Berrys

Berrys

Alexander Berry (1781-1873), merchant, landowner, pastoralist and parliamentarian was born in Scotland, and travelled the world as a surgeon's mate before abandoning medicine for commerce. In search of new opportunities, Berry first came to Australia in 1808, later meeting his business partner (and future brother-in-law) Edward Wollstonecraft (1783-1832). By 1820, both men had settled in Sydney, where they were among the earliest and most enterprising cultivators of land in the colony.

In January 1822, Alexander Berry visited the Shoalhaven River, then well beyond the limits of settlement, to explore the surrounding district. The rich alluvial soils and natural grassy 'meadows' on either side of the river led the partners to select a grant of 10,000 acres at the base of Mount Coolangatta. When Berry returned to occupy ‘Cullengatty Farm’, later known as Coolangatta Estate, it became the first settled area on the NSW South Coast.

In 1829, at Berry’s request, colonial agricultural expert James Atkinson visited the Coolangatta Estate, setting out his detailed observations about the management of the property in his letter to Alexander Berry of 4 June 1829.

An Exploring Party in New South Wales [hand-coloured aquatint] / published June 1826 by J. Cross, London
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Within years the Coolangatta Esate was exporting thoroughbred horses to India, cedar to Europe and cattle, tobacco, cheese and wheat to Sydney. Land purchases increased the estate's size to about 32,000 acres (12,950 ha) in the 1840s, and to more than 40,000 acres (16,187 ha) by 1863.

After Wollstonecraft's death, the Coolangatta Estate was managed by Berry's brothers, John, David and William. Following Alexander Berry's death, the estate passed to his brother, David, and on his death in 1889, to his cousin, John Hay (1840-1909) who had been born and raised at 'Coolangatta'. Hay went on to encourage land settlement especially around the town of Berry.

In 1900, the Coolangatta Estate became a government stud farm and school. Paddocks were stocked with a broad range of cattle breeds, including Shorthorns, Holstein-Fresians, Guernseys, Jerseys, Red Polls, Ayrshires, Kerries and Dexter-Kerries, with the aim of improving knowledge of dairy breeds and butter making. 

By 1912, much of the outlying land of the Coolangatta Estate had been sold off to existing tenants and newcomers to the area. In 1946, Coolangatta House was all-but destroyed when fire raged through the 19-room property leaving only the library, billiard room, hall and some outbuildings. During the 1970s and 1980s the homestead site was redeveloped as a historic resort, and a vineyard planted in 1988, which has seen the Coolangatta Estate thrive once again. 

Berry and Wollstonecraft took turn about at the Coolangatte Estate and their Sydney mercantile business. With a large convict workforce allocation, land clearance at Shoalhaven proceeded quickly, cattle and horse breeding got underway, crops were planted including maize, potatoes, wheat, barley, tobacco and vegetables, and Coolangatta House was completed. In January 1824, their first coastal vessel was built at Shoalhaven for transporting farm produce to Sydney.

'Dear Berry'

James Atkinson (1795-1834), settler and author arrived in Sydney in May 1820, following encouragement from Alexander Berry and Edward Wollstonecraft. He soon obtained two grants of land totalling 1500 acres (607 ha), making his selection in the newly settled Bong Bong district of NSW, where he lived from 1821.

Atkinson combined his farming experience gained in England with an active interest in the innovations of the 'agrarian revolution'. Through both his writings and in practice, he became one of the few progressive farmers in NSW who tried to raise the efficiency of farming in the colony: ploughing competitions, stock-breeding, cheese-making and dingo eradication all claimed his attention.  

In 1825, Atkinson went back to England to write his treatise on colonial farming, An Account of the State of Agriculture & Grazing in New South Wales… (London, 1826), later returning to Sydney where he continued to take an active interest in farming and its improvement in the colony until his death. His book aroused much criticism, both here and overseas, yet remained an important work not only for its description of the methods practised in the colony at the time but also as it emphasized the problems faced by all colonists: the issues faced in attempting to adapt European plants, animals and farming methods to a strange environment.

Transcript: 

Oldbury  4 June 1829,                                         
Dear Berry,

I returned on Tuesday from a visit to our dear friend Wollstonecraft at the Shoalhaven whom I was happy to find in comparatively good health, and looking better than I had seen him for some time. As I am aware would wish me to communicate to you anything that struck me with regard to the management of your truly extensive establishment, I shall endeavor to give you my observations as shortly as possible, regretting my necessarily short stay did not enable me to effect a more minute examination. 

The improvements you have effected in clearing, enclosing and especially draining, are extremely judicious, and reflect infinite credit equally on your judgment and spirit, and I have no doubt you will experience great and permanent benefit from them. I have never seen anything at all approaching to them in this Colony, and they are highly worthy of imitation. The improvements are in fact such in magnitude and character that I could hardly recognize the place as it is now six years since I was there last. The dry seasons have also produced truly astonishing effects combined with the treading of the cattle. 

I regret I cannot speak so decidedly in praise of your system of Agriculture which I must candidly confess is anything but Farmerlike; the land first brought into cultivation is fast becoming extremely foul, and unless something is done to prevent it

Volume 46 pages 259-264: Letter from James Atkinson to Alexander Berry, 4 June 1829
4 June 1829
Berry, Alexander, 1781-1873
Digital ID: 
a7883001
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Transcript: 

I fear you will find your produce deteriorated both in quantity and quality every year. The land is certainly extremely fertile but you must recollect that no land whatever is perfectly inexhaustible, unless [indecipherable] annually like the banks of the Nile by annual inundations and depositions. You have now sufficient land in cultivation to enable you to fallow a portion every year, which I should by all means advise, and you could easily effect it without at all interfering with your usual operations. I should begin by thoroughly cleansing the surface by two or three ploughings, and harrowing, with sufficient intervals to allow the seed weeds to grow, and then give it a deep furrow with 4 or 6 oxen, after which shallow tillage with light ploughs, harrows, and perhaps once stirring with your truly formable scarifier would be sufficient. This land I should sow with turnips and feed them off with sheep, which you can buy in from the upper country for the express purpose, and sell off or kill in the spring.  

I am persuaded this plan would thoroughly cleanse the oil from both seed and root weeds, and cause it to produce plentiful crops of clean grain for at least 4 years, not the least among other benefits would arise from the treading of the soil by the sheep, which it much requires; the growing crops of wheat also would be greatly benefited by feeding off. I should certainly never think of keeping breeding sheep as a permanent stock, but a quantity bought in in the Autumn and sold in Spring, after shearing, would b

Volume 46 pages 259-264: Letter from James Atkinson to Alexander Berry, 4 June 1829
4 June 1829
Berry, Alexander, 1781-1873
Digital ID: 
a7883002
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Transcript: 

be very profitable. If you fallowed 50 acres every year, you might feed at least 5 or 6 hundred sheep for the Winter and Spring in this manner. At present as you have no sheep I should recommend you to feed off your growing wheat with store swine, and calves, and I have no doubt you would find your produce from the joint effects of feeding and treading much augmented in quantity, and the grain far heavier and yielding more flour. You could have yards built near the fields to shut them in at night, and a person to watch them during the day, and I am convinced it would pay you amply. The manner you harness and work your oxen is very simple and excellent. The carts you use are of good construction but should be made to shoot, which would much expedite many of the operations. They were employed when I was there in clearing the rubbish from some Corn Land, and had they been made to [shoot] would have cleared at least one third more land in the same time; by the way your Corn Land (I mean Maize) is very imperfectly cleared, this I think very dangerous, as it must be the means of harboring vast quantities of the eggs and larvae of insects and may be the means of producing the caterpillar someday upon your wheat. 

As manure is not an object with you I should prefer to burn the corn stalks upon the land in small lumps, by which means every particle might be destroyed. I entirely agree with you that your stacks are far too large; I should certainly build them of such a size, as should a little exceed the quantity the thrashing machine could

Volume 46 pages 259-264: Letter from James Atkinson to Alexander Berry, 4 June 1829
4 June 1829
Berry, Alexander, 1781-1873
Digital ID: 
a7883003
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Transcript: 

could knock out in a day. The stacks should also be built upon steddles, they stand now upon the bare ground which cannot fail in that low situation to breed weevils. The enclosed paper shows you the manner I build my steddles,  the posts are merely blocks cut from the body of a tree, of any height you please, but 10 ins is sufficient. At first I used to sink the posts in the ground, but of late I have only sat them on their ends first levelling the place for them to stand upon, this plan I prefer, as the post in the ground is liable to rot, and they can also be removed if required to any other place in a few minutes. The crop pieces are either limbs or bodies of young trees, or split wood, something stouter than rails. The ends you will perceive are points to fit them together, and the undersides are flattened with an axe or adze to make them lie firm together upon the posts. The centre post is cut shorter than the others which gives the whole a tendency to the centre, and the stacks are less likely to slip. Upon this frame we lay a few battens, palings, boughs or any other rubbish at hand, to prevent the sheaves slipping through. For the future I intend to have all my carts and drays made too shoot; and shall draw them up alongside the steddle  and immediately shoot the whole load upon the ground from whence it will be forked up to the stack without detaining the team. I have no doubt a man standing upon the ground where he can have firm footing and full use of his strength will throw up twice as much as one standing upon a load, and I think there would be less grain wasted as it would be easy to sweep up what fell upon the ground or to spread a cloth to receive it. 

If the stack was very high

Volume 46 pages 259-264: Letter from James Atkinson to Alexander Berry, 4 June 1829
4 June 1829
Berry, Alexander, 1781-1873
Digital ID: 
a7883004
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Transcript: 

a small moveable stage about 10 ft high for a man to stand upon would be useful thus all the men required in building a stack would be 3 or if high 4 –  2 men would be sufficient in the field to pitch and load – and 3 carts going and coming or 4 if the field was distant. 2 men should be constantly employed thatching – with this strength constantly employed, provided the steddles and straw for the thatching were ready before-hand,  I have no doubt your whole harvest might be got in and secured in about 5 weeks, which time I suppose your harvest generally occupies, and you might employ about 30 or 40 reapers. By appropriating some of your best men to this purpose, and giving them a glass or two of spirits or some Beer extra, your harvest would go regularly forward; you would never have any large quantity cut but not carried, and never above one or two moderate stacks uncovered at one time; as you [have] plenty of bullocks you could let one set to work in the mor[ning] and another in the afternoon, with the same men, this plan [indecipherable] always follow in Harvest. There are many other things I wish to say to you but at present have not time, I hope to be present at the Anniversary dinner of the Agricultural Society on the 13th of next month when I shall expect the pleasure of seeing you. Mrs A and our little girl are quite well, and I am quite recovered myself. The season is dreadfully dry, and the weather cold and frosty. The young wheat look healthy but have not yet made much progress.  Mrs A joins with me in Kind regards to Mrs Berry and believe me  

Dear Berry 
Yours ever faithfully
           Ja.s Atkinson

PS: There is a Bill of mine in the Bank which will be due sometime this month, I shall be obliged to you to retire it, and send me another for acceptance excluding by about £20 the amount that will then appear to my debt. I shall not have occasion to draw much for some time as I have considerable funds in R and M’s hands which I am anxious to draw out as fast as I can. There are said to be a number of new Settlers with money, if you know any who want to buy a flock of sheep,  I would deal with them on very liberal terms.  I am much overtaken and would rather sell them than [farm/form] any new establishment.

Volume 46 pages 259-264: Letter from James Atkinson to Alexander Berry, 4 June 1829
4 June 1829
Berry, Alexander, 1781-1873
Digital ID: 
a7883005
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Volume 46 pages 259-264: Letter from James Atkinson to Alexander Berry, 4 June 1829
4 June 1829
Berry, Alexander, 1781-1873
Digital ID: 
a7883006
View collection item detail

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This story has been developed with the support of the State Library of NSW Foundation.

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