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Military and Political History

Military and Political History

Dutch Women Army Corps at Yeronga Park Brisbane (WWII)

he US Army had chosen Yeronga Park for a military camp in 1942. Camp Yeronga Park housed a variety of units among them the military police and the 99th Signal Battalion, US Service Army of Supplies ( USASOS) and the US Women’s Army Corps (WAC). The Australian Army placed an Read more…

By DACC, 2 yearsJanuary 29, 2023 ago
Military and Political History

Evacuees and Refugees from Netherlands East Indies recuperating in Australia after WWII

After the surrender of Japan there were some 100,000 European people in the Japanese camps, many of them were close to starvation. An agreement between Australia and Netherlands East Indies governments led to the formation of the Netherlands Indies Welfare Organisation for Evacuees (NIWOE). The organisation emerged out of the Read more…

By DACC, 2 yearsJanuary 10, 2023 ago
Military and Political History

Personal recollections Camp Columbia – Jean van Schilfgaarde

Personal recollections Camp Columbia – Jean van Schilfgaarde The information below is the exact text of a letter from Jean van Schilfgaarde to Dr Jack Ford in 1992. Jack had contacted her for his research for his publication: Allies in bind: Australia and the Netherlands East Indies relations during World War Two. This Read more…

By DACC, 2 yearsJanuary 9, 2023 ago
Military and Political History

Dutch at WWII Camp Columbia Brisbane 1944 – 1947

Camp Columbia in the suburb of Wacol in Brisbane was a United States Army military camp. It was built in 1942 to accommodate American troops. The Sixth US Army Headquarters was formed and stationed here. It also hosted two hospitals and an Officer Candidate School till 1945.  This was the Read more…

By DACC, 2 yearsJanuary 9, 2023 ago
Aviation and Shipping

Joan McConachy – secretary at the Dutch Army at Camp Columbia

By her son David Hill. Joan McConachy was a secretary at Camp Columbia, Brisbane working for the Dutch Army as she later told her son David (perhaps at NEFIS). Joan was born in 1924 at Winton (Central West QLD) and moved to Brisbane around 1943 from the then family home Read more…

By DACC, 2 yearsDecember 31, 2022 ago
Migration history

A fascinating link between the Boven Digul Camp, the 18th NEI Squadron and the Cowra WWII Cemetery

The Burgers Family from Cowra bring together several important historical events. It starts with Jan Hevel who is an Adjutant at the Political Prisoners Camp Boven Digul -Dutch New Guinea. The leaders of the Indonesian independence uprising of 1925/1926 were imprisoned in the remote jungle of Netherlands New Guinea. In Read more…

By DACC, 2 yearsDecember 27, 2022 ago
Military and Political History

Jeff Crosbie – Australian Gunner at the 18 NEI RAAF Squadron

On 22 January 1944 RAAF Flight Sergeant Jeff Crosbie reported for duty at the aircrew headquarters tent of 18 NEI-RAAF Squadron at Batchelor, Northern Territory. When the Dutch had to flee Netherlands East Indies, after the Japanese invaded the country, Dutch planes, ships and military personnel regrouped in Australia.  While Read more…

By DACC, 2 yearsDecember 23, 2022 ago
Military and Political History

Indonesian War Graves at Cowra (Netherlands East indies)

When the Japanese invaded the Dutch East Indies, some 20,000 Dutch and Indonesians (Netherlands East Indies – NEI) fled to Australia. As Australia had a strict White Australian Policies, native people from NEI where housed separately. Of them 1,200 Indonesian internees were held at the Cowra POW Camp during WWII. Read more…

By DACC, 2 yearsDecember 22, 2022 ago
Aviation and Shipping

Dutch War Cemetery Perth incl. names of people killed

This is the only official Dutch War Cemetery in Australia. It is only one of three non Commonwealth War Cemeteries in Australia, the other two being the Tatura (German) War Cemetery in Victoria (250 graves) and the Cowra (Japanese) War Cemetery in New South Wales (523). At Cowra the Dutch Read more…

By DACC, 2 yearsDecember 21, 2022 ago
Military and Political History

Max Horstink – bombardier at 18 NEI Squadron RAAF and guerrilla fighter at Timor WWII

As a KNIL Officer, he was part of the Australian troops (Sparrow Force) in Timor. He was later placed as a bombardier at the 18 NEI Squadron RAAF in MacDonald airfield near Darwin.  After that he became a NEI intelligent officer on Dutch New Guinea and Borneo and was killed during the Indonesian uprising, Bersiap.

By DACC, 2 yearsNovember 21, 2022 ago

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