Showing posts with label Bedford Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bedford Park. Show all posts

07 September 2025

The Three Smilgevicius Passengers on the Heintzelman, by Daina Pocius and Ann Tündern-Smith

Updated 14-16, 24 and 26 September, and 1 October 2025.

Looking through the list of names of those who arrived on the First Transport, the General Stuart Heintzelman, we often wonder about relationships and friendships between those on board. When we see the same surname, our first thought is, are they related? Maybe they are brothers, or cousins? When Daina saw the name Smilgevicius three times, she wanted to know if there was a connection.

Izidorius Smilgevičius

Izidorius, or Izzy as he was known in Australia, was born on the 11 February 1924 in the village of Truikiai, close to the town of Plungė. Named after his father, he was a farm worker while residing in Lithuania. The population at the time Izidorius lived in Truikiai was about the same as it is today, around 150.

He was only 22 years old when he arrived in Australia. He was described on his arrival statement as having worked previously as a general labourer. He therefore was suited to continuing to work as a labourer.

Izzy's ID photo from his Bonegilla card

He was among 185 Baltic men sent from the Bonegilla camp to pick fruit in northern Victoria’s Goulburn Valley, in his case, for Messrs Dundas Simson in Ardmona.

When that fruit season finished, Izzy returned to Bonegilla on 31 March 1948. With still most of his two-year contract to work, his next placement was to Tasmania, where he was sent after 4 days back in Bonegilla.

Izzy’s Bonegilla card does not say what he was to do in Tasmania. Ramunas Tarvydas, in his From Amber Coast to Apple Isle, fills in the missing information. Ramunas or Ray says that Izzy first picked apples in the Huon Valley in the southeast of Tasmania. When that work finished, the Commonwealth Employment service sent him to the northwest, to work for the Electrolytic Zinc Company at Rosebery. His working and living conditions, and his Baltic companions, are described in Jonas Mockunas’ recent entry in this blog.

An Alien Registration file for one of Izzy's fellow workers, Juozas Jablonskis, records that these two had absconded from Rosebery, along with Juozas Paskevicius and Jonas Rauba.  They had been thoughtful enough to write to the Commonwealth Employment Service (CES) in Queenstown to say that they were leaving.  A few days later, in February 1949, the senior CES official in Tasmania sent a second letter to the Commonwealth Migration Officer in that State, saying that all 4 were thought to be at a specific address in East Melbourne.

The next letter from the CES to the Commonwealth Migration Officer, Hobart, states that all 4 had been found to be working for Hume Steel in Footscray while still living at the East Melbourne address.  By this time, March 1949, the CES had been dealing with enough absconders to decide that, if they found new work of a kind that happened to be in the national interest, they should be left to pursue it.  

The building products manufactured by Hume Steel would have fitted into that category.  The CES Director, Hobart, advised his Immigration counterpart that the Melbourne CES was taking no further action pending further advice.  There are no more relevant papers on the Jablonskis file so we can assume that there was no further action.

A professional portrait of Izidorius
Source:  Collection of Izidorius Smilgevičius

In Melbourne, Izidorius married Victorian-born Clara Edith Matthews, ten years his senior, and became a house painter.  He is recorded as being an early donor to the Melbourne Lithuanian Club and a member of the Melbourne Lithuanian Catholic parish.

Ann discovered a message online from Clara’s niece, Joy Spain, after she had posted the First Transport’s passenger list to the Immigrant Ships Transcribers’ Guild Website. Izzy was in a high-care nursing home and wanted to see a picture of the ship which brought him to Australia, so Joy took Ann to visit him there in 2012.  Although Joy’s message said that Izzy was in reasonable health, he clearly was bedridden but pleased to see his ship again.

Izidorius died two years later, on 6 December 2014 aged 90 years.  Clara had passed away almost 23 years previously in 1981.  They are buried together in the Warringal Cemetery, in Heidelberg, Melbourne.

Izzy and Clara Smilgevicius' headstone in the Warringal Cemetery
Source:  John William Constantine through Find A Grave

Jurgis Smilgevičius

Jurgis was born on the 22 June 1919, in the Laumakiai manor, located near the beautiful Venta River, in the Šiauliai district. Here he was taught to read and write at home. His parents died, leaving him an orphan the age of ten. His maternal uncle, Liudvikas Ragauskas, took him into his family.

His obituary in Mūsų Pastogė, the main Lithuanian newspaper in Australia, said that he finished 4 classes at the Kelmė school and another 4 at the Šiauliai Boys' school in 1937. His selection papers for migration to Australia confirm that he had finished a full 8 years of secondary education.

In 1937, Jurgis entered the Military School. In 1938, he graduated with the rank of artillery reserve lieutenant. During 1938-40, he studied electrical engineering at the Vytautas the Great University in Kaunas. When the University was closed during WWII, Jurgis moved to Germany and finished his studies in 1947 at the Technical University of Braunschweig, majoring in electrical engineering.

Here was another Lithuanian with a full 12 years of school plus a higher education. His military career and his degree in electrical engineering from Braunsweig follow the same pattern as that recently described for Jonas Motiejūnas. Perhaps they even were in the same classes.

Like Jonas, he was accepted for resettlement in Australia in October 1947, and sailed on the First Transport.

Jurgis Smilgevicius from his selection papers for Australia

His uncle Liudvikas also came to Australia, on the Anna Salen arriving on 22 June 1949. Sadly, Liudvikas was only in Australia for five years before he died of a heart attack. The Communists had taken his wife and three children to Siberia, and he had been imprisoned in a Communist prison for a long time. When Liudvikas declared his intention to be naturalised in the year before he died, his place of residence was given as Sunbury Mental Hospital (where he probably was working).

Jurgis’ first job in Australia had nothing to do with electrical or any other kind of engineering. Instead, he joined the fruit-pickers in Victoria’s Goulburn Valley from 29 January 1948, working for Mr E Fairley of Shepparton. After the season ended and he returned to the Bonegilla camp on 1 April, his next employer was the Templestowe Brickworks, in Heidelberg, Melbourne, starting two weeks later.

On his 50th birthday in June 1969, Jurgis celebrated with friends in Geelong and spoke about himself and the difficulties he had encountered. The brickyard foreman would point the workers out to customers as if they special attractions — here a professor, here a doctor, a lawyer or engineer. Fortunately, it did not take long for a happy coincidence to allow Jurgis’ qualifications to be recognised, so he began working in his specialty.

He married Regina Narbutaitė, who had arrived on the Second Transport, the General Stewart, on 12 February 1948. They married on 20 December 1948 in Melbourne. It was a civil registry wedding rather than a church one, because Jurgis had to describe himself as divorced.

Jurgis Smilgevicius in 1947

Jurgis was married before the War and had two daughters, Violeta and Liliana. They were separated by the flight to Germany. The two girls with their mother, Valentina, and grandmother, Marija, were resettled in Michigan, USA. Jurgis was able to meet Violeta when she visited Australia 30 years later. Jurgis travelled to Michigan to visit them as well.

One month after the marriage, Jurgis lodged a sponsorship to bring Regina’s 61-year-old father to Australia from Germany. He reported that he was earning £8/5/- per week at the brickworks while Regina was able to earn £5/5/- each week.

Jurgis’ income translates into only $16.50 in decimal currency, but its buying power now would be about $570, adjusting for inflation. As of November 1948, the basic wage for men was £5/19/-, so Jurgis’ income compares well as it was nearly 40 per cent higher. Regina, of course, was earning only three-quarters of the £7/-/- a man would be paid for doing her work.

The speed with which Regina and then her father followed Jurgis to Australia makes us think that this was a special friendship which had developed in a Displaced Persons camp in the British Zone, where these two had found refuge. Valentina, in the American Zone, signed an English-language letter on 4 October, her signature certified by the camp’s Executive Officer, stating that she had not lived with her husband since 1944. She further declared that she had no objections to her husband migrating to Australia and that she would “not raise any summons” against the Australian Government for supporting her family or “other matters concerning (her) husband”.

This must have cleared the way for the early migration of this still married man, after the Australian Government had made it clear that all on the First Transport were to be single people. This was to give officials greater freedom to send the new arrivals where they were most required without having to worry about their dependents.

Jurgis was one of the founding members of the Melbourne Lithuanian community and was elected to its first committee in August 1948.

There was a major housing shortage in Australia’s cities after WWII, given that those who would have been building new accommodation were fighting instead. As a consequence, rents were high. Jurgis and Regina saved hard for a deposit, which he put down on a housing block. 

He started to build a small house, a tiny house even, with an area of 14 square metres. He worked on it at weekends. Living there was hard for his wife, as running water and electricity were not connected at first. Regina gave birth to both their daughters from this unfinished house.

Jurgis and Regina's first home
Source:  Mockūnienė, Lietuviai Australijoje

On 25 August 1955, Jurgis and Regina Smilgevicius became naturalised Australians. This was reported separately for each by Commonwealth Gazette but the address in both reports was the same. The new house was at 38 Clyde Steet in the west Melbourne suburb of Newport.

Jurgis worked as an engineer for Melbourne’s trams and for the State Electricity Commission. In the Commonwealth Department of Civil Aviation, he was appointed in October 1958 to the position of Airway Engineer on a salary range of £903-£1,353 per annum, which the Reserve Bank calculates now would buy $35,000-$52,000. Since salaries have risen faster than inflation for the past 67 years, we can say that he definitely had a good income. Another way of looking at that income is to look at the basic wage for men in 1958, which was less than half of Jurgis’ starting salary, at £425.

In February 1972, Regina too joined the Federal Public Service, as an Assistant Postal Officer Grade 1 with the Postmaster General’s Department. Her salary was not published in the Commonwealth Gazette notifying her appointment

After retiring in 1980, they moved to Surfers Paradise. In 1981 they initiated a meeting of local Lithuanians and the formation of an eldership (Lietuvių Seniūnijus). Initially it was only a group of 10, but when it grew to over 30, 8 years later, he passed on his role as secretary.

Jurgis Smilgevicius (left) with Antanas Vailionis, Liudas Krašauskas, and Juozas Songaila
Source:  Gold Coast Lithuanian newsletter, 9 March 2003

He was reported to have been the sort of person who got on well with everyone.

Jurgis passed away on the Gold Coast on14 October 2006. His ashes are interred in the Allambe Memorial Park, Nerang, Gold Coast City, Queensland.

Jurgis Smilgevicius' plaque in a rose garden at the Allambe Memorial Park

Kazys Smilgevičius

Kazys was born in Jankaičiai village, in the district of Rietavas, Lithuania, on 18 December 1922.  The population of this village has shrunk from 123 at the time of Kazys' birth to 10 in 2011, the latest available figures.

He was a tailor and single when he arrived in Australia on board the General Stuart Heinzelman on 28 November 1947. After a short time in Bonegilla, he was one of the 64 sent to Adelaide to labour for the South Australian Government’s Department of Engineering and Water Supply (E&WS) at Bedford Park.

Later he worked for the E&WS at Port Lincoln and Murdinga on the Eyre Peninsula, then moved to General Motors-Holden (GMH) to work as a spot welder. As the Adelaide News in May 1949 reported that he had been living in North Adelaide for about 6 months, he probably had been able to find his GMH job in late 1948 (with Commonwealth Employment Service and Department of Immigration permission, of course).

Kazys’ time in Australia was only beginning when tragedy stuck.

Kazys Smilgevicius' death as reported in the Adelaide Advertiser of 21 May 1949
Source:  Trove

He had been in Australia for less than 18 months.

He lies buried in West Terrace cemetery with a headstone erected by the Lithuanian community. The inscription “Teesie tavo valia” usually is rendered in English as “Thy will be done”.

Kazys Smilgevicius' headstone in the West Terrace Cemetery, Adelaide

Conclusion

After researching the three Smilgevičius men, we could see that they are not related. The common features that Daina has noted are that all three are Žemaičiai (the plural of Žemaičias, meaning someone from Žemaitija) and all three are buried in a foreign land far from their home of birth.

Žemaitija or Samogitia is one of the five cultural regions of Lithuania. Located in the northwest "lowland" of the country, its capital is Telšiai and the largest city is Šiauliai. Through the centuries, Samogitia has developed a separate culture featuring with its own architecture, folk costumes, dances, songs, traditions, and a distinct language. A Žemaitis trait is stubbornness: they never give up when in trouble and stubbornly pursue a goal. That’s a perfect characteristic for thriving in a new country.

Sources

Advertiser (1949) ‘Balt found dead after accident’ Adelaide, 21 May, page 3 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/36367983, accessed 11 May 2025.

Age (1954) ‘Public Notices (Ragauskas Liuduikas)’ Melbourne, 14 July, p 11 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/page/19714654, accessed 6 September 2025.

Australijos Lietuvis [Australian Lithuanian] (1949) ‘Ie Vėl Tragiška Lietuvio Mirtis [‘Here Comes Another Tragic Death of a Lithuanian’, in Lithuanian] Adelaide, 23 May, p 10 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/280321223, accessed 11 May 2025.

Births, Deaths and Marriages Victoria, ‘Family History Search’ https://my.rio.bdm.vic.gov.au/login, accessed 6 September 2025.

Commonwealth of Australia Gazette (1956), ‘Certificates of Naturalization’, 5 January, p 14 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/232876169/25098341, accessed 11 May 2025.

Commonwealth of Australia Gazette (1958), ‘Department of Civil Aviation’ 30 October, p 3712, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article240882809, accessed 11 May 2025.

Commonwealth of Australia Gazette (1972), ‘Postmaster-General’s Department’, 17 February, p 47, https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/241063103, accessed 11 May 2025.

Draugė (2006) ‘A✟A Jurgis Smilgevičius, 1922.06.19–2006.10.14’ [‘RIP Jurgis Smilgevicius, 1922.06.19–2006.10.14’ in Lithuanian], Sydney, 8 November, p 7 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/2006/2006-11-08-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf, accessed 11 May 2025.

Fair Work Commission ‘The Minimum Wage and Fitter (Trade) Rate since 1906’ https://www.fwc.gov.au/documents/resources/minimum-wage-since-1906-fitter-table-real-value.pdf accessed 12 May 2025.

Find a Grave 'Izidorius Smilgevicius', https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/194474754/izidorius-smilgevicius, accessed 7 September 2025.

Find a Grave 'Jurgis Smilgevicius' https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/220726332/jurgis-smilgeviciusaccessed 7 September 2025.

Find a Grave 'Kazys Smilgevicius' https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/166040462/kazys-smilgevicius accessed 7 September 2025. 

Hume Steel Engineering, 'Steel and Metal Fabricator' https://www.humesteel.com.au/, accessed 14 September 2025.

Krausas, A (1953) ‘Lietuviai apsigyvena Melbourne’ [‘Lithuanians settle in Melbourne’, in Lithuanian] Mūsų Pastogė [Our Haven] Sydney, 1 July, p 2 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/259358418, accessed 11 May 2025.

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Mūsų Pastogė [Our Haven] (1956) ‘Melbourno Liet. Namų Statytojai’ [‘Melbourne Lithuanian House Builders’, in Lithuanian] Sydney, 7 November, p 5 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/259364141, accessed 11 May 2025.

Mūsų Pastogė [Our Haven] (1969) ‘Geelong, Inž Jurgiui Smilgevičiui 50 m’ [Geelong, Engineer Jurgis Smilgevicius’ 50th Birthday, in Lithuanian] Sydney, 7 July, p 6 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1969/1969-07-07-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf, accessed 12 May 2025.

Mūsų Pastogė [Our Haven] (1993) ‘Lietuviai auksininame pajūryje’ [‘Lithuanians are mining gold at the seaside’, in Lithuanian] Sydney, 28 June, p 6 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1993/1993-06-28-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf, accessed 12 May 2025.

Mūsų Pastogė [Our Haven] (1955) ‘Mirė L. Ragauskas’ [‘Death of L. Ragauskas’, in Lithuanian]’ Sydney, 23 February, p 4 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/259358293?searchTerm=ragauskas, accessed 6 September 2025.

My Tributes, ‘Funeral notice for SMILGEVICIUS, Izidorius (Izzy)’ https://www.mytributes.com.au/notice/funeral-notices/smilgevicius-izidorius-izzy/4771888/ accessed 11 May 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Central Office; A261, Application forms (culled from other file series) for admission of Relatives or Friends to Australia (Form 40); 1949/565, Applicant - SMILGEVICIUS Jurgis; Nominee - NARBUTAS Vladas; nationality Lithuanian recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=7873413, accessed 6 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Central Office; A446, Correspondence files, annual single number series with block allocations [Main correspondence files series of the agency]; 1955/44365, Application for Naturalisation - SMILGEVICIUS Jurgis born 22 June 1919; recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=8822042, accessed 6 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Central Office; A11772, Migrant Selection Documents for Displaced Persons who travelled to Australia per General Stuart Heintzelman departing Bremerhaven 30 October 1947; 281, SMILGEVICIUS Jurgis DOB 22 June 1919 recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=5005995, accessed 6 September 2025

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Central Office; A11772, Migrant Selection Documents for Displaced Persons who travelled to Australia per General Stuart Heintzelman departing Bremerhaven 30 October 1947; 282, SMILGEVICIUS Kazys DOB 18 December 1921 recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=1833359, accessed 6 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Central Office; A12508, Personal Statement and Declaration by alien passengers entering Australia (Forms A42); 37/526, SMILGEVICIUS Izidorius born 11 February 1924; nationality Lithuanian; travelled per GENERAL HEINTZELMAN arriving in Fremantle on 28 November 1947 recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=7272979, accessed 26 August 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, South Australia Branch, D4878, Alien registration documents, alphabetical series (1923-71); SMILGEVICIUS K, SMILGEVICIUS Kazys - Nationality: Lithuanian - Arrived Fremantle per General Stuart Heintzelman 28 November 1947 recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=12050420, accessed 6 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, South Australia Branch, D4881, Alien registration cards, alphabetical series; SMILGEVICIUS KAZYS, SMILGEVICIUS Kazys - Nationality: Lithuanian - Arrived Fremantle per General Stuart Heintzelman 28 November 1947 recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=9210856, accessed 6 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Victorian Branch; B78, Alien registration documents (1948-1965); JABLONSKIS Juozas - Nationality: Lithuanian - Arrived Fremantle per General Stewart Heintzelman 28 Nov 1947 (1924-1953) recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=4134289, accessed 14 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Victorian Branch; B78, Alien registration documents (1948-1965); SMILGEVICIUS Jurgis - Nationality: Lithuanian - Arrived Melbourne per GENERAL HEINTZELMAN - 28 November 1947 (1919-1948) recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=4161568, accessed 6 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Victorian Branch; B78, Alien registration documents (1948-1965); SMILGEVICIUS [nee NARBUTAITE] Regina - Nationality: Lithuanian - Arrived Fremantle per General Stewart 12 February 1948 (1922-1954) recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=4161567, accessed 6 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla]; SMILGEVICIUS IZIDORAS, SMILGEVICIUS, Izidoras : Year of Birth - 1924 : Nationality - LITHUANIAN : Travelled per - GEN. HEINTZELMAN : Number – 810 recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203702820, accessed 26 August 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla]; SMILGEVICIUS Jurgis : Year of Birth - 1919 : Nationality - LITHUANIAN : Travelled per - GEN. HEINTZELMAN : Number – 677 recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203702821, accessed 6 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla]; SMILGEVICIUS, Kasys : Year of Birth - 1921 : Nationality - LITHUANIAN : Travelled per - GEN. HEINTZELMAN : Number – 678, recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203702822, accessed 6 September 2025.

News (1949) ‘Death at Home after Accident’, Adelaide, 20 May, p 2, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article130195716 accessed 11 May 2025.

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Tarvydas, Ramunas (1997) From Amber Coast to Apple Isle : fifty years of Baltic immigrants in Tasmania 1948-1998.

Vikipedija, ‘Truikiai’ [in Lithuanian] https://lt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truikiai accessed 10 May 2025.

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03 August 2024

Balts at Bedford Park, Ksaveras Antanaitis' brief home by Ann Tündern-Smith

Bedford Park in Adelaide now is home now to Flinders University and the Flinders Medical Centre, as well as many private homes. In the 19th century, it was a farm of that name. Some 1.6 square kilometres of the farm was purchase by the South Australian Government in 1917 so that it could build a sanitorium for tuberculosis patients. The sanitorium was supported by its own farm. This was where Veronika Tutins was sent to work in August 1948, so that she could be near the man she married 16 months later.

Bedford Park Sanitorium, 1943, with patients' accommodation on the left and
administration and nurses' quarters in the previous owner's home on the right

The previous owner's home converted into offices and nurses' accommodation,
with medical treatment rooms at the rear:  perhaps Veronika Tutins lived here in 1948-49

Another major presence after World War II was a camp set up the South Australian Government’s Department of Engineering and Water Supply (E&WS) for its workers. The Commonwealth Employment Service (CES) at the Bonegilla camp sent 64 of the refugees brought to Australia by the First Transport, the USAT General Stuart Heintzelman, to this camp to labour for the E&WS. Their first job was to be a new water main from the Happy Valley Reservoir into Adelaide city, about 20 kilometres north.

South Australia’s Minister for Works, responsible for the E&WS, had announced through the Adelaide News in May 1947 that adequate water supplies for Adelaide were being held up by a shortage of labour. There were sufficient pipes and 100 men were being employed already to lay them, but 150 more men were needed.

The E&WS already had employed a boarding house keeper at its Bedford Park camp, to help men unable to get accommodation in the city. The shortage of housing around Australia, due mainly to the builders and repairers of accommodation having been in the armed forces for up to 7 years previously, was a problem plaguing Adelaide too. (I have noted elsewhere that the shortage was so desperate that any refugee who had even helped build a farm shed in the Baltic States was enlisted as a ‘builder’s labourer’ for Australia.)

Thanks to the boarding house keeper, the men could buy meals for £1/5/- a week.  That was about one-fifth of their £5.12.6 weekly wage.  The Minister hoped that this would remove objections from men on this E&WS project who had to prepare their own meals. Presumably the lack of this service had been causing even more of a turnover of employees than normal.

Unlike the Bangham camp, which was set up specifically for men from the First Transport, the Bedford Park camp clearly was in existence before the 64 arrived in January 1948.

We have evidence that the 64 Baltic men were together in a separate part of the camp from an Adelaide Mail report of 17 January 1948, 8 days after the First Transporters arrived. Police had removed 7 men from the camp after a brawl which occurred while they were being fed. ‘Tables were upset and plates thrown at the cook.’ It seems that the boarding house keeper arrangement still had not made some of the men happy.

The Mail is very specific in reporting that, ‘The disturbances were not in the Balt section of the camp’.  The Baltic men may well have found the Australian version of food still strange, although they had had no alternatives for 7 weeks now and possibly also for another 4 weeks on the Heintzelman. However, they had been told that they could not leave of their own accord to look for other work. (It had been explained to them that they could go back to the CES for other work but, decades later, many did remember having been told that.)

The average age of the group from Bonegilla was 24 and the wage they were offered was the same award wage being paid to those already on the project. This was the first group of men sent by the CES to work outside the Bonegilla camp.

Marianne Hammerton has written a book on the history of the E&WS, called ‘Water South Australia’ and published in 1986. In it, she writes that, ‘From 1946 until well into the 1950s the Department could have done with — and indeed advertised widely for — 900 to 1,000 men just for construction projects, let alone maintenance … but it had little to offer. Those were boom years of full employment … the Department was not allowed to pay above-award wages …'

‘Standard issue to each man was an old army bed, a straw-filled hessian mattress, a chipped enamel pannikin, a knife, fork and spoon, a wash-up dish and an iron bucket. The men lived in ex-army tents, some with flooring, and shared hurricane lamps. Initially coupons were issued for food and blankets, but even when rationing was lifted the caterers showed little imagination. Supplies came in bulk — second-grade bulk tea, bulk porridge, meatballs, blue boiler peas and mutton.

‘The Department was forced to accept the problems inherent in such camps — caterers not turning up, gambling, drinking, training the unskilled — or have no labour at all …

‘In 1948 the influx of migrant (particularly Baltic) labour brought a partial solution to the Department’s problem. By 1950, 868 Displaced Persons remained out of a total allocation of 1,450 … The migrant labour force was not without its problems. There was no system of matching individuals to positions. The Department found it had a mixture of professionals, tradesmen and technicians working as labourers … Interpreters and volunteer teachers had to be found to overcome communication problems … ‘

A book is an unusual medium in which to find information relevant to the stories of our First Transporters. Other media in 1947-48 consisted of the press and radio and an element which was flourishing then but which has died out altogether: newsreels at movie theatres, before the feature film started. Keep in mind that Australia had no television until 2 months before the start of the Melbourne Olympic Games, in September 1956. 

Radio programs either were not recorded or the tapes were reused, so the media which survives from the first two years of life in Australia is mostly the press – although some Australian newsreels can be found still in our Film and Sound Archives.

One newspaper, at least, was as excited about the arrival of the first 64 (which it preferred to call 65) as the press had been in Fremantle, Melbourne and Bonegilla. The Mail headlined its story of 10 January 1948, ‘Balts free feel after prison camp horrors’. It continued, ‘”At last — freedom!” That was the first reaction of 65 [sic] Balts when they reached their new home in Bedford Park, Adelaide, yesterday.’

We know from stories of Baltic men and women from during and after WWII that it wasn’t one prison camp or even a series of them. The men were likely to have been digging trenches between opposing lines of gun or artillery fire. The women could have been conscripted into German factory work. Men who had volunteered or been conscripted to fight with the Germans were likely to have been in prisoner-of-war camps from 1944 onwards, but I have no evidence that this was a majority of the men.

While some of the women, at least, had arrived in Germany early enough to be ‘free living’, the majority of the Baltic refugees were placed in Displaced Persons camps — not prison camps — after the War ended. The occupying military authorities kept an eye on discipline in the camps — from Eisenhower down on the American side. Bonegilla camp had been run under the discipline of Major Alton Kershaw: see what Endrius Jankus has written for more on that.

Given that they did not know in advance what discipline would apply in their new camp, the ‘Freedom’ reaction of the new arrivals at the Bedford Park camp probably was along the lines of, ‘The start of our new lives as paid workers in the new country!’

The Mail interviewed Jonas Zumaras, Antanas Skiparis and Vincentas Babinskas from Lithuania, and Vilhelms Vanags, Voldemars Abolins and Viktors Romanovskis from Latvia. Their interpreter was the Estonian who had been appointed leader of the party by the CES in Bonegilla, because of his good English, Olaf Aerfeldt.

Olaf Aerfeldt's 1947 ID photo, when he was aged about 21

All of them, except perhaps Romanovskis, had been held in German internment camps or forced to work as slave labour. This would explain the Mail’s ‘prison camp’ approach.

The Australian Workers Union reported to its members on 7 April through its Australian Worker newspaper that a very strong AWU camp had been established at Bedford Park. The camp was then about half Baltic refugees and half Australians. The Adelaide Branch Industrial Officer was attending fortnightly meetings of the camp committee. This was led by an Australian but half the other members were Baltic: Konstantins Svarinskis (a Latvian), Antanas Skiparis and Aleksandras Sliuzas (both Lithuanian). Interpreter Olaf Aerfeldt was described as ‘doing a magnificent job for his men and the Union’.

Olaf asked the Industrial Officer ‘to convey the thanks of the Balts in the camp to the AWU for the way the Union had looked after them since they arrived in Adelaide’ He added that ‘the Balts wanted to be good Australians and good unionists and the AWU had shown them the right road to follow.’

I will provide more details about these men in individual biographies.  Thanks to Rasa Ščevinskienė, we have a biography of one of them in the blog already.  He is Ksaveras Antanaitis, who was killed on 29 June 1948 when he fell from a truck bringing him and fellow workers back to the camp from their day's work.  The truck then ran over him, probably to the increased horror of all then involved.

ENGLISH LANGUAGE CLASSES

The Mail continued its interest in the new arrivals with articles headed, ‘Officials Ignore Teacher Plea’ (14 February) and ‘English Classes for Balts Arranged’ (21 February). Initially, the buck was being passed.

The State’s Deputy Director of the CES was quoted as saying, ‘The men were given a four-week course in English when they first arrived in Australia. Something should be done to follow that up. Perhaps we could get some volunteer teachers.’ He added that the job of the CES was finished when the men were handed over to the E&WS.

A Catholic priest said that about 40 of the men attended mass at his Church every Sunday — that would have been most of the 38 Lithuanians and a smattering of the Latvians. His opinion was that, ‘Four weeks’ instruction at Bonegilla is quite inadequate’. The responsible Commonwealth authority, the Commonwealth Office of Education, had opened in Adelaide the year before, but it looks like the journalist did not seek its advice.

One week later, the Mail was reporting that four teachers had volunteered to run English classes at the Teachers’ Training College one night a week and more if necessary. Between them, they would be teaching 30 of the refugees in small groups, then promoting them to a larger group as they advanced. They appeared to have organised this with the supervising engineer for the Happy Valley water main. The E&WS effort had been to mix the Baltic men with Australian workers ‘in the hope that they would pick up the language’.

Several people had driven also to the Baltic section of the Bedford Park camp to take some of the men home for meals, as their contribution to the teaching of English.

And the young women of the YWCA had organised a dance for the young Baltic men from the Bedford Park camp, for Friday, 18 February.

After that, the Mail left the Bedford Park men and chased other news, including incidents involving individual men. The only follow up in the press was more than two years later. Then the Director of the Adelaide office of the Universities Commission said that all migrants in South Australia had the opportunity to attend English languages classes. ‘All’ was limited to groups of six or more, when the Director went into detail. These groups could apply to the nearest school for a teacher in English (presumably, if someone helped them to do this).

The Director was responding to a motion from the State Council of the Australian Government Workers’ Association, insisting that ‘all foreigners brought into Australia should learn the language within three months or be sent back to their home country’. The Director pointed out to the Adelaide News reporter on 5 May 1949 that 3 months would be too short for some immigrants.

THE CONTRACT PERIOD

I’ve pointed out elsewhere that the E&WS seemed unaware that the Commonwealth Government had changed the duration of initial contract to work as directed from one year to two years while the Heintzelman passengers were on the high seas. They were informed of after some days at the Bonegilla camp. Endrius Jankus has written that a near riot ensued.

Endrius was one who tested the terms of the contract by finding his own work in Melbourne. He then was tracked down by the CES and told that he would continue to work as directed in Tasmania or be sent back to Germany.

The Adelaide Mail of 29 January 1949 reported that 19 of the Baltic men from the Bedford Park camp ‘who had completed their term of service’ had been allowed to transfer to other employers. Given the location and length of time involved, it is likely that all 19 were from the First Transport.

At this time, there still were 239 Baltic men employed by E&WS, more than 10 per cent of the Department’s workforce.

As explained earlier, if the E&WS found out about the Australian Government’s expectation of the contract length, any remaining for the First Transport group would have finished on 30 September 1949 or within days of that date.

SOURCES

Hammerton, Marianne (1986) 'Water South Australia' Netley, Wakefield Press pp 232-5.

The Advertiser (1948) ‘Balts here today’ Adelaide, 9 January, p https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/43751623 accessed 24 July 2024.

The Australian Worker (1948) ‘Bedford Park camp, SA: Balts want to become good unionists’ http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article146243837 accessed 24 July 2024.

The Mail (1948a) ‘Balts feel free after prison camp horrors’ Adelaide, 10 January, p 3 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article55903813 accessed 24 July 2024.

The Mail (1948b) ‘Police aid sought in camp brawl’ Adelaide, 17 January, p 24 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article55904127 accessed 24 July 2024.

The Mail (1948c) ‘Officials ignore teacher plea: no English lessons for eager young Balts’ Adelaide, 14 February, p 24 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article55909057 accessed 24 July 2024.

The Mail (1948d) ‘English classes for Balts arranged’ Adelaide, 21 February, p 24 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article55905295 accessed 24 July 2024.

The Mail (1949) ‘Balts leave Govt. jobs’ Adelaide, 29 January, p 29 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article55924132 accessed 24 July 2024.

The News (1947) ‘Labor needed on water main’ Adelaide, 21 May, p 5 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article127299932 accessed 24 July 2024.

The News (1948) ‘Dance at Open House for Balts’ Adelaide, 19 February, p 11 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article128385028 accessed 24 July 2024.

The News (1949) ‘All “Given chance to learn English”’ Adelaide, 5 May, p 2 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article130191874 accessed 24 July 2024.

Wikipedia ‘Bedford Park’ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bedford_Park,_South_Australia accessed 23 July 2024.

18 July 2024

Veronika Tutins (1911–2006), who disappeared? by Ann Tündern-Smith

Updated 4 August 2024

Veronika Tutins was a great friend of two other Latvian women from the First Transport, sisters Irina and Galins Vasins. Evidence of the friendship still exists in the form of 6 photos of Veronika, mostly with Irina and Galina. Suddenly, she vanished. What happened to her?

Veronika Tutins, 1947, from her Bonegilla card

All of them were employed initially in Australia at the Bonegilla camp. Irina was employed until February 1951, when the Department of Immigration offered her a transfer to another Reception and Training Centre for new arrivals, at Greta in NSW. Galina had left one year earlier, in February 1950. They certainly could be viewed as long-term Bonegilla employees, having worked there beyond the end of their initial contract  on 30 September 1949.

(L-R) Galina Vasins, Veronika Tutins and Irina Vasins
in the grounds of the Bonegilla camp, 1948
Source:  Private collection

Veronika, however, had ceased duty at Bonegilla on 22 August 1948 and was supposed to commence at the Bedford Park TB Sanitorium in South Australia on 24 August. We know that she wasn’t sent to South Australia as a patient, since any TB cases from Bonegilla were treated in the local Albury Hospital. 

(L-R) Galina Vasins, Irina Tutins and Irina Vasins
in the remains of a tank in the Bonegilla camp grounds, 1948
Source:  Private collection

Perhaps the answer lies in the story of Eduards Brokans, who arrived in Australia on 12 February 1948, on the Second Transport, the General MB Stewart. Due to the West Australian Government’s mistaken idea that all the passengers from the First Transport were to work in its State, the men from the Second Transport were held there pending a work allocation. So Eduards does not have a Bonegilla card. (The women were sent by train across the south of Australia, from Perth to Bonegilla, and do have Bonegilla cards.)

Eduards Brokans, from his 1947 selection papers

Eduards were sent to Bedford Park in South Australia to labour for that State’s Department of Engineering and Water Supply (E&WS). We don’t know exactly when this happened, as we do with anyone whose Bonegilla card is extant. We can guess that this happened between February and August 1948, so Veronika had arranged to be near him.

It’s unfortunate that she did not tell Irina and Galina about her plans. Irina, for one, was still wondering what had happened more than 50 years later. If Veronika wrote to the Vasins sisters after moving to South Australia, they did not get the letters.

While Veronika's plan was to be near Eduards, both working in the suburb of Bedford Park, the South Australian Government had other plans.  Instead of Bedford Park, that Government sent Veronika to the Belair Sanitorium, 9 kilometres by road from Bedford Park.  That must have made seeing each other at weekends harder than it needed to be.

After Veronika stopped working there, the name was changed to Birralee, a named used previously when the property was a private home.  Belair was the name of the suburb in which the Birralee Sanitorium was located.  Birralee is  the name used by Veronika to describe her workplace when she applied for Australian citizenship.

Her application for citizenship shows that Veronika worked at Belair until December 1949.  My guess is that she left before her marriage.  Extant records in the National Archives of Australia show that Eduards and Veronika Tutins were married in Norwood, South Australia, on Christmas Eve, 1949. He was more than two years younger than his bride, being born on 29 June 1914. Her birthday was 15 November 1911.

Veronika had stayed at her Belair workplace for at least two months longer than required under the conditions of the voyage which brought her to Australia.  As reported here earlier, the first Minister for Immigration, Arthur Calwell, decided that the obligation to work as directed should end early, on 30 September 1949.  This was due to “the outstanding contribution they have made to Australia’s labour starved economy”.

Veronika had 6 years of primary education, followed by 4 years of commercial schooling. Eduards had 6 years at primary school only. She had been born in Zvirgzdene, a rural parish in Latvia’s Latgale province. Latgale is the one predominantly Catholic of Latvia’s four provinces: the others are predominantly Lutheran. Veronika advised the Australian selection team that she was a Roman Catholic.

Her registration as a Displaced Person with the American Expeditionary Forces now with the Arolsen Archives recorded that, in late 1945, she knew the Latvian, Russian and German languages. Two years later, when appearing before the Australian selection team, she undoubtedly could add English to the list. She had been selected as a waitress, back in the days when the Australian Government was setting up hostels for its younger, unmarried staff, although whether she waited on tables at Bonegilla is not known. He had been selected as a labourer.

Another Arolsen Archive card records that she had been living in Latvia’s capital, Riga, before fleeing to Germany. While in Latvia, she had worked as a typist, according to her application for Australian citizenship.

In Germany, from 7 December 1944 to 2 March 1945, she had been employed as a metal worker in a Chemnitz factory. Since Chemnitz became part of the zone occupied by Soviet forces, then became part of East Germany, undoubted Veronika was on the move westwards from early March 1945. By October 1947, she was living in a Displaced Persons camp in Esslingen, in south-western Germany.

She told the Australian selection team that she was single, but had one dependent, a sister. The sister was recorded on her Bonegilla card as Olga Zakis, still resident in Esslingen.

By the time of her application for citizenship in September 1958, Veronika had just obtained work as a comptometrist with a long-established Adelaide hardware manufacturer.  Since comptometers have not been used in offices since the 1990s, I suspect that the majority of readers will not know what they were.  

They were mechanical adding machines, which could be used for subtraction as well.  Trained comptometer operators could enter all the digits in a number at once, using up to ten fingers, unlike on modern calculators, where one digit at a time is entered.  This made them exceptionally fast.  Their decline was not due to the invention of modern calculators but to advances in electronic computing.

A comptometer manufactured in the 1950s

Eduards had been born in the Rezekne area, also in Latgale. Like Veronika, he was a Roman Catholic. At the time of interview by the Australian selection team, he gave a street address in Esslingen. It does look like Esslingen could have been where these two met.

His previous occupations were recorded by the Australian team as farmer from 1927 (at the age of 13) to 1937, then ‘worker’ (perhaps labourer) for 1937-40, then office worker for 1940-44 and ‘worker’ again for 1944-47.

Veronika had recently had her 38th birthday at the time of her marriage. Despite this relatively advanced age for childbearing, they had three children together: two girls and a boy, born between 1950 and 1954.

Eduards became an Australian citizen in the Adelaide suburb of Mitcham on 17 October 1955. Very often, a couple make the commitment to Australia by applying at the same time and taking the oath of allegiance in the same ceremony. Veronika waited. She applied in September 1958, she was approved with her certificate sent to South Australia in February 1959, but she did not take the oath to become an Australian citizen until 27 October 1959, also at Mitcham.

Maybe even before this commitment to Australia, the United States became more attractive to them. It might have been economic opportunities, as with some of the other First Transporters who left (like Vytautas Stasiukynas) or it could have been personal reasons, including reunion with family members (see Viktoras Kuciauskas).

The attraction may well have been Eduards’ younger brother, Aleksandrs, born on 19 July 1917. Unlike the older sibling who started working on a farm at the age of 13, Aleksandrs had attended university in Latvia and graduated with a PhD in agronomy from the University of Hohenheim in Stuttgart, Germany. He initially resettled in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, which also became the home of his brother’s family.

Ancestry.com has a digitised passenger list showing Veronika reaching San Francisco from Sydney on the SS Oronsay on 13 June 1960. With Veronika was her husband, a son and two daughters. The daughters were named as Mary and Rita, while the son was Edmunds. ‘Mary’ is likely to be the daughter identified on Geni.com as ‘Mērija Ilze Brokāne’. The names of the other two in their original, non-Anglicised versions, are not spelt out on this Website. 

It is possible that Veronika finally applied for Australian citizenship in order to have a passport for the journey to the United States. The Australian-born children would have been on one of their parents’ passports.

Dr Aleksandrs Brokans died at the age of 100 in 2017 in a Maryland nursing home. The children of Veronika and Eduards are listed among surviving members of his family.

Eduards did not have quite the long life of his younger brother, dying at the age of 86 in December 2000.

Eduards and Veronika Brokans in later life
Source:  Geni.com

Veronika lived on to the respectable age of 94, dying on 10 April 2006. Irina Vasins was still alive then, dying in 2008, while her sister Galina is still alive as far as I am aware. Mind you, it was not as easy 18 years ago to use the Web to solve disappearance mysteries, so I wasn’t able to find the answers in this blog entry while Irina was still with us.

Veronika is buried in the Resurrection Cemetery, West Hanover Township, near her final home of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

SOURCES

Ancestry.com ‘California, U.S., Arriving Passenger and Crew Lists, 1882-1959 for Veronica Brokans, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/10094931:7949 accessed 12 July 2024.

Arolsen Archives ‘DocID: 69544463 (Veronika TUTINS)’ https://collections.arolsen-archives.org/en/document/69544463 accessed 10 July 2024.

Arolsen Archives ‘DocID: 75443572 (VERONIKA TUTINS)’ https://collections.arolsen-archives.org/en/document/75443572 accessed 10 July 2024.

Geni.com ‘Veronika Brokāne’ https://www.geni.com/people/Veronika-Brok%C4%81ne/6000000011861721721 accessed 12 July 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Australian Customs Service, State Administration, South Australia; D4878, Alien registration documents, alphabetical series, 1937-65; BROKANS Eduards - Nationality: Latvian - Arrived Fremantle per General M B Stewart 12 February 1948, 1948-1955; https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=4072903 accessed 10 July 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration Central Office; A11772, Migrant Selection Documents for Displaced Persons who travelled to Australia per General Stuart Heintzelman departing Bremerhaven 30 October 1947, 1947-1947; 819, TUTINS Veronika DOB 15 November 1911, 1947-1947; https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=5118138 accessed 10 July 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration Central Office; A11938, Migrant Selection Documents for Displaced Persons who travelled to Australia per General Stewart departing Bremerhaven 13 January 1948, 1948-1948; 484, BROKANS Eduards born 29 June 1914, 1948-1948; https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=4664555 accessed 18 July 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration, South Australia Branch; D400, Correspondence files, annual single number series with 'SA' and 'S' prefix, 1945-1969; BROKANS VERONICA - Application for Naturalisation - [Box 92], 1950-1959; https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=202814862 accessed 29 July 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration, South Australia Branch; D4881, Alien registration cards, alphabetical series, 1946-1976; TUTINS Veronika - Nationality: Latvian Arrived Fremantle per General Stuart Heintzelman 28 November 1947 also known as BROKANS, 1947-1949; https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=7171511 accessed 10 July 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration, South Australia Branch; D4881, Alien registration cards, alphabetical series, 1946-1976; BROKANS Eduards - Nationality: Latvian - Arrived Fremantle per General M B Stewart 12 February 1948 https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=7205717 accessed 18 July 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration, South Australia Branch; D4881, Alien registration cards, alphabetical series, 1946-1976; BROKANS Veronica - Nationality: Latvian - Arrived Fremantle per General Stuart Heintzelman 28 November 1947 Also known as NEE TUTINS, 1947- 1959; https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=7205718 accessed 13 July 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria] ; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla], 1947-1956; TUTINS, Veronika : Year of Birth - 1911 : Nationality - LATVIAN : Travelled per - GEN. HEINTZELMAN : Number – 1187, 1947-1948; https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203711044 accessed 10 July 2024.

Star-Democrat (2017) ‘Obituaries: Dr Alexander Brokans’ Easton, Maryland, USA, 28 November, p A6 https://www.newspapers.com/image/353165191/?match=1&terms=edmunds%20brokans accessed 12 July 2024.

Vasins, Irina (2000-2007) Personal communications.

Vintage Calculators Web Museum,  Calculator Companies (2024) 'Comptometer' http://www.vintagecalculators.com/html/comptometer1.html accessed 31 July 2024.

Wikipedia 'Comptometer' https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comptometer accessed 31 July 2024.