Tuesday, Apr 23, 2019 at 17:30
Harry Butler lived in Wanneroo, W.A. for a considerable period, before moving to Ludlow.
The Wikipedia article says he was born in
Perth - but he wasn't, he was born in a remote, unnamed railway construction
camp in regional W.A.
No stranger to family tragedies, Harry's Mother died in childbirth with his younger sister - and he lost his second wife in the mid-1970's, in another family tragedy.
The Butler Bequest came about as a result of his wifes early death, and the W.A. Museum is the major beneficiary.
One of the newer Northern
Perth suburbs is named Butler - but it's not named after Harry, it's named after one
John Butler, the first explorer of the Wanneroo area, in 1834.
Harry did a vast amount of work on Barrow Island, working with the oil and gas industry.
In the article below, he gets a mention 40 times, plus a great photo of him with a big, fearless, goanna.
DPAW article - Barrow Island
Harry died in December 2015, and the W.A. Museum staff wrote up a short biography on him.
Vale Harry Butler - W.A. Museum
And the SMH did an obit on him, too ..
SMH - Obituary - Harry Butler
Here's another obituary from the ABC.
Conservationist Harry Butler dies - Dec 2015
The Butler Bequest -
Harry Butler Research Centre opened - 2017
Harry didn't fit the mold of the classic conservationist, he was a practical bloke who knew that development had to be accommodated, along with as much conservation, as was practical.
If he hadn't added his voice to being in favour of Barrow Island being allowed to proceed as a major gas plant site, we would possibly have no natural gas exports today.
The EPA refused to allow the Barrow Island development, yet it was finally over-ruled.
Today, Barrow Island hosts one of the worlds biggest gas plants, yet the whole island is an "A" class
nature reserve, thus proving it is possible to have tightly controlled development, and conservation as
well.
Cheers, Ron.
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