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puredingo wrote:Mt John?
slparker wrote:There is already a Mt Jack further up the kiewa valley between yackandandah and dederang. I'm not sure that having two Mt Jacks in NE Victoria is a particularly fine idea.
MickyB wrote:slparker wrote:There is already a Mt Jack further up the kiewa valley between yackandandah and dederang. I'm not sure that having two Mt Jacks in NE Victoria is a particularly fine idea.
Could that be the reason why there was a name change from Mt Jack to Mt Cope?
Lophophaps wrote:MickyB wrote:slparker wrote:There is already a Mt Jack further up the kiewa valley between yackandandah and dederang. I'm not sure that having two Mt Jacks in NE Victoria is a particularly fine idea.
Could that be the reason why there was a name change from Mt Jack to Mt Cope?
Possible. Also, there would be limited scope for new names in the vallies, and more people would object to renaming. One smallish distant peak will not connect with most people, and by the time it was renamed it might well be too late. This is what happened with Mt Eadley Stoney. Finally, naming the mountain Cope gave rise to a handful of other Cope features, something probably not possible near Beechworth.
The main point is that the mountain had a name, and this was changed. Now it may be changed back.
It's a tad ironic that bushwalkers and conservationists are tending to side with the cattlemen, but it fits, at least with my views. I've long held that cattle (and feral animals and plants for that matter) are no good for national parks. I've also held that the cattlemen made significant contribution to alps, and that this should be recognised.
slparker wrote:There is already a Mt Jack further up the kiewa valley between yackandandah and dederang. I'm not sure that having two Mt Jacks in NE Victoria is a particularly fine idea.
north-north-west wrote:slparker wrote:There is already a Mt Jack further up the kiewa valley between yackandandah and dederang. I'm not sure that having two Mt Jacks in NE Victoria is a particularly fine idea.
There are two Mt Miserys in Victoria, as well as two Mt Despairs, and at least three Spion Kopjes - two of which are in the ANP. An extra Jack isn't going to hurt anyone. They could just officially swap the names of the current Jack and Cope, so Jack is back where he belongs.
Lophophaps wrote:north-north-west wrote:slparker wrote:There is already a Mt Jack further up the kiewa valley between yackandandah and dederang. I'm not sure that having two Mt Jacks in NE Victoria is a particularly fine idea.
There are two Mt Miserys in Victoria, as well as two Mt Despairs, and at least three Spion Kopjes - two of which are in the ANP. An extra Jack isn't going to hurt anyone. They could just officially swap the names of the current Jack and Cope, so Jack is back where he belongs.
Swap - what good idea. This could work, and should be submitted to the Geographic place names advisory panel for consideration.
slparker wrote:I see the misty eyed romanticism of restoring the toponym of this feature but I fail to see why it is of such importance that it would be privileged over other features of local significance or, in 2016, we ought not see this for what it is: privileging colonial farmers over the indigenous people.
Given that jack and jim's farming endeavours were contemporaneous with aboriginal dispossession it seems insensitive to celebrate it. In fact why are they celebrated at all?
slparker wrote:That misrepresents what I wrote. I asked why we ought to rename Mt cope to Mt jack when the jack in question has no qualities worth celebrating, so far as I can discern.
slparker wrote: I assume the opposite- that he, and his ilk, were the first on the scene to exploit the land prepared well for cattle (inadvertently) by the owners. Their motives were mercenary.
Moreover, as their grazing was contemporaneous with aboriginal dispossession, I conclude that it's likely that the managers and workers of cobungra station are likely to have been involved with direct violence against aboriginal people at this frontier.
I have no evidence of this but if it did not occur is likely to be the only frontier in colonial Australia where it did not.
Xplora wrote:slparker wrote:That misrepresents what I wrote. I asked why we ought to rename Mt cope to Mt jack when the jack in question has no qualities worth celebrating, so far as I can discern.
You are certainly entitled to your own opinion on that assuming it is one founded in some sort of knowledge of the individual. Conversely others can have a differing view.
Well you propose naming a mountain after some bloke- you convince me what qualities he has to deserve such an honour.slparker wrote: I assume the opposite- that he, and his ilk, were the first on the scene to exploit the land prepared well for cattle (inadvertently) by the owners. Their motives were mercenary.
Moreover, as their grazing was contemporaneous with aboriginal dispossession, I conclude that it's likely that the managers and workers of cobungra station are likely to have been involved with direct violence against aboriginal people at this frontier.
I have no evidence of this but if it did not occur is likely to be the only frontier in colonial Australia where it did not.
slparker wrote:if it is to be changed i would rather support a suitable indigenous name. without getting all black armband and PC about it, the reason that Jim and Jack could run their cattle up there was because the indigenous people were moved off with violence.
slparker wrote:My own bias is clearly that nomenclature ought to be significant and have contemporary resonance, as well as historical significance.
Lophophaps wrote:I'm reliably advised that there's no record of an Aboriginal name.
Lophophaps wrote:I'm unaware of any formal connection by the proponents to the Mountain Cattleman's Association.
Lophophaps wrote:Might not the acceptance of a white name by the Aboriginal community be taken as a sign of reconciliation about those dark days? Something like this worked in post-apartheid South Africa.
Lophophaps wrote:There was limited or no land ownership by Aboriginals. Tribes had areas where they were predominate, but that's all. One reason for disagreement between settlers and Aboriginals is that the latter took animals belonging to the former, who saw this as a crime. Aboriginals objected to land they used for hunting, gathering and spiritual connection being made unavailable. Settlers could not comprehend this, a clash of cultures.
slparker wrote:There is no record but there are descendants of the dhudharoa and yaithmatung who might like there two bob's worth.
slparker wrote:the petitioner has written books for the MCA.
slparker wrote:The local indigenous people (yes they're still here - I work with a dhudharoa woman) might have something to say about the prospect of naming a mountain after a settler who was present at the time of their ancestor's dispossession of that very land versus the prospect of an indigenous name or keeping it how it is. I doubt if they would see it as reconciliation but i'm sure they will have their say.
slparker wrote: It is true that access to women and land was sometimes bartered for. it is also true that not all squatters were violent, but that's the exception rather than the rule.
Xplora wrote:slparker wrote:There is no record but there are descendants of the dhudharoa and yaithmatung who might like there two bob's worth.
Are you certain they have not been consulted?.
Xplora wrote:Honest question - which books are these? Were the books written for the MCA or about mountain cattleman as a matter of history?.
Xplora wrote:We should change many other names as well including Mt Jim?.
[/quote]Xplora wrote:I found a map prepared by an aboriginal council which shows the massacres of aboriginal people in Victoria and the High Country does not rate a mention.
It is well regarded that Jack and Jim were the first European's to explore the Bogong High Plains and much of this was done before they introduced cattle. If they had been surveyors or geologists would they deserve more recognition? What makes the efforts of Jack and Jim less deserving than other explorers? What makes this particular magistrate Cope more deserving? What gives a magistrate the right to change the name of a feature already named? I have read one account that he changed the name himself. Possibly he felt a previous magistrate, Alfred Wills, had a mountain named after himself in the same area and wanted equal recognition. Perhaps we should change the name of Mt. Howitt. He too was a stockman early in his exploring life and strangely enough ended up a magistrate around Omeo after Alfred Wills. Righting an historical wrong is not always about aboriginal reconciliation and there is not need to make it so in this instance. If it were of significance then I would support it. Your argument so far attributes guilt to a man simply by the association of his profession.
Xplora wrote:“Reconciliation,” he scoffed. “Reconciliation is a myth. The only reconciliation I believe in happens one on one. That’s what we’re doing now.” He gestured to the table, hands opening gracefully, conductor to orchestra.
“Which is?”
“Speaking to each other on a level. One on one. And this – me and you, sitting together at a table – this is very symbolic. Isn’t it?”
An extract from The Terrible Truth by Cal Flyn. The quotes are attributed to Ricky Mullett of the Kurnai people who have claim in the area mentioned and have been consulted. I consider you wrong that the question is not about renaming the mountain Jack. It is not renaming a mountain if the mountain was in fact named Jack. It is about taking away an unlawful name and restoring the original. It is not about reconciliation, MCA or guilt by association. Jack Wells was an explorer of the Bogong High Plains and deserves his place in history as much as any other explorer. He did not deserve to have it stolen by a privileged Judge who was appointed in charge of the Court of Mines in Beechworth. The earliest map I can find with Mt. Cope on it was produced in 1877 and authorised by Thomas Couchman, the secretary of Mines. Can you see a connection?
paidal_chalne_vala wrote:How about calling it "Mt. Politically Correct" ? a.k.a Mt. P.C.
paidal_chalne_vala wrote:Denial is a river in Egypt!.
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