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The
Snowy Mountains (Australia) Hydro-Electric Scheme, begun in 1949, was 25
years in construction, and remains one the worlds great engineering and
social achievements. Attaining its goal of irrigating the arid Australian
interior for food production, and generating hydro-electricity, it also
dramatically changed the nature of Australian culture.
Over 100,000 workers, displaced after World War II and from more than 30 countries, were brought in during the course of the scheme. The experience of work at Snowy and the sheer migrant numbers moved the Australian population from stolidly British and Anglo-Saxon to determinedly multi-cultural. The man in charge of the scheme, New Zealander William Hudson, told workers when he toured Europes displaced persons camps and offered work twenty-four thousand miles away: "You wont be Balts or Slavs you will be men of Snowy". Born in Nelson, New Zealand, in 1896, Hudson was educated at Nelson College and studied civil engineering at London University. When Hudson told his father of his decision to study engineering, the response was, "Bill, that's all you're bloody well good for" - an ironic understatement for the man who was to forge one of the world's great engineering feats. When war was declared he enlisted in the British Army to fight in World War I. After the war he graduated with first class honours and completed post-graduate study in France, then joined the large British engineering firm, Armstrong Whitworth. The Chosen
One In the post-war 1940's Australia's acute needs for water, power, labour and capital were the most important challenges it faced. As demand for agricultural exports increased and the manufacturing sector boomed, the shortage of irrigation and power became pressing concerns. Despite opposition to the Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Scheme, these concerns, along with a perceived need to modernise industrially and defend against the communist threat of the time, determined that the scheme must go ahead. William Hudson took up duty on 1 August 1949, under the Snowy Mountains Hydroelectric Power Act, and on 17 October 1949 he fired the first explosive charge. So began a project that would launch Australian engineering and industry into a new era, while ushering in an enduring multi-cultural legacy. United
Nations of Snowy |
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Recognising that post-war Australians were now going on holiday in the family car, he developed escorted car convoys around the scheme to promote a sense of communal ownership. Bus tours were also accommodated. Tour operators convinced parents all over Australia that their children's education was incomplete without a school or family tour. This stroke of inspired public relations helped sell, the scheme to taxpayers, and the younger generation. The Snowy Mountains project opened up the Australian alpine region for tourism, with the infrastructure provided paving the way for Australia's modern ski resorts. Hudson was given substantial powers in the interests of speed and achievement, and he used these powers effectively, creating an organization based on professional disciplines. His management style was hierarchical, but based on a respect for hard work and excellence. Leader By
Example
There were many design and construction innovations achieved in the
scheme, in particular the technique of rockbolting. Previously
concrete lining had been usual in protecting workers from unstable rock
when tunneling. Under Hudson's charge researchers developed innovative
rockbolts which were used to individually tie a rock face to the rock
beneath it. When linked together in a pattern the rockbolts provided a
lateral force that obviated a need for concrete lining. The technique was recently used in the construction of the Sydney Harbour Tunnel. |
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The Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Scheme meets its two primary aims. It harnesses snow melt from the Australian Alps, it westwards under the mountains to irrigate the arid interior for food production while it generates hydro-electricity as the water falls to the level of the plains. The Snowy Mountains Scheme has not been without criticism, particularly from environmentalists. It is difficult to imagine such a scheme going ahead today in an age of environmental risk reports and where the Keynesian economics of income generation that underpinned it have been out of fashion for a long time. But having recently celebrated its 50th anniversary Snowy remains an
important asset and a massive human achievement - reflected in
no one more so than William Hudson. As Sir James Gobbo, Governor of
Victoria, stated in the 1999 Ian McLennan Oration, |
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Hudson resigned grudgingly in 1967 aged 71 and died eleven years later in 1978,
after receiving international acclaim. |
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References:
Web References: Brad Colliss
excellent account Of the Snowy River scheme, Snowy: The Making of
Modern Australia, extracts found on the web pages: Sir James Gobbo,
Governor of Victoria, Ian McLennan oration at the University of Melbourne, Short
biographical entry from University of Melbourne Page, Books: Eugene Grayland.
(1967) Famous
New Zealanders, Whitcombe and Tombs, Christchurch. |
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