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Joice NanKivell Loch

 
Wikipedia: Joice NanKivell Loch

Joice NanKivell Loch (b. 24 January 1887, Ingham, Queensland – d. 8 October 1982)[1] was an Australian author, journalist and humanitarian worker who worked with refugees in Poland, Greece and Romania after World War I and World War II.[2]

Contents

Biography

Joice Mary NanKivell was born at Farnham sugar cane plantation in Ingham in far north Queensland in 1887. Her father acted as manager of the plantation for Fanning, NanKivell, a company run by the Fanning brothers and her wealthy grandfather Thomas NanKivell. The family fortune was lost however when Kanaka labour was abolished and Joice and her parents walked off the property virtually penniless.[citation needed]

Joice's father George NanKivell took a job as manager on a run-down property in Gippsland where Joice grew up. She had wanted to become a doctor but the family was unable to pay university fees and so she helped on the property until she was 26 years old. After the death of her brother during World War I, her father abandoned the farm and Joice went to Melbourne where she worked for the Professor of Classics at the University of Melbourne and reviewed books for the Melbourne Herald.[citation needed]

She met her husband, Gallipoli veteran Sydney Loch when she reviewed his anti-war book To Hell and Back, the banned story of Gallipoli which told of the horrors of that campaign. The book had been banned by the military censor fearful that if the truth about the slaughter at Gallipoli were revealed young men would stop enlisting to fight in France.[3]

Joice and Sydney Loch went to Poland as aid workers for the Quaker Relief Movement with the aim of writing a book about the damage that Lenin's troops had inflicted on Poland and were awarded medals by the President of Poland for their humanitarian work.[citation needed] In 1922 they went to Greece as aid workers following the burning of Smyrna. The Lochs worked in a Quaker-run refugee camp on the outskirts of Thessaloniki for two years before being given a peppercorn rent on a Byzantine tower by the sea in the refugee village of Ouranoupolis.[citation needed]

To help the villagers, Joice purchased looms so that the women could work as rug weavers; she designed Byzantine rugs, one of which is now on display in the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney. She also acted as a medical orderly and held regular clinics for the villagers. For their work in Greece the couple were awarded medals by the King of the Hellenes.[2][4]

Operation Pied Piper

During World War II Joice was awarded another two medals by the Governments of Romania and Poland for saving a thousand Polish and Jewish children from the Nazis by leading a daring escape known as Operation Pied Piper from Romania where they were running a refugee centre for Poles who had escaped from the Nazis and the Russian invasion. Subsequently Joice and Sydney ran a refugee camp for Poles at Haifa. In 1945 they returned to Greece and their tower home and re-established the Pirgos rug industry in Ouranoupolis.[citation needed]

Marriage

Sydney Loch (born 1888, London - died 6 February 1955), [5] was a Gallipoli veteran and a humanitarian worker. He was raised in Scotland and sailed to Australia in 1905, aged 17, working first as a jackaroo. He later became a writer. He and Joice NanKivell wed in 1919. They sailed for England and secured a contract to write a book on Ireland, which was published as Ireland in Travail.[citation needed]

Deaths

Sydney Loch died on 6 February 1955. Joice Loch died on 8 October 1982, aged 94.

Selected bibliography

Fiction

  • The Cobweb Ladder (1916), poetry and prose for children
  • The Solitary Pedestrian (1918)
  • The Fourteen Thumbs of st Peter (1926)

Non-fiction

  • A Fringe of Blue (1968)

References

  1. ^ "Agent Details: Loch, Joice Nankivell". author information available for public browsing. www.AustLit.edu.au. http://www.austlit.edu.au/run?ex=ShowAgent&agentId=A(AN. Retrieved 2006-07-10. 
  2. ^ a b Kontominas, B. The great heroine Australia forgot, Sydney Morning Herald, 8 July 2006
  3. ^ To Hell and Back, The Banned Story of Gallipoli HarperCollins, Sydney, 2007/Isis Publishing, London, 2008
  4. ^ Maxine McKew; Susanna De Vries (2000-12-28). "and Susanna de Vries, Blue Ribbons, Bitter Bread, Pirgos Press/Tower Books, Sydney. Transcript: Australian women of the century remembered in federation book". 7:30 report (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/stories/s229874.htm and Susanna de Vries, Blue Ribbons, Bitter Bread, Pirgos Press/Tower Books, Sydney.. Retrieved 2006-08-08. 
  5. ^ De Vries, Susanna. Blue Ribbons Bitter Bread: The Life of Joice NanKivell Loch, Australia's Most Decorated Woman 2000 Hale & Iremonger, Australia ISBN 0868066915

Sources

  • Adelaide, Debra (1988) Australian women writers: a bibliographic guide, London, Pandora

Further reading

  • De Vries, Susanna, 'Blue Ribbons Bitter Bread: the Life of Joice NanKivell Loch (3rd ed., 2005)

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