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Saturday, July 2, 2016

Re: [MTC Global] Trees

The geographical spread of this tree is fascinating. Africa and Australia. The path of the largest human migration ever! Africa via South India to Australia

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On 03-Jul-2016, at 6:41 AM, 'K. Sampath Kumar' via Management Teachers Consortium, Global <join_mtc@googlegroups.com> wrote:



Dear friends,

Good morning.

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The Baobab Prison Trees of Australia
 The Australian baobab tree, a relative to the baobabs of Madagascar and mainland Africa, is a large tree with a big swollen trunk that resembles a bottle. So sometimes they are also called "bottle trees". Because of their unusual shape, and the fact that they are one of the longest-living life forms in Australia, baobabs have always attracted sightseers. Some baobabs have drawn more tourists than others.

There is one such baobab on the King River road just south of Wyndham in Western Australia. The tree is about 15 meters in circumference and the trunk is hollow. On its hollow trunk, a door was cut to give access to its roomy interior. The story goes that once a police patrol, in the nineties of the 19th century, was leading a group of aboriginal prisoners to Derby for sentencing, when they halted at Wyndham for the night. The patrol team noticed that the tree was hollow, and so they cut a small opening and put the prisoners inside.

boab-prison-tree-5
The Boab Prison Tree in Derby. 

This continued for sometime and people started calling the tree the "Hillgrove Lockup". Occasionally when the group of prisoners was large and there wasn't room for everybody inside, some of the natives would be chained to the trunk outside. The cell on the inside is about 9 square meters, and is said to have accommodated 30 prisoners at a time.

There is another baobab south of Derby that is rumored to have served the same purpose. The hollow is 6 meters high and has two natural holes for ventilation.

Many historians have dismissed these stories as nothing but folklore. There is no evidence that baobabs were ever used as prisons. The one near Derby, in particular, is so close to the town (only 16 km away) that there was no need to remain holed up in a tree for the night when the police could have just continued on their way.

Reports about these prison trees started appearing in newspapers in the 1910s, and pretty much each publication repeated the same story using "very similarly-worded information". Some claimed that the Wyndham baobab tree had a huge bolt fastened into it for chaining prisoners to. In those days it was not uncommon for early police stations to chain prisoners outside to strong trees or heavy logs, but there are no contemporary mentions of the inside of the tree being used. Even fairly descriptive articles about Derby and Wyndham in the 1900s make no mention of the prison trees.

"The boab is particularly conspicuous by its absence from a 1905 state government report on the appalling treatment of Aboriginal prisoners in the area, despite the report giving a very detailed and damning account of the gaols and the transportation of prisoners to Wyndham and other local towns," writes Chris Dawson, who made a very detailed anaylisis of the urban myth.
Myth or otherwise, both baobabs are very popular among tourists. The local tourist industry has also exploited the story to promote tourism to these areas. The trees are now fenced off to prevent people from climbing into them and carving their names in the bark.

boab-prison-tree-1
The Boab Prison Tree in Wyndham. 
boab-prison-tree-3
The Derby Prison Boab Tree in 1959. 
boab-prison-tree-2
Carved graffiti on the tree. 
boab-prison-tree-4
Inside the Wyndham Boab Prison Tree

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With regards,

 
Dr. K. Sampath Kumar,  B.A. (Economics), BGL, M.Com., M.Phil., Cert. A.I.I.B.,
  
                                    
MBA (Finance), MBA (HR & Marketing),  ACS, FCMA, Ph. D.,
Professor
, SSN School of Management
C/o. SSN College of Engineering
Rajiv Gandhi Salai (OMR)

KALAVAKKAM - 603110
Kancheepuram District, Tamil Nadu, India
Landline :  044-24860668
Mobile    :  9094405733
 
Success consists of getting up
just one more time than you fall
-- Oliver Goldsmith


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