Stephen Harold Trollip

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Stephen Harold Trollip

Also Known As: "Harold Trollope", "Harold"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Aliwal North, Cape
Death: May 15, 1949 (67)
Immediate Family:

Son of Samuel Wesley Trollip and Jessie Jane Williams Trollip
Husband of Fanny Irene Trollip
Father of Jesse Helen Ruth Glen Sobey; Irene Eyre; Private; Private; Private and 2 others
Brother of Zillah Evelyn May Trollip; Morris Knight Trollip; Wesley Booth Trollope; Jessie Audrey Jane Glen-Leary and Bob Flavell Trollip

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Stephen Harold Trollip

Stephen Harold Trollip (a former Kruger National Park ranger), chased the elephants into the Addo Park area using shotguns, firecrackers and fires. The area was inadequately fenced and the movement of Addo elephants continued to cause problems on surrounding Addo farmlands. Elephants were killed as a result of conflicts with farmers and collisions with trains.

In 1933, Trollip started supplying oranges, hay, pumpkins, lucerne and pineapples to elephants in order to keep them within the Addo Park boundaries, which was effective. Since elephants visited the feeding site at certain times, the practice of inviting visitors began. The feeding caused problems of its own which is the reason why there is a sign warning visitors not to take citrus into the game area. The elephants would remain within easy reach of the feeding area which had a negative effect on the natural vegetation within that area and elephants were often injured during the insuing feeding frenzies created by the regular food delivery. In 1954, Graham Armstrong (the Addo Park manager at the time) developed an elephant-proof fence using tram rails and lift cables and an area of 2270 hectares was fenced in. There were 22 elephants at the time. This Armstrong fence, named after its developer, is still used around the Addo Elephant National Park today. The feeding of citrus, lucerne and the like, continued after the fence was erected in order to increase the chance of visitors seeing the Addo elephants from outside the fence. The Sundays River Citrus Co-operative was donating substandard oranges and grapefruit. A viewing ramp and floodlights were erected for visitors.

By 1976 about 25-30 tons of oranges were fed during the winter months. For want of a better system, a truck would enter the game area and dump the oranges. Elephants would run behind, screaming, roaring and grabbing oranges from the truck. They would be scared away from the entrance gate (when the truck departed) by whips, throwing bricks and shouts. The vegetation around the feeding area was decimated, as elephants did not move out of the area for fear of missing the feeding sessions. Levels of aggression between the elephants rose and many were injured. Many elephant cows showed signs of stress by the secretions from their temporal glands when competing for oranges. Due to all these signs, the practice of feeding citrus was gradually phased out by 1979. Elephant numbers grew from 22 in 1954 to 100 in 1979. Today there are more than 450 elephants in the 1,640 km² Addo Elephant National Park.

In 1981, the first tourist drove through the Addo Elephant Park using a basic gravel road system in place. Hapoor, the dominant bull in the Addo Park from 1944-1968) Hap means ‘nick’ in Afrikaans, while ‘oor’ means ear and it is believed the distinctive nick in his ear was caused by a hunter’s bullet. Hapoor was the only elephant to ever break out of the Addo Park, in 1968 after being deposed from his dominant status by Lanky and was driven from the heard and became a loner. Later that year he was found feeding near Coerney Station and was shot by the then Park Warden, Sep Le Roux. It was well known that Hapoor disliked humans and could have been a potential threat, because of his aggressive nature. The Hapoor waterhole in the southwestern section of the Addo Park game area is named after him.

The expansion of the Addo Elephant National Park into a ‘Greater Addo’ was first officially mentioned at the Open Africa Initiative in 1997.The plans to expand the park received a significant boost when academics from the Terrestrial Ecology Research Unit (TERU) at the University of Port Elizabeth drafted a proposal outlining the opportunities that could possibly be created through an expansion initiative. Dr. Anthony Hall-Martin was instrumental in this process. The expansion has meant not only that the Addo Elephant National Park contains five of South Africa’s seven major vegetation zones (biomes) but also that it is probably the only park in the world to house the so-called “Big 7″ (elephant, rhinoceros, lion, buffalo, leopard, whale and great white shark) in their natural habitat.

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Stephen Harold Trollip's Timeline

1881
July 7, 1881
Aliwal North, Cape
1914
April 29, 1914
1915
December 12, 1915
Fort Beaufort, Amatole, Eastern Cape, South Africa
1949
May 15, 1949
Age 67