CALCUTT, Robin Alexander (7 January 2011)
DWYER, Terence (21 Feb 2011)
DYER, Gwendoline (Gwen) Alice (12 July 2011)
FREEMAN, Colin, BSc, MSc, AALIA (28 May 2011)
HENDERSON, Jean (1 July 2011) - no details available
HOERTER, Frank (1 August 2011) - no details available
KOLLMORGEN, Fred (24 July 2011)
MOODIE, Mollie (19 May 2011)
MORRISON, James Bryan (21 April 2011)
SCHOFIELD, Frank Donal (5 February 2011)
SPENCER, Margaret, OAM (6 January 2011)
Terence DWYER (21 Feb 2011, aged 85)
Terry was born in Liverpool, England and arrived in Melbourne in October
1949. He went to PNG as a Cadet Patrol Officer in June 1950. His first posting
was to the Western Highlands where he patrolled and established the airstrip
and first base camp at Laiagam and patrolled around the Wabag area. He then
moved to New Britain (Rabaul, Kandrian). He met and married Joan in 1956
and they returned to Sydney in 1957, where Terry attended the long course at
ASOPA. In 1958-59 he was stationed at Kundiawa, Goroka and Kerowagi. Their
first son (David) was born in Goroka in 1959. Stationed at Chuave 1960-61 and
Goroka 1962, in 1963 Terry trained local officers at the Finschhafen Training
School. Their second son, Colin, was born in Lae 1963. After another term in
Goroka (1965-68) Terry transferred to Port Moresby where he rose to be the
Director of Bureau of Industrial Organisations.
He and his family left Port Moresby in May 1974 and settled in Queensland.
Terry will be sadly missed by his wife Joan, sons David & Colin and his 6
grandchildren. David Dwyer
Robin Alexander CALCUTT (7 January 2011, aged 78)
Robin was born in Camberwell, Melbourne, in 1932. He was educated at Xavier
College where he showed a keen and life long interest in sport and academics.
Robin went to PNG as a cadet patrol officer in 1953. His first posting to New
Ireland always held a special place in his heart and he was thrilled to return in
2002 to revisit the people and outstation of Konos. Robin served for some years
in the Sepik River area. In 1961 he was posted to Telefomin, where he met
Marie Tierney and they were married in Melbourne the following year. Marie,
Robin and their family lived in a number of areas of PNG including Angoram,
Kerowagi, Daru and then Port Moresby. They relocated to Brisbane in 1973.
Robin held the position of Ceremonies Officer at the University of Queensland
until his retirement in 1997. He was very active in various community services
including local school committees, Neighbourhood Watch and in his role as a
Justice of the Peace. Robin moved to the RSL Fairview Retirement Village at
Pinjarra Hills following the death of his wife Marie and he held the community
there in very high regard. A devoted and proud family man, Robin immersed
himself in the lives of his six children and eleven grandchildren until his death
from cancer in January. Belinda Calcutt
Margaret SPENCER, OAM (6 January 2011)
Dora graduated MSc in Entomology in 1939 and lectured in Biology at New
England University College, 1940 to 1945. She then tutored in Zoology at the
University of Sydney. Her association with PNG extended for 25 years from 1953.
In 1954 she was appointed as entomologist-instructor at the Malaria Control
School at Minj in the Western Highlands of New Guinea. During the next two years
she and her husband, Dr Terrence Spencer, documented the epidemiology of
Highlands malaria, and published the first record of a Highlands malaria epidemic.
From 1956 she carried out a detailed study into anopheline fauna of the
D'Entrecasteaux Islands and, as part of a Malaria Control Assessment Team,
extended that study over a wide range of PNG islands, working closely with her
husband in epidemiological studies. She was awarded a WHO research grant to
study enlargement of the ovarioles and development of eggs in PNG anopheline. A further special investigation was her study of the malaria potential for the work
force of the Bougainville Copper Project and make recommendations for its
control. In addition to published scientific papers and unpublished reports Dr
Spencer has written a history of malaria control in the south west Pacific region, a
book on the Australian experience of malaria, and three books describing
experiences on field patrol and on outstations in PNG. In 1998 she graduated PhD
in the Tropical Health Program of the University of Queensland. Her thesis
described the development of health services in PNG from 1870 till the outbreak of
World War II. With thanks to: PAMBU Index for PMB 1146
Gwendoline (Gwen) Alice DYER (12 July 2011, aged 83) See pg 42
Gwen was the youngest of 12 children in the Rabjohns family at Wynnum. She
married Keith Dyer in 1948 and they sailed to Taskul, Papua New Guinea,
where he was a Patrol Officer in Charge. Gwen learned to speak and write
Pidgin English fluently and enjoyed the respect of the indigenous people. She
excelled in multiple sports and represented PNG in the South Pacific Games.
Their children Lynette, John, Peter and Mark, were all born in the PNG and
home schooled by Gwen with Correspondence lessons. She entered fully into
community life, and made lasting friendships in twelve coastal and highland
station employment locations. When the Dyer family returned to Victoria Point,
Gwen was active in service for Blue Care, Lifeline, the Victoria Point Uniting
Church, Meals on Wheels and Neighbourhood Watch. Gwen's welcoming hugs,
good humour and smile will be long remembered. Gwen will be greatly missed
by her husband Keith, the extended family and her many friends.
See also the Rev. Barry Dangerfield's Eulogy in the Library.
Mollie MOODIE (19 May 2011, aged 92)
Mollie was born on 28 April 1919 in Bankstown, Sydney. The family lived in
Dungog NSW before moving to Corowa down on the Murray River, where she grew
up. She met and married Don Moodie on 8 June 1940 and went to live on a farm
at Dandongadale, Buffalo River. In December 1953 she travelled up to Port
Moresby to join her husband who had gone there previously. She spent many
happy years at Laloki Plant Quarantine Station, then Moitaka and finally in Port
Moresby proper. During her time in Moresby she worked for BP's on the
kitchenware department for about 12 months and then went to Steamships Trading
Co. She finished her working career at the local Electricity Commission operating
the Check machine.
Mollie and Don left Moresby in November 1965 and retired to Margate in Qld
where she worked as a nurse in an Aged Care Facility. After her husband Don died
in November 1971 she moved to Ocean Shores the following year to be near her
youngest son Jim. Mollie was a valued member of the Ocean Shores Bowling
community and won a no less than 10 major championships.
She will be missed by all who knew her, particularly by her family. Mollie is
survived by her own three children and their families: Ron - Hervey Bay, Lyn
(McGowran) - Ocean Shores, Jim - Brunswick Heads, 10 grandchildren, 10 great
grandchildren and 1 great great grandchild. Lyn (McGowran)
James Bryan MORRISON (21 April 2011, aged 77)
Jim was born in Leicester, England and emigrated with his family to
Wellington, New Zealand, at the age of 18 years.
He married Dianne and had 56 happy years together and 5 children.
His training was in printing and he worked in New Zealand and then Fiji,
setting up the School of Printing under the Colombo Plan. He later went to Port
Moresby and worked as the Assistant Government Printer in Konedobu for 10
years.
During his time in Port Moresby he was involved with the PNG Orchid Society
where he was made a Life Member for his wonderful contribution working as
Treasurer and committee Member. Jim and Dianne were always ready to open
their home to hold meetings and they took part in all the various excursions to
the outstations to rescue orchids from logging camps.
He was always willing to give of his time for others and joined choirs, Scottish
dancing and The Masonic Lodge, and was a member of the Board of Governors
of the Port Moresby Technical College.
Jim later went to the Solomons, Samoa and the Philippines with the Australian
Business Volunteers. After returning from Manila in 2004 the first signs of his
illness appeared. Jim lived in Whangarei New Zealand. He is survived by
Dianne, five children and grandchildren.
Glenda and John Schofield
Fred KOLLMORGEN (24 July 2011, aged 94)
It's nearly 70 years since Bandsman Fred Kollmorgen was abruptly separated from
his mates in the Band of the 2/22nd Battalion at Rabaul. Fred was the only survivor
out of the 25 bandsmen; his indomitable spirit sustained him through a hazardous four-month trek of some 1,000 kilometres through fetid, disease-ridden, enemy-patrolled jungle to eventual safety at Port Moresby.
After the war, Fred farmed down in Gippsland until retiring, selling up and moving to Ringwood, where he continued his Salvation Army service, particularly as a
member of the Ringwood Citadel Band. Frederick William Kollmorgen was born at
Oakleigh on 10 May 1915. As a 23-year-old truck-driver and tenor-horn player with
the Springvale Salvation Army Band, he enlisted in the AIF at Caulfield on 24
June 1940. He was assigned the number VX29061 and posted to the 10th Training
Depot at Bendigo. Private Kollmorgen transferred into the 2/22nd Battalion Band
on 6 December 1940 to be part of the Band (of which all but two were Salvation
Army Bandsmen) under Arthur Gullidge, and sailed for Rabaul aboard the
Zealandier on 10 April 1941.
On Sunday afternoon, 24 July 2011, within hours of the Ringwood Salvation Army
Band visiting and playing some of his favourite music, Fred passed away.
The link remains, for as long as we remember Fred and his mates they are still with
us. Fred is survived by his son, Jim. Info from Memorial News, No. 29 August 2011
Frank Donal SCHOFIELD (5 February 2011, 89 years)
Frank Schofield was born in England in 1921 and undertook medical studies there.
He was a Regimental Medical Officer with the British Army serving in Greece,
Egypt and Palestine, and later as a RAMC Medical Specialist, from 1945-48. He
was involved in medical research in East and West Africa, and later joined the staff
of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Frank Schofield was one of the most outstanding medical researchers to work in
PNG, starting with Robert Koch, discoverer of the Tuberculosis germ at the end of
the 19th century. He has left a rare legacy. While he was based at Maprik he
demonstrated that by immunizing pregnant women with tetanus toxoid you could
prevent their babies developing tetanus of the newborn. This form of tetanus
resulted from contamination of the baby's umbilical cord at birth by cutting it with
a dirty knife or piece of bamboo or by rubbing dirt or ash onto the cord stump. This
immunization measure was rapidly incorporated into the international programme
of immunization. As a result, between one and two million children are saved
annually and some twenty to forty thousand women are saved from puerperal
tetanus. It is estimated that some 40 million children have survived as a result of
his discovery.
Frank came to the Territory in 1958 to take up an appointment as Assistant
Director (Medical Research) in the Public Health Department, one which he held
until 1964 when he joined WHO (the World Health Organization) taking up a post
as Professor of Public Health in Ethiopia and then Kenya. He moved to Geneva in
1973 where he was the inaugural head of the Expanded Programme on
Immunization: the global programme for immunizing children and pregnant
women. At the commencement of the program less than five per cent of the world's
children were immunized—it is now over 80 per cent with 3-5 million lives saved
annually.
Frank Schofield held many consultancies in several developing countries, and with
WHO and other international organizations in the areas of immunization and
other aspects of Primary Health Care and medical education.
In 1980 he was appointed Professor of Social and Preventive Medicine and later
established the Tropical Health Program, the forerunner of the Australian Centre for International Health and Tropical Medicine—the ACIHTM—at the University of
Queensland. On his retirement in 1987, the university bestowed on him the title of
Emeritus Professor.
Frank was a naturalist and loved the wildlife of the countries he worked in be they
jungles, steppes, savannahs or deserts. He was a humble man who sought neither
wealth nor fame. Louis, his son, in his eulogy of his father, summarised his life as:
"he loved nature, he loved his work, he loved his family, and he loved life."
Professor Schofield died on 5 February 2011 at St Andrew's Private Hospital
in Brisbane and was buried at Pinnaroo Lawn Cemetery. He is survived by his wife
Lorna June, their three sons, and five grandchildren. Anthony Radford
Colin FREEMAN, BSc, MSc, AALIA (28 May 2011, aged 73)
Born in Harrogate England, Colin, then aged 15, and his family, migrated to
Australia in 1951. They finally settled in Adelaide. He married Marion née Klemm
in Woodville on 7 November 1959.
In 1963, he took up Scuba Diving and was appointed Captain of the University of
Adelaide (UoA) Rugby team. Colin graduated UoA in 1965 with a Bachelor of
Science degree. In 1966 he became the President of the South Australian Museum
of Underwater Research, and was active in the establishment of Marine Reserves
on the South Australian Coast. He undertook many dives including ice diving in the
Canadian Arctic at age 60.
In 1967, after completing his library training, he took up a position at the newly
formed University of Papua New Guinea (UPNG) as the Foundation Librarian,
bibliographer of two hundred years of writings known as the "New Guinea
Collection". Writers like Jack Hides, and the Leahy and Fox brothers left lasting
impressions. He found "it was almost inevitable…that I would read a fair
proportion of the materials that came into the collection and in the reading, fall
under the spell of an earlier New Guinea as others have before me…it would be
essential for me to enter the high and wild country of the islands and taste
something of this exciting world for myself."
In March of that year, Colin, and a group of other academics, undertook his first
Kokoda Track walk to Imita Ridge the site of the legendary 'Golden Stairs', a track
rising 1,200 feet in the first three miles. In September 1968, he walked the Kokoda
again crossing thirty kilometres of the section from Efogi to Owen's Corner, Sogeri.
In 1969, Colin participated in an expedition led by Professor Rhodes Fairbridge of
Columbia University to the Louisiade Archipelago. And in July 1970, he and
several other lecturers and librarians from the (UPNG) set out to reach the top
(unsuccessfully due to poor conditions) of Mount Albert Edward.
In September 1972, influenced heavily by an account of the area by Osmar White's
Green Armour, 1945, Colin embarked on a walk from Wau to Bulldog on a project
led by the Australian Army Education Corps to survey the road through the Eloa
Valley, built by the Royal Australian Engineers during World War Two.
Colin also coached the Territory Papua and New Guinea Rugby Touring side in
1968 and the UPNG Rugby Club from 1967-1969, including a young Sir Anthony
Siaguru, a leading PNG statesman, and Bart Philemon, former PNG Minister for
Finance and Treasury.
During his time in Papua New Guinea he co-authored two books on native arts and
crafts and wrote a number of professional Academic Papers. He was also actively involved in gathering an oral archive for PNG. In later life he also wrote extensively
about his time in New Guinea, particularly the crossing from Wau to Bulldog
(2008), and the Louisiade Archipelago (2011 unfinished).
In 1972, he became a Principal Librarian of the National Library of Australia
(NLA). Following this he was posted to Washington DC in 1978 as the Australian
Liaison Librarian for North America and First Secretary of the Australian Embassy
until 1981. Colin's constant thirst for knowledge and ability to master new
techniques led him more and more into the growing field of Information
Technology. In 1981, after leaving the NLA, he worked as a Business Analyst,
designing various IT systems for major Government Departments including tax
evasion tracking systems for the ATO and CLIRS (Computerised Legal Information
Retrieval System). Towards the late 1980s he also worked for the United Nations
on Development projects in Nepal, Thailand, Vietnam and Tajikistan.
Finally, between 1989 and 2006, Colin began his last career as a University
Lecturer in Information Systems positions at various Australian Universities as a
Senior Lecturer including the University of New South Wales, the Australian
Defence Force Academy (ADFA) and the Australian National University.
Survived and much missed by his wife of 51 years, Marion, their two daughters,
Melissa and Cassandra and his three grandchildren Elena, Dylan and Callum.
Melissa Freeman
No further details at this stage:
Frank HOERTER (1 August 2011)
Jean HENDERSON (1 July 2011)
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