The foundations of the Park lay in the near-extermination of the local elephant population. Local fruit farmers had been sold their farms at greatly reduced rates and favourable terms because of the elephant presence. Nevertheless, these farmers complained to the authorities about damage to their crops, broken water pipelines and reservoirs, and even loss of lives. From June 1919 to August 1920, the
professional hunter Major P. J. Pretorius was brought in to thin out the herd, and shot a figure of "120-odd" elephants, reducing the population from about 130 to 16 individuals. In 1925
Deneys Reitz, in his capacity as Minister for Lands, stepped in to proclaim the area a sanctuary. In the following years Reitz often stopped by to check in on the elephant population. Following the passing of the Natural Parks Act in 1926, the Addo forest was formally established as a national park in 1931, in part due to the efforts of
Sydney Skaife . The first Park manager, Stephen Harold Trollope (a former
Kruger National Park ranger), chased elephants into the Park area using shotguns, firecrackers and fires. Only one bull remained outside the park and it was unfortunately shot by Trollope when it charged one of his men. This would have been the twelfth elephant in the park, leaving only 11. Over the years the rangers struggled with the elephants' determination to leave the farm to raid neighbouring farms, eventually constructing a barrier made of mineshaft lift cable, and tramlines donated by the
Port Elizabeth City Council and
City of Johannesburg, which could withstand all but the biggest elephants. By 1954 there were 22 elephant in the park, and in 1957
eland were introduced. In the 1990s,
hippopotamus and
rhino were introduced along with
Burchell’s Zebra and
warthog. Finally in 2003, six
Kalahari lions were introduced to the park as were the first
hyaenas. Today there are over 600 elephants in the Park.
Expansion The original park has subsequently been expanded to include the
Woody Cape Nature Reserve that extends from the
Sundays River mouth towards
Alexandria and a marine reserve, which includes
St. Croix Island and
Bird Island, both breeding habitat for
gannets and
penguins, as well as a large variety of other
marine life. Bird Island is home to the world's largest breeding colony of
gannets - about 120,000 birds - and also hosts the second largest breeding colony of
African penguins, the largest breeding colony being St. Croix island. These marine assets form part of the plan to expand the Addo National Elephant Park into the
Greater Addo Elephant National Park. The expanded park contains five of South Africa's seven major vegetation zones (
biomes), and is also the only park to house Africa's "Big 7" (
elephant,
rhinoceros,
lion,
buffalo,
leopard,
whale and
great white shark) in their natural
habitat. == Flora and fauna ==