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

Page 86

My activist role is better described as a watchdog, providing WACRA with information about developments that may threaten our local built environment heritage. As suggested earlier, local people do not appear to have much say in planning laws nowadays; they are very complicated and hard to engage with. My view is that the state government, with the new act, has all the cards in their hands. Local government has been systematically disempowered to such a degree that the community has little democratic input into planning and heritage. Saving Estcourt House Theo Ellenbroek

Late in 2016 we heard that the historic mansion, Estcourt House, situated in the Tennyson Dunes, was to be demolished to make way for a retirement village. Arguing for protection of heritage, I alerted the authorities on behalf of WACRA. Frederick Estcourt Bucknall came to South Australia in 1860. In 1869 he built a boathouse and hotel which local people at Port Adelaide called ‘The Kerosine Tin’. He soon owned other hotels in the area and was involved in the Marine Terraces (‘The Marines’) at Grange, using the same architects, Bayer and Withall. Bucknall built Estcourt House, a 17-room Military Road mansion, in 1882, anticipating a proposed inland harbour on the Port River (now West Lakes). The Bucknall family, including 11 children, moved into Estcourt House in 1883. Financial problems were looming. The Commercial Bank of Australia, in which Bucknall held most of his money, collapsed in 1886. He was declared bankrupt and was forced to sell Estcourt House. Since the house sale by Bucknall in 1886, the site and building have served as an abode for people with disabilities, catering for ‘crippled children and aged blind’, the language used in 1894. Over the years many organisations used this space as a facility, providing services to those in need of care. The government stepped in and bought the property in 1978. It became a branch of the Adelaide Children’s Hospital in 1981. In 1982 it was known as Ru Rua, housing children with intellectual disabilities. In 1995, the government sold Estcourt House to a private company. In an effort to save Estcourt House, WACRA went into campaign mode and we mobilised our local networks. Developing an argument to save Estcourt House became a priority. We organised a public forum at Henley Town Hall. At the same time, we gathered information, researched Estcourt House heritage, and alerted our membership and other community organisations. The timing aspects of the campaign were crucial. When we were ready, we contacted the local newspapers and made written representations to the City of Charles Sturt (Development Act 1993), including one in January 2018. Charles Sturt Council’s Planning Officer Anthony Zollo said that ‘34 people made submissions against the proposal for the January 2019 meeting’. It is recorded that both sides of government (Minister Stephen Mullighan for the ALP and Opposition leader Steven Marshall for the Liberals) were against the proposed demolition: ‘MPs join community fight to save historic home’ was the line run by the Weekly Times Messenger 17 January 2018. The Westside Weekly Times Messenger (page 4, 24 January 2018) reported (in anticipation):

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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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