Push-Button Will
Launch Snowy Scheme 10
October 1949 Daily Advertiser (Wagga Wagga) |
When the Governor-General (Mr. W. J. McKell) presses a button on a hilltop near Adaminaby on
the afternoon of Monday, October 17, a charge of explosive will
inaugurate the largest public works undertaking ever planned in
Australia. The hilltop ceremony will be the
equivalent of 'turning the sod' to begin the vast Irrigation and hydro-electric scheme
to be carried out by the Snowy Mountains Hydro Electric Authority. The explosion will begin the excavation
that will be necessary for the erection of the Adaminaby dam, with its 86
miles of tunnels, 500 miles of race-line, and 16 power stations will eventually
provide over two million acre feet of irrigation water and 1,720,000
kilowatts of electric power - nearly as much as all the power stations
in Australia are producing today. 70-year-old
Dream Towns in the Monaro have declared
the day a holiday, for the ceremony is an indication to the people
of the district that a dream 70 years old is coming true, that the
Snowy waters will at last be harnessed for the good of Australia. Apart from the national importance of
the work for defence and industry, its effect locally will be tremendous. The town of Cooma, where headquarters
of the Authority eye being established, will be doubled In size, for possibly
3000 people will move in round those headquarters, and plans are
already under way for the building of a new section of the town. Adaminaby itself (population 700)
will also grow, because as the nearest town to the dam site it will have
established near by a township of construction workers. New Townships As the construction
works proceed over the years other towns and townships will be established,
building up the population of the whole district, bringing fresh
prosperity, perhaps new industries. 'I believe that this scheme will
be one of the greatest single factors that will make it possible for
this country to carry a greatly Increased population,' said Mr.
Nelson Lemmon, Commonwealth Minister for Works and Housing, when the
bill setting up the authority went through Parliament. 'It will also be one of the greatest
single factors to bring about a permanent and effective policy of
decentralisation. Because of the great quantity of water
that will be made available for irrigation, and the cheap power
that will be generated, there is no reason why we should not see in our time
inland cities in the Murray Valley and the Murrumbidgee Valley that should carry
a population of 1,000,000 people.' To be Filmed The Prime Minister
(Mr. Chifley), Commonwealth Ministers, State Governors and Premiers, Federal
and State Members of Parliament, and visitors from several States will
attend the opening ceremony, which will be broadcast over the
national net-work by the Australian Broadcasting Commission and other radio
stations. Proceedings will be filmed by the
newsreel companies and the Department of Information, photographed and
reported in the newspapers. People in the surrounding districts are
planning to make this a field day. First function is an official luncheon
given by the Mayor of Cooma (Alderman Frank Norris) to the
Governor-General and visitors. At the same time buffet luncheon
will be provided for the big gathering of guests expected at the
Adaminaby Show ground. Ceremony
at Site These luncheons will be followed by
the ceremony at the site, where Mr. Lemmon will preside, there will be
speeches by the Governor - General, the Prime Minister, the
Governor of New South Wales) Liet. General John
Northcott), and the Premier (Mr. McGirr). The Federal Member for Eden-Monaro (Mr. A.
Fraser) and the State Member for. Monaro (Mr. J. W. Seiffert) will also take part in the proceedings. Those attending the ceremony will
then be invited to afternoon tea at the Adaminaby show grounds, there will be a dance at Adaminaby at night, and
a mayoral ball at Cooma. Much preliminary work remains to be
done before actual construction of the Adaminaby dam begins. Roads leading to the area will be
remodelled to carry the heavyweight traffic of machinery and materials. A special access mad is being constructed
from the existing highway to the dam site. Space is being cleared for buildings
at the site, drilling teams are in the field, engineers are taking up
residence, stores and headquarters buildings are being prepared. But it is estimated that it will take
eight years to complete the first stage of the scheme - the Adaminaby
dam and the tunnel which will take Eucumbene waters from the dam
into the Tumut - and maybe 20 or 30 years before the whole scheme, is
completed. |