| Author |
Replies: 30 / Views: 6,996 |
|
Bedrock Of The Community
Australia
38679 Posts |
|
|
|
|
Pillar Of The Community
Canada
531 Posts |
|
|
Is that a province of South Africa? That would be a cinderella then, yes? |
Send note to Staff
|
|
|
Pillar Of The Community
United States
2758 Posts |
|
|
Bumbunga is in Australia, outside of Adelaide, South Australia. A Micro-Nation. |
Send note to Staff
|
|
|
Valued Member
United States
248 Posts |
|
|
Warrehouse, what's a Micro-Nation? In fact, what exactly is Bumbunga? -Allen (eager to learn something new today)  |
Send note to Staff
|
|
|
Bedrock Of The Community
Australia
38679 Posts |
|
|
Province of Bumbunga The Province of Bumbunga comprises a three hectare strawberry farm located at Bumbunga, some eight kilometres from Lochiel and 137 kilometres north east of Adelaide in South Australia. The Province was proclaimed on January 1, 1979 by the owner of the property Mr. Alex Brackstone, a former circus monkey trainer who migrated from England after World War II and who settled at Bumbunga after unsuccessfully mineral prospecting in Queensland and the Northern Territory. Mr. Brackstone's motives for taking this step were quite unlike those of Mr. Leonard Casley and Mr. Thomas Barnes who proclaimed their states (of Hutt River Province and the Independent State of Rainbow Creek) as a result of fierce disputes with their respective governments. The Bumbunga Province came into being for purely patriotic reasons as Mr. Brackstone was alarmed at the erosion of Royalist sentiment in Australia and what he detected as the drift to Republicanism — particularly after the then Governor General Sir John Kerr dismissed the Whitlam Labour Government in 1975. In setting up the Province of Bumbunga and proclaiming himself the Governor, Mr. Brackstone hoped to reverse this trend. One of his chief weapons in this campaign against creeping Republicanism is his pride and joy, a 92,000 square foot strawberry patch which is shaped as a map of the United Kingdom. It stretches 600 feet from the Isle of Wight to John O'Groats in Scotland and 350 feet from Land's End to Kent. Governor Brackstone offered to perform marriage ceremonies in the Province for brides of noble British birth and he planned to import earth from the place of the lady's birth in England and sprinkle it on the appropriate place amongst the 50,000 strawberry plants in his map. However, he encountered certain problems with this plan as quarantine authorities confiscated Shipments of earth from the U.K. ;
|
Send note to Staff
|
|
|
Valued Member
United States
248 Posts |
|
|
Rod, Now that is an interesting story! The things we learn from stamp collecting are just incredible. So, how did the Australian government feel about Mr. Brackstone's endeavors? Also, how did the aforementioned Cinderella's come into being? Are there any others associated with this "political" entity?
-Allen |
Send note to Staff
|
|
|
Pillar Of The Community
United States
2758 Posts |
|
|
A Mirco-Nation is an individual or group whom has declared themselves independent of the country they live in. They state that their property is free and clear of the local national government, that they are a government onto themselves. This can be a farm, house, ranch, even an apartment/condo. They establish their own constitution & laws, some print their own stamps & money including coins.
More later! |
Send note to Staff
|
| Edited by warrehouse - 04/06/2010 6:22 pm |
|
|
Pillar Of The Community
United States
2972 Posts |
|
|
Sounds like an episode of Family Guy or The Simpsons from a couple of years ago. |
Send note to Staff
|
|
|
Valued Member
United States
248 Posts |
|
|
That's what I really like about that story: It's real, and it's more entertaining than an episode of the Simpsons!  -Allen |
Send note to Staff
|
|
|
Bedrock Of The Community
Australia
38679 Posts |
|
|
Valued Member
United States
248 Posts |
|
|
Warrehouse and Rod, I have to admit, you really got me going on this... I've spent significant time on Wikipedia today researching micro-nations and their philatelic contrivances. Very entertaining! I have to say I can almost feel the pain of those guys in Rainbow Creek, and can't blame them a bit for seceding.
-Allen |
Send note to Staff
|
|
|
Pillar Of The Community
United States
7072 Posts |
|
|
Pillar Of The Community
United States
1947 Posts |
|
|
Is this legal? I can't imagine the reaction here in the US if this were tried. You might get away with the fiction as long as you did nothing that infringed on the powers of the various governments(local, state, federal) But stamps and coins---- |
Send note to Staff
|
|
|
Valued Member
United States
248 Posts |
|
|
Valued Member
United States
248 Posts |
|
|
Cjd, I hadn't run across that one yet, but now I've got a project for the day!  -Allen |
Send note to Staff
|
|
|
Valued Member
United States
77 Posts |
|
|
Guys, I have a neat one from right here in the good 'ol U.S.of A. I have a sheet of the stamps issued in McDonald Co. Mo. when the whole county tried to secede from the state of Mo. I also have one of the passports they issued. Another stamp collector friend of mine even has one of the stamps used on cover! I will try to post pictures as soon as I get back to the shop, but tomorrow I have to take my mother to see her Doctor.Interesting stuff! Dean P.S. I was living close to there at the time and still do. There was an article in Linn's a long time ago but they didn't get the whole story. I'll see if I can find that too. |
Send note to Staff
|
|
Replies: 30 / Views: 6,996 |
|