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Mouat, Henry Playfair

Male 1880 - 1952  (72 years)


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  • Name Mouat, Henry Playfair 
    Nickname Harry 
    Born 31 May 1880  Ravensbourne,(Dunedin),NZ. Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died 8 Oct 1952  St Luke's Hospital,Sydney,NSW Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I579  Wilkinson
    Last Modified 18 Mar 2019 

    Father Mouat, John,   b. 12 Nov 1830, Island of Unst,Shetland Is,Scotland Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1 Jul 1902, Dunedin,New Zealand Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 71 years) 
    Mother Mary Theresa,   b. 25 Mar 1844 
    Family ID F2948  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Winchester, Iris Friend,   b. 25 Jun 1891, Hamilton,Newcastle,NSW. Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 3 May 1975, Morling Lodge Nursing Home,Canberra,ACT. Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 83 years) 
    Married 2 Nov 1912  Hamilton,Newcastle,NSW. Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Notes 
    • Inconsistency: married, 2 Nov or Dec, 1912.
    Children 
     1. Mouat, Althea Florence,   b. 27 Mar 1917, Newcastle,NSW. Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 19 Jun 2017, Canberra,ACT,Australia Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 100 years)
    Family ID F197  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • BIOGRAPHY: https://www.canberratimes.com.au/national/act/defining-the-act-20130326-2gs66.html

      BIOGRAPHY: Canberra Times, 26 March 2013
      Defining the ACT
      By Matthew Higgins

      BIOGRAPHY: "In places the country was so rough that the party carrying out the survey had to crawl on all fours, measure over precipices, and descend in one mile about 1500feet.?? These were the words of surveyor Percy Sheaffe, who between 1910 and 1915 surveyed more than half of the ACT border.

      BIOGRAPHY: Sheaffe, and fellow surveyors Harry Mouat and Freddie Johnston, deserve to be remembered in this our centenary year. Canberra streets are named after Sheaffe and Mouat, but it is the numerous survey marks installed by all three that still survive in the ranges that are their true memorial. Those survey marks, variously timber posts and iron and concrete installations, are direct links with the very birth of the capital territory.

      BIOGRAPHY: Directing the work of the surveyors was Charles Scrivener (after whom Scrivener Dam is named). It was Scrivener who had the task of locating just where a city might be built in the rather nebulous ??Yass-Canberra?? site that federal parliament had decided upon for the national capital in 1908.

      BIOGRAPHY: Scrivener also had to recommend where the borders of the Federal Capital Territory (the ACT since 1938) should run. In deciding that, he was guided by the federal ministers? directive that the territory should encompass the new city?s water supply. The federal government did not want to have endless quarrels with NSW about water pollution. Those politicians were ahead of their time, and Canberrans have been in their debt ever since.

      BIOGRAPHY: Water shaped the territory and explains its weird form. The Cotter River has always been our main supply, and explains why the ACT extends so far to the south-west, for that is where this vital river rises. Early water engineer Ernest de Burgh wrote of the Cotter that ??it is impossible to imagine a catchment from which a purer supply could be obtained??. Other sections of the border safeguard parts of the Molonglo and Naas-Gudgenby river catchments, and also follow the old Queanbeyan-Cooma railway.

      BIOGRAPHY: Scrivener had originally wanted a horseshoe-shaped territory, which as well as the Cotter would have included the full Molonglo-Queanbeyan river catchment. But the NSW Government didn?t want to lose all of that catchment nor the town of Queanbeyan. Though the Queanbeyan River wasn?t incorporated into the territory, the federal government was granted water rights, which later proved significant when we came to build Googong Dam to complement the Cotter system in the 1970s.

      BIOGRAPHY: Percy Sheaffe began the border survey in June 1910 on top of 1421-metre Mount Coree. How the young Queenslander felt about heading into the Brindabellas at the beginning of winter is unrecorded. Scrivener soon wrote of Sheaffe?s progress that frequent showery days and occasional snowfalls were not making the work easy.

      BIOGRAPHY: After clambering down from precipitous Coree, Sheaffe reached the lowest point on the border at the Murrumbidgee River downstream of Uriarra Crossing. He went on around the northern border, crossing through the paddocks of anxious farmers who were worried about which of their lands would end up in the ??Federal??.

      BIOGRAPHY: As Sheaffe moved down the railway line in the east, a second party set out from Coree, heading south along the rugged spine of the Brindabellas. This team was headed by New-Zealand-born Harry Mouat, known as ??Happy Harry?? to his colleagues because he so rarely smiled. He was destined for the wild country of the upper Cotter. Acting Commonwealth geologist Griffith Taylor wrote that ??the upper valley of the Cotter is so rugged and far from all settlement that only one or two people have traversed it, and the map simply indicates it by a broken line in a perfectly blank strip of territory??.

      BIOGRAPHY: As Mouat moved south he picked up names until then known only by local bushmen, such as Mount Aggie, named after Agnes Franklin of Brindabella Station. Mouat made these bush names the official ones we know today. Later in the survey when his field assistant Reg Kelly almost died on a rugged peak, Mouat named it after him, Mount Kelly.

      BIOGRAPHY: Just south of Rolling Ground Gap in May 1914, Mouat was forced off the ranges by blizzards. Scrivener had him spend that frozen winter surveying along the upper Cotter River looking for new dam sites. Corin Dam, built in the 1960s, is surprisingly close to one of the sites recommended by Mouat all those years ago.

      BIOGRAPHY: Mouat had only just got married. Sheaffe married during the job. There was little comfort for young wives in the bush. There was also little privacy living under canvas, especially as the tents of the chainmen, labourers and the cook of each party were close by. To top it off, Sheaffe?s mother Isabel often visited! But there were creature comforts, and photos of the time depict a gramophone and silverware in Sheaffe?s tent.

      BIOGRAPHY: In early 1915, Scrivener retired and Sheaffe was recalled into fledgling Canberra to take on higher duties. He was replaced on the south-eastern border by Frederick Johnston, a young West Australian. Johnston drove a Model T Ford down to the south; he had to go via Cooma as the road inside the territory was impassable for cars. But before he went, he had to get his licence. The Queanbeyan policeman who tested him had never been in a car before, and, according to Johnston, was terrified.

      BIOGRAPHY: Johnston moved along the southern border, where the country was far too rough for the Ford to get beyond base camp. Johnston, Mouat and Sheaffe were all dependent on horses for travel and sometimes had to tramp on foot.

      BIOGRAPHY: One day a local grazier quizzed Johnston about why he wasn?t married. Johnston evasively replied it was because girls were too particular. The grazier looked him in the eye and drawled, ??You ought to come around our way ? my gals aint partikalar.?? Freddie wrote in his memoir ??I did not call!??

      BIOGRAPHY: Finally, almost five years after the border survey began, Johnston and Mouat joined the line at a spot between Sentry Box Mountain and Wrights Hill. It was a celebratory moment, but with prohibition in force in the territory thanks to King O?Malley, it seems to have been a dry night.

      BIOGRAPHY: During the 1990s I had the very good fortune (thanks to federal and ACT heritage funding) to recover the surveyors? story from obscurity and to walk much of their route, searching for their original survey marks. I found more than 500, little knowing that Canberra?s worst recorded bushfire was just around the corner. Many survey marks and delicately engraved reference trees were destroyed in January 2003, but many survive and it was a privilege to have recorded the others so that their existence might be known by future generations.

      BIOGRAPHY: Next time you look out to the ranges that so define the view from Canberra, spare a thought for the surveyors who charted our territory, helped safeguard our catchment, and whose surviving survey marks bring immediately to mind the very birth of the national capital.

      BIOGRAPHY: -----------------------------------
      http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-06-20/mouat-tree-being-moved/6558704

      BIOGRAPHY: ABC News
      'Blazed' tree airlifted out of Namadgi National Park tells tale of epic ACT border survey
      By Craig Allen
      Updated 22 Jun 2015, 9:55am

      BIOGRAPHY: Mouat tree being moved
      PHOTO: The historic Mouat tree was lifted by helicopter out of Namadgi National Park. (Supplied: ACT Parks and Conservation Service)
      A mountain gum bearing the century-old scars of the surveyors who first marked the border between ACT and NSW, has been dug from the ground and helicoptered out of the Namadgi National Park.

      BIOGRAPHY: The huge logistical exercise is part of an ambitious plan, to create a new historical tourist attraction that helps explain the origins of the ACT.

      BIOGRAPHY: The tree was 'blazed', as the old surveyors would have said, with the letters 'CT' (for capital territory), by a team accompanying surveyor Harry Mouat, in early 1915.

      BIOGRAPHY: It was used to delineate the Federal Capital Territory - as the ACT was then known - from surrounding New South Wales.

      BIOGRAPHY: Harry Mouat was responsible for surveying much of the ACT's south-western fringe, in a task that took him through rugged reaches of alpine wilderness in what is now Namadgi National Park.

      BIOGRAPHY: Mr Mouat's granddaughter, Adrienne Bradley, said conditions were challenging for the crew.

      BIOGRAPHY: "Apart from the rocks, the mountains, the steep cliffs and so on, there was snow," Ms Bradley said.

      BIOGRAPHY: "I believe [Mr Mouat] asked to come back from the mountains because it was snowing, they said no - he had to stay there."

      BIOGRAPHY: Mouat tree close up
      PHOTO: The mountain gum bears the scars of the ACT's first surveyors. (Supplied: ACT Parks and Conservation Service)
      The so-called Mouat tree was rediscovered near the far southern tip of the ACT by historian Dr Matthew Higgins, who convinced authorities it should be preserved.

      BIOGRAPHY: ACT surveyor-general Jeff Brown said about 1,500 trees had originally been marked along the border by three surveying teams.

      BIOGRAPHY: But today, only about 50 have survived the ravages of fire and decay.

      BIOGRAPHY: "When they saw this one, and knew that it was getting old - it had already died, and was becoming possibly unstable - they thought it'd be great to preserve the tree," Mr Brown said.

      BIOGRAPHY: "So people could see it and get the story associated with the tree and the marking of the border."

      BIOGRAPHY: 'I'm sure Harry Mouat has got a wry smile on his face'
      Namadgi Park Rangers excavated the dead tree and called in a helicopter to airlift it to the Namadgi Visitor's Centre near Tharwa.

      BIOGRAPHY: There, staff plan to erect an interpretive shelter recalling the history of the tree, and the surveyors who blazed the border.

      BIOGRAPHY: A fundraising campaign, spearheaded by the Surveying and Spatial Sciences Institute, will be launched this week by ACT Planning Minister Mick Gentleman.

      BIOGRAPHY: The hope is to raise $100,000 for the structure.

      BIOGRAPHY: It's because of the surveyors 100 years ago up there, etching out the water catchments that gave us the ACT-NSW border. This project is about celebrating that remarkable achievement.

      BIOGRAPHY: ACT Parks and Conservation's Brett McNamara
      Parks and Conservation Service manager Brett McNamara said the tale of the surveying expedition had largely been lost - but deserved to be re-told.

      BIOGRAPHY: "It's a story that's little known, in terms of why [Canberra] is located on the limestone plains," Mr McNamara said.

      BIOGRAPHY: "It's because of the surveyors 100 years ago up there, etching out the water catchments that gave us the ACT-NSW border.

      BIOGRAPHY: "This project is about celebrating that remarkable achievement.

      BIOGRAPHY: "Never before had Europeans ventured into this country where they were up there in the Brindabellas. So it's quite a fascinating history ... and here we are today using a helicopter.

      BIOGRAPHY: "I'm sure Harry Mouat has got a wry smile on his face."

      BIOGRAPHY: ----------------
      "The Mouat Tree"
      https://themouattree.wordpress.com/the-survey-story/
      ---------------

      DEATH: The Canberra Times, 11 October 1952

      DEATH: MR H MOUAT

      DEATH: The death occurred in Sydney on Wednesday of Mr Harry Mouat, 72, one of the earliest surveyors connected with defining the ACT territorial boundaries, and laying out of the city of Canberra.

      DEATH: It is understood he was leaving St Luke?s Hospital after recovering from an operation when he slipped and fractured his neck.

      DEATH: The deceased was born in New Zealand and carried out work in the Pacific Islands and Newcastle before coming to Canberra in 1913.

      DEATH: His work on the boundaries concentrated mainly in the south-west corner of the Territory near Yaouk. He also carried out reconnaissance surveys in the Adaminaby area when consideration was being given to early hydroelectric scheme for Canberra and the South Coast. The Snowy Hydro Electric Authority referred to his work when carrying out present development.

      DEATH: For several years the deceased was in charge of all survey work in the ACT but left Canberra in 1944 to become commonwealth Property Officer at Sydney. He retired from the service in 1946. He leaves a widow and daughter, Mrs WAF de Salis of Red Hill.

      DEATH: http://earlycanberra.webs.com/people.htm#461012967
      ----------------------

      BIRTH: Harry Mouat (1880-1952) was born in Ravensbourne, near Dunedin in New Zealand. He worked there and in Tonga before starting in Canberra on 16 September 1913.