07 September 2025

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

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

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

Izidorius Smilgevičius

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

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

Izzy's ID photo from his Bonegilla card

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

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

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

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

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

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

A professional portrait of Izidorius
Source:  Collection of Izidorius Smilgevičius

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

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

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

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

Jurgis Smilgevičius

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

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

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

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

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

Jurgis Smilgevicius from his selection papers for Australia

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

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

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

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

Jurgis Smilgevicius in 1947

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Kazys Smilgevičius

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

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

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

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

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

He had been in Australia for less than 18 months.

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

Kazys Smilgevicius' headstone in the West Terrace Cemetery, Adelaide

Conclusion

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

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

Sources

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

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

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22 August 2025

Beginning Life in Australia, by Viltis Salytė-Kružienė, translated by Daina Pocius

These are excerpts from a speech by Viltis Salytė-Kružienė on 6 July 1997 at Melbourne Lithuanian House for Lithuanian National Day. This article appeared in the 4 August 1997 issue of the Australian-Lithuanian newspaper, Mūsų Pastogė, from which we are using it and its illustrations with kind permission.
Two portraits of Viltis Kružienė
1997 (left) and 1947 (right)

One cold day in Germany in October 1947, my sister came to me and asked if I would like to travel to Australia for work. If I agreed, the train would leave for Frankfurt at 8 a.m. tomorrow morning, and in Butzbach, near Frankfurt, the Australian commission would be waiting for us, and then maybe in a week or so we could sail to new shores.

There wasn't much time to make up our minds. Although we didn't know much about Australia, we still needed somewhere to settle down for a permanent life. We wouldn't be able to stay in Germany. And who would want to return to the Bolshevik occupation? There was no question of returning to Lithuania in 1947. And so began my odyssey of travel together with other Lithuanians, Latvians, and Estonians.

In 1947, we sailed to sunny Australia on the American military transport ship General Stuart Heintzelman.

The ship's passengers were mostly young men and women. There were 630 Lithuanian men and 18 women on board.¹ Most of them had recently graduated from school, and their memories were still alive with the bright memories of their teachers who, while educating them, told them that they should live not only for themselves, but also for others, and most importantly, be a useful person for their homeland.

While sailing on a ship, a group of enthusiasts decided to publish a one-off newspaper in Lithuanian. The Latvians and Estonians did the same. The newspaper was called The Baltic Viking. Its introduction read:

"Forced by changeable fate, we had to leave our native hearths, Europe, and go abroad in search of work and bread. Many of our nation's emigrants have long since settled down nicely in the USA, South America, and other countries. We hope to find shelter in that continent of the world that is the most distant from our country and where we will find only a few hundred Lithuanians. We must urgently join their ranks, each time receiving new reinforcements of our own strength. To create an Australian immigrant community, taking unity, nationality, solidarity as the basis, and to strive to maintain close ties with Lithuanians all over the world. Never forget and believe in a happy future. We do not know where our paths of destiny will lead and let neither time nor immense distance break the unity of Lithuanians. On the threshold of a new life, let us remember the words of our Anthem: In the name of that Lithuania, may unity shine ..."

A general meeting was convened in the ship's dining room, and a temporary board was elected, which would represent us if necessary.²

First, in early November, a gathering was organised on the ship to commemorate All Souls' Day.³ Although we did not have a priest, we prayed from the Lithuanian prayer book for all the dead and sang a few hymns together. Every Sunday, mass was held, and hymns were sung.

Scouts for men and women were organised. During the trip, meetings were held and a festive bonfire with an interesting program was held on the deck of the ship. A folk-dance group and a men's choir were also organised. The ship's captain invited the Lithuanian choir to sing for the American crew. One Lithuanian woman dressed in national costume presented him with a modest Lithuanian gift.

The Lithuanian scouts on the Heintzelman hold a bonfire ceremony
(perhaps without lighting the fire)

Once a week we would receive 10 packs of American cigarettes or some sweets. The women received Elizabeth Arden cosmetics, everyone else received toothpaste and toothbrushes. Today, such gifts mean nothing to us, but back then it was different.

Four weeks passed in a flash. Early in the morning of November 28, the ship approached the Australian coast. Everyone who had just gotten up ran to the deck to see what Australia looked like.

When entering the port of Fremantle, nothing could be seen. The shore was far away, no land, no towers, only rocks, rocks and more rocks. Standing on the deck, I looked at the waves of the sea, and began to doubt whether it was worth going to that shore. Maybe, as someone said, there were only deserts and black bears and kangaroos running around.

However, when the ship stopped in the port and we saw people waiting for us on the quay, the picture changed. Those waiting were the same as us. The mood improved, and when the customs officers hurriedly checked our luggage, we began to go ashore.

The ship brought 849 emigrants to Australia. Out of all, only two people were not allowed to alight: a Latvian woman who was suspected of being politically unacceptable, and a man who developed a mental illness during the trip. The man was Lithuanian.

The buses took us to the intended camp, which was called Graylands, while the rest of the Lithuanians were accommodated in the Swanbourne camp, which was about a kilometer away from the first one.

Before getting on the bus, a strange woman gave me a large paper bag full of still warm cakes with jam. That touched me very much, and I thought, how good those Australian people are! I kept thinking about that woman for a long time. Why did she want to please the emigrants who had only just arrived?

In the camp, semi-circular tin barracks, painted white with lime, could be seen from a distance. The weather was beautiful. Neither hot nor cold. After getting ready, we were called to lunch. Before going to the dining room, everyone was given leaflets in which the Minister of Immigration, Mr Calwell, greeted the arrivals.

The second thing that surprised me was that when I entered the dining room, the tables were covered with white tablecloths, and at the ends of the tables stood vases high with oranges. And we had not seen them for many years! After eating a good lunch, we went to our rooms to rest.

The refugees brought from Europe on the ship General Stuart Heintzelman, DPs, Displaced Persons, were replaced by German prisoners of war from the state of Victoria returning to their homeland.

Four days later, in Perth, we boarded the Australian warship Kanimbla, which looked much worse than the American one. However, the Australians seemed much friendlier to us than the Americans. We travelled all week to Melbourne.

True, before sailing to Melbourne, we were questioned at the Greylands camp, and the answers were written down by Australian scribes. They listened how well everyone could "speak English." My knowledge of English was marked "satisfactory."

While sailing on the Kanimbla, the Australians published a daily newspaper. The ship's management invited me to read the text of the newspaper in English translated into Lithuanian, so that even those who did not speak English at all could read what was written in that newspaper. The Latvians and Estonians did the same.

A week later we reached Melbourne. The journey continued on the same day. We went by train to a camp called Bonegilla. The train stopped somewhere in the fields, the Australian soldiers picked us up with our luggage and brought us to the barracks in trucks.7

The train for the women is about to leave Port Melbourne for Bonegilla
Contrast this photo with the more frequently use one
taken by a Melbourne
Sun photographer (below)
The common person in both photos is Helmi Jalak,
sixth from the front in this photo but fourth from the front in the Mūsų Pastogė photo;
the presence of a second class sign in this photo but not the one above suggests a delay in starting
while heads were poked out of different windows
Source:  Melbourne Sun, 9 December 1947

Oh God, the barracks had not been inhabited for about a week. The floors were dirty, there were cobwebs everywhere. There were three beds with mattresses in the room. We put our suitcases outside and went to ask for cleaning supplies. After bringing water, we washed ourselves in our new home, made the beds with clean sheets and warm blankets. We felt like we were in a hotel.

While we were getting ready, many journalists and photographers arrived at the camp. They photographed our every move. The next morning, journalists and photographers followed us from early morning. Soon we received newspapers and magazines with our photos.

The next day, it was announced over the loudspeaker that everyone would have to go to school and learn some Aussie expressions, which would be very useful in everyday life at first, as well as the so-called "Australian way of life".

It was 8 December.8 As I was walking through the campgrounds, I met an acquaintance from Estonia who invited me to go with her to an agency that recruits clerks for various office jobs. Since I could not only speak English but also type, I got a job as a typist and translator at the Employment Office in the camp.

I completed my compulsory labour contract in Bonegilla. My other female companions were assigned to work as waitresses or housekeepers. The men were assigned to manual labour and were sent all over Australia as ordinary labourers.

That was the beginning of my life in Australia...

CITE THIS AS Salytė-Kružienė, Viltis (trans. Pocius, Daina) (2025) 'Beginning life in Australia', https://firsttransport.blogspot.com/2025/08/beginning-life-in-Australia-by-Viltis-Salyte-Kruziene.html.

Footnotes (by Ann Tündern-Smith)

* Oral history is not about factual details. Viltis Kružienė did a fine job of remembering significant moments in her journey to Australia and the start of her life here, but some of the details, such as numbers, are known to be different from her recall.

1 The passenger list shows only 415 Lithuanian men but 21 Lithuanian women.

2 Elsewhere, Kazys Mieldazys has recorded a representative committee being elected in the Diepholz camp where all gathered before the train to Bremerhaven and the ship to Australia.

3 Kazys Mieldazys also noted the All Souls Day (2 November) service.

4 There were 843 passengers, of whom 4 were not allowed to land: one on security grounds and 3 on health grounds.

5 Additionally, there were former internees, that is, people not deemed to be safe to leave in the community during the war because of their real or alleged Nazi sympathies. Some came from New South Wales but all had been brought to Fremantle from Melbourne by the Australian Navy ship, the Kanimbla.

6 The Kanimbla, like the Stuart Heintzelman, was a troop carrier rather than a warship.

7 The women were privileged to ride in the back of Army trucks. The men had to walk about 3 kilometres between the railway station and the barracks, carrying their luggage.

8 The train trip to Bonegilla station and the Army truck ride for the women occurred on December 8. The date of the first lessons was 9 December.

Source

Kružienė, Viltis (1997) 'Atvykimo Australijon 50 - mėtį minint' ('Celebrating the 50th anniversary of arrival in Australia', in Lithuanian) Mūsų PastogėSydney, 4 August, p 4 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1997/1997-08-04-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdf, accessed 22 August 2025. 

17 August 2025

Žilinskas three, by Daina Pocius and Ann Tündern-Smith

Updated 28 August and 2 September 2025.

Green is a common enough family name among English speakers. Its Slavic equivalents include Zelinski, Zelinsky, Zelenskii, Zelenskiy and so on. In recent years, the whole world has become familiar with a Ukrainian version, Zelinskyy.  The Lithuanian equivalent is Žilinskas.

Onomasticians, people who study names, say that this is a toponym, a name derived from a place. The families which carry this name originated in a place which was known for its greenness.

There are over twenty people with the name Žilinskas who came to Australia from Germany after World War II, but only three who arrived on the First Transport. Later arrivals were family units but, in this instance, two men of that name were brothers.

Aleksandras Žilinskas

Aleksandras was named after his father and born on 17 June 1928 in Šiauliai. He was a farmer but recorded as a barber when in Germany, where he had arrived in 1943.  As he would have been only 14 or 15 at the time, it looks like he may have been rounded up from whatever he was doing in Lithuania to provide youthful labour for the Germans.

After the War, he had wanted to return to Lithuania if independent but indicated that he would migrate to Canada as second preference.

Aleksandras Zilinskas' ID photo from his Bonegilla card

Instead, he was part of the First Transport to Australia. He would have been only 15 when he left Lithuania, and no family is indicated in the records. Now aged only 19, he was sent to pick fruit at HE Pickworth’s orchard in the Goulbourn Valley as part of his two-year employment contract. Once the harvest was finished, he returned to Bonegilla on 1 April 1948 and was transferred to Tasmania a week later.

Initially in Tasmania he picked fruit again, maybe apples instead of pears given that Tasmania was renown then for its apples.  He worked for EG Lees for one month before transferring to the  Goliath Portland cement company at Railton from May 1948.

It is reputed that Aleksandras was seeing two girls at one time, which caused some rivalry with the local lads. He was challenged to a fight, which he won. The local policeman needed to intervene when the local boys marched into camp seeking revenge.

That's Aleksandras, second from left, joining others for a smoke before a concert during his time in Railton; left is Endrius Jankus, on the right we have Kazys Vilutis and Vaclovas Kalytis
Source:  Collection of Endrius Jankus

On another occasion Aleksandras wielded a toy pistol after an argument, hitting a local who had to have seven stitches in his head. Aleksandras pleaded guilty to assault and was fined £2, with 2/6 costs.  Given the date when he was before the court, this incident probably occurred when Aleksandras worked for the Hydro Electric Commission in Tasmania’s Central Highlands from 1950 to 1951. Here he most likely helped build dams, power stations or accommodation. 

He then worked at the Electrolytic Zinc Company at Rosebery from 1951 to 1955.

Aleksandras didn’t stay in Tasmania but moved to Queensland in 1956.  The National Archives has a file which records him first making contact with the Department of Immigration in Brisbane in August 1969.  He had applied to become an Australian citizen and was living already with Thelma Daphne Pike, known as Mrs Zilinskas.  He was working as a gardener at the time.

On 23 January 1970, before the long-serving Lord Mayor of Brisbane, Clem Jones, Aleksandras took the oath of allegiance and became an Australian citizen.

After 75 years in Australia, Aleksandras passed away on 1 November 2023, aged a respectable 95.  His ashes are interrred in the Bribie Island Memorial Gardens, Woorim, Moreton Bay Region, Queensland.

Clearly no-one proofread this plaque for Aleksandras' birthplace before it was cast

Juozas Žilinskas

Juozas Žilinskas was said to have been born in 1907 in the Lithuanian village of Jaunai, Kalvarija township, Marijampolė district, into a family of a wealthy farmers. According to his death certificate, his parents were George (probably Jurgis) and Marie (possibly Marija, née Cejinskas, which would be Cejinskaite in Lithuania).

He had five brothers and two sisters. One brother, Jurgis, also came to Australia on the General Stuart Heintzelman.

Juozas studied in Kybartai and Marijampolė. He later studied humanities in Kaunas and continued his studies at the universities of Rome and Paris. He taught at the Marijampolė gymnasium (senior high school) and was the director of the Kybartai gymnasium during the last years of Lithuania’s independence and the German occupation. In exile, he organised and directed the Lithuanian school in his DP camp. By this time, he could speak 8 languages.

He was 40 when he arrived in Australia, although it is suspected he was at least five years older. (The age of 40 had been specified as the maximum for those refugees lucky enough to be selected for the First Transport.)

Juozas Zilinskas' ID photograph from his Bonegilla card

He was sent to pick fruit at the HE Pickworth orchard on 28 January 1948, returning to the Bonegilla camp on 1 April after 2 months away. The camp administration then employed him as a kitchen hand for more than 3 months, from 6 April to 25 July.

Next, he was sent to Canberra on 3 August to work for the Department of Works and Housing. In practical terms, he was making bricks at the Canberra Brickworks. If he was released from the terms of his two-year employment-where-sent contract at the same time as most others, on 30 September 1949, this would have meant 13 months of more labour for the former senior high school principal.

He remained in Canberra and found employment with the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in its stores, where he worked until his death. He had a very good reputation in CSIRO due to his diligence and honesty.

One of Ann’s informants, Estonian Galja Mägi, had come to Australia on the General Stuart Heintzelman too, but on a later voyage which left Naples on 31 March 1949 and reached Melbourne on 20 April (which must have been a record time). She said that Juozas had been the first Baltic refugee to buy his own house in Canberra.

Galja Mägi and her 12-year-old son, Tõnu (later Tony) had lived with Mr and Mrs Zilinskas for the nine months before 20 December 1951, when they had been able to move into their own home. Mrs Mägi’s husband and Tony’s father, Johannes, had preceded them to Australia and was living in Canberra hostels for working men at the same time.

Galja learnt that Juozas was the eldest son in his family, so his father had wanted him to become a priest, as was a custom in those days. Try as he might, he could not commit himself to the priesthood. He nearly had a nervous breakdown over the matter. In the end, he was allowed to leave home and continue to study.

Galja said that Mrs Zilinskas, Wanda, had been a primary school teacher. She had been married before World War II to another teacher, but he had been killed by the Russians. She had fled to Germany with her sister and parents. Her father had died of typhus in one of the Displaced Persons camps. Juozas, who knew her before the War, located her and sponsored her entry to Australia.

Away from his home and work, in the Lithuanian community, Juozas could be seen everywhere and often. He did not neglect a single commemoration or community gathering. He was chairman of the very first committee for the Lithuanian Community in Canberra. From then on, he was on every committee and board.

When Juozas was a little bit over 50 years old, he developed a bad pain in his back. The doctor prescribed tablets for him and told him that he was not to go to work, or even drive, for three weeks. At the end of this time, he went back to the doctor, who wrote him a medical certificate for the period. Juozas took the certificate home and looked up the word the doctor had written for his condition in a medical dictionary. What he found there stopped him in his tracks. The dictionary said, “incurable”.

By this stage, he was having difficulty in reading. There was no nerve specialist in Canberra, only someone who came from Sydney once a month. He did not have anyone with him he could discuss his condition. He spent the evening quietly, lying on his back, staring at the ceiling. That night, he did not sleep. We need to understand how much pain he might have been experiencing despite the treatment already received.

The next day he returned to work, in the stores at the CSIRO. The stores contained sodium cyanide among many other chemicals. That day, 5 April 1961, he was found deceased in a CSIRO storeroom about 1.40 pm. The Canberra Police were notified, and the body was taken to Canberra morgue where an autopsy was carried out.

At 2.30 pm, someone turned up at Wanda’s workplace to tell her that her husband was dead. He had poisoned himself in his storeroom and collapsed on the floor. Wanda was so devastated that for six months she could not return home. She spent this time boarding with other couples.

This news of his death shocked not only his wife, other relatives and friends, but the entire Lithuanian community of Canberra and, undoubtedly, the wider Lithuanian community. 

Canberrans and Australians in general would have been shocked by the circumstances also – so much so that Juozas’ death and some others like it are the reason why Australia now has a Telephone Interpreter Service. Had it operated in 1961, Juozas might have had someone with the language and technical skills to connect him to a medical person with whom he could have discussed his situation, day or night.

Juozas was buried in Woden Cemetery, Phillip, Canberra. He was survived by Wanda, who lived another 36 years, until 1997. They had no children.

Juozas' grave
Photograph:  Ann Tündern-Smith

Wanda Zilinskas (left) with a First Transport arrival, Birute Tamulyte Gruzas
Source:  Collection of Birute Tamulyte Gruzas

At the time of his death, Juozas and Wanda had moved from the original house in Ebden Street, Ainslie, up the hill to a home closer to his Black Mountain workplace, in Cockle Street, O’Connor. This very house was celebrated in a book prepared for Canberra’s centenary in 2013 by Tim Reeves and Alan Roberts, 100 Canberra Houses.

The authors wrote that the house had been built in 1960 by a Polish Displaced Person, who had cleared a rocky, hillside block himself and ordered a Women’s Weekly plan from a local department store. He also had built the whole house himself apart from the brickwork and stonework. Perhaps because of Juozas’ recent death, the first buyer was recorded as Wanda Zilinskas, who paid just over £5,000 for it.

This was much to the builder’s satisfaction. However, it also was the home where Wanda could not stay for 6 months after her husband died.

2001 watercolour by an unknown artist of the house in which the Juozas and Wanda Zilinskas
were living at the time of Juozas' death.
Source:  Reeves and Roberts, 100 Canberra Houses

Jurgis Žilinskas

Juozas Žilinskas’ brother Jurgis, was born in 1910, also in the village of Jaunai, Kalvarija township, Marijampole district.

Jurgis finished his studies at the Marijampolė school and the Technical School in Kaunas, from which he graduated as a mechanic.

After the War, he lived in the Hanau displaced persons camp in Germany. The record of his interview with the Australian selection panel records him as one of those to have been “forcibly evacuated by the Germans”.

Jurgis Zilinskas' photograph from his selection documents

He arrived in Australia on the First Transport in 1947. Like his brother, he left the Bonegilla camp on 28 January 1948 to pick fruit at the HE Pickford orchard. Together they returned to Bonegilla on 1 April, and together they worked as kitchen hands in the camp for 6 weeks until 25 July 1948. Then, together yet again, they set out for Canberra to labour at the Brickworks.

Jurgis is on the far right of the row of 11 Bonegilla camp employees with a 12th in front
Who are the others?  Who took the photograph?  Was it the versatile Gunars Berzarrins?
Source: this copy from the Collection of Galina Vasins Karciauskas; also in the Australian Lithuanian Archives

Like his brother, he was one of the first Lithuanians to settle in Canberra. He also was one of the first to buy a house and he provided assistance to many Lithuanians. He was a supporter of the Canberra Lithuanian Club, of which he served as President in 1954, and participated in many Lithuanian gatherings.

Here he met and married Bronė Rubikaitė. She had arrived in the middle of 1948 on the Svalbard, the Fifth Transport, and been sent from the Bonegilla camp to work as a domestic in the Cooma Hospital in southern New South Wales. As Cooma is some 90 road minutes from Canberra and there was a train service at that time, perhaps she was in Canberra to mix with more fellow Lithuanians.

Jurgis was a passionate chess player, known locally as by the translation into English of his first name, George. Ann has counted 20 reports of his chess competition results in the Canberra Times, so suggests to any readers interested in the detail that they search the National Library’s Trove digitisation service themselves.

In late 1949, he was one of 8 Lithuanians who participated in a New Australians versus the Canberra Chess Club tournament, along with 2 Latvians, a Hungarian, and Estonian geologist, Professor AA Öpik. The New Australians won resoundingly, which probably led to invitations to join the Canberra players, as George played for them later.

He was Canberra’s champion player in 1951.

Jurgis, seated second from left, playing chess

Ann has been told that Jurgis was “a bit of a gambler”. He probably gambled with his health because, aged 63, he died suddenly of a heart attack on 3 August 1973. He had been working at the Canberra Brickworks for 25 years at the time of his death although, according to his death certificate, he had risen to the skilled occupation of bricklayer.

His funeral took place at St Christophers Cathedral before the cortège left for the Woden Cemetery. He was buried near his brother Juozas, who had died 8 years earlier.

Jurgis' grave with his wife, Bronė (see below)
Photograph:  Ann Tündern-Smith

A laughing Jurgis, his grave image
Photograph:  Ann Tündern-Smith

Neither of them lived to see the freedom of the Motherland, for which both had yearned.

Bronė was buried besides her husband on 5 June 1996, having died one month earlier. Her mental health must have deteriorated badly in the twenty and more years after her husband’s death. Ann has been told that she used to wander around the local shops talking to herself. Another informant has told of how she was scammed by 2 men who made use of her vulnerable state. As this is Jurgis’ story, the details of his wife’s life are better shared by someone focussed on those who came on the Second Transport.

Bronė also told this informant that she had nothing to do with Juozas or his wife as they did not like her. Juozas’ wife, Wanda, who died after Bronė, on 21 July 1997, is not buried with the others. She chose cremation, so her ashes are stored in the Sister Kenny Wall at Canberra’s Norwood Crematorium.

CITE THIS AS Pocius, Daina and Tündern-Smith, Ann (2025) Želinskas three https://firsttransport.blogspot.com/2025/08/zilinskas-three.html.

Sources

Advocate (1951) ‘Toy Pistol with a Wallop’, Burnie, Tas, 25 May, page 9 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/69286430, accessed 16 August 2025.

AEF DP Registration Record, 'Aleksandras Zelinskas', 3.1.1.1 Postwar Card File / Postwar Card File (A-Z) Names in "phonetical" order from SI, ITS Digital Archive, Arolsen Archives https://collections.arolsen-archives.org/en/document/69061784accessed 16 August 2025.

Australian Capital Territory Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages 1961, Death certificate: Jouzas Zilinskas, Canberra, certified copy held by Ann Tündern-Smith.

Australian Capital Territory Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages 1973, Death certificate: Jurgis Zilinskas, Canberra, certified copy held by Ann Tündern-Smith.

Australijos Lietuvis (Australian Lithuanian) (1949) ‘Mūsų šachmatininkai Canberoje’ (Our Chess Players in Canberra, in Lithuanian), Adelaide, SA, 19 December, p28 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article280322235, accessed 14 August 2025.

Canberra Times (1961) ‘Man Found Dead in Storeroom’, Canberra, ACT, 6 April, p 3 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article133976454, accessed 13 August 2025.

Canberra Times (1973) ‘Return Thanks’, Canberra, ACT, 16 August, p 18 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article110743068, accessed 3 August 2025.

Canberra Times (1973) ‘Funerals’, Canberra, ACT, 6 August, p 10 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/110741343, accessed 16 August 2025.

CŽB (1961) ‘Canberros Naujienos, Staigi Mirtis’ (‘Canberra News, Sudden Death’, in Lithuanian), Mūsų Pastogė (Our Haven), Sydney, 18 April, p 4 https://spauda2.org/musu_pastoge/archive/1961/1961-04-18-MUSU-PASTOGE.pdfaccessed 16 August 2025.

Examiner (1951) 'Struck by Toy Pistol' Launceston, Tas, 26 May, p 7 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article52816810, accessed 16 August 2025.

Find a Grave, ‘Brone Zilinskas’ https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/230145727/brone-zilinskas, accessed 16 August 2025.

Find a Grave, ‘Joozas (sic) Zilinskas’ https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/230151971/joozas-zilinskas, accessed 16 August 2025.

Find a Grave, ‘Jungis (sic) Zilinskas’ https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/230148732/jungis-zilinskas, accessed 16 August 2025.

Find a Grave, ‘Wanda Zilinskas’ https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/263471913/wanda-zilinskas, accessed 16 August 2025.

J (1973) ‘A A Jurgis Zilinskas’ (RIP Jurgis Zilinskas, in Lithuanian), Tėviškės Aidai (Echoes of the Homeland), Melbourne, 21 August, No 32, p 3 https://spauda2.org/teviskes_aidai/archive/1973/1973-nr32-TEVISKES-AIDAI.pdf, accessed 16 August 2025.

JŽ (1954) ‘Canberros Lietuvių Bendruomenė’ (‘Canberra Lithuanian Community’, in Lithuanian), Mūsų Pastogė (Our Haven), Sydney, 15 December, p 2 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/259360319, accessed 14 August 2025.

Mägi, Galina (Galja), Personal communication with Ann Tündern-Smith, 13 August 2021.

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; 344, ZILINSKAS, Aleksandras DOB 17 June 1925 https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=5118126, accessed 16 August 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Central Office; A11772, Migrant Selection Documents for Displaced Persons who travelled to Australia per General Stuart Heintzelman departing Bremerhaven 30 October 1947; 344, ZILINSKAS Jurgis DOB 2 April 1910 https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=5118048, accessed 16 August 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Central Office; A12508, Personal Statement and Declaration by alien passengers entering Australia (Forms A42); 37/666, ZILINSKAS Juozas born 7 December 1907; nationality Lithuanian; travelled per GENERAL HEINTZELMAN arriving in Fremantle on 28 November 1947 https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=7249369, accessed 16 August 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration, Tasmanian Branch; P1183, Registration cards for non-British migrants/visitors, lexicographical series; 20/595 ZILINSKAS, Aleksandras born 17 June 1928 - nationality Lithuanian https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=60159309, accessed 16 August 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla]; ZILINSKAS ALEKSANDRS (sic), ZILINSKAS, Alexandrs (sic), Year of Birth - 1928, Nationality - LITHUANIAN, Travelled per - GEN. HEINTZELMAN, Number – 1082 https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203726182, accessed 16 August 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla]; ZILINSKAS JUOZAS, Year of Birth - 1907, Nationality - LITHUANIAN, Travelled per - GEN. HEINTZELMAN, Number – 1225 https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203726183, accessed 16 August 2025.

National Archives of Australia: Migrant Reception and Training Centre, Bonegilla [Victoria]; A2571, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla]; ZILINSKAS JURGIS, Year of Birth - 1910, Nationality - LITHUANIAN, Travelled per - GEN. HEINTZELMAN, Number – 740 https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=203726184, accessed 16 August 2025.

Reeves, Tim and Roberts, Alan (2013) 100 Canberra Houses: A Century of Capital Architecture, Canberra, Halstead Press, pp 106-7.

Tarvydas, Ramunas (1997) From Amber Coast to Apple Isle: Fifty Years of Baltic Immigrants in Tasmania 1948-1998, Baltic Semicentennial Commemoration Activities Organising Committee, Hobart, Tasmania, p 48.

V (1951) ‘Lietuvis-Australijos Sostines Sachmatu Meisteris’ (‘Lithuanian-Australian Capitals Chess Master’, in Lithuanian), Mūsų Pastogė (Our Haven), Sydney, NSW, 28 November, p 4 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article259360595, accessed 14 August 2025.

Wikipedia, ‘Zelinski’ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zelinski, accessed 14 August 2025.

13 August 2025

The Electrona Carbide Factory, by Ann Tündern-Smith

Eight First Transport Men to Electrona

We’ve just had an entry about Jonas Motiejūnas, the leader of the Lithuanian men on the First Transport, whose first job after fruit-picking was with the Australian Commonwealth Carbide Company at Electrona in Tasmania.*

Along with Jonas, the others sent to Electrona were Lithuanians Kazys Alseika, Anicetas Grigaliunas and Algirdas Jonas Smelstorius, and Estonians, Sven Kiväli, Raimond Uster, Erich Väli and Kalev Veermäe. That’s 4 Lithuanians and 4 Estonians, 8 in all. At least the two ethnic groups had 3 or more years of German in common for some cross-cultural communication.

A Launceston Examiner report from 1950 says that the factory was employing 150 men. Ramunas Tarvydas, in his 1997 book, From Amber Coast to Apple Isle, writes that the factory, plus the quarry at Ida Bay supplying the limestone which the factory processed, employed around 200 in 1965.

Coke – the coal product, not the soft drink – was the other input which the factory needed to manufacture calcium carbide. This carbide is a solid which reacts with water to produce acetylene gas.

Jonas Motiejūnas told Ray Tarvydas about shovelling coal, not coke. Perhaps the carbide factory’s furnaces created the conditions required to turn coal into coke during the production process.

Using acetylene for lighting was common still in mid-20th century Australia. Another major use of acetylene still is in welding.

Acetylene carbide bicycle lamp:  visit Coffs Collections for information on how it worked

The factory’s prior history

The Electrona Carbide factory had been opened in 1917 by James Gillies, a metallurgist who patented a method for the electrolytic extraction of zinc from ores. His process required lots of electricity, so he moved from New South Wales to Tasmania with the idea of using that state’s topography and plentiful rainfall to set up a hydroelectric scheme.

Weather and politics led to the Tasmanian Government taking over his hydro scheme, which became the forerunner of the State’s Hydro-electric Commission, now Hydro Tasmania. Gillies’ Great Lake Scheme, together with the Electrona carbide factory, are seen as the start of industrialisation in Tasmania.

Just as it took over his hydroelectric scheme, the Government took over the carbide factory in 1923. From 1934, it was operated by the Commonwealth Carbide Company of London. At some stage before 1948, it had been taken over again, so was operated by the Australian Commonwealth Carbide Company when the first Baltic refugees arrived.

The men’s work

As a qualified engineer, Jonas Motiejūnas was in a good position to assess the nature of the work. Here is how Ray Tarvydas wrote up his assessment.

(Click on the image for a more legible version, click the cross in the upper right to return here)

It is possible that nothing had changed in the 30 years since the factory opened.

The carbide works in 1920
Source:  Rimon, Carbide Works

Motiejūnas was able to get a transfer from this dangerous work after discussion with a CES official. Tarvydas reports that another of the 8, Sven Kiviväli, was able to transfer to Melbourne after his mother, grandmother and sister arrived. Clearly these women needed a man to look after them, although Sven had just turned 19 when the rest of the family arrived in January 1949.

Tarvydas says that the 3 other Estonians decided that they too needed to leave when Sven was able to go.  Like Endrius Jankus, they probably were tracked down by the Commonwealth Employment Service and sent to new jobs (we have to hope) of the CES' choosing.

It will be interesting to see, if we can, how the remaining 3 from the First Transport coped.

* Although the Bonegilla cards for each of the 8 refer to “Australian Carbide Co, Electrona, Tas”, newspaper reports from the time show that the owner’s full name was the Australian Commonwealth Carbide Company Limited.

CITE THIS AS:  Tündern-Smith, Ann (2025) 'The Electrona Carbide Factory' https://firsttransport.blogspot.com/2025/08/electrona-carbide-factory.html

Sources

Coffs Collections 'Acetylene bicycle lamp' https://coffs.recollect.net.au/nodes/view/59599, accessed 14 August 2025.

Examiner (1950) ‘Carbide Works May Close’, Launceston, Tasmania, 18 March, p 14, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article52775382, accessed 12 August 2025.

Hydro Tasmania, https://www.hydro.com.au/, accessed 13 August 2025.

Rimon, Wendy (2006) ‘Carbide Works’ in The Companion to Tasmanian History, https://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/C/Carbide%20Works.htm accessed 13 August 2025. [Rimon’s description of the process and products does not tally with Motiejūnas’ description, possibly because both changed over time.]

Tarvydas, Ramunas (1997) From Amber Coast to Apple Isle : Fifty Years of Baltic Immigrants in Tasmania 1948-1998, Baltic Semicentennial Commemoration Activities Organising Committee, Hobart, Tasmania, pages 34-36.

Wikipedia, ‘Electrona, Tasmania’ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrona,_Tasmania, accessed 13 August 2025.

Wikipedia, ‘Hydro Tasmania’ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydro_Tasmania, accessed 13 August 2025.

Wikipedia, ‘James Hyndes Gillies’ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hyndes_Gillies, accessed 13 August 2025.