Friday, August 06, 2010

Remembering the great Ian Downs – builder of the Highlands Highway

By MALUM NALU

Many of those legendary Australian kiaps (patrol officers) who helped develop Papua New Guinea into what it is today will sadly not be around as the country celebrates 35 years of independence next month.
Such a man was Ian Downs, who died on Tuesday August 24, 2004, in the Gold Coast, aged 89, one of the greatest and most legendary men who walked this country.
Ian Downs
Downs is remembered as the principal facilitator of the contruction of the Highlands Highway – linking the Highlands, Lae and Madang - as well as being a powerful influence in the founding of PNG’s great coffee industry.
The entire highway today covers about 700 km, rising from sea level to over 8000 ft and much of it going through some of the most-rugged terrain in PNG.

A semi-trailer along the Highlands Highway outside Kundiawa.-Pictures by MALUM NALU
It is all situated in the tropics and, as a result, tropical downpours coupled with the great elevation cause regular and consistent damage to the Highway and its feeder roads.
Drainage is a critical issue and blocked drains usually result in landslides, landslips, and large sections of the road just falling away.
Border of Simbu and Western Highlands provinces at Munde
The highway opened up the Highlands and provided the initial impetus for the coffee industry to flourish and prosper, and provided the initial link for the initial political unification process of PNG.
A farmer rehabilitating his coffee garden in the Waghi Valley under Coffee Industry Corporation's coffee rehabilitation programme
The highway, for the Highlands, was their gateway to the world, and all of that region’s valuable coffee exports leave by the same route.
Most of what makes modern living possible arrives in the Highlands via the highway, and that entire region’s valuable coffee exports leave by the same route.
Main street of Banz, Western Highlands province
The Porgera gold mine would never have been established without the highway, and it continues to be a lifeline for Porgera mine and the oil and gas projects in the Southern Highlands.
At lower elevations, Ramu Sugar has tonnes of sugar exports that get to the Lae Port via the Markham section of the highway.
Woman struggles along rundown Minj, Western Highlands province, which is a skeleton of its former self
There is no single infrastructural asset of greater value to PNG than the Highlands Highway.
It was while reading some most-misleading information about the Highlands Highway in the media recently, including who built it and when it was first built, that I decided to go through some old files
Roadside market near Yonki, Eastern Highlands
In 1953, thanks to Ian Downs, you could drive from Lae to Goroka and on to Mount Hagen.
He was also a member of the first House of Assembly in 1964, when he collected a record majority of over 100,000 votes – which goes to show the respect he commanded – to win the seat of the New Guinea Highlands, a constituency in the central highlands region with a population of over half a million people.
 In the face of an increasingly nationalist style of politics he decided not to stand for re-election in 1968, and retired from parliament to take up private interests.
“He’s the one who got the road (Highlands Highway) through,” pioneer Highlands explorer Mick Leahy once said of Downs.
Evangelical Bible Church property at Kassam, Eastern Highlands
“He’s a man and a half this Downs.
“A few more like him and New Guinea would really get somewhere.”
A man of intellect and a great strength of character, Downs was also a writer of note.
A former patrol officer who rose to the position of deputy administrator in the mid-1950s, Downs was a prominent figure in PNG in the last years of the Australian trusteeship, and possibly the only person who combined the roles of administrator, politician, planter and historian.
Ian Fairley Graham Downs was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1915 and was educated at Brighton and Geelong Grammar Schools between 1926 and 1928.
He entered the Royal Australian Naval College as a midshipman in 1915, and in 1935, joined the New Guinea administration as a cadet patrol officer.
Downs took up his appointment to New Guinea in 1936 and was one of the first patrol officers assigned to the Western Highlands.
He accompanied John Black and Jim Taylor on part of their famous Hagen-Sepik patrol in 1938-39.
From 1942 to 1945, Downs was a Coastwatcher with the Royal Australian Navy in New Guinea waters.
Downs returned to New Guinea after World War II and by 1951 was the youngest district commissioner in the administration, based in Madang.
Between 1952-56 he held the position of district commissioner in Goroka, before resigning to take up coffee farming and to enter politics.
Succeeding the late George Greathead as district commissioner to the then Central Highlands, a huge “middle kingdom” of more than a million people stretching from Kassam in the East to the then Dutch New Guinea border in the West.
Disillusioned with official policy, Downs resigned from his post as district commissioner in 1956 and in the following year gained election as Member for the New Guinea Mainland in the Legislative Council.
As a parliamentarian he was further elected in 1961 to the administrator's advisory council (later known as the administrator's executive council), a board set up to advise the Administrator on policy issues.
Downs resigned from the government, where he had long been a member of the legislative council, to contest this country’s first national elections.
Downs was elected to the first House of Assembly in 1964 with a record majority of over 100, 000 votes.
For the next four years he held the seat of the New Guinea Highlands, a constituency in the Central Highlands region with a population of over half a million people.
In the face of an increasingly nationalist style of politics he decided not to stand for re-election in 1968, and retired from parliament to take up private interests.
He involved himself deeply in the infant coffee industry, being instrumental in the creating of the original Coffee Marketing Board in 1964, of the coffee exporting company Coffee International Ltd, of the Highlands Farmers & Settlers Association and its trading arm Farmset Ltd, and was active in many areas of PNG’s early political and social development.
It was during these years that Downs pioneered what became known as Korfena Plantations, a group of coffee plantations centred in the Upper Asaro Valley, as well as one of the first village-based coffee marketing groups known as Upper Asaro Coffee Community Ltd.
His novel The Stolen Land was published in 1970, and he returned to Australian in 1970 after 35 years in the country.
His widely respected publication The Australian Trusteeship: Papua New
Guinea, 1945-75 was published in 1980, followed by his autobiography The Last Mountain in 1986.
Ian Downs’ contribution to the founding of modern-day Papua New Guinea was immense, and thousands who knew him well have mourned his passing.

3 comments:

  1. Thank you for posting such a wonderful remembrance. I only knew the man as my father and so in many ways did not know the impact he had in PNG other than through stories from those who knew him and of course through his books. He was great to me also, a man of enormous generosity, vision and courage. He could return from a day with the cattle with blood pouring as a result of some mishap and say "Oh, that". Or he might emerge from the coffee with a brown snake laying limp over a brush-hook that he'd casually knocked off while he was weeding. I miss him still and wish that many men might have half his character. - Amanda Falvo (nee.Downs)

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    1. Hi, I'm sorry I never met your father as I lived on the Gold Coast and collected Ian Ottley's PNG warrior etchings in black/silver over 30 years ago. I noted your father used his illustrations in his book. I have downsized, moved to Hervey Bay and do you know anyone who would like the metallic silver framed pictures.

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  2. Hi , I lived on the Gold coast and sorry that I never met your father Ian Downs. I collected Ian Ottley's PNG warrior prints at a tea plantation near Murwullimbah Northern NSW, and note he used his illustrations for his book. It's was over 30 years ago, black on silver with quality frames, do you know anyone who would like them as I have moved (downsized) to Hervey Bay.

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