Showing posts with label Rähn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rähn. Show all posts

15 September 2025

Juozas Jablonskis (1912-89): Army Captain, University Lecturer, Medical Student, Masseur, Labourer, Welder, by Rasa Ščevinskienė, Jonas Mockūnas and Ann Tündern-Smith

Updated 19 September 2025.

A ship carrying 115 women aged between 14 and 42 plus 728 men of a similar age is bound to breed a few romances. So it was with the First Transport sailing between Bremerhaven in Germany and Fremantle in Australia in November 1947.

Ann has counted 25 marriages between the passengers after arrival in Australia. Some might have been engaged to each other before both parties managed to get selected.

At least one couple got married in Germany just before the ship sailed, then caused headaches for Australian officials when they insisted on being sent to their first work placement together.

Another couple had married in Germany in June 1945, but the Australian selection team had not realised that a -ienė Lithuanian surname ending might be the married version of a male surname ending in -as. If the team’s local support staff knew this, they did not tell the Australians.

This couple’s second marriage in the Bonegilla camp, on 20 December 1947, made their situation just the same as that of another young couple who were the first to marry in the camp, on 16 December. Maybe sending both of the second couple to a tannery for their first employment was some sort of punishment for misleading the selection team, which was looking for Displaced Persons who did not have partners.

Juozas and Helvi's Shipboard Romance

One of the shipboard romances was that between Juozas Jablonskis and Helvi Kald, as recorded first by the Perth Daily News on 28 November 1947, the same day on which the USAT General Stuart Heintzelman passengers disembarked in Western Australia. The Daily News report was repeated by 4 more newspapers around Australia the next day.

Juozas 1947-48 identity photo

Juozas was much older than Helvi, at 35 to her 20. He also was Lithuanian, while she was Estonian. The newspapers reported that they had met when both were appointed to be in charge of policing the ship during the nights, mainly to keep the men separate from the women. Juozas was in charge of the male guards while Helvi was in charge of the women. They had arranged their shifts on duty to coincide and Juozas had proposed marriage at 8.55 pm on 20 November, “under a sickle moon”.

For those of us who have not thought about the significance of a waxing sickle moon, it is said to represent new beginnings, hope, and the journey from darkness into light. It was of religious significance to the ancient Mesopotamians and still plays a role in Islam.

Helvi knew already that she was going to be sent to Canberra to work whereas Juozas, along with all the other men, did not know what his future held apart from a contract to work in Australia for one year. It was Helvi was told a journalist about their plans to marry in Melbourne soon after arrival there.

The Australian Government had different plans for them. There was no stopover in Melbourne. All were sent directly to the Bonegilla camp in rural northern Victoria by train. On 22 December, Helvi was sent to work at the Canberra Community Hospital.

There had been 11 days in which to organise a marriage as well as two other marriages in Bonegilla setting an example. Did one of Helvi or Juozas have second thoughts, cold feet? 

Edna Davis, the only Australian on board the Heintzelman, had offered to help Helvi with a suitable dress for the wedding.  Although Edna and Elmar Rähn were married in Perth during the short stopover, Edna stayed in Melbourne with her mother while Elmar continued to Bonegilla with the other Displaced Persons.  Did the loss of Edna's support upend Helvi's enthusiasm?

While Ann discussed the news articles with Helvi in later life, she never got a direct answer.

Instead, Helvi remembered catching a glimpse of Juozas in Canberra afterwards, perhaps on an escalator in a department store. She thought that maybe he was looking for her but, as we will find out below, a married Juozas actually had moved to Canberra to live and work.

Or did he wonder if Helvi was there still?

Juozas' life in Lithuania

Juozas had been born on 16 April 1912 in Meškalaukis village, Joniškėlis municipality, Biržai district, one of a family of 6 children. After completing his secondary education at the Joniškėlis school, he entered Linkuva gymnasium, later Biržai gymnasium, from which he graduated in 1933. On 15 September 1935, he graduated from Lithuania’s Military School in Kaunas, to be awarded the rank of Second Lieutenant and assigned to the 6th Infantry Regiment.

Young Juozas
Source:

While still with that Regiment in August 1937, he won prizes for the best shooter and other personal prizes in a shooting competition between regiments. One month later, he was appointed to a lectureship in the Military School as well as to the position of platoon commander. One month after that saw his promotion to Lieutenant.

Three months later, just before Christmas 1937, Juozas married Irena Danutė Šernaitė, a teacher 4 years younger than him. During the following year, in August 1938, he was appointed to a position in the Faculty of Law at Vytautas the Great University in Kaunas.

World War II

Initially during the occupation of Lithuania by the Soviet Union from August 1940 to June 1941, he served as the commander of the 1st platoon of the 3rd company of the Military School. When the Lithuanian Army was liquidated on 3 October 1940, he was appointed commander of a platoon of the Red Army in the Military School in Vilnius.

Germany attacked the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941 in Operation Barbarossa, only 8 days after the Communists had deported whoever they could load onto trains to Siberia. Lithuania was part of the invasion that day. Juozas resigned from the Soviet Army. Five weeks later, on 31 July, he was appointed commander of the 4th company of the Vilnius Reconstruction Service, and on the following day, he was appointed commander of the 4th company of the Lithuanian Self-Defence Unit’s 3rd battalion.

Irena and Juozas had a daughter, Nijolė, in December 1942.

In 1944, the battalion was incorporated into the German Army and found itself in Liepaja, and later in Danzig. At this point Juozas resigned from the German Army also. His final military rank was Captain.

After the War

After World War II ended, he enrolled to study at the University of Hamburg. Ramunas Tarvydas, in From Amber Coast to Apple Isle, reported that he was studying medicine, so was known by his fellow Displaced Persons working out their contract with the Australian Government as “doctor”. The October 1947 possibility of migrating to Australia put an end to those studies.

On board the First Transport, the USAT General Stuart Heintzelman, the Lithuanian group celebrated their nation’s Army Day on 23 November. The speaker on that occasion was Captain Juozas Jablonskis.

Juozas told Australian officials that he now was single and his previous occupation was that of masseur. That would have described his situation in Germany well. On that basis, he was accepted into Australia as a labourer. His first workplace was Electrolytic Zinc, supposedly in Burnie, Tasmania, where he was sent on 13 January 1948.

Work in Australia

In reality, he was one of the 12 men sent to clear tracks into the forest around Rosebery, where the EZ Company was mining its zinc and looking for more. His working and living conditions there have been described by Jonas Mockunas in a blog entry posted in May.

Juozas’ application for Australian citizenship in May 1955 claims that he left for Melbourne on the first day that he could, the day that the Minister for Immigration had declared would be the end of the contract for the Displaced Persons from the First Transport, 30 September 1949.

Another file of papers shows that Juozas, in fact, had absconded from Rosebery with 3 others even earlier, probably in January 1949 or the very start of February. The others were Izidorius Smilgevičius, whose story we have looked at already, Juozas Paskevicius and Jonas Rauba. They had been thoughtful enough to let the Commonwealth Employment Service (CES) official in Queenstown know by letter that they were leaving.

The CES thought they were headed for Melbourne, so soon found them there, at the one address. Juozas was their spokesman, telling the CES that they “definitely refused” to return to Tasmania. All 4 were employed by Hume Steel, which wanted to keep them.

After more than 12 months of mismatching talented people with jobs requiring hard labour, those in charge of the CES had decided that if they had found their own employment in areas that were “in the national interest”, they should be left there. This was far easier than trying to force them back to jobs that they hated. Hume Steel still manufactures products required by the building industry and otherwise supports it, so it clearly fitted into the national interest category.

By 10 October that year, Juozas was reporting another job to the Department of Immigration, in order to keep his Alien Registration up to date. It was as a welder with General Motors Holden, presumably in its Fisherman's Bend factory on Melbourne's Yarra River. We can assume that he had acquired this skill while working for Hume Steel.

So it is strange that his Alien Registration file starts with a memo from the Immigration Office in Hobart, dated 4 October, stating that Juozas had reported back to that office as he had a job with Electrolytic Zinc's Risdon plant, just outside Hobart.  The memo asked for Juozas' Alien Registration papers to be returned, as they had been sent to Immigration's Melbourne office in June.  The file contains no evidence that the papers did go back to Hobart.

Why this blip? Juozas may well have received a better offer from GMH after returning briefly to Tasmania. From Ramunas Tarvydas' account of working for EZ Risdon, living conditions certainly were worse than the address where Juozas had been living in Melbourne.

In that citizenship application, Juozas reported that he was married to Irene Šernaitė in Lithuania in December 1937. He advised that he had divorced her in a Hamburg court in 1947. It looks like he was someone who did not think that he would be returning to Lithuania in the short term. He also could have been clearing the way for his wife to marry someone else. An official has confirmed in a note on the side of the form that he travelled to Australia as a single man.

He certainly was a versatile employee: from military officer and medical student, with a sideline in massage, to welder. At the May 1955 time of the citizenship application, he was working for Johns & Waygood, an engineering firm well known to Australians, if only for its signs in lifts it has installed. It also undertook a wide range of other construction work.

During 1950, he was advertising in Mūsų Pastogė that he was an agent for the Mutual Life & Citizens Assurance Company, commonly known even then as MLC. He could arrange a loan to buy or build a house, or insure property, or insure against accidents and illness. This venture probably did not make him much money, given that he did not buy his own house for the first time until 1965, well after Napoleonas Butkūnas’ 1951 purchase.

Juozas Jablonskis in the early 1950s, from his second Alien Registration passbook

Before Johns & Waygood and after MLC, he had completed another form to advise the Department of Immigration that he was moving from the Melbourne suburb of Mont Albert to the Kaunas Poultry Farm on Scotsburn Avenue, East Oakleigh. Given the name the owner had chosen for this business, it must have been started by a Lithuanian – but by whom? (A ChatGPT search of the Web has failed to find any business of this name operating during 1940 to 1970, but it might have left records which have not been digitised yet.)

His Australian citizenship was granted on 20 October 1955. In 1960, there was another life change when he married Birutė Vasariene. This probably was a registry wedding, given Juozas’ previous marriage and divorce. Lithuanians can tell from her family name that Birutė Vasariene had a previous marriage as well.

Juozas and Birute on their wedding day

Life in the Capital

By 1963, Juozas, Birutė and her two sons were living in Canberra and getting very involved in its Lithuanian community life. Juozas was a committee member of the Canberra Lithuanian Community by then. Both he and Birutė were founding members of the Canberra Lithuanian Australian Club. Juozas and one of his stepsons participated in the construction of the Club during that year, with Juozas donating 27 hours of his time and the stepson 3 hours

Mūsų Pastogė records that both Juozas and Birutė were members of the Canberra Lithuanian choir, Aušra (Dawn) by 1968, and probably earlier. They returned to Melbourne for the 1970 Lithuanian Days with the choir.

There is mention of Juozas working for various government departments while in Canberra, but no details.

Juozas Jablonskis in 1967 in front of a house he owned -- from the cream brick inserts,
it was built in the late 19th century and therefore is not in Canberra

Life in Sydney

Juozas’ stepsons, Vytenis and Gintaras, moved to Sydney, with the elder one marrying Dalia Kišonaite there in 1973. Juozas and Birutė moved to Sydney also in 1982, presumably to be closer to family members.

Lithuanian Army Day, now Armed Forces Day, is celebrated annually to commemorate the founding of the army on that day in 23 November 1918 following independence. In 1984, the Tėviškės Aidai newspaper reported that, in Sydney, the guest speaker was to be the former Lithuanian Military School lecturer, Captain Juozas Jablonskis.

Birutė and Juozas in Sydney's Lithuanian Club, 1985

Juozas' death

Juozas’ death on 15 July 1989, at the age of 77, was not expected by his Sydney friends. His obituarist wrote that he had not wanted to believe the news when he received the telephone call. He had seen Juozas only a week or two before at church.

Juozas was always friendly, helpful, polite and it was pleasant to exchange words with him, in the opinion of everyone who knew him.

He was farewelled in a service at Sydney’s Lithuanian Catholic Church, St Joachim’s, in the suburb of Lidcombe. Members of the congregation provided a guard of honour for his coffin, covered in the Lithuanian flag. In the Lithuanian section of the Rookwood Cemetery, more farewells were delivered by the Chairman of the Lithuanian Sydney District Committee, the chairman of the Ramovė branch and Juozas’ stepson, Gintaras.

His final farewell was the Lithuanian national anthem.

Juozas' First Wife

What happened to his first family? Germany after WWII was a place of chaos, one reason why the Allies were so keen to involve other governments, like that of Australia, in the resettlement of the displaced people that it housed.

Newspapers were full of advertisements for people seeking other people. The Red Cross was also attempting to help family reunions.

We don’t know if Juozas’ wife was a party to the divorce he obtained in Hamburg or whether it was possible in the circumstances to obtain one without the other party’s knowledge. However, Juozas’ wife may have been in Germany at the same time because a Geni entry shows her dying in Rockford, Winnebago County, Illinois in the United States, in 1998.

Given that the Geni entry shows her as mother of Daniel Herman as well as Juozas’ daughter, Nijolė, finding her grave and a short obituary was easy. The short obituary says that she actually was selected for resettlement in America from Belgium.

Irena's obituary in the Rockford IL Register Star, from the Find A Grave Website

The ashes of Irena Danutė Šernas Herman, previously Jablonskienė, are buried with those of her mother, Kleopa or, in America, Cleopatra, in the Greenwood Cemetery, Rockford, Illinois.

Juozas and Irena's daughter

Nijolė received a lengthy obituary on the Web upon her passing in 2022. It tells us that when her mother and grandmother fled Lithuania, expecting to return soon, they left 2-year-old Nijolė with her great-uncle, brother of the eminent politician Jokūbas Šernas, a priest called Adomas and his wife, Zuzana. When it was obvious that the Communists were staying in Lithuania, Adomas managed to get new documents for Nijole Jablonskytė, who became Kristina Šernaitė. Her relatives continued to call her Nijole.

After finishing high school, she worked for a year on a collective farm, looking after the calves. Then she was permitted to study music, first at the Panevėžys Music Technical School (renamed the Higher Music School, V. Mikalauskas Arts Gymnasium). In 1977, after graduating from the Klaipėda Faculty of the Vilnius Conservatory (now the Lithuanian Academy of Music), she became a music teacher. She got a job in the Music Department of Lithuania’s National Library and eventually became Chief Librarian its Music and Visual Arts Department.

In 1993, she was able to stay with her mother in Rockford, Ill, for several months, meeting her half-brother, Daniel, for the first time and visiting other relatives who had settled nearby.

In May 2004, she was happy and proud to be part of a reunion of descendants of Jokūbas Šernas, organised by her nephew and his grandson, Paris resident Matiejus Šernas. Jokūbas was one of the 20 signatories to Lithuania’s 1918 Act of Independence. Relevant to the life story of another First Transport passenger, Endrius Jankus, Jokūbas put much effort into the unification of Lithuania Minor with Lithuania.

Kristina Nijolė Šernaitė Jablonskytė
Source:  
Lietuvos evangelikų reformatų bažnyčia (Lithuanian Evangelical Reformed Church)

You might wonder if she had wanted to meet her father too for the first time as an adult. When he died in 1989, the Baltic States were on the cusp of their second independence, this time from the then Soviet Union, but its dramatic events were yet to happen. Freedom of travel outside Lithuania did not come until 1991.

The Šernas family were member of Lithuania’s minority Evangelical Reformed Church. Her guardian, her great uncle Adomas, had become superintendent of this church in 1942. He confirmed her as a nun in 1956.

When the Vilnius Reformed Parish was re-established after second independence in 1991, Nijolė or Kristina became an important member. She was active in its choir, Giesmė (Song), touring Europe with it.

She helped to organise celebrations of famous members of the Church. In particular, she unveiled a plaque on the occasion of the 110th anniversary of the birth of her grandfather, Jokūbas, in 1998. Since he had died in 1926, she knew him only from family stories, which she related to those assembled.

She was able to ensure that Reformed Church publications were lodged with the National Library. When not engaged in library work, she was supporting the Reformed Church in every way she could.

The urn containing her ashes was buried next to her family members in the Nemunėlis Radviliškis Reformed Cemetery during Easter 2022. The Nemunėlis Radviliškis area is north of Vilnius, on Lithuania’s border with Latvia.

Although aged only 14 at the time of her confirmation, Kristina Nijolė Šernaitė Jablonskytė appears to have kept whatever vows she took in 1956.

Helvi Kald

As for Helvi Kald, Ann was in frequent contact with her during the last decade of her life, and they did discuss Juozas. It’s possible that we now know more about him and his family than Helvi ever knew.

SOURCES

Alekna, Ignas (1970) ‘Lietvių Dienos Melbourne’ (‘Lithuanian Days Melbourne’, in Lithuanian) Musu Pastoge (Our Haven), Sydney, 14 September, p 1 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1970/1970-09-14-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf, accessed 13 September 2025.

Alyta, A (1968) ‘Canberros Liet. choras “Aušra”’ (‘Canberra Lithuanian Choir “Dawn”, in Lithuanian) Musu Pastoge (Our Haven), Sydney, 21 October, p 3 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1968/1968-10-21-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf, accessed 13 September 2025.

Billion Graves, ‘Juozas Jablonskis’, https://billiongraves.com/grave/Juozas-Jablonskis/36458236, accessed 13 September 2025.

Births, Deaths and Marriages Victoria, ‘Juozas Jablonskis’ https://my.rio.bdm.vic.gov.au/efamily-history/67c4932959c170259455a526/record/5c6563e14aba80ac314470da?q=efamily&givenName=Juozas&familyName=JABLONSKIS, accessed 13 September 2025.

Commonwealth of Australia Gazette (1956) ‘Certificates of Naturalization’, Canberra, 5 January, p 24 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/232876166/25098351, accessed 13 September 2025.

Daily News (1947) 'Moonlight Romance on Migrant Ship' Perth, 28 November, p 10 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/79814982 accessed 15 September 2025.

Elektroninio archyvo informacinė Sistema (Electronic Archive Information System, in Lithuanian with some English) ‘Joniškėlio RKB 1912–1920 m. gimimo metrikų knyga ir 1891--1919 m. gimimo metrikų abėcėlinė rodyklė’ (‘Joniškėlis Roman Catholic Church birth register book for 1912–1920 and alphabetical index of birth registers for 1891–1919’, in Lithuanian) p 8, no 47 (Jablonskis, Juozas, parents Antanas Jablonskis and Ona Jablonskienė, maiden name Čingaitė, born 16 April 1912) https://eais.archyvai.lt/repo-ext-viewer/?manifest=https://eais.archyvai.lt/repo-ext-api/view/361346/306271014/lt/iiif/manifest&lang=lt&page=8, accessed 12 September 2025.

Find A Grave, ‘Irena D Herman’, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/242714828/irena-d-herman, accessed 13 September 2025.

Geni.com, ‘Irena Danutė Jablonskienė’ https://www.geni.com/people/Irena-Jablonskien%C4%97/6000000027568795108?through=6000000035149339511, accessed 13 September 2025.

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

Lietuvos evangelikų reformatų bažnyčia (Lithuanian Evangelical Reformed Church) (2022) ‘Atsisveikinus su istikima reformate Kristina Sernaite’ (Farewell to the Faithful Reformer Kristina Sernaite’, in Lithuanian) https://ref.lt/vilniaus-parapija/1283-atsisveikinus-su-istikima-reformate-kristina-sernaite, accessed 13 September 2025.

Lietuvos nacionalinio muziejaus biblioteka (Library of the Lithuanian National Museum) (2004) Lietuvos Kariuomenės Karininkai 1918-1953 (4 Tomas) [Lithuanian Army Officers 1918-1953 (Volume 4)] in Lithuanian, p13 https://www.scribd.com/document/568361928/Lietuvos-kariuomen%C4%97s-karininkai-1918-1953-4-tomas, accessed 11 September 2025.

Lietuvos ypatingasis archyvas (Lithuanian Special Archives, in Lithuanian), ‘Vaizdai, Australijos lietuvių Juozo ir Birutės Jablonskių vestuvinė nuotrauka’ (‘Images, Wedding Photo of Australian Lithuanians Juozas and Birutė Jablonskis’) (1960) https://lyavaizdai.archyvai.lt/vaizdai/3/p20/doc10423?sqid=98f363a253a06e583a1f204c2c38d0ff8622911b, accessed 11 September 2025.

Lietuvos ypatingasis archyvas (Lithuanian Special Archives, in Lithuanian), ‘Australijos lietuvis Juozas Jablonskis prie savo namų’ (‘Australian Lithuanian Juozas Jablonskis in front of his home’) (1967) https://lyavaizdai.archyvai.lt/vaizdai/3/p20/doc10424?sqid=98f363a253a06e583a1f204c2c38d0ff8622911b, accessed 11 September 2025.

Lietuvos ypatingasis archyvas (Lithuanian Special Archives, in Lithuanian), ‘Australijos lietuvis Juozas Jablonskis su anūkais Nikolu ir Bianka’ (‘Australian Lithuanian Juozas Jablonskis with grandchildren Nicholas and Bianca’) (1981) https://lyavaizdai.archyvai.lt/vaizdai/3/p10/doc10426?sqid=98f363a253a06e583a1f204c2c38d0ff8622911b, accessed 11 September 2025.

Lietuvos ypatingasis archyvas (Lithuanian Special Archives, in Lithuanian), ‘Australijos lietuviai Juozas ir Birutė Jablonskiai Sidnėjaus lietuvių klube’ (‘Australian Lithuanians Lietuvos ypatingasis archyvas (Lithuanian Special Archives, in Lithuanian), ‘Australijos lietuviai Juozas ir Birutė Jablonskiai Sidnėjaus lietuvių klube’ (Juozas and Birutė Jablonskis at the Sydney Lithuanian Club’) (1985) https://lyavaizdai.archyvai.lt/vaizdai/3/doc10425?sqid=98f363a253a06e583a1f204c2c38d0ff8622911b, accessed 11 September 2025.

Mieldažys, Kazys (1961) ‘Pirmieji Žingsniai Australijoje’ (‘First Steps in Australia, translated by Jonas Mockūnas) https://www.australianlithuanians.org/history/ww2-kazys-mieldazys/, accessed 11 September 2025.

Musu Pastoge (Our Haven) (1950a) ‘Lietuvi, jeigu vori pirkti nama ir neturi pakankamai pinigų …’ (‘Lithuanian, if you want to buy a house and don't have enough money …’, in Lithuanian) Sydney, 26 April, p 4 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1950/1950-04-26-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf, accessed 13 September 2025.

Musu Pastoge (Our Haven) (1950b) ‘Lietuvi, jei nori apsidrausti …’ (‘Lithuanian, if you want to insure yourself … ’, in Lithuanian) Sydney, 21 September, p 4, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article259362269, accessed 12 September 2025.

MyHeritage.com, ‘Juozapas Jablonskis’ https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-40000-280448660/juozapas-jablonskis-in-geni-world-family-tree, accessed 13 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Central Office; A446, Correspondence files, annual single number series with block allocations (1926-2001); 1955/23339, Application for Naturalisation - JABLONSKIS Juozas born 16 April 1912 (1947-55) recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=8868844, accessed 14 September 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Central Office; A12508, Personal Statement and Declaration by alien passengers entering Australia (Forms A42) (1937-1948); 37/188, JABLONSKIS Juozas born 16 April 1912; nationality Lithuanian; travelled per GENERAL HEINTZELMAN arriving in Fremantle on 29 November 1947 (1947-1947) recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=7249257, accessed 14 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: Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla] 1947-1956; JABLONSKIS JUOZAS, JABLONSKIS, Juozas : Year of Birth - 1912 : Nationality - LITHUANIAN : Travelled per - GEN. HEINTZELMAN : Number – 764 (1947-1948) recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203639455, accessed 14 September 2025.

Register Star (1998) ‘Irena D. Herman, 80’, Rockford IL , June 18 p 15 https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/242714828/irena-d-herman, accessed 13 September 2025.

Surgailis, Gintautas (2019) ‘Šeštasis pėstininkų Pilėnų kunigaikščio margio pulkas’ (‘The Sixth Infantry Regiment of the Duke of Pilėnai’, in Lithuanian), Vilnius, Library of the General Jonas Žemaičias Military Academy of Lithuanian https://biblioteka.lka.lt/data/PDF-leidiniai/2016-2020/2019-Surgailis-VI_pestininku_Pilenu_kunigaikscio_margio_pulkas.pdf, accessed 13 September 2025.

Sydney “Ramovės” Valdyba (Sydney Ramovė Board) (1984) ‘Sydnejus, Ramovėnam ir visuomei’ (‘Sydney, Ramove and the Community’, in Lithuanian) Tėviškės Aidai (Echoes of the Homeland), Melbourne, p 8, https://spauda2.org/teviskes_aidai/archive/1984/1984-11-09-TEVISKES-AIDAI.pdf, accessed 13 September 2025.

Tarvydas, Ramunas (1997) From Amber Coast to Apple Isle, Fifty years of Baltic Immigrants in Tasmania, Hobart, Baltic Semicentennial Commemoration Activities Organising Committee, pp 39-45.

Wikipedia, ‘Jokūbas Šernas’ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jok%C5%ABbas_%C5%A0ernas, accessed 12 September 2025.

Žalys, B (1989) ‘A†A Juozas Jablonskis’ (RIP Juozas Jablonskis) Musu Pastoge (Our Haven) Sydney, 31 July, p 7 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1989/1989-07-31-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf, accessed 13 September 2025.

10 December 2022

The only Australian aboard our Heintzelman voyage, Edna Davis (1906-1985), by Ann Tündern-Smith

Updated 20 November 2023

There was one Australian aboard the November 1947 voyage of the Heintzelman from Bremerhaven, Germany, to Fremantle, Australia.  She was Edna Davis, described by the West Australian Newspaper on 29 November 1947 as 'formerly principal of a school for young children in Melbourne'.  Miss Davis had been in Europe since August 1945, working with the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, known as UNRRA, and the International Refugee Organization, IRO, in the US Zone of occupied Germany.  

Her return to Australia on board the Heintzelman had been arranged by the IRO, responsible for organising its voyage to Australia.

'These people are a very good type,' she told the West Australian reporter.  'I have been working with various people in Europe for the past two years, and I am of the opinion that the Baltic people are more like the English than those of any other country that I have met.'

Another Perth newspaper, the Daily News, reported on 28 November that Edna Davis had run onboard classes in English, since the Baltic refugees mostly spoke German among each other.  The classes were held three times a day, for elementary, intermediate and advanced students.

She told the Daily News that most of the men were rural workers, a fact that Australians would have welcomed even more then than now.  She added that others were 'engineers, chemists, architects, watchmakers and musicians'.  She advised that, 'They were specially selected by the Australian Commission in Germany. All had been separately interviewed and had undergone a strict medical examination. The Balts were pleased with the friendly and sympathetic treatment received from the Commission'.  The Commission was Australia's immediate post-War representation in Germany, run by the Australian military.

Source: Perth Daily News, 28 November 1947

We are fortunate in having had the Daily News publish a photograph of Edna Davis, above on the right, with her name spelled 'Davies' this time.  She is together with one of the Lithuanian passengers who actually preferred to be known as Birute and whose last name usually was spelled Tamulyte.  Birute was sent to Canberra to work, stayed, married and raised two sons.  She died in Canberra in 2016, aged 83.

When I first posted about Edna Davis, in April this year, I wrote that, 'I have been told that the Australian woman on the voyage married one of the men on the same trip.  Who that was I have yet to find out.  That information might help in the discovery about more of Edna Davis' early and later life.  Do you know more?

The community of people who, like me, are descended from passengers on this Heintzelman voyage or very interested in it came to my immediate aid.  Peter Pildre knew that Edna Davis had married Elmar Rähn, who was part of the 1924 Estonian athletics team at the Paris Olympics.  In Australia, Elmar became a teacher at Trinity Grammar, Kew, in Melbourne — specialising in athletics, of course.  He had organised a Trinity scholarship for Peter on the basis of his athletic ability.  I hope to make Elmar Rähn's life the subject of a separate entry.

Jonas Mockunas turned up an issue of the Journal of the Holocaust Survivors '45 Aid Society which included a mention of Miss Davis' role in Germany.  Writing about his life there from April 1945, Salek Benedikt described how his group were looked after in an UNRRA children's home in the village of Winzer, near Deggendorf, in Bavaria.  UNRRA Team 182, consisting of 15 volunteers from 11 countries, ran the home.  Among them was Edna Davis from Victoria, Australia, who he recorded as a nurse.
All 15 members of the Team are in this photo, so Edna Davis is in there somewhere,
perhaps third from the right. (Click on photo to enlarge.)
Source:  Holocaust Survivors '45 Aid Society

Edna Davis was one of three Australian women recruited by UNRRA to perform welfare work in the immediate aftermath of the War.  They were packed, ready to leave, when they were told that the Australian Government had refused them passports.  

The official explanation was that the Government had a policy of preventing persons who could assist in relieving the Australian 'man-power' shortage from leaving Australia if the work they were to perform could be done by persons available on the spot.  The Government stated that it had been told that if the Australian women could not leave by 6 August 1945, others from the US would fill their places.  The Government could not allow them to go 'while there remained an acute shortage of woman-power for the care of patients in repatriation, military and other hospitals and the dire need for women for textile and other industries'.

When I first read this, I thought, hang on, two of the women were teachers.  What did they have to do with the care of patients in hospitals or woman-power in the textile industry?

The two teachers were Edna Davis and Valerie Paling, both from Lauriston, a private girls' school in Melbourne.  Ms Paling was described as bitter about the Government's decision.  'As there was no ban on male UNRRA appointees going abroad it seemed to her like sex prejudice', said some reports.  She clearly was a woman ahead of her time.

Not only were the women packed, but they had resigned from their work, gone to a great deal of trouble arranging for necessary documents, and each had received 13 injections.

The Government backed down and the Prime Minister himself, Ben Chifley, announced on 3 August that the women would receive their passports.

In case this initial refusal to issue passports seems way too restrictive by modern standards, we must remember that World War II still raged in Asia.  The 6 August deadline above happens to be the day on which an atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.  While the Germans had signed their unconditional surrender on 7 May, Japan did not announce its surrender until 15 August.  World War II in the Pacific did not end until 2 September, the day that the Japanese Foreign Minister signed its instrument of surrender.

For a comparison, think of how the Australian Government restricted overseas travel in the early days of the COVID-19 regime here.

Jonas Mockunas also turned up an online issue of a periodical called Lauriston Life, which had an article confirming that Edna Davis had resigned from the position of principal of Lauriston's Junior School.  She is known to have not only worked at the UNRRA children's home in the village of Winzer, but to have been in charge of the Wartenberg Children’s Centre, also in Bavaria.  Unaccompanied children received care here while efforts were made to find family members for them.  She also made several journeys across Europe returning groups of children to their homes.

Apart from her marriage to Elmar Rähn, we know little about what happened to Edna after her return to Australia.  The Australian version of Ancestry gives access to death indexes
advising that she died in 1985 in East Melbourne.  A search on the Victorian Government's Births, Deaths and Marriages Website gave a date of 22 November 1985.  

The death certificate then purchased shows that the cause of death was 'alveolar cell carcinoma of lung', which she was thought to have had for about 6 months.  Might this be air pollution in the immediate aftermath of World War II in Germany catching up with her?

The death certificate also confirmed her 1947 marriage — in Western Australia.  Edna and Elmar had met in Germany but had another four weeks to get to know each other on board the Heintzelman.  Now that I have a copy of their marriage certificate, I can report that no time was wasted once their ship docked.  They were married 3 days later, on 1 December 1947.  Both were living in the Graylands Camp.  There were two witnesses to the Church of England ceremony, O Pilais and E Pabeel, both unusual family names by English or Estonian standards:  perhaps they had been among the hundreds of Perth and Fremantle locals who came forward to entertain the new arrivals. There were no children of the marriage.  

Edna was 79 years old when she died, born in Newtown, Tasmania, to David Manton Davis, an inspector of schools, and the former Alice Mary Whitham.   A separate search through the Libraries Tasmania Website provides a birthdate of 16 April 1906.  Some family trees on Ancestry show that she was the middle child in a family of 5 children, the older of the two daughters. 

Electoral rolls and rate books give us some more information about Edna's life after her marriage in Perth in December 1947.  As Edna Mary Rahn, home duties, she was paying the rates on a property on Curraweena Road in the City of Caulfield, Melbourne, in December 1949 and December 1950.  It was a 5-room, weatherboard house said to have a 'population' of 3 people.

We know from a probate notice published in the Melbourne Argus of 27 January 1950 that the third person was Edna's mother, Alice Davis, a widow formerly of Kempton in Tasmania.  Perhaps Edna had been engaged in 'home duties' because she was providing care for her mother.

The Melbourne Weekly Times newspaper of 10 October 1951 has Mrs Rahn employed as the social worker for the War Widows Guild of Australia (Victoria).  She certainly was doing social work with young refugees in Germany.

In 1954, an electoral roll shows her having moved to South Road, Brighton, but again gives her occupation as 'home duties'. 

The first Olympic Games in the Southern Hemisphere were held in Melbourne between 22 November and 8 December 1956.  To make these the "friendly Games" and perhaps because hotel accommodation would be taxed by the influx of visitors, Melbourne residents were asked to offer homestays.  The Melbourne Argus newspaper of 29 September 1956 had a 3-page spread illustrating the offers.  Melbourne Opens Her Homes and Hearts included 'Former Olympic athlete Mr. E. Rahn and Mrs. Rahn, of South road, Brighton' who would 'have as their guest a visiting Dane'.

Elmar appears to be inspecting the roses in the front garden of the Brighton house.
This double-fronted brick veneer with roses lining the walk to the front door would have been
a far cry from the housing Elmar knew in his home country.


The living room of the Rähn household,
captioned by the Argus, 'A fire for a cosy room'
Source: The Argus, 29 September 1956

By 1963, Edna had moved to High Street, Armadale (now Prahran), declaring her occupation to be 'teacher'. Elmar Emil Rahn, also a teacher, was at this address too.

On the 1967, 1968, 1972 and 1977 electoral rolls, she remained a teacher but her address had changed to Illawarra Road, North Balwyn.  Elmar is absent from these rolls, having died as early as January 1966. On the 1980 roll, when she was aged in her 70s, her no occupation was stated and her address had changed to Dixon Street, Malvern.

There are no rates records digitised for these addresses, so perhaps the property on Curraweena Road was sold and Edna returned to renting her accommodation with Elmar.

Australia at this time had laws requiring retirement age of 65 for all, although women could retire and claim an aged pension at the age of 60.  Edna reached that age in 1966, but clearly continued teaching.  In 1977, she was aged 70 or 71, but continued to give her occupation as 'teacher'.  Either this was an oversight or she was still able to work at this age in a private capacity.  It certainly does suggest a love of teaching, just as her life exemplifies service to others.

CITE THIS AS:  Tündern-Smith, Ann (2022) 'The only Australian aboard our Heintzelman voyage, Edna Davis (1906-1985)' https://firsttransport.blogspot.com/2022/12/edna-davis-only-australian.html .

Sources

'843 'Splendid' Balt Migrants Arrive', The Daily News (Perth, WA)28 November 1947p 8, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article79814996, viewed 5 November 2022.


Bars, Jenny, 2014, 'Miss Paling and Miss Davis: Humanitarian workers in post-WWII Europe', Lauriston Life, edition 3, October 2014, https://www.lauriston.vic.edu.au/.../downloads/page0032.pdf, downloaded 10 April 2022.

Benedikt, Salek, 2002, ' "Wir Fahren Nach England"', Journal,  Holocaust Survivors '45 Aid Society, Issue 26, Autumn, p 4-6.

Blandford, Nick, 4 May 2018, 'Material on Elmer Rahn', email.

'I Hear on my Rounds ... Australians with UNRRA', The Argus (Melbourne, Vic), 4 December 1945, p 7, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article12156653viewed 5 November 2022.


'Melbourne Teacher Aids European Children', The Herald (Melbourne, Vic)3 August 1946, p 5, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article245542437viewed 5 November 2022.

Mockunas, Jonas, April 2022, post to General Stuart Heintzelman/First Transport Facebook group.

Pildre, Peter, 
April 2022, post to General Stuart Heintzelman/First Transport Facebook group.

'Pretty Girl Migrants', The Daily News (Perth, WA)28 November 1947, p. 1, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article79814870viewed 5 November 2022.

Public Record Office, Victoria, Rate Books 1855-1963, digitised by Ancestry.com.au.

'To Their New Land', The West Australian, (Perth, WA)29 November 1947, p 6, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article46819538viewed 5 November 2022.

'Unaccompanied Children, Work of Melbourne Women with U.N.R.R.A.' The Age  (Melbourne, Vic)7 September 1946, p 7http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article206366640, viewed 5 November 2022.

'War widows want higher allowance', The Weekly Times,  Melbourne, 10 October 1951, viewed 14 December 2022.

'Workers for UNRRA: Passports Refused to Nine Persons', 
 
The Riverine Herald, (Echuca, Vic; Moama, NSW)1 August 1945, p 6, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article116615757viewed 5 November 2022.