de Kantzow, Charles
Kleckham, Marjorie Surtees
Merrett, Margaraet (Peggy)
Murray, Peter Ross Kennedy
Norrie AO OBE , Major General James William
Quartermaine, Pamela Ann
Stevens, Brian Arthur
Wan, Sir Wamp
Back to Vale
Index
We hope to have "Vales" in the next update for the following
people -
Booth, Harvey (23 July 2007)
Bovelt, Allan (June 2006)
Stuart, Rev.Canon Ian Duke (June 21, 2007)
Mulholland, Dr Jean (Beebo) (30 June 2007, aged 80
years)
Rolfe, Bette
Trezise, Sir Kenneth Bruce (28 July 2007, aged 68
years)
Charles de KANTZOW (28
December 2006, aged 72 years)
Charles arrived in Mendi in 1961, a new Didiman recruit.
After a brief introduction into Highlands life he was given
the task of developing the Southern Highlands Agricultural
Training Station at Kagua, on a swamp, using a bag of pearl
shell and some salt to buy labour. Charlie was a Hawkesbury
College graduate whose resourcefulness and resilience were
born out of hard work and hard times on his parents’
property on the Hawkesbury River. The focus was not just on
Kagua. The local Highland people had to be contacted and
Charlie eagerly took his message to them on foot. When he
left to establish the Eastern Highlands Agricultural Station
at Korofeigu four years later, Charlie left behind a
thriving Agricultural Training College and local industries
based on cattle, poultry and pig production as well as
coffee, forestry and tea projects, and maize and sorghum
crops. In 1971 Charles joined ICI as their Highlands
representative based in Lae. Throughout his time in PNG,
except for the first two years, Charles had his wife Del by
his side. Del taught in the local T schools and later
established the first Special School in Lae.
The family, including daughters Stephanie and Kate, moved
from Lae to Scone NSW in 1974. Ten years later Charles took
up an agronomist position in Darwin. The family returned to
NSW in 1995 and settled in Berry. Since 1998 Charles has
promoted the coffee industry in the area. He died after a
long battle with cancer and is survived by his wife Del, two
daughters and two grandsons.
D de Kantzow
Marjorie Surtees KLECKHAM
(2 June 2007, aged 88 years)
Marjorie grew up in Brisbane, marrying Fred in 1940. Fred
then went to the Middle East and Marjorie worked as a nurse
at the Mackay Base Hospital. After the war Fred joined the
PNG Department of Agriculture - the couple’s first married
posting was to Popondetta where they lived through the
eruption of Mount Lamington in January 1951. Here,
Marjorie’s nursing experience and resourcefulness proved
invaluable – she described her experiences in an article in
the June 2003 Una Voce (p.11). Shortly after the eruption,
Fred set off for the devastated area and Marjorie set to
work: ‘I had to prepare food for everyone, get all the
bandages and medical supplies I could collect together, get
the machinery cleared out of the engine sheds, spread
tarpaulins across the floors of the sheds and make an
emergency war hospital for the people. I supervised all of
this work and also collected all the 44 gallon drums I could
find and sent boys with every available bucket to carry
water to fill these drums and tubs. It was very fortunate
that I did this as the streams ran hot and filled with mud
and dead fish and other animals.’ Then a shuttle service
began bringing in the burnt and dying native people.
Marjorie continued, ‘… all the women worked tirelessly all
that afternoon and all night and into the next morning. All
we had for the treatment of burns was tins of dripping.
Every native was given a place to lie down in the shelter of
a roof. The women (European women) put dripping on all their
burns … We had no morphia, nothing except rum and whisky to
ease the natives’ pain. We got this from the trade store.’
All the while Marjorie was caring for her two young children
and breastfeeding her baby daughter.
Later in 1951 the couple were transferred to Lorengau, where
Marjorie, ever resourceful, purchased a Singer treadle
machine from the Edgell & Whitely store and began making
laplaps for the Chinese shops to top up their modest income.
She also helped at the local hospital on a voluntary basis.
Further postings were to Daru, Port Moresby and Lae. The
couple retired in 1975, but two years later sailed their
yacht to Popondetta where Fred spent two years developing
the Smallholder Oil Palm project. Following this Fred and
Marjorie sailed to various ports around PNG, before finally
retiring to the Mackay area. Marjorie and Fred became world
renowned for their shell collecting, discovering new shells
over the years. Fred predeceased her; Marjorie is survived
by children, Fred and Betty, and grandchildren.
Index
Margaret (Peggy) MERRETT (30
June 2007, aged 81 years)
Born in Thirroul NSW, Peggy completed her nursing training
at the Wollongong District Hospital in 1947. A year later
she obtained her obstetric certificate in Sydney. After
cycling around England and Scotland and nursing at the
Wollongong Hospital, she moved to PNG in 1955. She worked
first in Port Moresby and then in Madang. There she met Russ
Merrett - Peggy and Russ were married in the Lutheran
Church, Madang, in 1958. In 1962 the family left PNG to
settle in Fairy Meadow NSW. In 1984 their eldest son, Jim,
died. Peggy’s interests included china painting,
horticulture and floral arrangement. In 1944 cancer caught
up with her, and over the years she had four major
operations. She passed away following complications
resulting from a fall. Peggy is survived by her husband,
daughter and two sons, and three grandchildren. Russ Merrett
Peter Ross Kennedy MURRAY
(8 October 2006, aged 81 years)
(The Vale notice for Peter Murray in the March 2007 issue of
Una Voce described Peter’s life up to 1949. His wife Pat has
now sent us more information.)
In 1949 Peter leased Libba Lossu Plantation in New Ireland
from the owner Mrs Margaret Grose, widow of the late WE
Grose and soon met the nearest neighbours, the Stanfield
family. Peter and Pat (Stanfield) were married in 1951. In
1955, when the Lossu lease expired, Peter went on to manage
Luburua and from 1958, Baia. During the Baia years, Peter
was a member of the District Advisory Council and twice
stood for election to the House of Assembly - in an ‘open’
electorate. He drew considerable support from the NI people
as he was well known and respected, but not enough to win a
seat. Peter had a second ‘occupation’ that of licensed
auctioneer, holding sales three or four times a year. He
dealt mainly with Government disposals, especially vehicles,
but also with personal property. Auction days were well
attended by all races, and the event took on a carnival
atmosphere. Peter joined the Freemasons Lodge and reached
the status of Master. He was able to assist in the building
of the Kavieng Lodge by contributing a ‘wall building’
machine for the construction of concrete blocks. In 1982
Peter and Pat left New Ireland because of a health problem
of Peter’s resulting from war service. From 1946 to 1982
Peter only ‘went south’ three times before ‘going finish’.
In Australia Peter was an active member of Legacy for over
20 years. He joined the Newcastle branch of the Naval
Association and was the instigator of a suitable annual
commemoration of the Battle of the Coral Sea held in
Newcastle on the Sunday nearest the Battle date in early
May; he was made a life member of the Naval Association in
1999. In 2005 Peter and Pat moved to a retirement home on
the Central Coast of NSW. Peter is survived by his wife Pat,
four children, Anne, Alastair, Rosalind and Eve, and ten
grandchildren. Pat Murray
Major General James William NORRIE AO OBE
(28 July 2007, aged 85 years)
A NSW country boy, Jim was a contemporary of Freddie Kaad at
Sydney Boys High School, where both excelled at sport. He
graduated from Duntroon in 1942 and an outstanding military
career in war and peace followed. Jim was in charge of
defence Forces in Papua New Guinea for several years in the
critical transition period through Self-Government to
Independence. His impressive military funeral in Sydney was
attended by His Excellency the Governor General and Mrs
Jeffrey. Harry West
Index
Pamela Anne Quartermaine (29
March 2007, aged 73)
Pam arrived in PNG in 1955 at the age of 21 and devoted her
next 38 years to community schools and to teacher education
as a teacher, a Teachers College lecturer, an Inspector, and
an administrator in the Waigani Central Office. She touched
the lives of her students, colleagues and members of the
community in Rabaul, Dregerhafen, Goroka, and Port Moresby
in such a way that these relationships often turned into
lifelong friendships. She had an abiding interest in the
needs of females in education and was for a time the Dean of
Women Students at Port Moresby Teachers College. She worked
for the National Government all the while maintaining very
cordial working relations with the various Churches which
also operated colleges and schools. Pam studied education in
Western Australia, the UK, the USA and Tasmania and traveled
widely, broadening her knowledge and perspective. She left
PNG in 1993 to live in Perth. In 2001 she completed her PhD
thesis on Teacher Education in PNG – a very comprehensive
document. In 2006 she returned to East New Britain to teach
at an international school but left prematurely because of
serious ill health. Pam had a deep and enduring affection
for PNG and its people.
(From the eulogy given by Neville Robinson)
Brian Arthur STEVENS (4 April
2007, aged 75 years)
Brian spent his formative years in Renmark SA. He joined the
Army in 1952 and attended the School of Signals. Radio
became a passion which stayed with him all his life – when
seniority moved him away from hands-on communication, he
turned Amateur. Brian’s first posting was to Korea, quickly
followed by a posting to Japan. There he met and married
Harumi, and their three children followed soon after. Of all
their postings, the family’s favourite was Port Moresby.
After retirement, Brian sought to return to PNG, but soon
realised that times had changed since Independence. He
returned to Adelaide where he involved himself in community
activities. One of the highlights of his later years was the
annual PNG reunion which he enjoyed enormously. Brian is
survived by Harumi, his wife of 52 years, three children,
Peter, Diane and David, and five grandchildren. Diane
Brinkworth
Sir Wamp Wan, Paramount Chief
(May 2007, aged 101 years)
Sir Wamp WAN, the Paramount Chief who became a Member of the
British Empire (MBE) and was later knighted, died in May
2007 at his home outside Mount Hagen. He was 101.
Sir Wamp’s contact with the outside world began in 1933 with
the arrival of explorers and the Administration. By then, he
was 27 and already a famous young tribal chieftain around
the Mt Hagen area. He was the first Highlands leader to
accept, welcome and help settle the pioneer western
explorers into the country’s interior. He was appointed a
boss of Tultuls soon after WWII; in 1962 when local
government was introduced, he became a Councillor, and in
1963 he became Council President. He, along with fellow
chiefs, the Administration and the Catholic Church, forged
harmonious relations with surrounding tribes – today the
tribes in his area are some of the most peaceful and
law-abiding in the Highlands region. He was the founding
father of the multi-million-kina Wamp Nga group of
companies. He assisted the BBC in filming colonial PNG
before self-government. Following this, in 1973, he was
sponsored to England and Italy; he met the Queen and was
awarded an MBE, and continued on to Rome where he met Pope
John Paul II. He invited the Pope to visit PNG. Eleven years
later, in 1994, he was on hand to greet the Pope on his
visit to the country. Between 1975 and 1982, he served as a
Provincial Member of the PNG Government and held the Health
portfolio. In 1995 he was knighted by the Queen. He stepped
down from public office at the age of 79.
Sir Wamp played a major role in bringing development and
services that completely changed the traditional existence
of the mountain tribes under his domain. He led in the
establishment of the Catholic and Lutheran churches in the
region; he was one of the first to become a Catholic. The
first school was established on his land. The Mount Hagen
General Hospital eventuated because of him. Like all tribal
chieftains in the Highlands during this era, Sir Wamp had
several wives – all five of them predeceased him. He is
survived by seven sons and eight daughters, and their many
descendants.
(Information from Pacific Press and The National)
Index