Sunday, 6 April 2008
Bernard Salt says Angourie is dead; Angourie villagers and visitors fall about laughing
Never having visited Angourie on the Clarence section of the NSW North Coast, KPMG partner Bernard Salt (who describes himself as "a compelling and entertaining speaker, enjoyed by blue-chip companies to stimulate thought provoking discussion at conferences, seminars and workshops") decided last week to declare this beautiful little community dead as an urban locality.
The "lost towns" include places such as Bethanga, Girgarre, Merino and Balmoral in Victoria and Moorook, Iron Knob, Mintabie, Brukunga and Fregon in South Australia. There is only one in Tasmania: Leith. Queensland has Yuleba, Minden, Marpuna, Yelarbon and Croydon. NSW has two: Cullen Bullen and Angourie. There are three in the Northern Territory: Peppimenarti, Gulin Gulin-Weemol and Belyuen, which was formerly known as Dellisaville.
This of course is news to local government which treats Angourie as a distinct urban locality; a complete surprise to village businesses which thrive on local and visitor patronage; and a great puzzlement to residents, who are used to being identified as coming from Angourie rather than from Brooms Head, Wooloweyah or Yamba.
Being a tolerant place, Angourie's response in The Daily Examiner was typically laid back.
Although a gust of laughter could be heard bouncing across the Clarence Valley when morning papers were flicked open yesterday.
Bernard Salt is one of those people invited to Kevin Rudd's Australia 2020 summit in Canberra this month.
The "lost towns" include places such as Bethanga, Girgarre, Merino and Balmoral in Victoria and Moorook, Iron Knob, Mintabie, Brukunga and Fregon in South Australia. There is only one in Tasmania: Leith. Queensland has Yuleba, Minden, Marpuna, Yelarbon and Croydon. NSW has two: Cullen Bullen and Angourie. There are three in the Northern Territory: Peppimenarti, Gulin Gulin-Weemol and Belyuen, which was formerly known as Dellisaville.
This of course is news to local government which treats Angourie as a distinct urban locality; a complete surprise to village businesses which thrive on local and visitor patronage; and a great puzzlement to residents, who are used to being identified as coming from Angourie rather than from Brooms Head, Wooloweyah or Yamba.
Being a tolerant place, Angourie's response in The Daily Examiner was typically laid back.
Although a gust of laughter could be heard bouncing across the Clarence Valley when morning papers were flicked open yesterday.
Bernard Salt is one of those people invited to Kevin Rudd's Australia 2020 summit in Canberra this month.
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Australian society
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