Showing posts with label Staugaitis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Staugaitis. Show all posts

25 May 2024

Naming the 64-65 Balts to Bedford Park, by Ann Tündern-Smith

The names below come from a Department of Labour and National Service list of those its Commonwealth Employment Service (CES) was sending to labour for the South Australian Department of Engineering and Water Supply (E&WS) in January 1948. According to the CES, the date they were sent to the E&WS Bedford Park camp in South Australia was 7 January. According to all their Bonegilla cards, it was 8 January.


This is not the only discrepancy in the First Transport (General Stuart Heintzelman) records. For example, the newspapers reported that 18 had been chosen from the later group sent to Wolseley (then on to Bangham) in South Australia for further training in Peterborough. All the other records show 17 only. Perhaps that mistake was made by a South Australian Railways spokesman (it was sure to be a man in those days) talking to the media.


Even the number of passengers on the first refugee voyage to Australia on the General Stuart Heintzelman vary from one report to another. After 25 years, I think I have figured it out. The initial number reported to the press was 844 but it is known that one person pulled out. That’s why the number than becomes 843. Suddenly it changes to 839, but that was after 4 were not allowed to land in Australia.

One was kept on the Heintzelman because adverse (read Communist) security information had been received after departure from Bremerhaven. The other 3 were referred to an Australian doctor who boarded the Heintzelman off Fremantle by the ship’s medical team. The Australian doctor argued that they would become a charge on Australia’s health system, ending their opportunity to resettle here. (That was after a through medical examination in Germany before the selection process was finalised.)

Perhaps the 7 January date is the day the CES told the lucky 65 where they were going. In that case, they may have stayed overnight at Bonegilla after packing and actually departed on 8 January.

Just wondering why the numbers always seem a little out … why are there only 64 people on the list below?

Biographies of two of the men are on this blog already, so their names in the list below are a different colour (grey on my screen) since clicking on the names will take you to their stories. I'll add more links as more stories go up.

Lithuanians, Latvians, and Estonians
LITHUANIANS LATVIANS ESTONIANS
Aleknavicius, Juozas Abolins, Voldemars Aerfeldt, Olaf
Antanaitis, Ksavaras Aboltinsh, Voldemars Trull, Adolf
Artmonas, Pranas Alvars, Raimonds Viiding, Kaljo
Babinskas, Vincentas Kopcs, Antons
Baronaitis, Antanas Romanovskis, Viktors
Galinis, Vytautas Skurolis, Donats
Kairys, Ceslovas Sprogis, Alfreds
Kalendra, Apolinaras Steimanis, Zigurds
Karpavicius, Pranas Skrebels, Valerians
Skidzevicius, Vytautas Strods, Janis
Skiparis, Antanas Strupitis, Augusts
Sliuzas, Aleksandras Strungs, Mikolis
Sluksnys, Jonas Suchanovskis, Aleksandrs
Smilgevicius, Kazys Svarinskis, Konstantins
Songaila, Juozas Svilis, Vitolds
Sopys, Vincas Vanags, Vilhelms
Stasys, Alfonas Veide, Modris-Tautmilis
Staugaitis, Antanas Veips, Stanislavs
Strimaitis, Kazys Zauls, Janis
Subacius, Feliksas Zidenis, Janis
Syrus, Faustas
Tumpa, Romuldas
Urbonas, Jonas
Urbonavicius, Czeslovas
Uzpulevicius, Alfonsas
Valinskas, Jonas
Valiulis, Juozas
Valteris, Stasys
Valys, Juozas
Velicka, Balys
Venzlauskas, Antanas
Vidginis, Juozas
Vidugiris, Alfonsas
Vidugiris, Petras
Viknius, Petras
Vitkunas, Bronius
Volkovas, Simonas
Zakarauskas, Juozas
Zumaras, Jonas

SOURCE

National Archives of Australia, Department of Labour and National Service, Central Office; MT29/1, Employment Service Schedules, 1947 - 1950; 21, Schedule of displaced persons who left the Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla Victoria for employment in the State of South Australia - [Schedule no SA1 to SA31], 1948 - 1950; https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=23150376 accessed 9 July 2024.

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.