Showing posts with label Plechavicius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Plechavicius. Show all posts

13 November 2025

Elena Kalvytė Augutis (1917-1996): ‘Special Circumstances’ by Rasa Ščevinsienė and Ann Tündern-Smith

We have just met Elena Augutis as the fellow Lithuanian who accompanied Bronislava (Bronė) Jutkutė (later Umbražiūnas-Amber) from the Bonegilla camp in northern Victoria to the Hotel Ainslie in Canberra. There we mentioned that Elena Augutis was said to have had ‘special circumstances’.  Here we look further at these and her life as a whole.

The only photograph we have of Elena, from her Bonegilla card, is so out of focus
that Ann has used a Web service, Unblurimage.ai, to improve it a little
Source of original:  National Archives of Australia

Pregnant Women

When the 839 First Transport passengers had yet another medical examination, at the Bonegilla camp, at least their third in the migration process, the examining doctor reported that, “Two of the women are pregnant”.  One of them was Ann’s mother, pregnant with Ann.  Since Ann read that sentence, she has taken a particular interest in the story of the other woman, Elena Kalyvte Augutiene.

We know from several sources that Elena Kalvyte had married Jonas Augutis in Germany in 1947, before she boarded the General Stuart Heintzelman.  Probably because she knew that all the Heintzelman passengers were supposed to be single, she appeared before the selection panel using her maiden name.

Jonas follows

Perhaps Jonas applied too, but was rejected for the First Transport. He was not accepted for resettlement in Australia until his application for the Tenth Transport, the Svalbard, which reached Melbourne on 29 June 1948, when his daughter was already one month old. Perhaps it was her imminent birth that finally got him on a ship to Australia. This ship had sailed from Bremerhaven before her birth, on 8 May 1948, but its 52 days (7½ weeks) sailing time was more typical of ships of that era than the fast Generals.  His brother, Juozas, 8 years younger than him, came also.

Jonas Augutis from his 1948 Bonegilla card
Elena's early life

Elena Kalvyte, the mother of the new Australian, was born on 31 August 1917 in Berciškiai village, Šilute district, in Lithuania, to Jurgis Kalvis and the former Ona Kaulickaitė.  An American Expeditionary Force’s (AEF) Displaced Persons (DP) Registration form completed on 19 July 1945 gives her previous occupation as clerk, her languages spoken, in order of fluency, as German and Lithuanian and her last residence in Lithuania as the city of Pagėgiai.

It is worth noting that her religion is stated to be Evangelical, unlike the vast majority of Lithuanians.  Various writers using various sources suggest that around 85 per cent of the population in 1939 were Catholic – they probably would be excluding the more varied Vilnius region, still in Polish hands.

Elena left the Hotel Ainslie in Canberra on 10 or 11 February to return to the Bonegilla camp.  By this time she would have been more than five months pregnant.  Her pregnancy would have been visible and probably interfering with her work. Nonetheless, as far as officialdom was concerned, both Elena and Ann’s mother had signed a contract to work in Australia in jobs where they were needed for two years (even though the paper they signed said one year only).

Pregnant women work in farm households

The issue was solved, at least until childbirth and perhaps later, with help from the Lutheran Church.  Both women were sent from the Bonegilla camp to assist nearby farmer’s wives.  In the case of Elena Augutis, it was to a Mr and Mrs RG Molkentin in Jindera, New South Wales.

Jindera is only 25 Km northwest of the north side of Lake Hume; another 7 Km brings the driver to the Bonegilla camp.  Or the driver could take the better roads through Wodonga and Albury, then head a few kilometres northwest to Jindera.

Elena’s Bonegilla card records a baby girl’s birth on 23 May 1948 at the Albury District Hospital.

Jonas Augutis' story

We know a lot about the baby girl’s father from an obituary in the Lithuanian-Australian newspaper, Mūsų Pastogė, in 1983.

Former Lieutenant Jonas Augutis of the 6th Regiment of the Lithuanian Army was born on 21 September 1914, almost 3 years before his wife, in the Sadutiškis parish of Utena county. When he finished Utena senior high school, he entered Lithuania’s Military School, graduating with its 17th class to the rank of Junior Lieutenant and joining the 7th Regiment in Klaipėda. Later, he was transferred to the 6th Regiment and served in Pagėgiai, Elena’s last place of residence in Lithuania. In 1938, he was promoted to the rank of Senior Lieutenant.

After the Soviets occupied his country in 1940, he was transferred to the Vilnius garrison with his regiment. As Soviet officials judged him to be unreliable, he was soon arrested and imprisoned in Lukiškės prison in central Vilnius. After the German Army invaded the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, the prisoners were transferred to the Vilnius railway station to be taken to Russia. When the Germans bombed the railway station, several wagons were uncoupled, saving some of the prisoners, including Jonas.

During the German occupation of Lithuania in 1941-44, Jonas became the deputy governor of Utena County. On Lithuanian Independence Day, 16 February 1944, General Plechavičius made a radio appeal to the nation for volunteers to fight Soviet-backed partisans. Some 19,500 men responded to the appeal. Amongst them was Jonas, who was sent to fight the partisans in southeastern Lithuania.

When the Germans tried to transform the squad into SS units, Plechavičius resisted, was arrested and sent to the Salaspils concentration camp. His battalion was disbanded with Jonas being sent to Germany and assigned to an aviation unit. When the War ended, Jonas found himself in the American zone of Germany. He lived in a Displaced Persons camp, served in an American labour company and met Elena Kalvaitė.

Jonas goes to Canberra

Finally selected for resettlement in Australia and housed initially in the Bonegilla camp, it is likely that Jonas was able to reunite with Elena and meet his daughter. Two days after his 34th birthday, he was off to Canberra to work for the Department of the Interior, probably as a labourer. Let us hope that his wife and daughter were able to travel with him or join him soon after.

The Department of the Interior was responsible then for all official aspects of life in Canberra, as well as a wide range of other activities, including elections, meteorology, surveying and lands. The range is so wide that it is impossible to tell what Jonas was tasked to do. We know from his obituary that he joined Australia’s Bureau of Statistics after completing his employment contract and stayed there until his retirement in 1979, aged 65, the then compulsory maximum age of employment. (Ann notes that she was working across the road from the Bureau, in the Department of Immigration from 1977, and may well have crossed his path in the local shopping mall.)

In the early 1950s, the couple and their small daughter were living at 3 Ross Street, a short thoroughfare in suburban O’Connor. Given their circumstances, it may well have been built by the Government to rent. The address was confirmed by the Commonwealth Government when a notice of grant of citizenship to the couple was published in the gazette in December 1959.

Jonas appears before a magistrate

When Jonas came the before Canberra Court in June 1955, charged with both assaulting a policeman in the execution of his duty and drink-driving, at least one reporter for both the Queanbeyan Age and Canberra Times chose to describe him incorrectly as resident on the longer, more prominent, Queanbeyan address of Ross Road.

Jonas made counter allegations of having been assaulted by the police after his arrest. Elena gave evidence in support of her husband, one of the occasions when we have a record of the marriage having occurred in 1947.

Police evidence included Augutis having lost his driving licence once before, in November the previous year, while being fined £20 for drink driving. He had applied successfully to have the licence restored on 16 February. This, therefore, was the second occasion in less than a year when he had been found driving erratically when under the influence of alcohol. Still, he only was fined, £35 on the drink driving charge and £20 for assaulting the policeman. He was given 3 months to pay the total of £55, a hefty amount when you consider that its buying power then was equivalent to more than $2,300 in 2024.

Drinking too much alcohol is also on record for a number of the men from the General Stuart Heintzelman. Considering what they, as well as Jonas Augutis, had gone through during World War II, it is no surprise that they were using this approach to deal with what then was seen as, “Forget the past, look to the future”. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (now commonly PTSD) was not recognised until 1980, when it entered the American Psychiatric Association‘s third edition of its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III) as a result of the behaviour of Vietnam War veterans.

Jonas’ occupation at the time of his 1955 court appearance was still ‘labourer’.

Elena and Jonas' daughter

Elena and Jonas’ daughter started appearing in the local press, the Canberra Times, in September 1958. She attended Turner Primary School and had placed in the Junior High Jump competition at the School’s first athletics carnival. She also won a place in what the School called its Junior Championship. In the following year’s athletics carnival, she also placed in the 75 yards (69 metres) race for 11-year-old girls. 

In another crossing paths moment, the sports ground used by the Turner School is across the street from where another First Transport arrival, Valeria Mets, was living. She probably was at work, though, when her friend’s daughter was competing successfully.

Citizenship

Elena and Jonas received Australian citizenship at the same ceremony on 17 June 1959. They were with 54 other recipients, all of whom were given bibles either from the British and Foreign Bible Society or the Roman Catholic Church in Canberra. They would have been an excellent source of reading practice for English language development so long as they were much later versions than the 1611 King James Version still in common use at that time.

Jonas is recorded on his passenger list as Roman Catholic, while we know already that Elena identified as a Protestant. Which version of the bible they accepted, how they reconciled their religious differences or if they even bothered, are unknowns.

What is known is that Elena, newly back in Canberra with a baby, had help from nuns who were associated with Canberra's St Christopher's Cathedral.

Now that Elena and Jonas were Australian citizens, they were required to be on the electoral roll and to vote in elections. Electoral rolls for the period 1961-77 show them still living at Ross Street, with Elena’s occupation shown as cleaner and Jonas (recorded as John) shown as a machine-operator.

Elena, Jonas, their daughter and the Bureau of Statistics

Since John or Jonas spent his life working for the Bureau of Statistics, it is possible that the machine he was operating was a computer.

The citizenship ceremony was shortly after Elena was photographed with someone probably well known to her from some months together in early 1948, identified in the Canberra Times as Miss A Molkentin. They were said to be among visitors at the opening on 26 May of an exhibition of statistical equipment by the Bureau of Census and Statistics, then co-located with the Treasury in Parkes. We would not be surprised if they were staff gathered around for the purpose of a publicity photo, meaning that both Elena and Miss Molketin were employed by the Bureau, now the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).  (We will add the photograph if we can find a version which is not mostly black.)

At that stage, the Bureau was conducting complete censuses of the Australian population every 7 years. A very useful one for our purposes had been conducted in June 1947, just 5 months before the First Transport arrived. The 1954 census included most of the Eastern European refugees, still known as former Displaced Persons or New Australians. The next was to occur in 1961. However, the Bureau may well have been employing temporary staff, likely to have been female, to prepare punch card records of surveys, for example.

Ann has been told that their daughter also was a good musician. The Canberra Times of 12 July 1962 records her passing the Grade IV examination of the Australian Musical Examination Board, a hint that her parents had been able to afford a piano at home for some time. The next year she passed the 5th Grade examination. In 1965, she passed the 6th Grade examination.

The 1 June 1967 issue of the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette announced her appointment to the Commonwealth Public Service as a Clerk in what then was called the Third Division. She followed her parents into what then was called the Statistician’s Branch of the Department of the Treasury.

This was the first step on the ladder of a public service career and it looks like a step which she might have taken as soon as she finished high school at the end of the previous year. If she wanted further education, the Commonwealth Public Service provided time off for classes and other support.

Her promotion into the position of a Clerk Class 2/3 in the Public Finance and Taxation Section of the Statistician’s Branch was confirmed on 14 January 1971.

The daughter’s Canberra friends were told of her marriage in Canada in June 1976 by an advertisement in the Canberra Times 4 days after the event. We have no idea if there was sufficient money for her parents to fly from Canberra to attend.

A marriage and new life in Canada should have led to a resignation in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette, but the search engine for the National Library of Australia’s Trove digitisation service has been unable to find one. Nor can Trove find appointments to the ABS for either John/Jonas or Elena. It is highly likely that they were temporary employees only, able to be left without employment when the Bureau did not need them. This would explain why Elena was prepared to give her occupation as ‘cleaner’.

The parents move; Jonas dies

By the 1980 electoral roll, Elena had moved to a new address, Dexter Street in the Canberra suburb of Cook, but had no occupation, while John was living still at the Ross Street address. It is quite possible that this is a record of John not get around to updating his residence before that electoral roll was finalised. (Newer electoral rolls are not available to the public for privacy reasons, which was not an issue in the 1970s and earlier.)

The family’s next appearance in the press was in April 1983, when Jonas died aged 68. The advertisement indicated that Elena and “John” had 2 granddaughters in Canada. It also tells us that Jonas’ brother, Juozas, who came to Australia with him in June 1948, had left for the United States. There, another Augutis brother, Mikas had settled.

An older Jonas Augutis in the photograph accompanying his obituary

The advertisement also said that Jonas had died “after a long illness”, often code for cancer. Whether it was cancer or not, Elena probably had devoted herself to care for him throughout, maybe even into his last days.

Jonas’ obituary in Mūsų Pastogė described him as being of an open nature, a keen reader of books, interested in Lithuanian and general history, and someone who subscribed extensively to the Lithuanian press. He was cremated at the Norwood Park Crematorium on April 21 1983. His farewell included a speech on behalf of the Lithuanian returned servicemen’s organisation, Ramovė.

The family donates

Public thanks appeared in a Lithuanian publication for a donation from the Augutis family in 1990, a very generous $100 from Elena.  She had donated it to the Independent Lithuania Foundation in Canberra.  This was only months after Lithuania had announced its independence from the Soviet Union on March 11, 1990.

The Augutis name previously appeared on a list of donors in 1951, for 10 shillings to the National Fund. The purpose of this fund was assumed known to readers. Ten shillings, the equivalent of $1 in decimal currency, may appear small but was the largest amount a number of donors were giving and corresponds in buying power with more than $25 in 2024.

Elena's last years

In another possible moment of paths crossing, Elena lived in the same suburb as Ann in her later years. They may well have been at the local shops at the same time.

Elena joined Jonas in Norwood Park with a plaque on the same rock after her death on 6 October 1996 aged 79, in Morling Lodge, Canberra’s first aged care home. She did not receive an obituary. We are doing the best that we can here.


Augutis plaques, Norwood Park
Source:  CAMCF on Find a Grave

SOURCES

‘AEF DP Registration Record’ (Kalvyte, Elena) Folder DP1750, names from KALVITE, ELLA to KAMBROWSKA, Ruth, 3.1.1 Registration and Care of DPs inside and outside of Camps, ITS, Arolsen Archives https://collections.arolsen-archives.org/en/search/person/67568764?s=elena%20kalvyte&t=2738679&p=0, accessed 7 November 2025.

Bonegilla Migrant Experience, Bonegilla Identity Card Lookup, ‘Kalvyte, Elena’ https://idcards.bonegilla.org.au/record/203640622, accessed 8 November 2025.

Bonegilla Migrant Experience, Bonegilla Identity Card Lookup, ‘Augutis, Jonas’ https://idcards.bonegilla.org.au/record/203678465, accessed 8 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1955) ‘Assault Allegation Denied By Canberra Police’ Canberra, 17 June, p 2 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/91200919, accessed 9 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1955) ‘Claims Constable Kicked And Punched Him’ Canberra, 17 June, p 2 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/91201156, accessed 9 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1955) ‘Wife Tells Court Of Husband's Injuries’ Canberra, 22 June, p 5 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/91203754, accessed 7 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1955) ‘Magistrate Rejects Allegations Against Canberra Constable’ Canberra, 28 June, p 6 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/91204078, accessed 9 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1958) ‘Isaacs House Wins In Turner School Sports’ Canberra, 23 September, p 13 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/103121705, accessed 9 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1959) ‘Electronic computer demonstrated’ Canberra, 27 May, p 1 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/114842319, accessed 7 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1959) ‘56 Migrants Enter Full Citizenship’ Canberra, 18 June, p 8 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/114844678, accessed 7 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1959) ‘Stonehaven Wins Turner School Athletics Trophy’ 21 September, p 9 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/103101338, accessed 7 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1962) ‘What People Are Doing, Pupils Pass Music Test’ Canberra, 12 July, p5 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/131726767/14513046, accessed 9 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1963) ‘Music Study Passes To 24’ Canberra, 24 October, p 4 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/104284561, accessed 9 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1965) 'Music examination results' Canberra, 22 March, p 19 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article131762530, accessed 5 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1976) ‘Marriages’ Canberra, 16 June, p 22 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/131823361, accessed 7 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1983) ‘Deaths’, Canberra, 19 April, p 15 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/116379793, accessed 7 November 2025.

Canberra Times (1983) ‘Funerals’, Canberra, 20 April, p 32 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article116380111, accessed 9 November 2025.

Commonwealth of Australia Gazette (1959) ‘Certificates of Naturalization’ Canberra, 3 September, p 3112 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/240886578, accessed 7 November 2025.

Commonwealth of Australia Gazette (1967) ‘Appointments, Retirements And Dismissals’, Canberra, 1 June, p 2733, https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/241040405, accessed 9 November 2025.

Commonwealth of Australia Gazette (1971) ‘Confirmation Of Provisional Promotions’, Canberra, 14 January, p 360 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article241066570 accessed 9 November 2025.

Find a Grave, ‘Elena Augutis’ https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/180994456/elena-augutis, accessed 7 November 2025.

Mūsų Pastogė (Our Haven) (1951) ‘Maza kolonija, bet daug aukoja!‘ (‘Small Colony, But a Lot of Sacrifice’, in Lithuanian) Sydney, 19 December, p 6 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article259360432, accessed 7 November 2025.

Mūsų Pastogė (Our Haven) (1990) ‘Canberroje‘ (‘In Canberra’, in Lithuanian) Sydney, 8 October, p 8 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1990/1990-10-08-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf, accessed 8 November 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Queensland Branch; J25, Case files, annual single number series with or without 'Q' [Queensland] or 'QB' [Queensland Brisbane] or 'CLF' [Client Files] prefix, 1946-; 1953/4102, SVALBARD - nominal passenger roll - departed Bremerhaven, Germany 8 May 1948, 1948-1948 recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=1629089, accessed 8 November 2025.

Queanbeyan Age (1955) 'Q’beyan Man on Assault Charge', Queanbeyan, NSW, 17 June, p 1 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article270636187, accessed 5 November 2025.

Queanbeyan Age (1955) ‘Police Cleared of Assault Charge', Queanbeyan, NSW, 28 June, p 1 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/270646241, accessed 9 November 2025.

Reserve Bank of Australia, Pre-Decimal Inflation Calculator https://www.rba.gov.au/calculator/annualPreDecimal.html, accessed 7 November 2025.

VB (1983) ‘Mirusieji, A A Jonas Augutis’, (‘The Dead, In Memoriam Jonas Augutis’, in Lithuanian) Mūsų Pastogė, Sydney, 9 May, p 4 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1983/1983-05-09-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf, accessed 7 November 2025.

Wikipedia, ‘Povilas Plechavičius’ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Povilas_Plechavi%C4%8Dius, accessed 8 November 2025.

26 September 2025

Stasys Šeduikis (1924–2005), Lithuanian refugee, by Daina Pocius with Ann Tündern-Smith

Stasys Šeduikis was born in October 1924 into the family of Pranas Šeduikis and Elena Graužinytė in the beautiful town of Anykščiai near Utena. He had four brothers and two sisters.

His immigration papers to Australia show his year of birth as 1922. In addition, the year of birth on his application for naturalisation is 1925.  We are accepting the year used in his obituary, which also says that he was 80 years old when he died.

Life in Lithuania

After graduating from Anykščiai elementary school, he entered and graduated from Anykščių secondary school. His selection papers for Australia record only 6 years of primary schooling, however.

During the German occupation of Lithuania, on Lithuanian Independence Day (16 February 1944) General Plechavičius made a radio appeal to the nation for volunteers. Some 19,500 men responded to the appeal. Amongst them was Stasys and his four brothers. Instead of the Germans allowing cooperation, the Lithuanian units disbanded and Plechavičius and his staff were arrested.

Stasys and his brothers were taken to work in Germany. His Australian migration selection papers skip over that, though, recording him as someone who “fled from Russian regime” in August 1944. He had been working as a tailor for 6 years in Lithuania.

Stasys Seduikis' 1947 photograph from his selection papers for migration to Australia

Life in Germany

After the end of the Second World War, he lived in a Lithuanian refugee camp in Germany. It must have been in the British Zone of Occupation, as it was called Camp Churchill. It was in the Lower Saxony town of Lehrte. Given that this town had become an industrial centre after it became a railway junction in the late 19th century, the camp may have been established in apartments built for factory workers who had been displaced at the orders of the occupiers.  That is certainly how it worked in the American Zone of Occupation.

After emigration began in 1947, Stasys initially indicated his desire to move to the USA but found himself on the First Transport to Australia, on the ship General Stuart Heintzelman. His brothers returned to Lithuania.

Stasys works in Australia

Stasys completed his contract to work in Australia at the brown coal open cut mine in Yallourn, Victoria, living in the North Camp there, which means that he gets a place in Josef Šeštokas’ book, Welcome to Litte Europe. Josef says that he was “remembered by his North Camp peers for playing soccer, having simple tastes and modest ambitions”.

Stasys is second from the right in the middle row of this group of Lithuanians
pictured in the North Camp at the end of their day's work
Source:  Welcome to Little Europe, p 123

Josef adds that, “after operating a milk bar in Carlton he worked at General Motors Holden Fisherman’s Bend plant, for 30 years or so, as a toolmaker”.  We know that he worked there until his retirement.

Newspaper reports have him living Yarraville, a western suburb of Melbourne, though Josef writes that he lived in West Footscray. In reality, they are the one neighbourhood, although an 8-lane highway now slices through diagonally

Marriage, Family, Citizenship

He married fellow Lithuanian, Ona Utaraitė, on 17 May 1952, in the church of St John the Evangelist, on Victoria Parade, a church which the Catholic Lithuanians had adopted as their own.

Ona had completed medical school and worked in Australia as a nurse in northern Melbourne’s Greenvale Geriatric Centre.  Stasys’ occupation at the time of his naturalisation application was described as machinist.  Toolmaker or machinist, that would have been with the car manufacturer, General Motors Holden as previously mentioned. 

They had five children, two daughters and three sons.  Life was harmonious and happy for them.  After the children grew older, they had eight grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

Stasys was naturalised, granted Australian citizenship, in the suburb where he and his family lived, Footscray, on 12 February 1970.  At a guess, the person granting him the citizenship would have been the mayor of Footscray.

Stasys' Later Years

On 3 October 1988, Ona passed away from a sudden heart attack, at the age of 60 and after 36 years of marriage.  Stasys then became lonely, but met Elena Petrulienė, a Lithuanian widow who had arrived recently in Australia.  They married on 20 January 1990, with fellow First Transport arrival, Benediktas Kaminskas, as Stasys’ best man.

Stasys developed lung and heart disease and had to stay in hospital for a long time. Elenutė, his wife, cared for him until his weakened heart stopped beating.  He died of heart disease and pneumonia in hospital in the early morning of 16 February 2005.

The mourning mass was offered by Fr. Algis Šimkus at a church to which the Lithuanians had moved, St. Mary Star of the Sea in West Melbourne.  The Melbourne parish choir and soloists Rita Mačiulaitienė and Birute Kymantienė sang at the mass.

Stasys' children, paying their last respects to their father, carried the coffin on their shoulders. He was buried next to his first wife, Ona, in Altona Cemetery. After the funeral, the participants were invited to Melbourne’s Lithuanian House for the wake.

The two sisters survived from his large family in Lithuania.

SOURCES

Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne, St Patrick’s Cathedral, ‘Saint John the Evangelist East Melbourne’ https://www.cam1.org.au/cathedral/en-au/History/Saint-John-the-Evangelist-East-Melbourne, accessed 26 September 2025.

Funeral card, ‘Stasys Seduikis’, Australian Lithuanian Archive.

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; 266, SEDUIKIS Stasys born 10 October 1922 recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=4260285, accessed 27 August 2025.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration, Victorian Branch; B44, Immigration case files, annual single number series with 'V' [Victoria] prefix, 1955-; V1969/48207, Seduikis, Stasys, 1948-1970; recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=25979622, accessed 26 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration, Victorian Branch; B44, Immigration case files, annual single number series with 'V' [Victoria] prefix, 1955-; V1969/48208, Seduikis, Ona, 1948-1970; recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=25979623, accessed 26 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia, Department of Immigration, Victorian Branch; MT848/1, General Personal Files, 1955-1955; Seduikis, V1955/42471: Seduikis, Ona born 1928, 1955-1955; recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=9546663, accessed 26 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia, Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla], 1947-1956; SEDUIKIS STASYS, SEDUIKIS, Stasys : Year of Birth - 1922 : Nationality - LITHUANIAN : Travelled per - GEN. HEINTZELMAN : Number – 662, 1948-1948 recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203696971, accessed 26 September 2025.

Šeštokas, Josef (2010) Welcome to Little Europe, Displaced Persons and the North Camp, Sale, Vic, Little Chicken Publishing, pp 91, 123.

Tėviškės Aidai (Echoes of Homeland) (1988) ‘A.+A. Ona Šeduikienė’ (‘RIP Ona Seduikis’, in Lithuanian) Melbourne, 8 November, p 7 https://www.spauda2.org/teviskes_aidai/archive/1988/1988-11-08-TEVISKES-AIDAI.pdf, accessed 26 September 2025.

Tėviškės Aidai (Echoes of Homeland) (1989) ‘Iš Mūsų Parapijų’ (From our Parish’, in Lithuanian) Melbourne, 7 November, p 7, https://spauda2.org/teviskes_aidai/archive/1989/1989-11-07-TEVISKES-AIDAI.pdf, accessed 25 September 2025

Tėviškės Aidai (Echoes of Homeland) (1990) ‘Iš Mūsų Parapijų’ (From our Parish’, in Lithuanian) Melbourne, 30 January, p 7 https://spauda2.org/teviskes_aidai/archive/1990/1990-01-30-TEVISKES-AIDAI.pdf, accessed 25 September 2025.

Tėviškės Žiburiai (The Lights of Homeland) (2005) ‘Australija, A.A. Stasys Šeduikis’ (Australia, In Memoriam Stasys Seduikis) Mississauga, Ont, 26 April, p 7 https://spauda.org/teviskes_ziburiai/archive/2005/2005-04-26-TEVISKES-ZIBURIAI.pdf, accessed 26 September 2025.

Wikipedia, Lehrte, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lehrte, accessed 25 September 2025.

Wikipedia, Povilas Plechavičius, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Povilas_Plechavi%C4%8Dius, accessed 26 September 2025.

Wikipedia, St Mary Star of the Sea, West Melbourne, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Mary_Star_of_the_Sea,_West_Melbourne, accessed 26 August 2025.

Žmona Elena, Stasio Šeduikio vaikai (Wife, Elena, Stasys Šeduikas’ children) (2005) ‘Padėka’ (‘Thanks’, in Lithuanian) Tėviškės Aidai (Echoes of Homeland) Melbourne, 30 March, p 7 https://spauda2.org/teviskes_aidai/archive/2005/2005-03-30-TEVISKES-AIDAI.pdf, accessed 26 September 2025.

29 April 2021

Henrikas Juodvalkis (1917-2001), a faithful son of Lithuania, by Endrius Jankus

 

This obituary was written by Henrikas Juodvalkis' friend and fellow First Transport passenger, Endrius or Andrew Jankus, and published, in Lithuanian, in the Lithuanian-Australian newspaper, Musu Pastoge, on 19 February 2001.  Andrew kindly provided his English language version to me many years ago.  I am glad to be able to share it here, with some light editing to suit this medium 20 years later.


First Transport passenger Henrikas Juodvalkis was born in Zarasai, a city in northeastern Lithuania, on 5 February 1917.  He died in Hobart on 3 February 2001, just two days before his 84th birthday.


In the 1930s, he did military service in the pioneers platoon of the Ukmergé infantry company. He then was offered a place in the pioneers company in Radviliskis and a chance to further his studies in the Non-Commissioned Officers Academy in Kaunas. Having served his term, he decided to re-enlist in the army as an NCO.


When Lithuania regained Vilnius in 1940, Henrikas was with the first Lithuanian units to march into the ancient capital. He was one of the Guards of Honour who guarded the Lithuanian tricolour flag that first day on Gediminas Hill, and he was among those greeted at the flag lowering ceremony that evening by Generals Rastikis and Plechavicius.


At the start of WWII, Henrikas served for those who were fighting to reestablish an independent Lithuania. However, when the Germans occupied Lithuania in 1941, independence was crushed and Lithuanian army units were forced to serve the German invaders.


Because of his good record, and the shortage of officers, Henrikas was promoted to Warrant Officer and assigned to lead the third platoon of the third company. His battalion did guard duty in and around Vilnius. He himself was assigned to the home guard of the German military headquarters.


Later Henrikas’ battalion was sent to Russia and stationed near Rostov. There it guarded Russian prisoners of war and undertook mine-clearing operations at the front. After a year, when the tide of battle turned against the Germans, they and their Hungarian allies began to retreat from Russia.


While Henrikas was on leave he returned to Lithuania and was unable to rejoin his unit as it was disbanded in the turmoil.


At that time, in February 1944, General Plechavicius began to organise battalions of self-defence volunteers for Lithuania. Henrikas enlisted and he was sent to Marijampole. One morning, his unit was surrounded by German SS units and all were arrested. The Germans made them wear Luftwaffe uniforms and sent them off to Germany to work, mostly at repairing bombed airfields.


At the end of the War, Henrikas was near Hamburg. He made his way to Flensburg and joined a group of Lithuanian displaced persons at the Tim Kroger school. Later, all the Lithuanians were moved to a camp at Mutzelburg.

 

 

Henrikas in Germany, 

during the 1947 selection process for Australia


Henrikas came to Australia on the First Transport in 1947. He was assigned to forestry work in Tasmania, leaving the Bongilla camp in January 1948 for a job with Australian Newsprint Mills in Maydena. 

 

Henrikas'  "Bonegilla card"

(The age doesn't match the date of birth: 

Henrikas was 30 years old when the card was typed)

Source:  National Archives of Australia

 


There, he married a local girl, Dawn. Later, he and his wife shifted to Hobart, where they built a house. Henrikas at first worked in a position of responsibility in a zinc factory. After a few years Henrikas and Dawn set up a shop and were self-employed until pension age. 

 


 Henrikas in a group photograph of Lithuanians in Tasmania,

celebrating 50 years in Australia in 1997

Source:  Hobart Mercury


Henrikas helped to support his relatives in Lithuania and was a faithful son of this nation. He left behind not only a grieving widow, Dawn, but also friends in the Hobart Lithuanian community. The funeral took place on 7 February 2001.


Rest in peace, Henrikas.

 

The original obituary in Musu Pastoge*

 

Meryl Dawn Juodvalkis died on 17 September 2016, aged 88.**



 *Jonas Mockunas advises that "a.a." before Henrikas' name is the Lithuanian equivalent of the English (or Latin) "RIP" ("Rest in Peace" or "requiescat in pace").

**Dawn’s death notice is at https://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/tributes/notice/death-notices/juodvalkis-meryl-dawn-dawn/4470912/, visited 29 April 2021.


CITE THIS AS:  Jankus, Endrius (2021) 'Henrikas Juodvalkis (1917-2001), a faithful son of Lithuania' https://firsttransport.blogspot.com/2021/04/henrikas-juodvalkis-faitfhful-son-of-Lithuania.html.

Henrikas Juodvalkis in army uniform


Source:  Musu Pastoge