Ed Parker – Treasurer, Camp Columbia Heritage Association, Cr Adrian Schrinner – Lord Mayor, Brisbane City Council, Paul Budde – President, Camp Columbia Heritage Association.

We are proud to inform you that the Lord Mayor of Brisbane hosted an official civic reception in honour of the Camp Columbia Heritage Association on the eve of our international WWII symposium at the University of Queensland.

This prestigious event took place at Brisbane City Hall, in the Balmoral Room, on Friday 29 August 2025. It was an invitation-only function for symposium speakers, registered delegates, and official guests.

The Lord Mayor’s support for this reception is a significant recognition of the importance Brisbane City Council places on the work of CCHA and the historical significance of Camp Columbia. It reflects the growing acknowledgement of Brisbane’s role during World War II as a centre of Allied cooperation, and the city’s unique connection to the Netherlands East Indies (NEI) government-in-exile. We used the symposium to focus on the Dutch involvement as the Fourth Ally in the war in the Pacific. Some 20.000 Dutch people fled to Australia after the occupation of NEI by the Japanese. A unique ceremonial sword discovered at the former site of Camp Columbia most likely belonged tho the highest ranking official of the NEI Government in Exile was for the first time on display at the exhibition that coincided with the symposium.

The following dignities participated in the event:

  • H.E. Mrs Ardi Stoios-Braken, Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to
    Australia. The Netherland Government was the major sponsor of the event.
  • Mrs Marjon Wind, Honorary Consul of the Netherlands in Queensland
  • The Hon. Milton Dick MP, Speaker of the House of Representatives
  • Cr Sarah Hutton, Brisbane City Council for The Right Honourable the Lord
    Mayor of Brisbane, Cr Adrian Schrinner.
  • Colonel Andrew Clark Army Attache U.S. Mission Australia. for the U.S. Charge d’Affairs Erika Olsen
  • Emeritus Professor Ian Lilly, University of Queensland: Research on Camp
    Columbia, Wacol.
  • PaulJac Verhoeven, Director Museum Bronbeek, Arnhem, the Netherlands.

We are honoured by this opportunity and were pleased to be able to represent our community at this special occasion.

Camp Columbia and the Camp Colubia Heritage Association Inc.

Camp Columbia was the largest Allied camp in Queensland during WWII. It served multiple roles:

– From 1942, it hosted American troops, including the U.S. Sixth Army, and played a critical part in the Pacific campaign.

– After the Americans left, it became the headquarters for the Netherlands East Indies government-in-exile, the first and only time Australia has hosted a foreign government.

– It later served as a refugee and migrant camp, becoming the largest postwar migration camp in Queensland.

CCHA’s mission is to:

– Preserve and promote this history

– Share the personal and community stories linked to the site

– Make the history visible – through research, our website, signage, exhibitions, archaeology and eventually a heritage trail at Camp Columbia, in partnership with Brisbane City Council and the local community.