The LPAC was formed after a public meeting which was called by the Hobart Walking Club following the first weekend in March 1971 when approximately one thousand or more people visited Lake Pedder. This became known as the Pedder Pilgrimage.
The origins of the United Tasmania Group were from a LPAC meeting, and from the South West Tasmania Action Committee, also known as the South West Tasmania Action Group.[7]
1972
There were a number of notable Tasmanians who objected to the flooding, including Brenda Hean who died mysteriously in 1972 while being flown to Canberra in a light plane to stage a protest event.[8][9]
In 1972, the organisation collaborated with mainland state branches to argue against the damming.[10] Activists also conducted vigils at the lake site and other locations in relation to the flooding of the original Lake Pedder[11]
It was instrumental in the successful challenge to the Franklin Dam proposal in the early 1980s.
Since the early 1990s, the Lake Pedder Restoration Committee (LPRC)[13] has continued to press for the restoration of Lake Pedder to its original form. Many of the senior members of the LPRC had also been active in the Lake Pedder Action Committee.[14]
Since the mid-1990s, various books and documentaries have revisited the flooding of Lake Pedder, and people involved in the arguments for and against the flooding.[15][16]
Records
A significant number of individuals have left archives and resources that include information about the LPAC and its activities:
^Save Lake Pedder National Park Committee (1967), Newsletter, The Committee, retrieved 6 November 2017
^Sims, Peter C. (Peter Charles,) (1995), Lake Pedder : the awakening, Pedder 2000 Committee, ISBN978-0-646-20321-8{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Save Lake Pedder National Park Committee (1967), Records, retrieved 6 November 2017
^Symposium to Enquire into the Hydro-Electric Commission, Environment, and Government in Tasmania (1971 : Hobart); Jones, Richard (1972), Damania : proceedings of a symposium to enquire into the H.E.C., Environment, and Government in Tasmania, Hobart, November, 1971, Fullers Bookshop (Publishing Division), ISBN978-0-85853-004-1{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^The South West Book page 277 Chronology – same year the Tasmanian Legislative council defeated a vote on a referendum on Lake Pedder by a 14-3 vote...
^Millwood, Scott (2008), Whatever happened to Brenda Hean?, Allen & Unwin, ISBN978-1-74175-611-1
^Millwood, Scott; McMahon, Michael; Robertson, Mira (2009), Whatever happened to Brenda Hean? (DVD ed.), Screen Australia : Australian Broadcasting Corporation, ISBN978-0-9806862-4-1
^Johnson, Dick; Australian Union of Students; Lake Pedder Action Committee; Lake Pedder Action Committee. Victorian Branch (1972), Lake Pedder : why a national park must be saved, Lake Pedder Action Committees of Victoria and Tasmania and the Australian Union of Students, ISBN978-0-9599018-0-1
^Sharples, C. E. (Chris E.); University of Tasmania. Centre for Environmental Studies; Symposium on Lake Pedder : Values and Restoration (1995 : University of Tasmania) (2001), Lake Pedder : values and restoration : the proceedings of a symposium held on 8th April 1995 at the University of Tasmania, Hobart (1st ed.), Centre for Environmental Studies, Dept. of Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Tasmania, ISBN978-0-85901-970-5{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Sims, Peter C. (Peter Charles,) (1995), Lake Pedder : the awakening, Peter C. Sims (published 2012), ISBN978-0-646-20321-8{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Grieve, Anna; Best, Steve (1997), Lake Pedder, Film Australia, retrieved 31 July 2015