Sangara, Papua New Guinea Explained

Sangara
Pushpin Map:Papua New Guinea
Coordinates:-8.8231°N 148.1019°W
Pushpin Label Position:right
Pushpin Map Caption:Location within Papua New Guinea
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Papua New Guinea
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Oro (Northern)
Subdivision Type2:District
Subdivision Name2:Sohe District
Subdivision Type3:LLG
Subdivision Name3:Higatura Rural LLG
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics1 Title1:Main languages
Timezone1:AEST
Utc Offset1:+10
Blank Name:Climate
Blank Info:Af

Sangara is a settlement in south-eastern Papua New Guinea. It is located to the east of Kokoda.

History

During the Second World War the area saw fighting between the Japanese forces and the allies (primarily Australians). Missionaries were once active in the area and a mission station was established in Sangara.[1] [2] In 1948, Martyrs Memorial School for boys was established in Sangara, named in honour of 11 Anglican missionaries.[3]

Economy

The Sangara also constitute a tribe in the area. They are known for setting up markets along the road to Buna Bay to Yodda Goldfield and trading taro with tobacco and glass bottles.[4]

Sangara is a notable area of coffee production, lying in the foothills.[5] 18 commercial coffee plantations were established in 1926, paving the way for commercial production from 1928.[6] Louis Austen, a retired sea-captain, once managed a government coffee plantation near Sangara.[1] Historically there were also major rubber plantations in the area; the rubber was transported to the port at Buna Bay and then shipped overseas.[7] [8] Sangara was also an important location for the sugar industry in the country. In 1928 a group of Cairns-based investors founded the Sangara Sugar Estates, Ltd., and proposed the payment of capital worth £500,000 to promote sugar production in Papua New Guinea.[9] The company was reported to have applied for some 8100 hectares of land.[6] The sugar industry in Sangara though was reportedly not as successful as the rubber industry and some of the plantations were later converted to produce rubber.[10]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Aerts, Theo. The martyrs of Papua New Guinea: 333 missionary lives lost during World War II. University of Papua New Guinea Press. 1994. 9980-84-053-6.
  2. Book: The road from Gona. Tomkins, Dorothea, Hughes, Brian. Angus and Robertson. 1969.
  3. Book: Ancestral Lines: The Maisin of Papua New Guinea and the Fate of the Rainforest. Barker, John. University of Toronto Press. 2008. 33. 978-1-4426-0105-5.
  4. Book: Papua Or British New Guinea. Murray, John Hubert. READ BOOKS. 105. 2009. 978-1-4446-7727-0.
  5. Book: Mair, Lucy Philip. Australia in New Guinea. registration. Melbourne University Press. 1970. 9780522839579.
  6. Book: A History of agriculture in Papua New Guinea: a time to plant and a time to uproot. Denoon, Donald, Snowden, Catherine . Papua New Guinea. Dept. of Primary Industry. Institute of Papua New Guinea Studies. 1980.
  7. Book: The handbook of Papua and New Guinea. Pacific Publication (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. 1961.
  8. Web site: A Chronology of Tramways and Railways in Papua New Guinea. www.pngbuai.com.
  9. International Sugar Journal (1931)
  10. Book: The plantation dream: developing British New Guinea and Papua 1884-1942. Lewis, David Charles. The Journal of Pacific History. 1996. 0-9595477-8-9.