The park was established in 1971 covering and was originally named after
Benjamin Boyd. Boyd was a wealthy pastoralist and businessman in the 1840s, with interests in shipping (including
whaling), based on the
South Coast of NSW. At the time, the area was part of the
District of Port Phillip and Boyd was
elected to the NSW Legislative Council for the
electoral district of Port Phillip. He was the first in Australia to engage in
blackbirding, a practice akin to slavery, when a ship he had commissioned brought 65
Melanesian labourers to
Boyd Town in 1847. Boyd commissioned the construction of a
sandstone tower overlooking the entrance to the harbour of
Twofold Bay to alert whaling crews of the approach of their prey. The tower was never completed. In the wake of the
George Floyd protests around the world and
in Australia and the
Black Lives Matter movement gaining pace in mid-2020, calls for the national park to be renamed were renewed.
Matt Kean, the
NSW Environment Minister, promised to seek a briefing about renaming the park and then to consult with local elders and the community. In September 2022 it was officially renamed, under new environment minister
James Griffin. On 11 November 2023,
Thaua and South Sea Islander
elders conducted a ceremony together to mark the park's name change. The name
Beowa had been selected in honour of the
orca, which is significant to the Thaua people. The park has been expanded from its original to cover over time. ==Description==