Mr John Duncan Tipper (J.D.) Founder of Muogamarra Nature Reserve
1886-1970
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
The Executive Rangers' League
Messrs
P Sherman - Hon. Counsel
P.A. Meggy - Hon. Secretary
J. D. Tipper - President
Roy F Bennett - Hon. Treasurer
J.R. Windeyer - Hon. Solicitor
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection.
Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Back of photo of The Executive Rangers' League
Mr John D. Tipper's first research site
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection.
Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper's research cottage
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection.
Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper and research cottage
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper's working cottage
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper's working cottage
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper's collection of artefacts
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper seated inside
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper's working cottage
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper with truck and supplies in Muogamarra
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection.
Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Taking a break at Muogamarra
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Meals at Muogamarra
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper and colleagues in the picnic area
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Visiting Muogamarra
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr J D Tipper and friends/visitors to Muogamarra
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper pointing out signage for visitors to Muogamarra
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Museum at Muogamarra
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection. Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper lighting a bonfire at Muogamarra with students visiting the reserve
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection.
Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper at Muogamarra
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection.
Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Mr John D. Tipper Surveying
Reference: Gibberagong Environmental Education Centre image collection.
Original Source and Date Unknown
© State of New South Wales (Department of Education)
Tipper, John Duncan
(1886–1970)
by Richard Gowers
This article was published:
in the Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 16 , 2002
online in 2006
John Duncan Tipper (1886-1970), conservationist and electrical engineer, was born on 4 August 1886 at West Maitland, New South Wales, elder child of Edwin Tipper, an English-born printer and later a journalist, and his native-born second wife Elizabeth, née McInnes. On his retirement, Edwin established apiaries at Willow Tree. John and his sister Elizabeth spent much of their childhood studying birds and animals in the Liverpool Ranges. He developed an appreciation of indigenous culture through his contact with Aborigines near the Barrington River.
Schooled at West Maitland, Tipper joined the electrical tramways branch of the New South Wales Government Railways and Tramways on 13 December 1910 and worked as a tracer. At St James's Church of England, Sydney, on 5 December 1912 he married Florence Wynn Clarke. He studied fitting and turning (1912-13) and electrical engineering (1914-17) part time at Sydney Technical College and qualified as an associate (1920). Promoted to draftsman in 1917, Tipper was an assistant-engineer from 1929 until he retired as engineer (third class) in October 1952. He was an associate-member of the Institution of Engineers, Australia.
Tipper belonged to the Wild Life Preservation Society of Australia. In 1928 he became founding president of the Rangers' League of New South Wales—a volunteer group dedicated to preserving natural bushland and preventing bushfires. In 1932 he helped to found the Australian Bushland Conservation Association, but his preservation ideals were constantly frustrated by continuing damage to Sydney's national parks. His desire for a region protected from fires and illegal trafficking in native flowers led him in 1933 to obtain a lease of some 2000 acres (809 ha) around Muogamarra Ridge (overlooking the Hawkesbury River) from the Department of Lands.
The reserve was established in 1934 and opened to the public in the following year. Called the Muogamarra Sanctuary, its name came from the Awabakal Aboriginal dialect and meant 'preserve for the future'. Tipper worked tirelessly to protect the native flora: he set up a volunteer bush fire brigade and, eventually, an environmental study centre and museum. Public access was limited during the six-week wildflower blooming season from mid-August to the end of September.
In 1953 Tipper surrendered his lease. Supported by the State government, Muogamarra Sanctuary was administered by trustees from 1954, with Tipper their president and resident curator. In 1967 the newly established National Parks and Wildlife Service assumed control of Muogamarra. Tipper grew increasingly angered by its management practices. Disagreements over the level of protection afforded to Aboriginal relics within Muogamarra combined with his own ill health to end his association with the sanctuary in 1968.
'J.D.' (as Tipper was known to his friends) was a passionate naturalist who believed that conservation was a calling 'as exacting, responsible and individualistic as any of the senior professions'. A widower, he married Enid Constance Monaghan at St Margaret's Presbyterian Church, Turramurra, on 22 August 1966. He died on 8 September 1970 at Wahroonga and was cremated with Anglican rites; his wife survived him, as did the son of his first marriage.
Select Bibliography
Muogamarra Nature Reserve (New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service leaflet, no date)
Rangers' League of New South Wales, Bulletin, no 2, 1930
Sydney Morning Herald, 2 Feb, 29 June, 3 Dec 1929, 7 Feb, 5 Nov, 3 Dec 1930, 9 May 1931, 12 July 1932, 7 Dec 1935, 14 Mar 1950, 26 June, 18 July 1953, 1, 22 Feb, 1 Sept 1955
Tipper papers (State Library of New South Wales)
railway service personal history card: J. D. Tipper (State Records New South Wales).
Citation details
Richard Gowers, 'Tipper, John Duncan (1886–1970)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/tipper-john-duncan-11867/text21247, published first in hardcopy 2002, accessed online 15 November 2021.
This article was published in hardcopy in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 16, (Melbourne University Press), 2002. View the front pages for Volume 16
This article was published:
Pittwater Online - September 1-28, 2024: Issue 634
https://www.pittwateronlinenews.com/Muogamarra-Nature-Reserve-Celebrates-90-years.php
Muogamarra Nature Reserve in Sydney's northern outskirts is celebrating its 90th birthday by welcoming more than 4,700 nature enthusiasts during its 2024 Open Season. The 'Muogamarra Sanctuary' was established in 1934 before being added to the state's National Park reserve in 1969.
The Sanctuary was the vision of John Duncan 'J.D.' Tipper, conservationist and electrical engineer. John was born August 4 1886 at West Maitland, New South Wales, the elder child of Edwin Tipper, an English-born printer and later a newspaper proprietor of the Maitland Ensign and journalist, and his native-born second wife Elizabeth, née McInnes. On his retirement, Edwin established apiaries at Willow Tree. John and his sister Elizabeth spent much of their childhood studying birds and animals in the Liverpool Ranges. He developed an appreciation of indigenous culture through his contact with Aborigines near the Barrington River.
Mr. Tipper belonged to the Wild Life Preservation Society of Australia, which was formed on the 19th May 1909 in the Royal Society's Hall, 5 Elizabeth Street, Sydney.
In 1928 he became founding president of the Rangers' League of New South Wales—a volunteer group dedicated to preserving natural bushland and preventing bushfires. Many Pittwater residents were early members of this league, and others were Honorary Rangers of our local reserves under the Fauna Protection Act 1948 and the Wild Flowers and Native Plants Protection Act 1927-1945, roles which persisted into the late 1950's.
Note: The information in this article is not fully complete. It does not acknowledge the relationship between NSW DoE and National Parks, with Muogamarra Field Studies Centre being established at the venue in 1971 opening on 1972 and continues to operate at the site.