Woodgreen) Woodgreen Station, also spelt Wood Green and also known as Atartinga, is a cattle station located in the Northern Territory of Australia, to the northeast of Alice Springs, extending approximately 2,215 km2 (855 sq mi). It was also known as (Mer) Athatheng by some of the Indigenous people in the area.

Woodgreen Station
class=notpageimage|
Location in Northern Territory

The first lessee of the pastoral lease created in 1918 was Bob Purvis Sr, who first ran it as a sheep station and bred horses, before introducing cattle. The property was very degraded by the time his son, Bob Purvis Jr, took it over in 1960, mainly due to overstocking. Since then, Bob Jr has slowly but surely rejuvenated the property, making it a viable concern, albeit with much lower stocking rates of cattle, by applying some of the techniques of regenerative agriculture and developing his own methods to improve the soil.

History edit

Before European settlement edit

Wood Green Station was established across the land of two Aboriginal groups, most of it on that of the Anmatyerre, with the eastern border flanking the lands of the Alyawarre people.[1][2] It has been referred to as Athatheng by Aboriginal people.[3][4] Before European settlement, the land had not been exposed to grazing animals with hard, cloven hoofs.[5]

Bob Purvis Sr (1918–1960) edit

 
Bob Purvis Sr, 1922
 
Bob Purvis Sr and Adele Purvis at Woodgreen

Robert (Bob) H. Purvis Sr had come out from England,[6] and worked as a bush contractor[7] before acquiring the 2,000 km (1,200 mi) pastoral lease known as Atartinga in 1918.[8][7] He had a brother named Lou Purvis. He survived a bout of tetanus which lasted months, which he spent somewhere else. He was known as a very strong man with a huge appetite, eating a lot of meat and eggs.[6] This earned him the nickname "the Sandover alligator", referring to the Sandover River, northeast of Alice Springs.[9][7] It was said that he could eat a whole leg of goat at one sitting.[10]

In the 1930s, Purvis Sr first bred horses (for the British Indian Army as well as race horses[11]) and sheep, and in the 1930s took on some cattle,[8] changing it to a cattle station from around 1940. The property was expanded at some point, but as the government stipulated minimum livestock numbers, the land was overgrazed, and probably mismanaged, according to his son. The 1957 drought led to culling and sale of many horses.[11] The property had also been affected badly by drought in 1954.[12]

Bob Purvis Sr was married to Adele Viola Purvis,[13] who was formerly a music teacher. She was also a keen local historian, and founded the National Trust of Australia (Northern Territory).[7] She published articles,[10] and was also the first person to donate a box of papers to the Northern Territory Archives' Alice Springs office after it opened in 2003.[13]

Bob Purvis Jr (from 1960) edit

Bob Purvis Jr was born on the property[8] in 1937, and went to boarding school in Adelaide, South Australia.[11] His father had got into huge debt by the time he took over ownership[14] in 1960, largely due to land degradation caused by poor grazing practices. This was partly due to the conditions of the least, which stated that thea minimum stocking rate was 3000 head for the property. The debts exceeded the property's value, and three quarters of the land was unusable.[5]

Bob Jr worked slowly over decades to improve the soil to make the property sustainable, using some methods which he had developed himself to reverse the damage.[8] He has practised regenerative agriculture, which included measures such as reducing stock numbers (he estimated that a sustainable number is about 400[5]) and building banks to slow the flow of water and trap the topsoil.[15] These ponding banks have become commonly referred to as "Purvis banks".[16] His labours have borne fruit, and perennial grasses have returned to the property, with topsoil in much better condition and more fertile. He has used fire for land management, adapted from Indigenous fire-stick farming, and sites once dominated by mulga have been transformed into open ghost gum grassland with many species of grasses and forbs, which offer better nutrition for cattle.[15] By 1985 he had paid off the debts, and was able to sell livestock in a hard season.[5] He also improved the fencing, and introduced solar power and batteries to provide for its energy needs.[11] Working with his wife, Marie, he has worked with fire for decades. This, along with ponding banks and lower stocking, had drought-proofed the property and improved productivity. He has also managed to keep buffel grass under control.[14]

Purvis got advice from scientists, government representatives and others. However there was no one single answer; it was through his own experimentation that he found the best ways to improve his land, being unique in its own way. He used observation and his analytical skills to hone his methods. He believes that regulators' initial recommended stocking rate was three times higher than what he considers appropriate for long-term carrying capacity of Woodgreen. His property is manageable and productive, as well as being stable financially, with a productive herd and few stock losses.[15] A 2021 article calls him a pioneer of the model of sustainably low stocking rates and maintaining high-quality beef, which caused him to be ostracised by some in the cattle industry.[17]

The introduction of native title in Australia in 1993 also led to a change in the relationship between the Aboriginal workers and the Purvis family.[11]

21st century edit

Bob's son Jim has co-managed the property since some time before 2015.[16]

In March 2020, anthropologists' work was under way on both Woodgreen and Mount Skinner pastoral leases as the basis for any future native title claims, under the auspices of the Central Land Council.[18] By 30 June 2021, the research had progressed.[19]

Property location and description edit

Woodgreen Station, also known as Atartinga, covers approximately 2,215 km2 (855 sq mi), and is located around 140 km (87 mi) north of Alice Springs, on the Sandover Highway.[20] The homestead is known as Atartinga, and is in the locality of Anmatjere, local government area Central Desert Region.[21] It lies within the Simpson Desert.[19]

Atartinga is a subregion of Burt Plain, an interim Australian bioregion.[22]

Woodgreen Conservation Reserve edit

Woodgreen Conservation Reserve is an NT protected area, under the Territory Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act 1976 (TPWC Act) of about 92,665 ha (228,980 acres),[23][24] or 927.09 km2 (357.95 sq mi).[25] Designated in 2014,[26] the park is an IUCN Management Category V park.[25]

There has been some mineral exploration in the park, as recently as 2021.[19]

The reserve straddles the Sandover Highway, with most of it on the western side. Its northeast corner is close to Atartinga homestead.[27]

1935 plane emergency landing edit

On 6 September 1935, a General Aircraft Monospar ST-12 operated by Australian Transcontinental Airways (ATA)[a] suffered engine failure, and made an emergency landing on Woodgreen Station. Reports vary slightly,[29] but the plane was said to be carrying the pilot J. Maher, with two passengers, Renfrey and Maloney, and a young crocodile that was being transported to Adelaide.[b] Renfrey walked for two days towards Ryan's Well, a watering hole on the Overland Telegraph Line around 40 mi (64 km), to seek assistance. Three men (one of several search parties sent out to look for the men[30]) motoring across the desert found him, and took him to Aileron telegraph station. In the meantime, Don Thomas from Alice Springs drove to Woodgreen to pick up Purvis Sr and two "blackfellows", one of whom managed to track down the plane based on the description of the location given by Renfrey. Maher and Maloney had only six oranges between them for food, but they survived until they were rescued by shooting and eating the crocodile.[31]

Other people edit

Topsy Glynn was born around 1916, the daughter of a "half-caste" stockman called James Glynn and an unnamed Aboriginal woman. She was later described by the authorities as a "three-quarter-caste aboriginal". After Topsy's mother was killed, around 1919, Ron Purvis Sr persuaded the NT police commissioner Robert Stott to put Topsy in to the "Half-caste Institution Alice Springs" (The Bungalow, then at the Alice Springs Telegraph Station), although she was not technically "half-caste", on condition that Purvis employed her on Wood Green Station as soon as she had completed her schooling there, which he did. Glynn gave birth to two daughters on Atartinga /Wood Green. The first of these daughters was Rona Glynn, born in 1936, whose father was Ron Price.[32] She went on to become the first Aboriginal teacher and nurse in Alice Springs. The second daughter was Freda Glynn, born in 1939, whose father was Ron's brother Alf Price.[32] Freda became a media specialist, who co-founded the Central Australian Aboriginal Media Association (CAAMA), and is the mother of filmmaker Erica Glynn.[33]

Topsy was again admitted to The Bungalow on 12 Sept 1939, When Freda was just three weeks old, as there were health issues to be attended to, the authorities were trying to determine who Freda's father was, and owing to "the promiscous manner in which Topsy was giving birth to half-caste infants at Wood Green station it was...considered to be in the girls best interests for her and her children to remain in the Institution". Topsy was not keen to return to the station, as she was employed by Purvis "as housemaid and cook and had also done stockwork and windmill repair work around the station and in return had only received clothing and rations", and was happy working as a laundress at the institution. However, by November 1940, Topsy was again working for Purvis at Wood Green under an agreement similar to that which governed the employment of halfcaste girls in the township.[32] Following the bombing of Darwin in February 1942, there were military orders to evacuate The Bungalow, so Topsy took her girls to New South Wales to find work there.[34]

Artist and cultural leader, Anmatyerr woman Hilda "Cookie" Price Pwerl (c. 1930–2019), worked for rations at Woodgreen (known to her as Athatheng) and other stations in the area when she was young.[3]

Lorna Petyarr Purvis, who married Alexander Donald (Pwerle) Ross (1915–1999; known as Don) in 1938, was Bob Purvis Sr's niece, and they met at Woodgreen. She was a "half-caste" Western Arrernte woman, who had had a hard life, growing up in The Bungalow. Don Ross was a senior Kaytetye man, who owned a cattle station called Neutral Junction Station, near the Barrow Creek Telegraph Station, between 1947 and 1952.[10]

J. R. Purvis was another son of Bob Purvis Sr.[10]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ ATA was a short-lived airline registered in Melbourne in 1935 by Harold Berryman, of Ballarat, and four other directors. Its three aeroplanes did the mail run from Darwin to Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney, until it ceased operations in 1936 owing to the impossibility of importing more planes from Germany at that time.[28]
  2. ^ One later report says the destination was Melbourne Zoo.[29]

References edit

  1. ^ Horton, David R. (1996). "Map of Indigenous Australia". AIATSIS. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  2. ^ Tindale, Norman Barnett (1974). . Aboriginal Tribes of Australia: Their Terrain, Environmental Controls, Distribution, Limits, and Proper Names. Australian National University Press. ISBN 978-0-708-10741-6. Archived from the original on 8 September 2005.
  3. ^ Gibson, J.M. (2020). Ceremony Men: Making Ethnography and the Return of the Strehlow Collection. SUNY series, Tribal Worlds: Critical Studies in American Indian Nation Building. State University of New York Press. p. 147. ISBN 978-1-4384-7856-2. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d Graham, Nicole (7 March 2003). Lawscape : paradigm and place in Australian property law (PhD). University of Sydney. pp. 217–221. hdl:2123/6269. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  5. ^ a b "Bob Purvis". State Library of South Australia. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d "Mr. Bob and Mrs. Adele Purvis" (photo + text description). Territory Stories. Library & Archives NT. 19 March 2022. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d Laudine, C. (2016). Aboriginal Environmental Knowledge: Rational Reverence. Vitality of Indigenous Religions. Taylor & Francis. p. 156. ISBN 978-1-317-18609-0. Retrieved 27 October 2022.
  8. ^ Nelson, Des (19 March 2014). "Elkedra jackeroo: 'Death Adders' and The Boss". Alice Springs News. Retrieved 27 October 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d Whitebeach, Terry Anne (June 2006). Telling someone else's story: The life history of Alexander Donald (Pwerle) Ross (1915–1999) (Phd). Charles Darwin University. doi:10.25913/5ea665580cb1c. PDF
  10. ^ a b c d e Purvis, Bob, 1937-; Simpson, Bruce (Bruce Forbes), 1923-2019; Gammage, Bill, 1942- (5 April 2005). "Bob Purvis interviewed by Bruce Simpson and Bill Gammage [sound recording]" (library catalogue record). National Library of Australia. Drovers oral history project. Retrieved 27 October 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ "Heavy rain in Central Australia". The Chronicle. Vol. 97, no. 5, 461. South Australia. 19 August 1954. p. 52. Retrieved 31 October 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ a b "Purvis, Adele Viola". Women's Museum of Australia. 7 December 2011. Retrieved 27 October 2022.
  13. ^ a b Richards, Dave (13 April 2012). "Burning Issues 3: A pastoral meditation". Alice Online. Retrieved 31 October 2022. Includes a photo of Bob Purvis Jr.
  14. ^ a b c Humphrys, Meg (28 September 2020). "Reflections from a lifetime of adapting regenerative agriculture to the desert context". Department of Industry, Tourism and Trade. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  15. ^ a b "» WA pastoralists tour NT stations for rangelands rehydration and rehabilitation insights". Rangelands NRM WA. 18 May 2015. Retrieved 27 October 2022.
  16. ^ Gillam, Mike (5 July 2021). "A touch of light: It is not too late to climb out of the environmental abyss". Alice Springs News. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  17. ^ "Native title claimants paint Nyterrm Dreaming" (PDF). Land Rights News (Central Australia). 10 (1): 21. March 2020. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  18. ^ a b c Central Land Council (2021). "Native Title". Central Land Council Annual Report 2020–21. Australian Government. ISSN 1034-3652. PDF & Parliamentary report
  19. ^ "Land Units of Woodgreen Station (Atartinga)". Spatial data and information management, Department of Infrastructure, Planning and Logistics. Northern Territory Government. 9 November 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  20. ^ "Place Names Register". NT Place Names Register. Northern Territory Government. Department of Infrastructure, Planning and Logistics. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  21. ^ "Interim Biogeographic Regionalisation for Australia (IBRA7) Codes". Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water. Commonwealth of Australia. 2012. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  22. ^ (PDF). Northern Territory Government. 2018. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 October 2019.
  23. ^ "Qualifying VK8 parks". World Wide Flora & Fauna - Australia. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  24. ^ a b "Woodgreen". Protected Planet. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  25. ^ "Northern Territory of Australia Territory Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act: Declaration of Park: Woodgreen Conservation Reserve" (PDF). Government Gazette. Northern Territory Government (G43): 9. 29 October 2014. ISSN 0157-8324. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  26. ^ Tennant Creek Visitor Guide (PDF). Tourism Central Australia. p. 29. See map of Binns Track.
  27. ^ Bentley, Amanda (10 September 2019). "Major Harold John Thomas Berryman". Ballarat & District in the Great War. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  28. ^ a b "Woodgreen Station". Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Archives. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  29. ^ "Mishap to Monospar 'plane". Western Argus. Vol. 41, no. 2361. Western Australia. 17 September 1935. p. 2. Retrieved 31 October 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
  30. ^ "A Monospar down". The Macleay Chronicle. No. 2951. New South Wales, Australia. 11 September 1935. p. 4. Retrieved 31 October 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
  31. ^ a b c "Half-caste Institution 1940-1941". Centre for Indigenous Family History Studies. 2007. Retrieved 30 October 2022. [From] National Archives of Australia, Darwin Office: CRS F126 Item 33
  32. ^ "Glynn, Alfreda". Women's Museum of Australia. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  33. ^ Smith, John P. McD (3 March 2019). "The Florence Nightingale from the bush". Alice Springs News. Retrieved 30 October 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Bastin, G.N. (1991). "Rangeland reclamation on Atartinga station, central Australia". Australian Journal of Soil and Water Conservation. 4 (2): 18–25. hdl:102.100.100/252501 – via CSIRO Research Publications Repository.
  • Walsh, D. (2009). A maximum sustainable stocking rate system in central Australia: Woodgreen Station, NT. DKCRC Working Paper 54, The Central Australian Grazing Strategies project Working Paper Series. Desert Knowledge CRC, Alice Springs. ISBN 978-1-74158-139-3. ISSN 1833-7309.

External links edit

woodgreen, station, london, underground, railway, station, wood, green, tube, station, confused, with, outstation, mulga, bore, also, referred, atartinga, 05778, 70778, 05778, 70778, woodgreen, also, spelt, wood, green, also, known, atartinga, cattle, station,. For the London Underground railway station see Wood Green tube station Not to be confused with the outstation of Mulga Bore also referred to as Atartinga 19 03 28 S 136 42 28 E 19 05778 S 136 70778 E 19 05778 136 70778 Woodgreen Woodgreen Station also spelt Wood Green and also known as Atartinga is a cattle station located in the Northern Territory of Australia to the northeast of Alice Springs extending approximately 2 215 km2 855 sq mi It was also known as Mer Athatheng by some of the Indigenous people in the area Woodgreen Stationclass notpageimage Location in Northern Territory The first lessee of the pastoral lease created in 1918 was Bob Purvis Sr who first ran it as a sheep station and bred horses before introducing cattle The property was very degraded by the time his son Bob Purvis Jr took it over in 1960 mainly due to overstocking Since then Bob Jr has slowly but surely rejuvenated the property making it a viable concern albeit with much lower stocking rates of cattle by applying some of the techniques of regenerative agriculture and developing his own methods to improve the soil Contents 1 History 1 1 Before European settlement 1 2 Bob Purvis Sr 1918 1960 1 3 Bob Purvis Jr from 1960 1 4 21st century 2 Property location and description 3 Woodgreen Conservation Reserve 4 1935 plane emergency landing 5 Other people 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editBefore European settlement edit Wood Green Station was established across the land of two Aboriginal groups most of it on that of the Anmatyerre with the eastern border flanking the lands of the Alyawarre people 1 2 It has been referred to as Athatheng by Aboriginal people 3 4 Before European settlement the land had not been exposed to grazing animals with hard cloven hoofs 5 Bob Purvis Sr 1918 1960 edit nbsp Bob Purvis Sr 1922 nbsp Bob Purvis Sr and Adele Purvis at WoodgreenRobert Bob H Purvis Sr had come out from England 6 and worked as a bush contractor 7 before acquiring the 2 000 km 1 200 mi pastoral lease known as Atartinga in 1918 8 7 He had a brother named Lou Purvis He survived a bout of tetanus which lasted months which he spent somewhere else He was known as a very strong man with a huge appetite eating a lot of meat and eggs 6 This earned him the nickname the Sandover alligator referring to the Sandover River northeast of Alice Springs 9 7 It was said that he could eat a whole leg of goat at one sitting 10 In the 1930s Purvis Sr first bred horses for the British Indian Army as well as race horses 11 and sheep and in the 1930s took on some cattle 8 changing it to a cattle station from around 1940 The property was expanded at some point but as the government stipulated minimum livestock numbers the land was overgrazed and probably mismanaged according to his son The 1957 drought led to culling and sale of many horses 11 The property had also been affected badly by drought in 1954 12 Bob Purvis Sr was married to Adele Viola Purvis 13 who was formerly a music teacher She was also a keen local historian and founded the National Trust of Australia Northern Territory 7 She published articles 10 and was also the first person to donate a box of papers to the Northern Territory Archives Alice Springs office after it opened in 2003 13 Bob Purvis Jr from 1960 edit Bob Purvis Jr was born on the property 8 in 1937 and went to boarding school in Adelaide South Australia 11 His father had got into huge debt by the time he took over ownership 14 in 1960 largely due to land degradation caused by poor grazing practices This was partly due to the conditions of the least which stated that thea minimum stocking rate was 3000 head for the property The debts exceeded the property s value and three quarters of the land was unusable 5 Bob Jr worked slowly over decades to improve the soil to make the property sustainable using some methods which he had developed himself to reverse the damage 8 He has practised regenerative agriculture which included measures such as reducing stock numbers he estimated that a sustainable number is about 400 5 and building banks to slow the flow of water and trap the topsoil 15 These ponding banks have become commonly referred to as Purvis banks 16 His labours have borne fruit and perennial grasses have returned to the property with topsoil in much better condition and more fertile He has used fire for land management adapted from Indigenous fire stick farming and sites once dominated by mulga have been transformed into open ghost gum grassland with many species of grasses and forbs which offer better nutrition for cattle 15 By 1985 he had paid off the debts and was able to sell livestock in a hard season 5 He also improved the fencing and introduced solar power and batteries to provide for its energy needs 11 Working with his wife Marie he has worked with fire for decades This along with ponding banks and lower stocking had drought proofed the property and improved productivity He has also managed to keep buffel grass under control 14 Purvis got advice from scientists government representatives and others However there was no one single answer it was through his own experimentation that he found the best ways to improve his land being unique in its own way He used observation and his analytical skills to hone his methods He believes that regulators initial recommended stocking rate was three times higher than what he considers appropriate for long term carrying capacity of Woodgreen His property is manageable and productive as well as being stable financially with a productive herd and few stock losses 15 A 2021 article calls him a pioneer of the model of sustainably low stocking rates and maintaining high quality beef which caused him to be ostracised by some in the cattle industry 17 The introduction of native title in Australia in 1993 also led to a change in the relationship between the Aboriginal workers and the Purvis family 11 21st century edit Bob s son Jim has co managed the property since some time before 2015 16 In March 2020 anthropologists work was under way on both Woodgreen and Mount Skinner pastoral leases as the basis for any future native title claims under the auspices of the Central Land Council 18 By 30 June 2021 the research had progressed 19 Property location and description editWoodgreen Station also known as Atartinga covers approximately 2 215 km2 855 sq mi and is located around 140 km 87 mi north of Alice Springs on the Sandover Highway 20 The homestead is known as Atartinga and is in the locality of Anmatjere local government area Central Desert Region 21 It lies within the Simpson Desert 19 Atartinga is a subregion of Burt Plain an interim Australian bioregion 22 Woodgreen Conservation Reserve editWoodgreen Conservation Reserve is an NT protected area under the Territory Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act 1976 TPWC Act of about 92 665 ha 228 980 acres 23 24 or 927 09 km2 357 95 sq mi 25 Designated in 2014 26 the park is an IUCN Management Category V park 25 There has been some mineral exploration in the park as recently as 2021 19 The reserve straddles the Sandover Highway with most of it on the western side Its northeast corner is close to Atartinga homestead 27 1935 plane emergency landing editOn 6 September 1935 a General Aircraft Monospar ST 12 operated by Australian Transcontinental Airways ATA a suffered engine failure and made an emergency landing on Woodgreen Station Reports vary slightly 29 but the plane was said to be carrying the pilot J Maher with two passengers Renfrey and Maloney and a young crocodile that was being transported to Adelaide b Renfrey walked for two days towards Ryan s Well a watering hole on the Overland Telegraph Line around 40 mi 64 km to seek assistance Three men one of several search parties sent out to look for the men 30 motoring across the desert found him and took him to Aileron telegraph station In the meantime Don Thomas from Alice Springs drove to Woodgreen to pick up Purvis Sr and two blackfellows one of whom managed to track down the plane based on the description of the location given by Renfrey Maher and Maloney had only six oranges between them for food but they survived until they were rescued by shooting and eating the crocodile 31 Other people editTopsy Glynn was born around 1916 the daughter of a half caste stockman called James Glynn and an unnamed Aboriginal woman She was later described by the authorities as a three quarter caste aboriginal After Topsy s mother was killed around 1919 Ron Purvis Sr persuaded the NT police commissioner Robert Stott to put Topsy in to the Half caste Institution Alice Springs The Bungalow then at the Alice Springs Telegraph Station although she was not technically half caste on condition that Purvis employed her on Wood Green Station as soon as she had completed her schooling there which he did Glynn gave birth to two daughters on Atartinga Wood Green The first of these daughters was Rona Glynn born in 1936 whose father was Ron Price 32 She went on to become the first Aboriginal teacher and nurse in Alice Springs The second daughter was Freda Glynn born in 1939 whose father was Ron s brother Alf Price 32 Freda became a media specialist who co founded the Central Australian Aboriginal Media Association CAAMA and is the mother of filmmaker Erica Glynn 33 Topsy was again admitted to The Bungalow on 12 Sept 1939 When Freda was just three weeks old as there were health issues to be attended to the authorities were trying to determine who Freda s father was and owing to the promiscous manner in which Topsy was giving birth to half caste infants at Wood Green station it was considered to be in the girls best interests for her and her children to remain in the Institution Topsy was not keen to return to the station as she was employed by Purvis as housemaid and cook and had also done stockwork and windmill repair work around the station and in return had only received clothing and rations and was happy working as a laundress at the institution However by November 1940 Topsy was again working for Purvis at Wood Green under an agreement similar to that which governed the employment of halfcaste girls in the township 32 Following the bombing of Darwin in February 1942 there were military orders to evacuate The Bungalow so Topsy took her girls to New South Wales to find work there 34 Artist and cultural leader Anmatyerr woman Hilda Cookie Price Pwerl c 1930 2019 worked for rations at Woodgreen known to her as Athatheng and other stations in the area when she was young 3 Lorna Petyarr Purvis who married Alexander Donald Pwerle Ross 1915 1999 known as Don in 1938 was Bob Purvis Sr s niece and they met at Woodgreen She was a half caste Western Arrernte woman who had had a hard life growing up in The Bungalow Don Ross was a senior Kaytetye man who owned a cattle station called Neutral Junction Station near the Barrow Creek Telegraph Station between 1947 and 1952 10 J R Purvis was another son of Bob Purvis Sr 10 Footnotes edit ATA was a short lived airline registered in Melbourne in 1935 by Harold Berryman of Ballarat and four other directors Its three aeroplanes did the mail run from Darwin to Adelaide Melbourne and Sydney until it ceased operations in 1936 owing to the impossibility of importing more planes from Germany at that time 28 One later report says the destination was Melbourne Zoo 29 References edit Horton David R 1996 Map of Indigenous Australia AIATSIS Retrieved 30 October 2022 Tindale Norman Barnett 1974 Anmatjera NT Aboriginal Tribes of Australia Their Terrain Environmental Controls Distribution Limits and Proper Names Australian National University Press ISBN 978 0 708 10741 6 Archived from the original on 8 September 2005 a b Remembering Cookie Carer for language and country PDF Land Rights News Central Australia 10 1 28 March 2020 Retrieved 30 October 2022 Gibson J M 2020 Ceremony Men Making Ethnography and the Return of the Strehlow Collection SUNY series Tribal Worlds Critical Studies in American Indian Nation Building State University of New York Press p 147 ISBN 978 1 4384 7856 2 Retrieved 30 October 2022 a b c d Graham Nicole 7 March 2003 Lawscape paradigm and place in Australian property law PhD University of Sydney pp 217 221 hdl 2123 6269 Retrieved 30 October 2022 a b Bob Purvis State Library of South Australia Retrieved 28 October 2022 a b c d Mr Bob and Mrs Adele Purvis photo text description Territory Stories Library amp Archives NT 19 March 2022 Retrieved 29 October 2022 a b c d Laudine C 2016 Aboriginal Environmental Knowledge Rational Reverence Vitality of Indigenous Religions Taylor amp Francis p 156 ISBN 978 1 317 18609 0 Retrieved 27 October 2022 Nelson Des 19 March 2014 Elkedra jackeroo Death Adders and The Boss Alice Springs News Retrieved 27 October 2022 a b c d Whitebeach Terry Anne June 2006 Telling someone else s story The life history of Alexander Donald Pwerle Ross 1915 1999 Phd Charles Darwin University doi 10 25913 5ea665580cb1c PDF a b c d e Purvis Bob 1937 Simpson Bruce Bruce Forbes 1923 2019 Gammage Bill 1942 5 April 2005 Bob Purvis interviewed by Bruce Simpson and Bill Gammage sound recording library catalogue record National Library of Australia Drovers oral history project Retrieved 27 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Heavy rain in Central Australia The Chronicle Vol 97 no 5 461 South Australia 19 August 1954 p 52 Retrieved 31 October 2022 via National Library of Australia a b Purvis Adele Viola Women s Museum of Australia 7 December 2011 Retrieved 27 October 2022 a b Richards Dave 13 April 2012 Burning Issues 3 A pastoral meditation Alice Online Retrieved 31 October 2022 Includes a photo of Bob Purvis Jr a b c Humphrys Meg 28 September 2020 Reflections from a lifetime of adapting regenerative agriculture to the desert context Department of Industry Tourism and Trade Retrieved 29 October 2022 a b WA pastoralists tour NT stations for rangelands rehydration and rehabilitation insights Rangelands NRM WA 18 May 2015 Retrieved 27 October 2022 Gillam Mike 5 July 2021 A touch of light It is not too late to climb out of the environmental abyss Alice Springs News Retrieved 31 October 2022 Native title claimants paint Nyterrm Dreaming PDF Land Rights News Central Australia 10 1 21 March 2020 Retrieved 30 October 2022 a b c Central Land Council 2021 Native Title Central Land Council Annual Report 2020 21 Australian Government ISSN 1034 3652 PDF amp Parliamentary report Land Units of Woodgreen Station Atartinga Spatial data and information management Department of Infrastructure Planning and Logistics Northern Territory Government 9 November 2015 Retrieved 29 October 2022 Place Names Register NT Place Names Register Northern Territory Government Department of Infrastructure Planning and Logistics Retrieved 30 October 2022 Interim Biogeographic Regionalisation for Australia IBRA7 Codes Department of Climate Change Energy the Environment and Water Commonwealth of Australia 2012 Retrieved 31 October 2022 Parks and reserves PDF Northern Territory Government 2018 Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2019 Qualifying VK8 parks World Wide Flora amp Fauna Australia Retrieved 29 October 2022 a b Woodgreen Protected Planet Retrieved 29 October 2022 Northern Territory of Australia Territory Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act Declaration of Park Woodgreen Conservation Reserve PDF Government Gazette Northern Territory Government G43 9 29 October 2014 ISSN 0157 8324 Retrieved 30 October 2022 Tennant Creek Visitor Guide PDF Tourism Central Australia p 29 See map of Binns Track Bentley Amanda 10 September 2019 Major Harold John Thomas Berryman Ballarat amp District in the Great War Retrieved 31 October 2022 a b Woodgreen Station Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Archives Retrieved 31 October 2022 Mishap to Monospar plane Western Argus Vol 41 no 2361 Western Australia 17 September 1935 p 2 Retrieved 31 October 2022 via National Library of Australia A Monospar down The Macleay Chronicle No 2951 New South Wales Australia 11 September 1935 p 4 Retrieved 31 October 2022 via National Library of Australia a b c Half caste Institution 1940 1941 Centre for Indigenous Family History Studies 2007 Retrieved 30 October 2022 From National Archives of Australia Darwin Office CRS F126 Item 33 Glynn Alfreda Women s Museum of Australia Retrieved 30 October 2022 Smith John P McD 3 March 2019 The Florence Nightingale from the bush Alice Springs News Retrieved 30 October 2022 Further reading editBastin G N 1991 Rangeland reclamation on Atartinga station central Australia Australian Journal of Soil and Water Conservation 4 2 18 25 hdl 102 100 100 252501 via CSIRO Research Publications Repository Walsh D 2009 A maximum sustainable stocking rate system in central Australia Woodgreen Station NT DKCRC Working Paper 54 The Central Australian Grazing Strategies project Working Paper Series Desert Knowledge CRC Alice Springs ISBN 978 1 74158 139 3 ISSN 1833 7309 External links editPhoto of Bob Purvis on his horse outside the Stuart Arms Hotel 1922 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Woodgreen Station amp oldid 1169160287, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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