C. Y. O'Connor
From Free net encyclopedia
Image:FremantleHarbour 2004 SMC.jpg Image:C Y O'Connor.jpg Charles Yelverton O'Connor (1842–March 10 1902) was an Irish engineer. O'Connor was born in Gravelmount, Castletown, County Meath. As Engineer-in-Chief of Western Australia, he was responsible for the construction of Fremantle Harbour and the pipeline project that supplied water to the Eastern Goldfields.
The construction of Fremantle harbour was probably O'Connor's greatest personal triumph, as his proposal to build the harbour within the entrance to the Swan River was contrary to previous expert advice that this was impracticable and that the construction would require constant dredging. Work commenced in 1892 in removing a limestone bar and sand shoals at the mouth of the Swan River and was successfully completed in 1903. On the 4th May 1897 the first overseas passenger vessel berthed alongside the wharf, which had been named Victoria Quay in honour of Queen Victoria, who celebrated her Diamond Jubilee that year. One hundred years of continued use of Fremantle Harbour by heavy shipping has vindicated O'Connor's technical judgement.
Image:Goldfields-Pipeline 2005.jpg O'Connor is best known for his work on the Coolgardie Goldfields Water Scheme, also known as the "Goldfields Pipeline". This pipeline — perhaps the world's longest water main — carries water 330 miles (530km) from Perth to Kalgoorlie. A succession of gold rushes in the Yilgarn region near Southern Cross in 1887, at Coolgardie in 1892, and at Kalgoorlie in 1893 caused a population explosion in the barren and dry desert centre of Western Australia, exemplified by towns like Cunderdin and Merredin. On 16th July 1896, John Forrest introduced to Western Australian Parliament a bill to authorise the raising of a loan of £2.5 million to construct the scheme: the pipeline would cart five million gallons (23,000 m³) of water per day to the Goldfields from a dam on the Helena River near Mundaring weir in Perth, pumped in eight successive stages through 330 miles (530 km) of 30 inch (760 mm) diameter pipe to a tank on Mt Burgess to the north of Kalgoorlie. The water is then reticulated to various mining centres in the Goldfields.
Image:Lake O'Connor SMC.jpg O'Connor was subjected to prolonged criticism by members of the press and also the Western Australian Parliament over the Scheme. He took his own life on 10 March 1902 by riding his horse into the surf south of Fremantle and shooting himself. His suicide took place less than a year before Forrest successfully turned on the flow of water from Mundaring Weir in Perth to Coolgardie and Kalgoorlie. The beach where O'Connor died was named after him, theres a statue in the water.
A bronze statue of O'Connor by Pietro Porcelli stands in front of the Fremantle Port Authority buildings, commemorating O'Connor's achievements.
The novel The Drowner, by Robert Drewe (Picador 1996) provides a fictionalised account of O'Connor and the building of the pipeline.
The lake created by Mundaring Weir is known as Lake O'Connor, it provides drinking water for the towns along the pipeline to Kalgoorlie, Western Australia.
His daughter Eva married George Julius.