Showing posts with label Calwell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calwell. Show all posts

03 July 2025

More grateful Displaced Persons, December 1947, by Ann Tündern-Smith

The Western Australian Immigration file of papers for the arrival of the First Transport party includes a letter of thanks additional to the one from Roberts Miezitis we have looked at already.  

This one's 14 December date and the phrase, "leaving for Canberra" suggest that it was written in the Bonegilla camp.  The envelope filed with it is addressed to the Commander of the Graylands "Immigration Centre".  You will remember that Graylands army base is where all the women were housed during their Perth stopover.

The group who went to Canberra on 14 December, according to the Bonegilla cards, were 5 women only, all destined to work in the Acton Guest House.  They were 4 Latvians and a Lithuanian.  Four were to work as waitresses.  One Latvian became a cleaner or, in the terminology of the day, a "domestic".

The name may make you think that Acton Guest House was some sort of holiday destination but, in fact, it was a home for public servants who were yet to buy their own homes in Canberra.  More soon.

Here is a copy of the original letter.  There also is a typed copy on the same file.

Source:  National Archives of Australia

Presumably this letter was written by one of Antonia Baranovskis, Zelvi Elksnis, Mirdza (Mitzi) Klavins, Inta Vitolins or Birute Tamulyte, the 5 in the first group to Canberra.

We have to wonder if this was the first time that the phrase "New Australians" was used in writing.  Within months, the Minister for Immigration, Arthur Calwell, was urging the press and the public to use it instead of "Balts". 

For this reason, Balts now has something of a derogatory tone about it in some people's minds, whereas there is written evidence that it had been used for decades at least as the normal description for people from the three Baltic states.

From the Second Transport on, through another 147 ship arrivals, the passengers came from a variety of Eastern European nations in addition to the Baltic States.  "Balts" was now a misnomer.

SOURCE

National Archives of Australia:  Department of Immigration, Western Australian Branch; PP482/1, Correspondence files [nominal rolls], single number series; 82, General Heintzelman - arrived Fremantle 28 November 1947 - nominal rolls of passengers https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=439196 accessed 27 June 2025.


02 July 2025

30 Return to Western Australia, by Ann Tündern-Smith

We've noted already that the Western Australian public and, probably, Western Australian public officials, thought that all of the passengers were going to stay in their state. It therefore was politic to oblige at least one Western Australia employer with a group of new employees. 

In fact, three employers were supported, all in the timber industry one way or another. They were Bunning Brothers (now known nationally and in New Zealand), Millers Timber & Trading Co Ltd and the State Saw Mills. Between them, they were supplied with 30 workers. All left the Bonegilla Reception and Training Centre on 15 January 1948. That was after a 5-week stay in the Bonegilla camp and about 6 weeks since they had left Western Australia on the Kanimbla.

The first notice of their impending arrival was given 10 days before they left for Western Australia. Given the size of the report and its placement at the bottom of page 8 of the local daily newspaper, maybe the disappointment wasn't so great after all.

The second paragraph contains the first news of the return of 30 men to WA

Regardless of their previous experience (at least one placed elsewhere had been a senior manager), they would all start on the bottom rung of the timber industry as labourers, a sawmillers’ spokesman told the West Australian newspaper. They would receive union rates of pay (as mandated by the Minister for Immigration, Arthur Calwell, and the best way of ensuring their integration into the workforce anyhow).

Source:  West Australian, 6 January 1948, page 7

On the same day, 6 January, the West Australian ran an editorial in support of the new Baltic arrivals and European migration generally.  This was important, given how focussed migration plans had been on sourcing Britons until Minister for Immigration, Arthur Calwell, had visited Europe in the middle of the previous year.  It meant that an influential voice in Western Australia was supportin Calwell's new direction

The West Australian's editorial in support of migration from Europe
Source:  West Australian, 6 January 1948, page 7

The West Australian reported 2 days after they left Bonegilla that they were expected in Perth two days later, on January 19. Their destinations would be the towns of Pemberton, Jarrahdale, Treesville and Manjimup. (Two of those names do sound like settlements started specifically for the timber industry.)

Like the previous two notices, this one was tucked away, again on page 7.

Source:  West Australian, 17 January 1948

The Perth evening newspaper, the Daily News, gave them much more prominence on their day of their arrival, with a photograph and report on page 2. Indeed, there was page 1 prominence given to one of the men, former Estonian Albert Kaddatz. I hope we can look at him in more detail soon.

Page 2 news with a photograph this time!
Source:  Perth
Daily News, 19 January 1948
(Click on the image for a more legible version in a new webpage)

All of the men with their potential employers are listed below.

 
Bunning Brothers
Gerhard GruscinLithuanian
Anskis ReizgysLithuanian
Edvardas RimkeviciusLithuanian
Zenonas SakalinskasLithuanian
Juozas SadauskasLithuanian
Kostas SandaLithuanian
Anton KokinsLatvian
Janis ReinholdsLatvian
Olgerts RutkisLatvian
 
Millers Timber & Trading Co Ltd
Hugo PoldemaaEstonian
Izidors PuzulisLatvian
Janis-Benedikts PlaudisLatvian
Vladis NorbertsLatvian
Juozas MozurasLithuanian
Jonas PlestysLithuanian
Zigmas PlukisLithuanian
Algirdas PranckunasLithuanian
Antanas PreimonasLithuanian
Stasys RastutisLithuanian
 
State Saw Mills
Albert KaddatzEstonian
Algirdas UndzenasLithuanian
Juozas SavikasLithuanian
Augustinas SemiotasLithuanian
Kazys SinkeviciusLithuanian
Alfonsas SlionskisLithuanian
Bronius SmalioriusLithuanian
Alfredas SutkeviciusLithuanian
Jurgis TucinskasLithuanian
Pranas VysniauskasLithuanian

Once again, the number of names do not match the claimed numbers involved. There are no 30 people above, but 29.

The explanation in this case is the missing Bonegilla card for Alfonsas Sadauskas. We already know his story, thanks to a son, Vidas, who says that Alfonsas was sent to the Mundaring Weir area about 40km east of Perth. What we don’t know is which of the three employers sent him there.

He was not necessarily employed with Juozas Sadauskas, who appears not to have been a relative. In fact, the name Sadauskas is so common that 3 people called Juozas Sadauskas, but with different dates of birth, migrated to Australia under the IRO Mass Scheme.

Just as we now have linked Alfonsas Sadauskas’ story to the mention of his name above, we’ll link other stories to their names above as they come to hand.

SOURCE

National Archives of Australia:  Department of Immigration, Western Australian Branch; PP482/1, Correspondence files [nominal rolls], single number series; 82, General Heintzelman - arrived Fremantle 28 November 1947 - nominal rolls of passengers https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=439196 accessed 27 June 2025.

 

22 June 2024

Displaced Persons in the National Archives of Australia by Ann Tündern-Smith

My friend, Nonja Peters, is a historian of Dutch migration to Australia, post-WWII migration to Western Australia, and the relationship between the Netherlands and Australia since March 1606.  That's when the Duyfken reached the north of Australia and charted 300km of the west coast of Cape York, those on board being unaware that they were the first Europeans to visit the continent.

Through her continuing contacts with the National Archives of Australia, she has discovered a treasure of value to us. Buried in material for students and teachers is the Archives scan of the original agreement between the Australian Government and the Preparatory Commission of the International Refugee Organisation.

You can find it at https://www.naa.gov.au/students-and-teachers/student-research-portal/learning-resource-themes/society-and-culture/migration-and-multiculturalism/international-refugee-organisation-australian-government-agreement.

That link has only the first page of the agreement.  You can read all 3 pages at https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=30156681.

The first link does offer a complete transcript of the agreement and a discussion of its historic importance.

It was signed by Australia's first Minister for Immigration, Arthur Calwell, in Geneva on 21 July 1947.  Only 4 months later, Australia's first group of refugees, then known as Displaced Person, were but one week away from arriving in Australia.

The pace at which this was organised is amazing when you think of how some modern projects drag on and on ...

SOURCE

National Archives of Australia: Department of External Affairs [II], Central Office; A13307, Treaties Collection; 46/2, Agreement between the Government of Australia and the Preparatory Commission of the International Refugee Organisation regarding the Migration to Australia of Refugees and Displaced Persons - Date and place of signing: Geneva, 21 July 1947 - Date of entry into force for Australia: 21 July 1947 - ATS Number: [1947] ATS 3 - Language: English [with annotations] https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=30156681 accessed 2 July 2025.

24 May 2024

Antanas Staugaitis (1927-2003): Lithuanian DP Taxi Driver by Daina Pocius with Ann Tündern-Smith and Rasa Ščevinskienė

Like the ill-fated Ksaveras Antanaitis, Antanas Staugaitis was one of the Lithuanian Displaced Persons or DPs selected in Germany to travel to Australia on the first voyage after World War II, on the USAT General Stuart Heintzelman. Like Ksaveras, he then was chosen to be in the first group of men sent by the Commonwealth Employment Service (CES) to work outside the Bonegilla camp.

Their destination was Bedford Park, South Australia, where they lived in a tent city while building a 20-kilometre pipeline from Happy Valley Reservoir, to their south, into Adelaide to their north. Their employer was the South Australian Government’s Engineering and Water Supply (E&WS) Department. Antanas later worked for the E&WS at Port Lincoln also.

Antanas Staugaitis, ID photo 
from his migration application
Source:  NAA

Everyone on the First Transport had been told in Bonegilla that the Australian Government had changed their agreement to work, where required, for one year to a two-year agreement. Maybe E&WS hadn’t got that message, because the Adelaide Mail of 29 January 1949 reported that the DPs or Balts, as they were known also, were being permitted to transfer to other employers. If that was with the assistance of the CES to another task where there was a shortage of workers, however, it was all above board.

We know from his application for Australian citizenship that Antanas left 6 weeks after the Mail report to work with the South Australian Railways. This was initially with other Balts and Aussies at Peterborough for 6 months, then in Adelaide.

From an alien registration index card held by the National Archives in Adelaide, we find that Antanas was released officially from his “two years” contract with the Australian Government on 3 October 1949. That’s about two months short, if the contract is regarded as terminating on the anniversary of arrival in Australia, 28 November 1949.

The Minister for Immigration, Arthur Calwell, announced the early release in Canberra on 5 September 1949, according to Australian newspapers of the following date. The contracts were supposed to end on 30 September, not 3 October. The early release was due to “the outstanding contribution they have made to Australia’s labour starved economy”.

Antanas completed an Adelaide mechanic’s course in 1953. He continued to work on the railways until 1956, rising to the rank of fireman. Then he purchased a taxi license and worked as a taxi driver until retirement in 1992.

He renounced any previous allegiances and became an Australian citizen on 12 October 1956. His address at the time was on South Terrace, the edge of Adelaide’s Central Business District. Those who certified in November 1955 for his citizenship application that he was of ‘good repute’ were Railways trainers and a station master equivalent.

He loved nature and would travel to the outback, to the Northern Territory with his good friends. He was known as a smart man with a conscience. For instance, in January 1950, the infant Mūsų Pastogė Lithuanian-Australian newspaper, about to celebrate its first birthday, reported that he had donated two shillings to support it. (The Reserve Bank’s pre-decimal currency inflation calculator advises that this is now the equivalent of a bit more than $6.)

Antanas was born 27 August 1927, in Šliziai, Šakiai region, into a farming family. The Germans took him from his family and friends to work in Germany, in 1942 when he was still only 14 years old. They sentenced him to two years hard labour, claiming that they had found him carrying arms. At least the hard labour was in agriculture, so probably he got fed enough to continue working.

After the war he was in a DP camp in Oldenburg in Lower Saxony, and later in the nearby Gross Hessepe municipality, where he attended the technical school to study the motor mechanic’s trade. He did not get to finish this course as his selection to resettle in Australia on the First Transport, the General Stuart Heintzelman, intervened.

He did not marry and had no family in Australia. He died at his home in Mile End, also inner Adelaide, on 20 March 2003, aged 75.

SOURCES

Encyclopaedia of Australian Science and Innovation, ‘Corporate Body South Australian Engineering and Water Supply Department’ https://www.eoas.info/biogs/A001434b.htm accessed 23 May 2024.

Hammerton, Marianne (1986) Water South Australia: a History of the Engineering and Water Supply Department (Netley, SA: Wakefield Press) 331 pp.

Mail (1949) 'Balts Leave Govt. Jobs' (Adelaide, SA) 29 January,  p 29 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article55924132 accessed 23 May 2024.

Mercury (1949) 'Migrants' Contract Time Cut', (Hobart, Tas) 6 September, p 4 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article26661508 accessed 24 May 2024.

Morning Bulletin (1949) 'Contract Terms of Migrants Cut', (Rockhampton, Qld), 6 September, p 4, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article56918854 accessed 24 May 2024.

Mūsų Pastogė (1950) ‘Mūsų Pastogės Rėmėjai’ 25 January, p 4, in https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1950/1950-01-25-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf accessed 23 May 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration, Central Office; A446, Correspondence files, annual single number series with block allocations, 1926-2001; 1956/45135, Application for Naturalisation - STAUGAITIS Antanas born 27 August 1927, 1955-1956, https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=8374445 accessed 24 May 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; 292, STAUGAITIS Antanas DOB 27 August 1927, 1947-1947, https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=5118002 accessed 24 May 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration, South Australia Branch; D4878, Alien registration documents, alphabetical series, 1923-1971; STAUGAITIS Antanas born 1927 Nationality: Lithuanian - Arrived Fremantle per General Stuart Heintzelman 28 Nov 1947, 1947-1956; https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=30038183 accessed 24 May 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration, South Australia Branch; D4881, Alien registration cards, alphabetical series, 1946-1976; STAUGAITIS Antanas - Nationality: Lithuanian - Arrived: Fremantle per General Stuart Heintzelman 28 November 1947, 1947-1956, https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=9222371 accessed 24 May 2024.

National Archives of Australia, Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla], 1947-1956; STAUGAITIS, Antanas : Year of Birth - 1925 : Nationality - LITHUANIAN : Travelled per - GEN. HEINTZELMAN : Number – 688, 1947-48, https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203905745 accessed 24 May 2024.

Papers held in the Lithuanian Archives in Australia, https://www.australianlithuanians.org/uncategorized/adel-arkhives/ accessed 25 May 2024.

Places in Germany, City Oldenburg in Oldenburg, https://www.places-in-germany.com/22143-city-oldenburg-in-oldenburg.html accessed 23 May 2024.

Places in Germany, Municipality Groß Hesepe https://www.places-in-germany.com/111536-municipality-gross-hesepe.html accessed 23 May 2024 accessed 23 May 2024.

Reserve Bank of Australia, Pre-Decimal Inflation Calculator, https://www.rba.gov.au/calculator/annualPreDecimal.html accessed 23 May 2024.

13 March 2024

The First Peterborough Balts, by John Mannion

Updated 17 April 2024

I grew up on a farm in what is known as the northern agricultural area of South Australia, at Pekina, 25 miles west of Peterborough, which is one of Australia’s former ‘great’ railway towns.  
The location of Peterborough in relation to Broken Hill is as important as its location
 with respect to South Australia's capital, Adelaide, since Broken Hill ore is shipped through Peterborough to Port Pirie WSW on the coast, where it is smelted
to produce ingots for shipment around the world.

Back in the early '60s a trip to Peterborough was a big day out for me. It meant a drive across the Yatina plain on a poorly formed dirt road with mum and my brother in the old Holden. (Dad always seemed to be away shearing!). 
A modern Pekina to Peterborough route, through Ororoo; Yatina is below the estimated travel time which, of course, is based on modern road conditions in a modern car; back in the 1960s though,
the Mannion family did not take these roads but travelled through Yatina to Peterborough

Source:  Imagery ©2024 TerraMetrics, Map data ©2024 Google

As we drove into Peterborough from the west there was a cluster of iron buildings on the left and the railway workshops on the right — the largest in the State rail system outside of Adelaide. 
The Peterborough railway yards are in the foreground of this mid-1950's photo
and the migrant hostel is behind them
Source:  John Mannion collection

A rear view of the migrant hostel, toilet block on the left and
local gardener at work on the right
Source: photographer Heuer, John Mannion collection

The Port Pirie to Peterborough railway, built in the 1880s, was to form the principal east-west transport axis of South Australia’s Upper North region, bringing prosperity to all the towns along the line until the 1970s. 

Back in the ‘60s and '70s, Peterborough was a thriving town of between four and five thousand people. Then after what was proclaimed a progressive move — the national rail track standardisation of the ‘60s — “the railways” moved out leaving hardly any jobs and leaving Peterborough with less than half its population. The 2021 Census counted only 1,428 residents. 
Peterborough at its best:
Judging from the cars, the postcard is from about 1960, and
the bottom left photo gives some idea of the size of the railway yards
Source:  John Mannion collection

Nearly 20 years ago now, I was a part-time project officer at Peterborough for an oral history project entitled Relaying Our Tracks. The aim of the project was two-fold. 

Funded by the Federal Government's Department of Family and Community Services, it was designed to “assimilate” newcomers into the former railway town that seemed to have lost its direction after being abandoned by the State and Commonwealth governments in the rationalisation period from 1978 until 1997. 

The town was being populated by city dwellers from Adelaide and interstate who had no affinity with the area and the project was supposed to help build community spirit. In that regard, as predicted, it was somewhat of a failure. 

However, as an historian, I found it invaluable in recording the oral histories of many older established members and former members of the community and their descendants. The interview process also saw many paper-based items, including old South Australian Railways (SAR) Institute Magazines come out of cupboards, drawers and back sheds. 

One article in particular intrigued me and after reading it I realised that it told a virtually forgotten story of local, state, national and international significance. It was the story of our first Commonwealth Minister for Immigration, Arthur Calwell, and his post-WWII Displaced Persons Scheme. I quote from the article: FLASH BACK in the Railways Institute Magazine, May-June, 1973, ‘Baltic Migrants Arrival at Peterborough, 1948’. 

‘Few people would remember that it is 25 years ago since the first Baltic migrants arrived at Peterborough to be trained for railway work in South Australia, The Balts were the first 'displaced persons' to come to South Australia as migrants and they were accepted almost to a man by the local people because of their youth and their apparent enthusiasm to learn all they could of their new home and join in the activities of their new country. 

‘They were willing employees who were prepared to work long hours and many shifts in order to help them establish themselves financially, but one of their most severe problems was the language barrier. One Fireman could not understand the meaning of the word ‘rest’, and when the crew arrived at its destination to go to barracks, this Fireman would not leave his engine and slept on the footplate. He had been told to work his engine to Wilmington and back, but was not told specifically to go to bed at Wilmington. 

‘With Mr. and Mrs. Allen Ind at the migrant hostel [the cluster of iron buildings I mentioned earlier] established in Peterborough, where these lads were first encamped in tents and later in rooms of more solid construction, it is recalled the young Firemen sitting up late at nights drinking coffee to help keep them awake so that they could pursue their study of the language and the instruction papers necessary to qualify as Firemen and Porters. 

‘Some of the older Enginemen [Australian] found it hard to converse and understand the young migrants and some of the young migrants found it hard to understand just what the Enginemen were thinking, but mostly it was a happy association which extended for many years afterwards and today, we have a lot of those Baltic migrants listed among our senior staff members in the Loco and Traffic Running, and among the Station Masters' ranks. 

‘In the early days most migrants wore gloves on their hands when doing hard and dirty work and the reward for this was apparent when some of them left the Railways and went into other positions, and some into their own businesses. The talented boys were pleased that they had protected their hands and fingers to equip them for delicate work in future life.’ 

Whilst the article did mention that these men were the first 'Displaced Persons' to come to South Australia as migrants, the impact of Arthur Calwell, the first Minister for Immigration in the Australian Government and his post war migration programme did not really register until I started some serious researching. 

Two accompanying photos showed the 17 members of first group of trainee migrant porters and firemen at Peterborough with Lithuanians in the majority — Jonas Bimba, Tadas Bliukys, Jonas Caplikas, Povilas Deimantas, Juozas Donela, Stasys Gricius, Jurgis Guoba, Raimundas Juzulinis, Benediktas Kaminskas and Vladas Simkunas. The photos also include four Latvians (Gunars Brunavs, Nikoljas Dukalskis, Nikoljas Kibilds and Janis Kolesnikovs) and three Estonians (Flaavi Hodunov, Hugo Jakobsen and Artur Klaar).  

While the press initially talked about 18 being selected (for instance in the Times and Northern Advertiser of 27 February 1948), I have noted that it later talked about 17 preparing for their examinations and passing them well (for instance, the Mail, 8 May 1948).

Photos of 17 First Transporters to be trained at Peterborough
from the Railway Institute Magazine, May-June 1973
Source:  John Mannion collection

They were among the first European displaced persons to come to Australia, aboard the chartered troop ship, the United States Army Transport, General Stuart Heintzelman. 

In the Friday, 23 January 1948 edition of the South-Eastern Times, a regional South Australian newspaper printed at Millicent, a rather insignificant one column, seven-line article read: 
Source:  Trove

A little over a month later, a similar article appeared in another country newspaper over 400 miles north of Millicent, at Peterborough. It was the Times and Great Northern Advertiser, of Friday, 27 February 1948. 
Source:  Trove

With a name like Mannion, I have no connection at all with European migration, only a tremendous interest in, and respect for those post-war migrants who made South Australia their home. A ‘baby boomer’ born into a relatively insular and conservative Irish Catholic mixed farming district, I had little exposure to the ‘outside’ world. 

However as a kid, I knew that were German, Czech and Dutch workers and their families living at the railway sidings of Eurelia, Orroroo and Black Rock within 25 miles to the north and west of our farm. These families formed part of the railway gangs involved with rail track maintenance work on the Terowie to Quorn narrow-gauge railway.  [Eurelia and Terowie are at the top and bottom respectively of the Google map above.  Black Rock is just SSW of the travel time pop-up on that map.]

I went to school at Orroroo, about 14 miles from home [see map above], with many of these ‘new Australian’ kids but we were not told anything about who they were, why they were here or where they came from. They were generally stuck in the back of the classroom and ignored. With names like Limback, Fejgl, Methurst, Katts, Kampen and Ehlers, they were often derided because of their names, appearance and social status. 

Little did I realise that in my own back yard, long before the term ‘multiculturalism’ was penned, there was an enclave of Europeans numbering up to 500 people living in the area — an extension of Calwell’s initial plan. These were the successors to the first ‘Balts’ of the ‘Fifth Fleet’. 

In the years that followed February 1948, right up until the ‘70s, hundreds more European migrants and their families made the Peterborough Division of the SAR their home. The majority lived at Peterborough, the largest shopping centre and livestock market town in the district. 

Many have described Calwell’s immigration scheme, ‘as one of the best things that ever happened to Australia and also as the greatest humanitarian act that Australia has ever undertaken.’ 

However, the scheme succeeded because we needed them as much as they needed us. In reality it was a calculated plan (in competition with the US, South America and Canada) to draft workers into Australia without upsetting the local domestic labour and housing situation. 

By the late 1920s, most of the Australian railway systems were well established, and during the 1930s little expansion occurred. During WWII, rail maintenance activity was reduced drastically reduced, as the SAR Islington workshops were adapted to heavy engineering war production. 

Combined with the virtual elimination of rolling stock maintenance and only emergency track maintenance, the railways carried greatly increased tonnages and train movements under the pressure of the national war effort with reduced manpower. At the end of the war the entire Australian railway system was in a crisis state in relation to operating capacity and infrastructure condition. 

Many of these ‘Balts’ were skilled men and women but were used as manual labour and literally dumped in outback railway depots and maintenance camps and regarded as foreigners and cheap labour. 

That Railways Institute Magazine article was written in 1973 and even then it questioned how many would remember the Balts. How many would remember in 2005, the time of my project 32 years later? Fortunately quite a few! 

Determined to follow the fate of these ‘Peterborough Balts’ I went through the Adelaide White Pages telephone directory and found several of the names on the two photographs listed. 

After a few phone calls I found two of the men pictured in the photo living in Adelaide, fit and well, and having stayed with ‘the railways’. I had so many questions to ask Flaavi Hodunov, an Estonian who became known as ‘Freddie’ and Povilas, or Paul, Deimantas from Lithuania. 

Where did they come from? What was the voyage over like? What did they find when they got here? What did they do before, during and after their time at Peterborough? 

Surprisingly, with a little encouragement from their wives, they were interested in what I was doing and gave me some basic background over the phone. I later met up with Flaavi, Paul and several other ‘Lithos’, when they told me their stories. 

I am glad of the continued interest in their stories and the opportunity to now have them published again, in blog entries to follow this one, nearly 20 years later.

FOOTNOTE:  Light editing, choice of illustrations and their captions by Ann.  You can see larger versions of the images by double-clicking on them.

SOURCES

Mail 
(1948) '17 Balts Learn English to be Railway Men' Adelaide, SA, 8 May, p 6 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article55905773 accessed 17 April 2024.

Railways Institute Magazine (1973) 'FLASH BACK ... Baltic Migrants Arrival at Peterborough, 1948, Adelaide, May-June, p 17.

South Eastern Times (1948) 'The Trains of Tomorrow', Millicent, South Australia, 23 January, p 2, https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/201013863 accessed 12 March 2024.

Times and Northern Advertiser (1948) 'New Arrivals', Peterborough, South Australia, 27 February, p2, https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/110548140 accessed 12 March 2024.



01 March 2024

WHAT LED TO THE FIRST DISPLACED PERSONS: A TIMELINE by Ann Tündern-Smith & Department of Information staff

I’m looking through a Department of Information file on correspondence from the Minister for Immigration (and Information, Arthur Calwell) during 1947 and 1948. For anyone who wants to follow up, its NAA: CP815/1, 021.148 (Item number 263676) – there are more details below. What has caught my eye is a timeline of “the Government’s achievements in the migration field in the past three years”. 

I thought it was an excellent summary of the context in which the Displaced Persons (refugees in reality) from the Baltic States were brought to Australia in November 1947. It is part of a draft for a proposed article for the Catholic Weekly to appear under the byline of Minister Calwell. I have highlighted the parts of particular significance to the passengers on the First Transport by using an italic typeface.  Also, I've had to change the layout a little to fit Blogspot's formatting limitations.  [My comments within the timeline are in square brackets.]

1945 July:  Cabinet [actually, Prime Minister Chifley, in establishing his first           Cabinet] appoints the Hon Arthur A Calwell Minister for Immigration. 

August:  Mr Calwell announces the Government’s immigration policy to the House of Representatives. 

September:  Commonwealth Immigration Advisory Committee, under the Chairmanship of Mr LC Haylen, MHR, begins European tour to investigate emigration possibilities. 

1946 February:  Commonwealth Immigration Advisory Committee’s report published; advocates encouragement of emigration from Europe as well as Britain. 

March:  Mr Calwell announces signing of agreement between United Kingdom and Commonwealth Governments to provide free and assisted passages to Australia for British ex-servicemen and their dependents, and other selected British migrants.

August:  Commonwealth and State Ministers confer in Canberra on nation’s immigration programme. 

December:  Cabinet approves agreement with Netherlands Emigration Foundation to bring Dutch farmers to Australia. 

1947 January        First party of British building tradesmen arrive under special arrangements made with United Kingdom Government. 

February:  Mr Calwell announces formation of Commonwealth Immigration Advisory Council to advise on immigration matters. 

March:  United Kingdom and Australian Governments announce that free and assisted passage schemes will come into operation on March 31. 

April:  Announcement of scheme for assisted passages for British ex-service personnel of European descent not eligible on residential grounds for such passages. 

June:  First free and assisted passage migrants arrive from United Kingdom. First child migrants arrive under reopened child migration schemes. Mr Calwell begins world tour to study immigration questions and seek more shipping for migrant carriage.

July:  Agreement signed between International Refugee Organization and Commonwealth Government for migration to Australia of 12,000 selected displaced persons from camps in occupied Europe. 

September:  First party of assisted passage United States ex-servicemen reaches Australia. 

November:  Establishment of Bonegilla, first reception and training centre for education of migrants from displaced persons’ camps in Europe. 

December:  First party of 843 [actually 839, as 4 did not leave the Heintzelman in Fremantle and were returned to Europe on health or security grounds] displaced persons of Baltic origin arrive at Bonegilla from Europe. First “all migrant” ship reaches Australia from Britain. 

1948 February:  Mr Calwell announces that nearly half a million tons of shipping is in sight to bring British migrants to Australia.

March:  Following ratification of peace treaties with Italy, Roumania, Bulgaria and Hungary, Mr Calwell announces modified policy allowing entry of nationals of those countries in certain circumstances. 

April:  First party of Dutch farmers under agreement with Netherlands Emigration Foundation, together with Dutch ex-servicemen, sail from Rotterdam. 

May:  Bathurst reception and training centre for displaced person migrants [sic] opens. 

The minute continues with the prediction that, “These ‘Migration Milestones’ may well become milestones in Australian history." Such foresight! 

While the article was drafted for proposed publication in the national Catholic Weekly, it first appeared as part of a series by Calwell on the resettlement of the Displaced Persons in the Sydney Catholic Weekly of 21 October.  

The series was repeated in the South Australian Catholic weekly, the Southern Cross, with the milestones section being published on 29 October. It then appeared in the Advocate, "a Catholic Review of the Week", with the milestones appearing on 4 November.

It later appeared different form, as part of a 70-page booklet on the progress of migration published in March 1949. The December 1949 election was then looming, an election lost by the Labor Party to Robert Menzies’ Liberal-Country Party coalition. 

A journalist inclined to irony, David McNicoll, included the launch of the booklet in his Town Talk column in the 8 March 1949 issue of the Daily Telegraph. See below.

Source:  Trove 248149510

SOURCES

Advocate (1948) 'Australia's Future', Melbourne, 4 November, p 11, accessed 1 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article172500091.   

Catholic Weekly (1948) 'Strength Will Come out of Population Melting-Pot', Sydney, 21 October, p 3, accessed 1 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article146660540   

McNicoll, David (1949) 'Town Talk', Daily TelegraphSydney, 8 March, p 1, accessed 1 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article248149510.   

National Archives of Australia, Department of Information, Central Office; CP815/1, General correspondence files, two number series1938 - 1951; 021.148, Immigration - From Minister [correspondence with Immigration Publicity Officer], 1947-1948; https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=263676.

Southern Cross (1948) 'Europe's "D.Ps." and Australia (5) Immigration -- Policy and Progress', Adelaide, 29 October, p 8, accessed 1 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article167722104.

   


19 August 2023

Why did Australia have an immigration program which brought our families here? Arthur Calwell (1896-1973) by Fiona Basile

Arthur Calwell, Australia’s first Minister for Immigration, had been thinking and reading about population growth as a means of ensuring Australia’s security even before he became a Federal Member of Parliament in 1940. No, he did not coin the ‘populate or perish’ phrase – that honour goes to Billy Hughes – but he certainly popularised it. This summary of the life of the man who brought our family members to Australia in 1947 as part of the commencement of his migration program, by Fiona Basile, was published in the Melbourne Catholic on 21 September 2022. It is reproduced here by kind permission. Additional footnotes have been provided by Mary Elizabeth Calwell, Arthur Calwell's one surviving child.

Arthur Augustus Calwell

Mary Elizabeth Calwell was just a schoolgirl when her father, Arthur Calwell, was sworn in as Australia’s first federal minister for immigration in 1945. Labor’s Ben Chifley had become prime minister, and World War II was coming to an end. Calwell had a visionary plan for a large-scale immigration scheme—a plan that would later see him labelled ‘the father of multiculturalism in Australia’.

In his inaugural parliamentary speech on 2 August 1945, less than three weeks after his appointment, and before the official end of World War II, Calwell presented his vision for Australia:

If Australians have learned one lesson from the Pacific War, it is surely that we cannot continue to hold our island continent for ourselves and our descendants unless we greatly increase our numbers. We are about 7 million people, and we hold 3 million square miles of this earth's surface … much development and settlement have yet to be undertaken. Our need to undertake it is urgent and imperative if we are to survive … The door to Australia will always be open within the limits of our existing legislation ... We make two things clear ... The one is that Australia wants, and will welcome, new healthy citizens who are determined to become good Australians by adoption. The second is that we will not mislead any intending immigrant by encouraging him to come to this country under any assisted to unassisted scheme until there is a reasonable assurance of his economic future ... 

Though Calwell died in 1973, having served in federal politics from 1940 to 1972, the impact of his policies and work in initiating and implementing post-WWII immigration to Australia continues to be felt today, including within our Archdiocese’s rich tapestry of multicultural faith communities.

Reflecting on her father’s legacy, Calwell’s daughter Mary Elizabeth notes that both historian Geoffrey Blainey and former Prime Minister Bob Hawke believed that Labor’s greatest achievement in the 20th century was probably Calwell’s ambitious immigration scheme.

Calwell was born in 1896 in West Melbourne. Many immigrant families lived nearby, so he enjoyed friendships with people from Jewish, Lebanese, Italian, Greek and Chinese backgrounds. He spoke fluent Irish and some Mandarin and French.

Calwell was raised in the Catholic faith of his mother and Irish grandparents, and was the eldest of seven children. He attended St Mary’s Boys’ School in West Melbourne and won a scholarship to attend St Joseph’s College in North Melbourne, both run by the Christian Brothers. He is reported as saying, ‘I owe everything I have in life, under Almighty God and next to my parents, to the Christian Brothers.’

Arthur Calwell’s mother died in early 1913. Although his father was a policeman and later Police Superintendent, a university education was not possible, so Calwell began work as a clerk for the Victorian State Government, first in the Department of Agriculture and then in the Department of Treasury. He was secretary of his ALP Branch at just 18 years of age, and was elected to many ALP and union positions, including Victorian ALP president from 1930 to 1931—the youngest person at that time to have held that position—and was the first president of the Victorian branch of the Amalgamated Australian Public Service Association, Clerical Division, from 1925 to 1931.

In 1921, Arthur Calwell married Margaret Murphy, who died just five months later. Ten years on, in 1932, he married Elizabeth Marren, an Irishwoman who was social editor of the Catholic weekly newspaper, the Tribune, and had also been a journalist at the Advocate. They met through Irish organisations. They had two children, Mary Elizabeth and Arthur Andrew, who died of leukaemia when he was 11 years old.

Mary Elizabeth, who went to boarding school at the age of 10, says she was fortunate to have grown up in a home that valued intellectual activities. Both her parents wrote extensively, and in 1933, they established the Irish Review, which continued under other auspices until 1954. Mary Elizabeth says both her parents had a ‘big influence’ on her life.

‘My father wrote for the Age Literary Supplement on American history for the 4th of July, and he quoted spontaneously from the Bible, history or literature in parliament. He was elected to positions in social, cultural and sporting organisations.’

However, it was Calwell’s role as [Australia's first] Immigration Minister that cemented his place in history. To win support, he emphasised the importance of immigration for national development and defence. ‘Australia’s population was 7.4 million with 250,000 available jobs,’ Mary Elizabeth says, ‘and he used the slogan “populate or perish”.’ According to historian Geoffrey Blainey, Calwell’s immigration scheme brought more people to Australia than had come in all the previous years since settlement.

In 1947, Arthur and Elizabeth Calwell, along with his secretary Bob Armstrong, visited 23 countries in just under 13 weeks, travelling by flying boat, plane and ship. In July, Calwell signed an agreement with the United Nations Refugee Organisation to accept displaced persons from European countries ravaged by war. Despite shipping shortages, 100,000 British and 50,000 assisted migrants had arrived in Australia by August 1949, along with many thousands of sponsored migrants.

The Calwell party in Berlin, 18 July 1947
From left: 
Brigadier T. White, Head of Australian Military Mission to Germany, Harry Beilby (Department of Immigration), Malcolm Booker (Second Secretary (Political) Australian Military Mission [Department of Foreign Affairs]), possibly Ian Hamilton (Department of Information), Elizabeth and Arthur Calwell, Bob Armstrong (Arthur Calwell's Secretary), the Military Mission's Australian driver with car
Source:  Calwell collection

'He allowed Holocaust survivors to come to Australia when other countries were uninterested,’ says Mary Elizabeth. ‘Descendants and survivors are proportionately greater here than in any country outside Israel.’ In 1946, 100 trees were planted in Israel by the Melbourne Jewish Community through the Jewish National Fund (JNF). In 1995, trees were also planted in Melbourne, and in 1998, the Australian Jewish Community established and dedicated the JNF Arthur A Calwell Forest of Life at Kessalon near Jerusalem, Israel.

Mary Elizabeth is particularly proud of her father’s implementation of the Nationality Act 1946, which enabled Australian women to retain their nationality after marriage to a foreigner [an international rarity then], and the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948, proclaimed on Australia Day 1949, with the first citizenship ceremony taking place in Canberra on 3 February 1949. He also introduced the term ‘New Australian’ to discourage hostility to migrants, and he approved the introduction of Good Neighbour Councils. By 1952, the Australian population had increased to 8.7 million through births and immigration.

When not engaged in politics, Calwell was devoted to the North Melbourne Football Club, becoming the club’s first life member. According to Mary Elizabeth, he was also devoted to the Church, receiving a papal knighthood from Pope Paul VI and being made a Knight Commander of St Gregory the Great with Silver Star in 1963.

'My father had a very deep and informed knowledge of his faith, which sustained him and complemented his commitment to Australian Labor values,’ Mary Elizabeth says. Among his many initiatives, for instance, he arranged for paid chaplains to be appointed to immigration reception centres, where displaced persons were welcomed, and he was on the committee that bought the first Maronite Church in Rathdowne Street, Carlton.

Having served as both deputy leader and leader of the Federal Parliamentary Labor Party—narrowly missing out on becoming prime minister in 1961, when Democratic Labor Party preferences were directed to the Liberal and Country Parties—Calwell retired from politics in 1972. He died on 8 July 1973 in East Melbourne and was given a large state funeral at St Patrick’s Cathedral.

Looking back on her father’s legacy, Mary Elizabeth observes, ‘There were 7.5 million in Australia in 1945, and by the time Dad died in 1973, we had an extra 6 million people.’ She agrees with sociologist Professor Jerzy Zubrzycki that her father’s immigration policies ‘changed Australia in a far more fundamental way than anything else since the end of the Second World War’, and that our nation is a richer place for those changes.

[I thank Mary Elizabeth Calwell for her support of my research for more than 20 years now, and Fiona Basile with the Melbourne Catholic for permission to reproduce Fiona's article.]

Footnotes

Arthur Calwell released an autobiography in 1972, titled Be Just and Fear Not, and Labor’s Role in Modern Society in 1963.

Mary Elizabeth published a biography of her father in 2012, titled I Am Bound to Be True.

It was the July 1947 agreement with the Preparatory Commission of the International Refugee Organisation signed by Calwell in Geneva which led, in September and October 1947, to staff from the Australian High Commission in London joining the deputy head of the Australian Military Mission to Berlin as the interviewing panel for the first group of displaced people. That first group were the passengers on the General Stuart Heintzelman arriving in Fremantle on 28 November 1947 – our First Transporters.

Arthur Calwell not only started government-sponsored migration to Australia, which continues today, especially for those determined to be refugees under the terms of the 1951 International Convention on the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol. He not only was responsible for establishing the legal concept of Australian citizenship. He established Australia as a place of refuge for Holocaust survivors in 1945 as well as those displaced by Hitler’s war and Stalin’s expansion of the Soviet Union to its west despite very little shipping after WWII.

Professor Louise Holborn, in her official history of The International Refugee Organization, stated that Australia was the country which most generously responded to the resettlement needs of family units, promoted the resettlement of unmarried mothers and was the only country to perform its own orientation work.

As Minister for Information (1943-1949), Arthur Calwell was in charge of the wartime Censor, employed war correspondents, and controlled Radio Australia and its translators.  He ensured that the Australian flag flew on major occasions and that Advance Australia Fair (not God Save the Queen) was played on official occasions, at picture theatres and before the ABC News broadcasts.  His department had a film unit which produced many documentaries and employed many important journalists, who promoted our literature and culture in Australia and to millions of people overseas.

Arthur Calwell opposed conscription for military service outside Australia from 1917, vehemently opposed our involvement in Vietnam, defended the separation of Church and State, and worked for social justice through Labor’s commitment to democratic socialism and democracy as the best political system available in the world.