Ben Ricketts was named
after George Ricketts who had the property in the 1860’s and 1870’s.
Ben is Scottish for mountain. Peter Page and Ray Birt, members of the
Sydney Bushwalkers Club were happiest when away from Sydney, bushwalking.
While Peter was in the Army during World War 2, Ray and her friends were
searching for their rural retreat. Alex Colley helped them find it in
the mountains above Jamberoo where his relatives, owned land, including
Ben Ricketts then owned by the Cameron family.
In
1947 Peter & Ray gave up their Sydney Jobs, married, bought an
ex army Jeep and moved to their alternative life on their mountain at
Jamberoo.When purchased by Ray, there were no buildings, only a stone
chimney at the site of the present Ben Ricketts house.They lived for
a while in a cottage on the adjoining Colley property. They bought the
cottage for removal and later used the materials to build two cabins.
The early guest accommodation was in two ex army tents with gravel floors,
kerosene lamps and cookers. Les Harper built the first cabin on their land,
'cabin 1'.
Bushwalking friends of the Pages, Frank & Anice Duncan, Alex and
Hilma Colley, Paddy & May Pallin, Ray & Jean Kirkby, Dorothy
Hasluck and later John & Grace Noble & Trisha Dean, bought the
adjoining land from the Brennan family and soon set up a small community
of holiday cabins. As well as their bushwalking friends, many of the early guests were
refugees from war torn Europe. At the Pages they found a friendly welcome,
free of hostility or prejudice. The green hills also reminded them of
their homelands.
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The accommodation changed over the years with cabins replacing tents,
electricity replacing kerosene and inside flushing toilets replacing
the outside dunny. However much of the old character has been retained. To Ray there was no generation gap. At the age when most have lost most
of their friends Ray had the interest and ability to make new friendships.
Ray died on the 10th January 2000 after a short time in hospital. While
she has no close living relatives, the extent of her extended family
was shown by the 250 people who attended the funeral at her Jamberoo
home. One family was represented by four generations being present. Seven
families with three generations present and fourteen families with two
generations present. Barry Duncan carried on the property for several
years and when he decided to leave to have surgery on his arthritic knees,
a number of friends grouped together to form Ben Ricketts Environmental
Preserve Pty Ltd to ensure that the properties would be conserved for
future generations to enjoy.
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