07 July 2021

Helgi Nirk (1919-2005): Tomato breeder

Updated 23 May 2023.

BURNLEY BOUNTY, BURNLEY SURECROP, BURNLEY GEM 

ABC television’s Gardening Australia featured a packet of Burnley Bounty tomato seeds in its opening sequence until the end of its 2018 season. Renaissance Herbs still sells the Burnley Bounty in its salad seedling range. The Little Vegie Patch Co sells seeds of Burnley Surecrop tomatoes. Australian Seed sells Burnley Gem. This is the story of their breeder. 


Renaissance Herbs credit Helgi Nirk with
the breeding of Burnley Bounty on their Website.  Excellent!

A TOMATO BREEDER'S LIFE

Helgi Nirk had arrived in Australia in November 1947 with the first party of refugees from Europe after World War II. 

HELGI'S EARLY LIFE

She was born a year after the end of the First World War, on 15 December 1919, in Sangaste, in the southern Estonian province of Valgamaa. 

Her father had been a schoolteacher at the local school. Then he had gone to the Caucasus, where oil had been discovered, to work as a bookkeeper. He had come back a wealthy man. 

He used his money to improve the farm near Sangaste which he had inherited from his father. He developed it into a model mixed farm. University and high school students used to visit the farm for classes on its operations.

Helgi’s father had died when she was only ten years old. He had been aged 56 when she was born, having followed an Estonian pattern of the man making his career and money before settling down with a wife.  Helgi's mother died seven years later, having been old for a first-time mother, 39, when Helgi was born.

HELGI'S OWN FARM

Helgi disagreed with her uncles on how she should manage her inheritance. They asked a court to give her full responsibility for her own affairs. The court granted this right when Helgi was only 18. As in Australia, 21 was then the normal age of legal majority in Estonia. Hers would have been a rare case. It is an early demonstration of her strength of character. 

Helgi Nirk in 1959

Elderly tenants helped her by feeding the farm animals, cows and pigs. When she was 20, the Soviet Union invaded independent Estonia. She thought that her future would be that of an employee of a state farm, a prospect which did not appeal. She decided to alter that future by enrolling in agricultural science at Estonia’s centuries-old University of Tartu. She was able to recruit share-farmers to continue working the land for her. 

Tartu University's main building and surrounds, much as they would have looked
when Helgi Nirk studied there in the early 1940s.
Photo by Kaupo Kalda from EstonianWorld.com

UNIVERSITY STUDIES

She should not have been able to enrol at the University as the daughter of a kulak, a landowner from a peasant background. The helpful local authorities gave her an identity card which described her truthfully as a child from the country without parents. In Russia, the kulaks had opposed the collectivisation of land. Stalin had ordered their liquidation in 1929. In the countries occupied by the Soviet Army during World War II, the practice was to round up kulaks and their families for train trips in cattle wagons to the extremes of Siberia. 

Helgi was one of the girls who swapped their rooms with boys who thought that they were in danger. If they did that, the Soviet troops would see at once that the young men they had come to arrest were somewhere else. 

One year later, international allegiances changed when the Germans pushed through the Baltic States to lay siege to Stalingrad. Estonia was occupied by the Germans for three years. During this time, Helgi completed her agricultural science studies and was awaiting the grant of her degree. The citizens of Stalingrad resisted their siege, the Soviet Union regrouped and rearmed, and once more it invaded the Baltic States. 

HELGI LEAVES ESTONIA FOR GERMANY

Helgi left Estonia in September 1944 with the last of the German troops. She was riding under a tarpaulin in the back of a truck, on top of munitions. She knew what was in the truck, but had made the decision that being blown up with the German truck was a better end than imprisonment or exile in Siberia. 

Helgi and a friend left the convoy in Lithuania and found a train travelling towards Germany. There was no passenger carriage for them, only a wagon without sides, little more than an open platform on wheels. The train was travelling away from the Soviet Army. That was all that mattered. 

The train stopped in Danzig, then a Prussian port city in turmoil. Nobody they asked knew what was going on. 

Central Danzig in 1945, after destruction by bombs and artillery fire;
Unknown photographer, sourced through Wikipedia

All who reached Danzig on that train were told that, before they could move on, they had to dig anti-tank trenches to halt the Soviet Army. Helgi’s friend was willing to do as ordered, but Helgi had another idea. 

The other travellers were led behind a wire fence. Helgi and her friend lay on their stomachs on the wagon which had brought them to Danzig. When darkness fell, they grabbed their small suitcases and walked carefully around the railway station to its western entrance. This was the entrance nearest to their destination, so they no longer looked as if they were Baltic refugees. 

They demanded and received two train tickets for the far west of Germany, Mannheim on Rhine. They got as far as Berlin, which they found also to be in turmoil. There were masses of people among the ruins of bombed buildings. Helgi went looking for a train to the west, while her friend guarded their luggage. 

A German in a decorated uniform, evidently an important officer, saw that she was distressed. He accompanied her back to the travellers’ aid office where her inquiries had already been rebuffed. Seeing the officer, the women behind the counter were now ready to assist. 

He discovered that Helgi and her friend had been three weeks on the road. He took them to the apartment of a female friend where, for the first time in nearly one month, they could wash and rest on beds. They were able to stay in Berlin for one week, which made it easy to find the station from which trains left to the west. 

HELGI IN GERMANY

Once they reached the west of Germany, Helgi and her friend were able to stop their flight. Helgi got work picking vegetables for the market on a small farm at Hockenheim. One day she found herself under Allied bombing attack. She threw herself to the ground at the sound of the approaching plane. As bombs hit the ground, she was covered with soil. When she scrabbled out from her covering of earth, she found that the cart nearby had been destroyed. The horse pulling the cart had been killed. Helgi was deaf for nearly one week. 

In Mannheim, she nearly found herself under arrest. Everyone was permitted to change 500 Occupation Deutschmarks into real Deutschmarks in one transaction, but no more. She had been changing her money in various towns across Germany, but she grew tired of the 500 Occupation DM limit. She asked a bank in Mannheim if she could change a few thousand in one transaction. “Please wait here”, she was told. She waited and waited, a friend for company. 

Suddenly she was confronted by a group of police and bank officials. “Where did you get this money? Who did you rob?” The money actually had come from the private sale of extra bacon and butter from her Estonian farm during the German occupation. That could be considered to be trading on the black market, so she told her interrogators that it came from the sale of her farm. This satisfied them. Fortunately, they did not know that selling anything in Estonia under the German occupation was also illegal. 

Under the American occupation, there was another incident when she almost lost her life. Word went out among the local refugees that an animal had been butchered and the meat was available for free. Helgi did not realise that the free meat offer was for refugees only. 

She told a German who had been kind to her about the offer. When a drunken American Army officer realised that there was a German in the butcher’s shop and Helgi had invited him there, he raised his pistol to shoot her. Another American pushed his hand so that the pistol fired out of harm’s way. 

While she was in a camp for displaced persons, she noted the UNRRA enthusiasm for DDT. Not only did they insist on dousing the inmates with liberal quantities to control insect infestations, they also tried to feed them spoonfuls. 

From Hockenheim, Helgi moved to Heidelberg, where she worked for the American Red Cross Club in a former museum. Her task was to organise concerts for the Americans. This was not taxing work. It supplied her with free food and accommodation. Downstairs the Americans had access to free coffee and doughnuts. Helgi had enough free doughnuts to last her the rest of her days. 

HELGI HEARS ABOUT AUSTRALIA

She moved to Stuttgart, where she studied genetics at the Hohenheim University, which has the oldest agricultural science faculty in the world. After completing this course, she was about to start on chemistry when she heard that the Australians wanted to send a ship of displaced persons to Australia. She got herself on the interview list by contacting a cousin who was working with UNRRA

This 1845 lithograph by JH Renz shows the main building of the
University of Hohenheim as it still is today,
so certainly as it was when Helgi studied there

A Canadian team had already interviewed her and declared her to be a suitable migrant, but Canada had not begun moving those they had selected. In comparison to the Canadians, the Australians had easy tests. Helgi did her best to make sure that she was on that first ship, because she was always hungry. 

HELGI TRAVELS TO AUSTRALIA

Her trip on the General Stuart Heintzelman was very good, indeed lovely. She passed the time playing chess, reading and sunbaking. Her recollection of Fremantle and Perth is that they were beautiful and clean. Like some of the other Estonian women, she found the Kanimbla filthy. She remembers cockroaches in the soup on board this Australian Navy vessel. 

HELGI IN BONEGILLA

In Bonegilla she shared a room with another Estonian, Helmi Liiver. When they reached their allocated room, they found it smelly, so they put down their suitcases and started to clean with scrubbing brushes and sandsoap. They found that the seats had been smeared with fat and there were rat droppings as well. 

Helmi Liiver, left, Helgi Nirk, centre, and an unidentified woman arrive
at the Bongeilla railway stop on 8 December 1947
(from the Helgi Nirk
 collection, Estonian Archives in Australia)

Having cleaned the room to the best of their ability, the two young women went to have a shower. A large animal perching on a wooden beam in the shower facilities startled them. Despite its sharp claws, it turned out to be a relatively tame camp possum. 

HELGI GOES TO WORK IN AUSTRALIA

The first job to which Helgi was sent was at the Austin Hospital in Melbourne, to train as a nursing sister. After the privations of the War and post-War Germany, the displaced trainee nurses found that they were still expected to live in relative poverty. They had only £1/3/3 left after payments for their board and lodging were deducted. 

Helgi's own battered, yellowed copy of a newspaper report
on the start of her nursing career,
from the Melbourne
Herald, 5 January 1948, page 5

In order to make some more money, Helgi actively looked for extra work, so that she could leave the hospital. She met an Estonian who had come to Australia before the Second World War, who was growing tuberoses for sale in his garden. Helgi and a friend turned up to help him, despite his reluctance. After seeing how they worked, he took them on as paid assistants. 

At the end of June 1952, Helgi started work with the Victorian Department of Agriculture as a laboratory assistant on even lower wages than before, but at least she was working in agriculture. For the next ten years, she had a second job as often as she could find one - gardening, cleaning, making buttonholes for children’s clothes. 

On one occasion, she found out that a two-storey building near where she was staying in Chapel Street, Prahran, needed painting. The owner could not find a tradesman to do the job, such was the shortage of building workers in the first years after the War. 

Helgi took on the task, single-handedly. The owner was able to arrange for scaffolding to be built. He moved it himself whenever Helgi had finished painting a section of the building. 

HELGI BUYS LAND IN THE DANDENONGS

By 1955, less than eight years after she arrived in Australia, Helgi was able to buy a property in the Dandenong Ranges. The house had not been lived in for a decade or so. The land was overrun with tough plants like blackberries and ivy, and a tall privet hedge on the high side of the hill, along the road, cast its shade over the front garden. Again, mostly single-handedly, Helgi poisoned and removed the unwanted plants. 

She turned the soil into the production of flowering plants. The house was cleaned up so that Helgi could move there in 1956. She started to collect plants for her property. 

HELGI  BREEDS K7, 7002, BURNLEY FORTUNE, BURNLEY METRO AND ARCADIA TOMATOES

Helgi’s work focus became tomatoes for the commercial growers of Victoria. She developed two varieties, K7 and the very fleshy 7002, which became so popular with the growers trialling them that they never had the chance to be named properly before commercial release. 

Named varieties for which Helgi was responsible included not only Burnley Bounty, Burnley Surecrop and Burnley Gem but also Burnley Fortune, Burnley Metro, and Arcadia. 

HELGI INVENTS A NEW METHOD OF CROSS-FERTILISATION

The prestigious scientific journal Nature, in its issue of 5 December 1959, carried an article by Helgi on how to obtain fertile hybrids from two tomato species which did not cross-fertilise naturally. Her success was due to the use of both stock and graft materials which were just beyond the dicotyledon stage of development, when only the first two leaves show above the ground. 

The aim of the experiments was to produce commercial tomato varieties which had the disease resistance of a Peruvian parent as well as the yield and fruit quality of a conventional parent. The cell materials from the stock tended to merge with the materials from the scion because of the very early stage of development at which the grafting has been performed. 

When the plants grew older, it was possible to use their pollen for normal cross-fertilisation and the resulting plants had some of the characteristics of each parent. Examination under the microscope showed that the cells of the hybrid plants had chromosomes from both parents. 

The Nature article created interest around the world. Other plant breeders had success with the technique. For example, jute hybrids in India were obtained from two species which had not interbred previously. 

International visitors now made a point of meeting with Helgi. One delegation from the Soviet Union came specifically to study Helgi’s tomato breeding. When she took the Armenian geneticist and his interpreter to field trials, the geneticist assured her of a good job if she returned to the Soviet Union. Helgi reminded him that this offer was a risk too huge for her to take. 

Helgi also received offers of employment as a tomato breeder in Spain and California. She was already so happy on her property in the Dandenongs that she did not want to leave. It was her own piece of paradise. 

Despite the encouragement of the supervisor who told her that her work was unique and should be recorded for other researchers in Nature, Helgi found that her employer could not deal with her lack of formal qualifications. She lodged applications and appeals, but she received neither promotions nor pay increases beyond those awarded to compensate for the slowly rising cost of living. 

This passport enabled Helgi to go on a tour of tomato breeding institutions
during July-August 1972 on behalf of the Victorian Department of Agriculture
from the Helgi Nirk collection, Estonian Archives in Australia

Helgi did more research which may well have been as original as her work on the tomato hybrids, but she kept it to herself. English was a language in which she had been working for only ten years. Writing the Nature article had been a major effort. She did not feel the need to repeat the effort because she knew that she already had international recognition for her work. 

As the lack of recognition from those for whom she worked was upsetting, putting in the effort to write more articles for scientific journals would only have stirred up more enmity, she thought. 

HELGI'S NURSERY

The business which had developed around her house, Helgi’s Nursery, became a refuge. She resigned from the Department of Agriculture on the day that she became eligible to access her superannuation, her sixtieth birthday. 

DISCRIMINATION

Helgi had experienced other, more overt discrimination when she first lived in Melbourne. On one occasion, she and her friend were told by the operator to speak English on phone. “Why?” responded Helgi. “This is not wartime.” The operator cut them off. 

On a Melbourne tram, a fellow passenger told her and her friend to “speak Australian”. Helgi responded that she had not learnt an Aboriginal language yet. The other passengers were on the side of the Estonians. There was so much laughter that the man left the tram at the next stop. 

HELGI'S LATER LIFE

Estonia did not find its freedom while Helgi was still fit to travel, so she never returned. She undertook many trips in Europe, North America and Asia, visiting relatives, friends and fellow researchers. 

Helgi closed the nursery to customers in the mid-1990s. At its peak, she had hundreds of different plants growing on the site. Fuchsias, foxgloves, feverfew, honesty and hydrangeas, rhododendrons, azaleas and alstromerias flowered in profusion, each to its own season.  

When I met Helgi there, late in her life, she had to be very particular about what she could and could not eat. She thought that her digestive problems might have been caused by the liberal use of DDT in the German camp. Given what we know about DDT, including it causing cancer in humans if the doses are high enough, she might have had a case. 

She died in her former nursery, surrounded by the beautiful gardens of her own creation, on 29 August 2005. 

AFTER HELGI

Helgi  then returned to Estonia at long last. Her ashes were buried beside her parents in the Sangaste cemetery. 

Sangaste Cemetery gate and boundary wall
Photograph by Ivar Leidus, from Wikimedia Commons
   

On 27 October 2006, the University of Tartu compensated for Helgi for her lack of formal qualifications by appointing her a Honorary Member.  The University's Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology says, "It is a great honor (sic) for our institute that two persons, who have significantly contributed to the achievement of the statutory goal of the University of Tartu, among other things with significant financial support, have been appointed honorary members of the University of Tartu."
 
I would have thought that Helgi's undergraduate education at that University plus her career as a plant breeder should have been enough to earn her that honour.  However, it is likely that a donation of 3 million Estonian kroons, worth more than $300,000 in Australian currency and probably from her estate, to the Institute would have helped too.

I'm sure the Helgi would have been very pleased by the honour from her alma mater.

I thank Helgi Nirk for sharing her life story.  Her papers are held in the Sydney-based Estonian Archives in Australia.

REFERENCES

Australian Seed, 'Tomato Burnley Gem, Lycopersicon esculentum', https://www.australianseed.com/shop/item/tomato-burnley-gem/, accessed 5 July 2021. 

'Balt nurses start work', The Herald, Melbourne, 5 January 1948, p 5, https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/243852526, accessed 6 July 2021.

Estonian World, 3 September 2020, 'The University of Tartu among the 300 best universities in the world', https://estonianworld.com/knowledge/the-university-of-tartu-among-the-300-best-universities-in-the-world/, accessed 6 July 2021.

Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Tartu, 'Honorary Doctors, Professors and Associated Professors', https://tymri.ut.ee/en/content/honorary-doctors-professors-and-associated-professors, accessed 23 May 2023.

Nirk, Helgi, 1959, 'Interspecific hybrids of Lycopersicum', Nature 184 pp 1819-20.

Nirk, Helgi, 1972, 'Study tour of tomato breeding institutions', Melbourne, Victoria, Department of Agriculture.

Renaissance Herbs, 'Tomato Burnley Bounty', https://renaissanceherbs.com.au/product/tomato-burnley-bounty/, accessed 5 July 2021. 

The Little Vegie Patch Co 'Tomato, Burnley Surecrop Heirloom Seeds', https://littleveggiepatchco.com.au/collections/tomato-seeds/products/burnley-surecrop-heirloom-seeds-1-1?variant=239173155, accessed 6 July 2021

University of Hohenheim, 11 June 2019, 'Campus', https://www.uni-hohenheim.de/en/campus-en, accessed 6 July 2021.

Vaba Eesti Sõna (Free Estonian Word), 19 February 1987, 'Helgi Nirgi tomat' ('Helgi Nirk's tomato), p 6, complete issue downloaded from https://dea-digar-ee.translate.goog/?a=d&d=vabaeestisona19870219.1.6&e=-------et-25--1--txt-txIN%7CtxTI%7CtxAU%7CtxTA-------------&_x_tr_sl=et&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=sc&_x_tr_hist=true 23 May 2023.

Valgamaa kodulooline andmebaas ISIK (Valga County History Database PERSON) 'Nirk, Helgi', https://isik.test.pix.ee/index.php?id=1238, accessed 23 May 2023.

Wikipedia, History of Gdansk, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Gda%C5%84sk, accessed 6 July 2021.

24 June 2021

Edvins Baulis (1916-95): Builder of houses and communities

Updated 1 March 2024.

Migrants can contribute to their new nations in many ways.  Edvins Baulis' speciality was the welfare of his fellow migrants and the community in general.  This made for a better Australia for all where he lived. 

Edvins in his early 60s
Photograph courtesy Erik Baulis

The Good Neighbour Councils (GNCs) started in 1949 and emerged as an Australian-wide movement in 1950, from a Citizenship Convention sponsored by the Commonwealth Government.  They united community groups and individual volunteers in assisting new arrivals to assimilate, to become like other Australians, the goal of settlement policy in those days.


As the work the GNCs was doing was valued by the Commonwealth Government, it supported them with funding.

In the 1960s, Australians and their governments started to think in terms of 'integration' rather than 'assimilation'.  This 'melting pot' approach aimed for an amalgam of the old and new, a new society rather than an expectation that only the migrants would change to fit into the old society (Lewins 2001).  It was in this environment that the Fraser Government decided to establish a Review of Post-arrival Programs and Services for Migrants in August 1977.

Known as the Galbally Review, its 1978 report acknowledged the good work the GNCs had done but found that their funding was now being used primarily for internal operations, such as liaison with other organisations and running conferences and seminars.  The money was not going towards direct services to migrants.

The Galbally Review advised that the money supporting the GNCs should be spent instead with ethnic organisations which were able to provide direct services to their own communities.  A two-year phase out of GNC funding was recommended (Galbally et al. 1978).  Around Australia, the GNCs folded, with only two exceptions:  one in Glenorchy and that in Launceston, led by Edvins Baulis.  As of 2021, only the Launceston Branch still operates (Winter 2006; Multicultural Council of Tasmania [2020]; E Baulis 2021) .

Known in Australia as Ted, Edvins led the Launceston GNC from that fateful year of 1978 until 1995, two months before he died.  As well, he was State President of the GNC during the periods 1982-85, 1987-90 and 1992-95.  In 1990, the GNC awarded him life membership (Anon n.d.; Winter 1993).

In a eulogy for Ted before Tasmania's Legislative Council, Independent Member for Launceston, Don Wing, said, 'Withdrawal of Federal funding ... following the Galbally Report caused him great anxiety and concern.  Good Neighbour Councils were abolished throughout Australia but survived in Tasmania and not only survived but actually flourished in the State mainly due to the commitment, leadership and persistence of Mr Baulis' (Wing 1995).

Ted's wife, Jean, was a Launceston local working in a bank, with several months experience of a refugee camp in Germany as a Girl Guide volunteer.  She kept up her interest in the refugees on her return to Launceston, enabling her to meet her husband-to-be at one of the Thursday evening meetings of the Launceston GNC he attended.

They married in October 1953 and had three sons.  After his death, she had the strength to finish up the remaining two months of his GNC presidency term (Examiner 1953; J. Baulis 2009).

Ted found the goodwill and energy to help start the Launceston Migrant Resource Centre while GNC president.  In general, Migrant Resource Centres around Australia now fulfil the roles previously carried out by the GNCs, but are led and resourced by post-WWII migrants from non-English-speaking nations and their descendents rather than by the Australian-born with generations of ancestry here.

Eulogies from Don Wing and the then Tasmanian Minister for Multicultural and Ethnic Affaris, Frank Madill, an undated curriculum vitae, and the recollections of his sons, particularly Erik, list Ted's many other community activities.

He was President of the Federation of Ethnic Communities Councils of Australia in northern Tasmania and President of the Latvian Community of Tasmania for ten years.

He organised an exhibition of Latvian arts and crafts to mark the 25th anniversary of the GNC in Tasmania.  It ran for two weeks in the Northern Regional Library, Launceston, in 1975.  He organised a similar exhibition for the State Library, Hobart, in September 1975.  During 1979, he was Vice-President of the Latvian Federation of Australia and New Zealand.

The Launceston branch of the GNC, under Ted's leadership, staged an International Concert at Launceston's Albert Hall on 4 October 1980.  It featured 70 dancers and singers from around the world, including the Wielangta Aboriginal Dance Group.  It attracted an attendance of four hundred.  Weeks later, on 21 November, he co-ordinated the mass choirs for Albert Hall's official opening by the State Governor.

Ted Baulis at the Latvian Arts Festival, Launceston, 1984
Courtesy Erik Baulis

He chaired the organising committee for the 34th Australian Latvian Arts Festival in Launceston in 1984, bringing many visitors to the region.  The week-long festival included singing and dancing performances as well as exhibitions of paintings by Latvian artists and traditional arts and crafts.  In 1990, the Latvian Community of Tasmania awarded him life membership.

Latvians parade in Launceston during the 1984 Latvian Cultural Festival:
Ted Baulis is on the right of the front row
Photograph courtesy Ervins Miezitis, from Latvians on Line Website

Part of a Hobart exhibition on multiculturalism in Hobart, early 1980s
Ted is the 'prominent migrant settler' from Latvia, second from left
Photograph courtesy of Jean Baulis

In 1987, he helped establish a weekly drop-in centre for migrants in Launceston.  It is still operated by the GNC in the Greek Community Hall and continues to bring together around 40 migrants every Friday morning.  The sessions conclude with a rousing rendition of We are Friends, which Ted composed for the Branch many years previously.

He was a member of the Launceston Male Choir for over twenty years and its President for 1975-78.  In 1988, Launceston's celebrations for Australia's Bicentennial included a performance by the Choir in the city's packed Albert Hall.  That year, it also sang in front of 10,000 at a Colonial Concert in the Royal Park, and at the Launceston Velodrome as part of the Anzac Day commemorations.

A quartet of singers from the Choir, the Tassietones, consisted of Ted, Robin Gregory, Alan Broughton and Merv Barnes, with Aileen Smith on piano.

Ted is on the far right of the back row
Courtesy Erik Baulis

He was on the executive committee of the St Giles Society, providing disability support for Tasmanians, during 1974-77 and worked for the Society for many more years.

He was a member of the State Government's Advisory Council on Multicultural Affairs and the Commonwealth's State Council of the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) after being a member of the ABC's Program Advisory Committee for Northern Tasmania in the early 1980s.  He was a member of the Royal Commonwealth Society for many years and a councillor for 1976-78.  He was State President of St Paul's Latvian Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tasmania for 15 years, between 1974 and 1988.

In the second half of 1992, the Australian Government concluded a major cross-portfolio Evaluation of its Access and Equity Strategy's impact on all of its departments and agencies (OMA 1992).  Ted's contribution to this was acknowledged by a letter of thanks from the Government (E Baulis 2021).

After testing by the National Accreditation Authority for Translators and Interpreters, he was found fit to be an interpreter for the Latvian language.

He became the co-ordinator of a Multicultural Insight class at the Adult Education Institute's School for Seniors in Launceston.  He was a member of Launceston's Tasmania Day Committee.

Ted was President of the Master Builders' Association of Northern Tasmania for more than seven years and, in 1990, won the Master Builders' Ern Davey Award in recognition of his outstanding service and contribution to the building industry in Tasmania.

Ted (with two friends) building his first house in Bridgewater, 20 Km north of Hobart
Courtesy Erik Baulis

He instigated and organised the Multicultural Fountain in Launceston's Civic Square, to commemorate the contributions of migrants to Tasmania (Madill 1995).  It opened on 21 March 1992, preceded by many hurdles and some prolonged delays.  As such, it was a labour of love for Ted.  The fountain was created by a local Czech-born artist, Mirek Marik.  It has been relocated to parkland on the southeast side of the confluence of the Tamar and North Esk rivers (R Baulis 2021).

Launceston's Multicultural Fountain, relocated
Courtesy Ralph Baulis

Multicultural Fountain plaque
Photographer:  Ann Tündern-Smith

In addition to all of this community service, Ted and Jean also volunteered to help the Red Cross Meals on Wheels program.

Jean and Ted

It is not surprising that Queen Elizabeth made Ted a Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE) in June 1979 (Wing 1995).

Jean and Ted
Courtesy Erik Baulis

According to the papers which record his selection for migration to Australia, Edvins was born in Piltene, in Kurzeme, Latvia, on 1 September 1916 (NAA: A11772, 33).  The province is known as Courland in English.  At the time of his birth, the area was caught up in widespread turmoil due to World War I.  His family lived on a small farm and endured meagre supplies, poor medical care and bitterly cold winters.  His eldest brother died of tuberculosis in the year he was born.  His father died of meningitis about 1919 (E Baulis 2021).

The Baulis family home in Piltene, Kurzeme, Latvia
Courtesy Erik Baulis

The selection papers for Australia say that Edvins had completed six years of primary school and two years of secondary school.  In 1938-39, he completed 15 months of compulsory military service in Latvia.  He had done four years of farming work also and worked for three years as an car mechanic.  Jean advised, when we talked in 2009, that he also had studied forestry for two years in Latvia.

After fleeing to Gotenhafen in German-occupied Poland in October 1944, he travelled overland by foot through what is now northern Poland and Germany before meeting up with British and American troops.  The trek was accompanied by extreme hunger, injury, exhaustion and danger, as it was for all Baltic refugees fleeing by land ahead of the Soviet military's advance westward.

Eventually he reached Oldenburg, between Hamburg and the Dutch border, staying at the Ohmstede Displaced Persons Camp.  This catered for around 5000 refugees.  Conditions were far from ideal, with significant food and clothing restrictions in place for much of his time there.  He recalled for his children that tailors in the Camp's workshops would make shirts and coats from old sheets and blankets.  The selection papers say that he had been a 'magazine chief' for two years, presumably in the Ohmstede Camp.


When the General Stuart Heintzelman reached Australia in late November 1947, Edvins had only a small suitcase and an English-Latvian dictionary.  His suitcase was built from the wreckage of a plane that had crashed on the outskirts of Oldenburg, while his shoes had cardboard soles.  He used to say, 'whenever it rained, I would grow half an inch taller because the cardboard soles would absorb all the water' (E Baulis 2021).

Perhaps it was Edvins' forestry studies which led to his first job in Australia.  The newly established Commonwealth Employment Service, operating at the Bonegilla camp, sent him to work at Veneer & Plywood Pty Ltd, a company headquartered in Balmain, Sydney, but operating in the rural NSW town of Wauchope (NAA: A2571/1, 14).  He moved to Tasmania, working first in paper mills in the southern town of Boyer.  Then he relocated to the States's north, working initially for Comalco at Bell Bay.  He moved to the construction site of a Hydro-Electric Commission power station in the Launceston suburb of Trevallyn in May 1953, staying there until his marriage to Jean in October 1954 (Wing 1995; Madill 1995).

In 1954 to 1955, he worked on his own home for his his new family in Trevallyn.  He and Jean were helped by family and friends, while he took six months off work to concentrate on the home.  Then he started out on his own as a builder,  building more than 70 houses in northern Tasmania.  He sold the last one in March 1978 (E Baulis 2021).

He loved the outdoors, especially along the coast of his island home.  He built holiday cabins for the family at Bridport and Bicheno.  He also loved Tasmania's highlands, favouring the Great Lake in its Central Plateau and, closer to Launceston, Cradle Mountain National Park.

It was while building that he would have sawn sheets of asbestos.  Jean believed that this always was outdoors, but Ted still developed the mesothelioma which killed this energetic and community-minded man at age 78 in 1995 (J Baulis 2009).

The Launceston City Council approved the street name, Baulis Court, in 1998 in memory of Ted Baulis and his service to the city.  It's in the suburb of Youngtown, to the southeast of South Launceston.


Courtesy Erik Baulis

Ted and Jean's three sons have made their mark on Australia too, as an architect, a senior Telstra technician and a doctor in general practice.  Their grandchildren continue the contribution.

This life-story could not have been put together without help from Ted's widow, Jean (d. 2014) and, more recently, their sons, especially Erik and Ralph, with support from Harald.  I thank them all for sharing.

References

Baulis E (21 April 2021) Personal communication.

Baulis J (2009) Personal communication.

Baulis R (4 April 2021) Personal communication.

Examiner (Launceston, Tas) (2 November 1953) 'Bride Chose White Gown And Roses', p 10, http://nla.news-article61108298accessed on 04 April 2021.

Galbally, F, Nick Polites, Carlo Stransky and Francesca Merenda 1978 Migrant Services and Programs: Report of the Review of Post-arrival Programs and Services for Migrants, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra, pp 73-79.

Lewins F 'Assimilation and Integration', in Jupp J 2001 The Australian People: an encyclopaedia of the nation, its people and their origins, 2nd edn, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp 752-753.

Madill F (19 June 1995) Tasmanian Government Media Release from Minister for Multicultural and Ethnic Affairs.

Multicultural Council of Tasmania [2020] Our Members, 2020-2021: Member Organisations, https://www.mcot.org.au/our_members, accessed 4 April 2021.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration; A2571/1, Name Index Cards, Migrants Registration [Bonegilla], 1947-1956; 14, BATALEC-BAUZON.

National Archives of Australia: Department of Immigration; A11772, Migrant Selection Documents for Displaced Persons who travelled to Australia per General Stuart Heintzelman departing Bremerhaven 30 October 1947, 1947-1947; 33, BAULIS Edvins DOB 1 September 1916.  

OMA (Office of Multicultural Affairs), Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet 1992 Access and Equity: Evaluation Summary, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra, http://www.multiculturalaustralia.edu.au, accessed on 4 June 2021.

Wing D (21 June 1995) 'Death of Edvins Baulis', Hansard, Legislative Council of Tasmania.

Winter G (2006) 'Good Neighbour Council' in The Companion to Tasmanian Historyhttps://www.utas.edu.au/library/companion_to_tasmanian_history/G/Good%20Neighbour%20Council.htm, accessed 4 April 2021.

Winter G (1993) A History of the Good Neighbour Council of Tasmania, 1949-1992, Good Neighbour Council of Tasmania, Hobart.
















 





29 April 2021

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

 

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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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

 

 

Henrikas in Germany, 

during the 1947 selection process for Australia


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

 

Henrikas'  "Bonegilla card"

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

Henrikas was 30 years old when the card was typed)

Source:  National Archives of Australia

 


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

 


 Henrikas in a group photograph of Lithuanians in Tasmania,

celebrating 50 years in Australia in 1997

Source:  Hobart Mercury


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


Rest in peace, Henrikas.

 

The original obituary in Musu Pastoge*

 

Meryl Dawn Juodvalkis died on 17 September 2106, aged 88.**



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

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

Henrikas Juodvalkis in army uniform


Source:  Musu Pastoge