Connect with us
Byron Bay News and Weather copy
Mt Warning News and Weather copy
Kyogle News
Grafton News and Events copy
Byron Bay News and Weather copy
Mt Warning News and Weather copy
Kyogle News
Grafton News and Events copy
previous arrow
next arrow

Clarence Valley News

Mystery disappearance of Cedar King remembered 58 years later

Published

on

Bill Haydon is second from the left with a timber-getting party. Photo courtesy Dorrigo Heritage Defenders
Advertisements
MadeComfy

Mystery disappearance of Cedar King remembered 58 years later

 

By Samantha Elley

It was 1965 and ‘Big’ Bill Haydon was known as the Cedar King on account of his lifetime of work dealing with the precious timber that grows on the Northern Rivers.

In this same year, at 74 years of age, Haydon was in the Washpool area in the Upper Clarence, now a National Park, where he would disappear, never to be heard from again.

Despite thorough search parties scouring the area, the home of the red cedar would be the last place anyone saw Bill Haydon alive.

A book written about his adventures, Red Cedar: The Tree of Australian History by John Vader gives a description of how Bill’s teams would descend 11 miles into gorges from the New England escarpment in land rovers that had snow chains on them and assisted by caterpillar tractors.

These were nearly perpendicular drops into hidden valleys with breath-taking views.

Sometimes, the only way to get the tractors out was to drag them in reverse using rear mounted winches, cutting their way as they went.

No wonder that cedar was known as ‘red gold’ when considering the lengths people went to, to obtain the rich, red timber.

Haydon was known as a self-made man having left home in 1906 with only a couple of shillings in his pocket.

Two years later he managed to buy his first bullock team for 200 pounds.

Bill Haydon is second from the left with a timber-getting party. Photo courtesy Dorrigo Heritage Defenders

Bill Haydon is second from the left with a timber-getting party. Photo courtesy Dorrigo Heritage Defenders

He would go on to buy 50 more.

He was known as the youngest person to own his own bullock team.

In 1926, along with others, he built the first petrol driven logging winch, then in 1941 the first caterpillar dozer was used on the North Coast.

By the late 1950s he commissioned the film Red Gold which recorded the history of cedar getters on the North Coast.

Haydon built 10 sawmills across the mid-North Coast districts, along with a ply mill and furniture factory near Kempsey.

He was generous in his dealings, building 80 houses, two schools and donated cedar to the Catholic churches in the area, as well as a slab of cedar to the National Museum.

References

This story first appeared in talesfromthegrave.org

 

For more local Clarence Valley news, click here.

Advertisements
Tenterfield-The Bowlo

Clarence Valley News

Community group’s council audit delayed

Published

on

By

NSW-Northern-Rivers-Breaking-News
Advertisements
MadeComfy

Community group’s council audit delayed

 

By Tim Howard

A community group supposedly the target of a Clarence Valley Council audit in February 2024 over the cost of its interactions with council has pointed out the audit has not been completed. The General Manager, Laura Black commented, “I anticipate it will take a couple of months.”

The secretary of Yamba Community Action Network (YambaCAN), Lynne Cairns, said this week’s council business paper included a report, Council Meeting Checklist – update on actions taken.

The report revealed staff had not completed the action, the result of a council resolution at the February 2024 council meeting.

“On page 175 of the business paper there is a note next to the item,” Ms Cairns said.

“It reads: ‘Staff responsible for collating information have been diverted to prepare and respond to legal action taken against council by an executive member of YambaCan’.”

Ms Cairns said this was incorrect as no-one on the YambaCAN executive had taken legal action against the council.

She was aware of some matters concerning the council a member of YambaCAN had taken to the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal.

“These matters were not matters concerning YambaCAN and the member who brought them was not acting for YambaCAN,” Ms Cairns said.

“I’m concerned this is some disinformation that somehow YambaCAN is responsible for delaying council’s investigation of its actions.

“YambaCAN is requesting an apology from council for the incorrect information in the business paper.”

The resolution read: that the general manager advises, by way of a report the:

1. allocation of resources required to respond to GIPAs submitted by YambaCan since January 2022.

2. allocation of resources required to respond to RFI (Request for Information) submitted by YambaCan since January 2022.

3. any cost implications of delays to delivering the Yamba Community Precinct project since January 2022.

The matter was passed 5-4, but debate was fiery.

Cr Karen Toms brought it as a notice of motion to alert the public to the costs the group’s GIPA requests and requests for information were incurring.

But other councillors said these costs were part of council operating openly and transparently.

Cr Greg Clancy was concerned the motion focused on just one group when council records showed it was responsible for a fraction of the requests.

“As seen in the listing of GIPA applications on council’s website, there are 22 GIPA applications and only six of these refer to YambaCAN,” he told the February meeting.

He also revealed YambaCAN had lodged a request for information, however were informed that there were 290 requests for information previously lodged by others that were waiting to be processed.

Ms Cairns was concerned that with the council going into caretaker mode on August 16, ahead of the September local government elections, council could not effectively decide on the matter.

There will be report on the outcome of this matter and other matters at council in next week’s edition of The Northern Rivers Times.

 

For more Yamba news, click here.

Advertisements
Tenterfield-The Bowlo
Continue Reading

Clarence Valley News

Clarence Valley Country Muster

Published

on

By

Clarence Valley Country Muster
Advertisements
MadeComfy

Clarence Valley Country Muster

 

If you are missing the country sounds from Tamworth, fret not, as the Clarence Valley Country Muster is just around the corner.

Expanded from two days to four, the event will start on July 25th and go to July 28th at 11 Coulters Lane, Ulmarra, near Grafton.

You will enjoy artists such as Jade Hurley, John, Lloyd, Jack Watson, Lindsay Waddington and Jamie Davis.

Special guest artists, Paul Ricketts, Winner of the Thornton Young Award and Nay McAplin, Winner of the Walk Ups in July, will also make an appearance.

Your comperes for the main stage will be Terry Gordon OAM and Ken ‘Chainsaw’ Lindsay.

And bring those nerves with you, as from 10.30am on Thursday, aspiring artists can take their turn on the microphone, with John Lloyd hosting the walk-ups.

All acts will be vying for a gig at next July’s event.

Now is the time to grab a group of friends or family members and book your spot by heading to their website www.cvcmuster.com.au or calling Wendy Gordon on 0432 741947.

Gates open for early arrival at the muster site on Tuesday, July 23.

For $120 per person, you can enjoy a full week of camping, camaraderie and entertainment at one of the best value-for-money festivals in the Clarence Valley.

Check out is Tuesday, July 30.

If you have a fire pit, bring it along as wood will be supplied.

There will be songs around the campfire, best dressed Christmas and party games and a big finale on the Sunday.

 

For more local Clarence Valley news, click here.

Advertisements
Tenterfield-The Bowlo
Continue Reading

Clarence Valley News

NSW BUDGET: NOTHING FOR RICHMOND AND CLARENCE VALLEYS COST OF LIVING CRISIS, BUT SOME WINS

Published

on

By

NSW BUDGET Cost of Living
Advertisements
MadeComfy

NSW BUDGET: NOTHING FOR RICHMOND AND CLARENCE VALLEYS COST OF LIVING CRISIS, BUT SOME WINS

 

The NSW Labor Government’s 18 June Budget does nothing to alleviate the growing cost of living problems in the Richmond and Clarence Valleys, although there is some good news for the region, according to Clarence Nationals MP Richie Williamson.

“Everywhere I go, every local I talk to, they all say the same thing: we’re struggling with rising costs – why isn’t the Government helping?” Mr Williamson said.

Mr Williamson said that he was all for working cooperatively with the Government, but there was mounting evidence Sydney Labor is “out of town, out of touch and the budget is out of control”.

“Calls to reinstate the $250 fuel card for regional seniors, students and apprentices have fallen on deaf ears, but Sydney seniors now enjoy $2-a-day Gold Passes on Sydney’s massive and massively subsidised public transport system as well as toll relief for Sydneysiders,” Mr Williamson said.

“Calls to save the Ulmarra ferry from Labor’s axe met a similar fate, at the same time as Labor is buying a fleet of new ferries for Sydney and took over another Sydney ferry service that has lower patronage than Ulmarra to Southgate.”

Mr Williamson did acknowledge the Government’s ongoing funding of the previous Liberals and Nationals Government’s Grafton Base Hospital rebuild, the allocation of $6.2m in the fight against White Spot disease in local rivers as well as a “welcome” $90m boost for the Resilient Homes Program, following the 2022 floods.

“These are crumbs compared to what Labor is lavishing on its Sydney heartland,” Mr Williamson cautioned.

“The Richmond and Clarence Valleys provide the timber for Sydney homes, the beef for Sydney dinners as well as the sugar and milk for Sydney cappuccinos.

“That needs to be acknowledged and we deserve our fair share,” Mr Williamson concluded.”

 

For more Richmond Valley news, click here.

Advertisements
Tenterfield-The Bowlo
Continue Reading

NRTimes Online

Advertisement

KC-Farm-Equipment

National News Australia

Latest News

Verified by MonsterInsights