This article will continue to have items added to the Timeline.
You drive for 90km and alongside you all of the way is a cuboid (a box-shaped object) of solid wood one metre high and one kilometre wide. This cuboid approximates the volume of sawlogs (90 million cubic metres) extracted from Victoria's native forests between 1900 and 2022. The cuboid covers an area of 9000 ha. Most of this wood will have gone into buildings as framing. Victoria depended on this supply for residential development well in to the 1990s.
But in the earliest days sawn timber would not have been as critical to development as other forest products. On this site there are reports (The Early Years) that illustrate the mismanagement of Victoria's forests from the time of settlement in the 1830s to the early 1900s. Perhaps mismanagement is the wrong term - lack of management is probably more appropriate. And yet our forests, those that weren't inappropriately "sold off" for agriculture or settlement development, were being heavily exploited (indeed, extensively clear felled )for mining timbers , fuel, fencing material,building materials, wharf development and, from 1854, building railways. The exploitation was such that by the early 1900s the Wombat Forest, as we now know it, was known to be the "ruined forest", and by the time of the FCVs first Annual Report in 1919/1920 future sleeper supply was a concern.
"Upkeep of existing railways and further extensions of the railway system cause a heavy drain upon the sleeper-yielding forests, which it is becoming increasingly difficult to meet from the ironbark, grey box, and red gum areas. In this connexion there are already clear indications that it wi11 soon become necessary to be content with less rigid specifications as regards both species and dimensions."
Keeping important forest areas out of the hands of the greedy was also a continuing focus of the newly-created FCV.
Our earliest plantations, and not just softwood plantations, were generated from about the 1860s with the first forest Nursery at Macedon established in 1872, and softwood plantations being established at Macedon and Creswick, and Sugar Gum plantations in the You Yangs. (At least some of this original plantation was still there in 2024.) Softwood plantation development continued at a relatively low level and at those levels were never going to meet the demand for wood volume, let alone the continuing need for durable timbers. (Preservative treatment of softwood to improve durability did not start until the 1960s.) It was the 1960s Plantation Extension (PX) Program which really allowed plantation timbers to begin to play a key role in housing and other traditionally hardwood uses from the 1980s.
Prior to the first FCV Annual Report (1919/20) statistics related to forest production are sparse to non-existent. But for the next seven decades or so we have relatively good production figures from both Victoria's native forests and softwood plantations. With the move of forest management into the direct control of Ministers, and into larger State govenment departments, fewer production figures tend to be available in the Annual Reports we have been able to locate so far.
Australia was "riding on the on the sheep's back" was a term once used to describe the reliance of our economy on wool production. In Victoria it could easily be said that "Victoria rode, to a significant degree, on the products supplied by our native forests".
Information gathered from Annual Reports (AR) has been used to provide a snapshot of production at about 10 year intervals up until the 1990s.You can of course go to the Annual Reports we hold for more detailed analysis if required. This Spreadsheet also contains a good annual series of production figures for hardwood sawlogs, softwood sawlogs and sleepers.
If sawlog volume is concerned then any figure given in super feet is presumed to be sft HLV (Hoppus Log Volume). You will soon see that the description of products and the units used in measurement change throughout time. And, for example, what is a "load" of firewood, and what is the weight of a "bag" of charcoal, or indeed the standard length of a telephone pole. Time series of production for more products, if we ever get that far, will be a long process.
If you look closely you will see changes in the products coming from our forest, their rise and fall (or in the case of softwood timber - just their rise), and changes in the species groups (hardwood or softwood) used to meet demand for certain products.
Also available is a still developing timeline of the production history of our native forests and softwood plantations.
(1) An extremely wasteful way to produce a sleeper.
(2) Estimate based on revenue
1828 - Portland/Heywood
"Portland was first settled by sealers and whalers as early as 1828, and sawpits were soon established to provide construction timber. Portland Historian J Wiltshire credits Henry Reid with constructing the first sawpit in 1833, in order to provide timber for houses and other buildings associated with his whaling activities. The closest stands of good timber were situated along the Northern shore of the bay between Portland and Narrawong, and this was where the first sawpits were dug."
"By 1960 there were sixteen hardwood sawmills drawing timber supplies from the Heywood Forest District Public Lands.
Source: Portland & Heywood Forests
1850s - Servicing Melbourne
“Sawmills were established in the 1850s in the ranges north and east of Melbourne to cater for the city’s rapid increase of population and demand for building materials. John Wood Bielby built possibly the earliest sawmill in the central mountain forests at Fern Tree Gully in the early 1850s."
Source: The Murrindindi Forest
1851 - Forests & Gold
"Victoria's first officially recognised gold discovery was in 1850 near Clunes, almost 40 kilometres north of Ballarat. In 1851, the Victorian Government offered a reward of £200 to anyone finding gold within 200 miles (320 kilometres) of Melbourne. Within six months, gold was discovered in Clunes, and then Ballarat, Castlemaine and Bendigo. The Victorian gold rush would dwarf finds in New South Wales, accounting for more than one third of the world’s gold production in the 1850s."
Source: Resources Victoria - (a State Government Agency)
And so the devastation of the forests around these centres began. See FCV comments from 1928:
“The magnificent virgin forests of Red Ironbark, Grey and Red Box, and White Ironbark, which formerly clothed the ranges in the vicinity of all northern district mining towns, have all long since disappeared. In the early days the miners and others removed trees as they saw fit, without let or hindrance, taking the best trees and those nearest the scene of mining operations. Gradually inroads were made further and further into the bush, until finally all accessible trees were completely removed. Trees were cut at all heights from the ground; only the best part of the tree was utilized - perhaps only one length of sleepers or one length of mine timbers removed - and the rest left to rot and constitute a serious fire hazard. About this time the bark of the Red Ironbark was harvested for tanning purposes, and thousands of splendid trees were killed by stripping for the tanning market, the whole of the timber, as a rule, going to waste. Some idea of what the original forests must have been at one time can be gathered from the fact that millions of sleepers of Box and Ironbark were removed from these forests during the last century, whereas now hardly a tree can be found which is large enough to convert to this use. Bealiba forest alone supplied all sleepers for the construction of the Maryborough-Donald, Creswick-Daylesford, Ballarat-Buninyong, Hopetoun, and Lubeck and other railway lines, besides furnishing all the requisite mining props and panelling for the surrounding mining population. The wholesale destruction of the forests was accomplished before any attempt was made to exercise control over the timber-getters. It was not until some 25 years ago that any degree of forestry control was exercised.”
Source: Box Ironbark Forests
1853 - Buninyong & the Wombat Forest
"The pioneering sawmiller of the gold rush era was Henry McGie of Ballarat who, in 1853, set up his first sawmill at Buninyong." Harvesting would extend north and east into the forest which now remains (the Wombat Forest) and in 1899 a Royal Commission Report would classify it as a "ruined forest".
Source: Wombat Forest.
1854 - Near Apollo Bay
"from 1854 until 1861 the timber industry thrived on railway contracts for sleepers to build the Melbourne-Geelong and the Geelong-Ballarat railways. ... "
Source: Otway Forests
1850s/60s - Mt Cole
"Mt Cole virgin forest was one of the first cut in Victoria and the oldest records indicate that it was almost a pure messmate cut. In half a century of almost unrestricted cutting the forest supplied hundreds of poles, eighty feet in length, and untold quantities of shingles, piles and sawn timber. ... By 1904 this valuable forest had been so depleted that the Government closed it to commercial enterprise for almost 50 years."
Source: Mt Cole
1863 - River Red Gum
The first major use of the River Red Gum was by Collier and Barry, the contractors of the Bendigo to Echuca Railway line. In 1863 or 1864 these contractors established a Red Gum mill for sleepers, which they closed when the railway was constructed. After the completion of the Echuca railway Victorian railway growth slowed down for a number of years. Nonetheless, red gum was in demand for the construction of wharf piers and, in the late 1860s, for export to India for railway sleepers and piers. Furthermore, in the late sixties Bendigo's quartz mines began to go deeper and deeper, and Red Gum was found to be excellent for the slabbing of shafts." ... "As early as 1870 much of the easily reached timber in the Barmah Forest had been worked over and the Gunbower and Yielima Forests were greedily eyed by millers."
Source: Barmah State Forest
1860s - Wattle Bark
The production of wattle bark for local use and for export was a major industry based on our public and private forests for a significant period from this time.
Source: Barkopolis
1870 - Mt Disappointment
"Early sawmilling is reputed to have commenced in the Mt. Disappointment forest in the year 1870 when Mr. Abe Neil established a mill on Strath Creek." "Numerous other mills operated on different locations and at different times within the forest between 1870 and 1939 ... " "the Australian Seasoned Timber Company ... which ran between 1880 and 1902 was said to be the largest sawmilling and timber processing industry in the Southern Hemisphere at the time, running a seasoning and joinery works at Wandong and over the period, four sawmills in the forest supplying timber directly to the works.
Source: Mt Disappointment Forest
1880s - Warrowitue & Moormbool Forests -
"For forty or more years from the 1880s, the then-named Warrowitue and Moormbool Forests produced wood in the form of mining timbers, firewood, sleepers and poles that was important for the development of Victoria. From about 1906 to 1927 many of these products were transported on tramlines operated by the McIvor Timber and Firewood Company."
Source: The Warrowitue and Moormbool Forests
1880s? - The Grampians
"Timber was harvested from the earliest days of settlement when it was used for houses and for farm buildings. When gold was discovered in nearby Stawell and Ararat, the demand for timber increased greatly. Now, it was needed for construction work such as pit props and rail sleepers; for fuelling the ever-hungry steam engines that powered the mines; for conversion to charcoal to produce the high temperatures that were required during ore-processing; and Iast, but not least, for warmth and cooking. The early sawmills, such as those at Fyans Creek, Stony Creek, Borough Huts, Zumstein, Wartook, Cranages, Strachan's Huts etc were steam-powered and were generally small enough to be mobile."
Source: Grampians State Forest
1890s - Otway Forests
the "sawmilling industry expands from foothill to mountain forests." ie. those forests that remain largely intact today.
"1960s - Major roading program to access remote hardwood timber resources; harvesting of hardwood sawlogs reached a peak of 120,000 m3/yr."
"1980s - Hardwood harvesting adjusted to a sustainable level on a regional basis through the Timber Industry Strategy, resulting in hardwood sawlog output being further reduced to 40,000 m3/yr.
Source: Otway Forests
1890 - Murrindindi Forest
"The towns of Yea in the north and Healesville in the south acted as the focal points of the timber industry by supplying capital, labour and transport. The Yea sawmillers operated out of the Cheviot railway station and moved through the forest in a south-easterly direction for twenty miles to the crest of the Black Range overlooking Buxton. The Healesville millers moved in a northerly direction for twenty miles to the top of the Divide overlooking the Murrindindi River until they met the Yea sawmillers’ leases. On the south-western flank were the Toolangi millers who worked their way up the Divide from Yarra Glen. All of the above three areas were exploited from the 1890s to the 1940s using timber tramways as the main form of transport. Road improvements during the 1920s and 1930s between Healesville and Alexandra opened up the Acheron Valley and enabled the eastern slopes of the Black Range to be made available for timber extraction. These millers moved up the face of the range until meeting with those Yea sawmills situated on the crest.”
Source: The Murrindindi Forest
1910/1939 - Western Tyers & Gould
Extensive harvesting to the south of Erica including in what is now the Moondarra State Park, and to the west and northwest.
Post 1939 salvage harvesting was extensive in the vicinity of Erica extending well up the Thomson Valley.
1917/18 - Vested Interests Continue to Impact Forest Management
"The endeavour made by the Department to have all sawmill royalties assessed on the cubic contents of logs, instead of on the output of marketable timber produced at the mill, was strongly opposed by the trade in the course of several deputations to the Government. In the end, the mills were permitted to pay for their timber on the basis of the ordinary mill output, and the rates of royalty chargeable were fixed for a period of seven years from 1st of January, 1918. Thus, at a stroke, the State lost two distinct advantages, power of close and effective supervision over mill operations on leased areas, with the prevention of undue waste, while, on the other hand, the Government's decision to bind itself to accept from a group of mills fixed royalties for so long a period is likely to result in a few years in a serious loss of revenue."
It is not until about 1934/35 that measurement by log volume starts to appear in Annual Reports - for a number of years hardwood sawlog volumes continue to be reported in sft HLV and in sawn volume while a transition to log measurement proceeds.
Source: Annual Report
1919/20 - Policy
The FCVs first Annual Report sets the direction the new management team will take in a Policy Statement but, interestingly there are no softwood production statistics included for some reason.
" ... special mention may be made of the ironbark and grey box areas which are still unreserved. These are our most valuable timbers for supplies of sleepers, piles, beams, and telegraph poles, and already their scarcity, due to wholesale excision in the past, is beginning to make itself felt. Steps are being taken to secure the reservation of further areas of redgum along the River Murray; this timber is also extensively used for sleepers, piles, and beams, and in the Murray areas, together with the black box, is being called upon to supply the immense quantities of fuel required annually for the pumping plants of the existing and future irrigation settlements."
Source: Annual Report
Eucalyptus oil production is 599417 lbs (271890 kg). Production reduces to about 52000 kg by 1992/93. Source: Statistic Snapshots
Source: Sawmill & Tramlines Map
1920s/1930s - The Victoria Forest et al
The extent of harvesting in this forest (predominantly mountain ash) and the network of tramlines and sawmills to extract and process sawlogs was massive. The Victorian Hardwood Company had a major mill at Powelltown and operated much of the network extending to the east as far as Nayook. It was at Nayook that the FCV established a sawmill in 1920 to provide some competition to the VHC operation. The 1939 fires effectively closed harvesting in these forests.
Source: Powelltown/Warbuton Map
1922/1923 - Poles Galore
"From the young timber crops large quantities of telegraph and telephone poles are annually removed for the Federal and railway telegraph lines, and these first fellings have now become highly remunerative."
We are still trying to get a handle on the scale of pole production.
Source: Annual Report
1926/27 - Sawn Timber from Private Land
"For the year 1926/27, the Government Statist shows that from all forests in Victoria 115,813,000 super feet of sawn timber was produced, so that the cut from privately-owned forests was 27,556,000 super feet, or approximately 24 percent of the total cut."
Source: 1927/28 FCV Annual Report
1929/30 - Softwood Supply Underway? & Improvement Firewood & Poles
"13,100 cases were milled locally from Creswick Plantation material, which output, together with miscellaneous sales, realized an aggregate return of £676. 6,600 cases milled locally from pine logs at You Yangs Plantation, 254,294 super feet of pine timber from Frankston, and 13,000 super feet from Mount Macedon Plantation, were sold during the year. Total sales of pine timber and cases manufactured from pine timber realized £1,863." At last, something to note from the plantation estate.
The expanding telephone/telegraph network sees 25350 poles produced.
Large volumes of firewood come from thinnings to improve forest production, particularly in the box ironbark forests - "Improvement wood - 243785 tons"
Source: Annual Report
1931/32 - Mt Macedon Softwood Sawlogs
"Over 1,500,000 superficial feet of mature Pinus radiata timber was harvested on Mt Macedon. This comprised portion of the original crop planted 50 years ago, and yielded exceptionally fine logs which, in many cases, measured 12 inches in diameter at 100 feet above ground level. The timber was of high quality and in ready demand for building purposes."
This is the first record of any significant sawlog volume coming from softwood plantations.
Source: Annual Report
1933/34 - Sleepers
Peak sleeper production with 919509 sleepers produced. From 1910/11 to 1985/86 at least 26 million sleepers were produced. Figures for 1918/19 have not been found.
Source: Sleeper Production
1936 - Making Paper
Agreement is reached between Australian Paper Manufactures (APM) and the FCV to establish a paper-making industry. See: The Wood Pulp Agreement Act 1936
1939 - Timber Salvage
The 1939 fires require a timber salvage program of unprecedented extent which continued into the early 1950s. The sawlog volume recovered alone was approximately 4.3 m3
Source: Post 1939 Fires - Recovery & Salvage
1940s - Emergency Programs
Two emergency programs were introduced to meet the demands of WW2 - the increased production of both firewood and charcoal.
Sources: Emergency Firewood & Charcoal Production.
1949/1950 - Peak Firewood Production?
Because the measurement of firewood production varied so much over time it is hard, if not impossible, to provide a good time series, but peak firewood production could well have occurred around this time.
"Firewood - green & dry split & improvement wood (thinnings)- 924485 tons measure; tops & dry longwood 156483 loads; Emergency firewood - 62520 tons wt."
This is of course the legal production. The illegal production, through time, was probably substantial.
Source: Annual Report
1950 - Connors Plain - Mature Alpine Ash
Harvesting commences on Connors Plain in probably the first extensive harvesting operation in mature alpine ash. Initiallly a two stage cut is used with sawlogs extracted first followed by pulpwood in the next year.
"Harvesting on Connors Plain finished after 1959. Assuming a sawlog output less than the allocation, but averaging 100,000 m3/yr, Connors Plain produced something like 1,000,000 m3 of sawlog, and an unknown quantity of pulpwood for APM at Maryvale, during the 1950s. (Comment : If you assume a sawlog/pulpwood ratio of 1:2 then the pulpwood removed would have been of the order of 2 million m3.)"
"There were significant concerns during the period of harvesting on Connors Plain that the regeneration being achieved was unsatisfactory, and indeed concerns that in some areas the two stage harvesting process used to provide sawlogs and, during the next season pulpwood to APM at Maryvale, would result in less than optimal outcomes."
This gave impetus to the research on alpine ash regeneration by RJ Grose.
Source: The Heyfield Story
1956/1957 - Hardwood Sawlog Peak
This year delivers the highest annual sawlog production ever achieved - 1381000 m3
Source: Annual Report
1959/1960 - Moving East
Logging operations increasingly move into the east of the State - particularly alpine ash forests accessible from Heyfield and Mansfield following, and in conjunction with, major road construction programs.
'"The Joint Planning and Development Committee, consisting of representatives of the Forests Commission and the Heyfield sawmillers, has completed the first phase of its inquiries, ie., examination of the timber resources available to the local industry and is now engaged on planning the orderly utilization of these resources. A similar Committee has been constituted to report to the Commission on resources available to the industry centred on Mansfield."
Source: 1959/60 FCV Annual Report
1969/1970 - Softwood Fencing Material & CSR at Bacchus Marsh
Softwood fencing material appears on the list prepared for this year. Is this the first time?
"Pulpwood, hardwood for hardboard - 74096 tons" is wood going to CSR at Bacchus Marsh to produce Masonite.
Source: Annual Report
1966 - Errinundra Plateau
"Rights to obtain 20,000,000 super feet H.L.V. of sawlogs annually from the Errinundra area in East Gippsland were granted during the year, but a good deal of roading and mill construction work will be necessary before cutting of this timber commences. All of the successful applicants for licences at Errinundra are already operating elsewhere in the State. As they will be either terminating or reducing those operations, the new allocations will not result in any large increase in total production."
Source : Annual Report
"In 1966, the allocation of the right to extract sawlogs from the Plateau was granted to the Heyfield/Orbost Sawmilling Company, headed at the time by Bert Head, a VSF graduate from 1933, and a man of strong intent and considerable ability as a stump-orator."
"In the sawmill, the prevalence of Ambrosia beetle, and associated fungal staining of the sawn boards, degraded the product in the market. This factor, with roading considerations, saw royalty rates reduced by the FCV in the early 1970s."
"Few visitors to the Errinundra National Park could now differentiate between logged and unlogged sites. The coupes of the late 1960's and early 1970's support Alpine Ash and Shining Gum regrowth, exceeding 45-50 metres in height, over a flourishing understory of wattle, sassafras,waratah and mountain pepper, to name just a few species."
Source: Logging Errinundra
1970s - East Gippsland
From the 1970s, East Gippsland forests will become the major producer of hardwood sawlogs.
1972 - Bowater-Scott Agreement
An Agreement was reached with Bowater-Scott for the supply of softwood logs for a new integrated mill at Myrtleford.
Source: Big Picture - Plantations
1980s - Ash Regrowth from 1939
Harvesting of the ash regrowth from the 1939 fires begins. What, only 40+ years after the fires I hear you say. If you wish to manage on an 80 year rotation you cannot wait 80 years to get started. And, by the way, a senior person in the conservation movement, who went on to serve the Federal Government of the time, was heard on Gippsland ABC radio in the early 1990s describing these forest as "old growth forest". Premature speculation!
1980 - Pulpwood to ANM
The supply of softwood pulpwood to the new mill at Albury provided an outlet for pulpwood from the Upper Murray plantations.
Source: Big Picture - Plantations
1986 - Sustainable Level of Hardwood Supply Established
The Strategy proposes major changes to previous policies including: ‘regional sustained yield’ based harvesting.
Source: Timber Industry Strategy pp 35 & 36
1992/93 - Plantations Moving Out of Goverment
Responsibility for softwood plantation management is moving to the Victorian Plantations Corporation which is eventually acquired by Hancock Victorian Plantations.
Source: Big Picture - Plantations
1992/93 - Sawlog Sources & Residual Logs
Residual logs appear on the list as a consequence of the Timber Industry Strategy - an attempt to better utilise low grade material in places where a pulpwwod market was not available. Get what you saw from it and chip and sell the rest - mostly to Harris Daishowa at Eden for export to Japan to make paper.
Still only about 35% of the sawlogs produced from public land come from softwood plantations. (Volume used includes veneer log volumes).
Source: Annual Report
2000/2008 - Wombat Closure
Sawmillers were squeezed for Wombat logs from 2000, and one by one they stopped getting Crown logs and/or were bought out by the Government and eventually closed - Ogden 2001, Eureka Timber Co 2002, Maxwell & Olson 2003, Dwyers 2007. That left the Black Forest mill. It was denied Wombat logs from around 2000 and ended up getting logs from Gippsland. Although the Government paid a cartage subsidy of sorts, then arrangement was economic lunacy for the sawmill because of higher sawlog costs. The dry mill closed in April 2007. The business then worked through specialty timbers on hand or got wood from interstate for a while, but closed for good on 8 January 2008. After the closure of native forest harvesting in the Wombat and Otway forests, there was no native hardwood logging in Victorian State Forests west of the Hume Highway.
Source: N Houghton
2002/2008 - Otway Closure
On 9 April 2002 the Premier (Steve Bracks) announced that TIS licences would be limited to two years from then on. Then on 6 November 2002 the Premier said he would curtail log allocations by 25%, and end native forest logging by 2008 if he won the upcoming election, which he did. From 2002 most sawmillers exited the industry over the next six years as limited licences were not conducive to any sort of forward planning and allocation reductions made the big mills uneconomic to run.
The last native hardwood sawlog was harvested on 30 May 2008. After the closure of native forest harvesting in the Wombat and Otway forests, there was no native hardwood logging in Victorian State Forests west of the Hume Highway.
Source: N Houghton
2023 - Native Forest Harvesting Ends
In May, the Victorian government announced that ' ... Native timber harvesting in State forests will end in 2024.
2024 - Softwood Plantations Rule
"Victoria has 382,600 hectares of plantations. It is the biggest plantation estate in Australia with 22% of the national estate. ... "Victoria produces around one quarter of Australia’s plantation grown wood. The industry generates an average of $500 million in value per year and has the largest export volume at around 5.3 million m3 per year."
Source: Victorian Plantations 2024