W.
A. W. de Beuzeville Retires 9
July 1948 The Land (Sydney) |
Mr W. A. W. de Beuzeville,
possibly the most valuable servant in forestry circles in this Commonwealth,
recently retired from the office of N.S.W. Government Ecologist. He left at the peak period of his service
taking with him mental wealth garnered from 36 years of experience,
visions of schemes necessary to place forestry in this State and continent,
on a solid progressive footing. His retirement means an irretrievable
loss to pending forestry developments. For no man, however capable, can
replace him. Therefore much of the work which
he has commenced must, for some time, remain in abeyance. In a day when all work on forestry schemes
should be speeding ahead, this halt, if it is not disastrous, is to be
greatly deplored. This retirement is due solely to Government
witlessness in adherence to a policy introduced during the depression,
of 1933, that no man shall work after 65; it is due to what Mr. E.
H. P. Swain once termed, a twinkle in his eye, "an excess of the
virtue of seniority." Wide
Scope of Knowledge W. A. W. de Beuzeville
has, and is, a wizard in all things concerned with forestation. He knows the soils of this State as intimately
as a man knows that of his suburban property. He knows the climates and their
varying degrees of mildness and severity, in every district. He knows the grasses, plants and
trees that already flourish in every area as well as the species which
may be successfully transported from one area to another. He can tell you, and without reference
to any source of information, the services for which these plants and
trees should be planted, their rate of growth. All these individual facts he
passes on for the asking, in a humble, matter-of-fact way. I think this sense of humility comes from
his seeing the world of nature as a kingdom of miracles of which we
have barely touched the fringe. Early
Years Mr. de Beuzeville
was born on Aston Station on the outskirts of Bombala. It was in the day of vast estates
and Aston Station, the property of Sir James Mathewson, Bart., England,
was under the management of his father, Mr. P. de Beuzeville,
J.P. The background of the elder de Beuzeville is of historic interest. In the adventurous 60's and 70's
he was engaged stocking up pastoral holdings for George King & Co.,
Ltd., Sydney in northern Queensland; later he migrated to the Cape
Oliver and Palmer goldfields. This de Beuzeville
married a daughter of Alex. Watt, a pioneer who settled in 1833 at Esrom, Bathurst, the site
on which All Saints College now stands. Those early years at Aston Station, at
Bombala, and later at Wagga and Tumut Public Schools, are now treasured
memories of the recently retired ecologist. School finished, he entered a
lawyer's office to forsake it for life on the land. In 1907, he married Miss Ratcliffe of "Wollongawah,"
Tumut, a grand-daughter of Commissioner Bingham, who established the
official Government Station at Tumut River in 1840. In 1912 he found the calling in which
he was to make his mark, and joined the Forestry Commission. In that year he was appointed to
Warialda as Forest Guard under the district administration of Mr. E. H. F. Swain,
former Forestry Commissioner. Survey
of Pilliga Scrub "Due to Mr. Swain's long vision and
persistent advocacy," said Mr. de Beuzeville,
"a branch of Forestry Survey and Assessment was established,
and three officers (I was one of them) were appointed Forestry Assessors
in 1914. "This brought about my transfer to
Baradine to undertake the survey and assessment of the Pilliga Scrub." Thirty-four years back, Pilliga Scrub
was flung over 3,500,000 acres and was practically road less and waterless.
"In this survey a unique system
of horseback traverses was adopted with great success," he
remarked reminiscently. "A compass line was sighted on horseback
and the paces counted for certain distances, usually 10 chains. Then a halt would be made and
details of timber stands and natural features, written up in field books.
By this means traverses of about
20 miles per day, were affected." Loaned
to C.S.I.R. In 1916 came a transfer to Head Office.
From there, from time to time, he went
forth to make forest surveys in many parts of the State. One such undertaking concerned the
mountain areas he had known and loved in his youth. On this occasion he was commissioned
to discover valuable belts of Mountain Ash (E. gigantea)
and the stretches of country which would be most suitable for the
establishing of exotic softwood plantations. For his efficient handling of
this work he was appointed senior forestry officer of Tumbarumba-Tumut
district. The
years were how revealing his worth In 1932, recognition of his intimate
knowledge of the flora of the State, brought
him the distinction of being loaned to the C.S.I.R. to make a
botanical and timber sample collection of timber forest trees in N.S.W.
and Southern Queensland. After that you would have found him
on the North Coast, bent on a survey of the Ironbarks. Honours
Conferred The appointment of Mr. Swain as Forestry
Commissioner in 1939 brought a new development:- the
introduction of an office for the intensive survey of climatics
and their control of vegetation. There was only one man truly suitable
for that position and you can guess who it was. And six years later when the
branch of Forestry Ecology was created, there was conferred on Mr. de Beuzeville the title of Forestry Ecologist. To this position was added the
responsibility of establishing the Forestry Commission's nurseries at West
Pennant Hills. The control of these two activities by
the man who so thoroughly knew his State ensured that all plants distributed
from the nurseries were suited to the climates to which they were
despatched. Mr. de Beuzeville
is a member of the Royal Society and the Linean Society
of New South Wales. His work on the Climatilogical Bases of Forestry, published by the
Commission, has created considerable attention abroad, particularly in the U.S.A. Other works of his are now in the course
of publication. The most popular of these will be
the one on Australian trees and tree planting. Two tremendous projects visualised by
him were the establishment of two shelter belts, (one of them composed
mainly of Kurrajongs) running north to south across the State. The completion of these schemes alone
warranted his retention by the Forestry Commission. |