Listen to the People: 50 years of community activism: 1970-2020

Page 62

immediately opposite her home in Jeanes Street. We had already dug the hole that morning without Mary knowing. That tree still stands proudly on that corner of Menkens Reserve and is known as 'Mary’s Tree'. One big problem we had with the reserve was that it did not have irrigation to keep the trees alive. Residents would carry out buckets of water and provide at least 20 litres a week to every tree. Further deputations to council resulted in an agreement that council would install irrigation, not only to the trees but to plant a lawn. After the amalgamation of Henley and Grange Council to become part of the City of Charles Sturt, additional work has taken place on the reserve to install a shade, seats and a playground. John Behenna was a councillor in the Henley and Grange Council who supported our request, and soon after Menkens Reserve was planted and landscaped John volunteered to officially set up the Henley and Grange Greening Group. His story starts from here. Greening Henley and Grange John Behenna

I attended meetings at the Henley and Grange Residents’ Association in 1990. In 1993 I ran for Henley and Grange Council and was successful. Later that year I formed a greening group. I have always had an interest in trees and bushes around the district. We had a series of productive meetings in the Henley and Grange Council with local people, including Jim Douglas who later became WACRA’s president. Tree supplies were organised and once a month the group planted. Steve Davey, the council’s gardener, supplied the plants and worked collaboratively with us. While we were in harness, we planted about 800 trees. Menkens Reserve, William Atkin Reserve, Henley High School (several planting sessions), the banks of the River Torrens (several times), the park bicycle path running off Marlborough Street, John Mitchell Reserve and a couple of streets in Fulham Gardens, Sunset Crescent near the Grange Railway Station, all were planted between 1994 and 2000. Enthusiasm was infectious. Trees and bushes were mainly Australian natives; they were salt and sea air tolerant. By the time Henley and Grange Council had merged to form Charles Sturt Council, group size had dwindled and council was not as enthusiastic. This is the way it happened. In 1994 the Weekly Times Messenger carried an article about tree planting in our local area. I contributed to that article, telling readers that I was planning a tree planting work group. I said: ‘Could all those interested come along, and we will have a cup of tea and a yarn about growing trees.’ The press was good because it supported my view that we needed to do more about some of the ugly streetscapes in the district, showing a photo of Seaview Road, Henley Beach, that was devoid of trees. Up to 16 people attended that meeting, and the same at subsequent gatherings. When I thought we had talked enough, I said: ‘Let’s get out there and plant’. It started at Menkens Reserve. Sixty plantings, every Saturday morning. We got things done. It was called direct action. Our greening movement reflected the community spirit of that era. We knew the gardeners and the councillors; it was a different ethos. In the 1990s we did things. I attended Henley and Grange Residents’ Association meetings. I was never a member but I knew this

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Articles inside

Organisations, department names and acronyms

2min
pages 129-133

Working together for the greater good

5min
pages 122-123

Power of the community

13min
pages 124-128

Energy Friends: ‘From little things big things grow’

2min
page 118

Power to the people

6min
pages 119-121

The pool table men

2min
page 117

Social networks

2min
page 113

Being part of the community

4min
pages 111-112

WACRA’s history in images

2min
page 110

Henley Community Garden

6min
pages 105-108

Poles Apart 2016-17

1min
page 102

Mosaic Stepping Stones 2009

1min
page 101

The Wake following Telstra tower being built

1min
page 96

Telstra tower, Henley Beach 2016-17

6min
pages 93-95

Saving old Grange Primary School

6min
pages 87-89

Saving Estcourt House

2min
page 86

Community Alliance SA

3min
pages 84-85

High-rise construction of the Baju/H2O developments

4min
pages 82-83

Paid parking meters in Henley Square

2min
pages 72-73

Greening Henley and Grange

2min
page 62

Earth Hour

3min
pages 65-66

Saving Menkens Reserve

2min
page 61

Dredging Outer Harbor

3min
pages 59-60

River Torrens – Breakout Creek (Karrawirra Pari

2min
page 58

Ban shark fishing

2min
page 48

Wara Wayingga-Tennyson Dunes Conservation Reserve

4min
pages 43-44

Save Henley Dunes – coastal ecology

2min
page 42

Saving Henley Dunes

7min
pages 53-55

The Coastal Pathway – unfinished business

8min
pages 45-47

Save Our Beaches – impact

5min
pages 37-38

Save Our Beaches – another perspective

6min
pages 39-41

Building healthy communities

3min
pages 27-28

Media is political

2min
page 16

Activism in an age of protest

1min
page 20

In the beginning

2min
page 11

Networking

2min
page 13

Acknowledgements

1min
page 9

What is community activism?

2min
page 12

Fundraising

2min
page 18
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Listen to the People: 50 years of community activism: 1970-2020 by eurekaprinters - Issuu