Sunday, January 01, 2012

Bill Bergen passed away

Bill Wellborne writes about his ASOPA friend Bill Bergen who passed away last Friday:
Asopa Class 1A 1962 - (Bill Bergen 3rd from right, top row)

Bill and I were great mates and this is confusing to some of our 1962-63 ASOPA colleagues. We were different in many ways but this made our friendship all the more interesting.
I was the athlete and  Bill loved his music. He had a strong Roman Catholic faith and I was Anglican.  Bill met his wife Joan when they sang in the church choir, prior to ASOPA. My late wife Pam and his wife Joan became firm friends after we married while at college. My wedding was in December 1962 and his was September 1963.
At college we often dined together, played Canasta and sometimes saw a movie. We convinced our wives to enroll for the 6 month E Course for teachers to commence in Rabaul in February 1964. Our wives actually arrived in Rabaul a day ahead of Bill and me in November 1963.
They were met by Father Franke and the were temporarily accommodated in Wanlis flats. We were then posted... Nodup T School for me and I think Rabarua for Bill. The following February our wives started the E Course but they could not cope as they were both pregnant.
Bill and I had to confront Frank Boisen, the District Education Officer, to tell him the news. Frank mumbled as strode off hitching up his pants, “'That's the trouble with Wanlis...There's  not enough room to bend over or swing a cat.!'”
In May my son Tony was born and around the same as Joan gave birth to Helen. 
We often dined together in Rabaul. At home one evening in 1966 we were enjoying a fondue and listening to some grand music on Bill's huge state-of-the-art tape deck. The newly constructed terrace houses were built close together and were known as the European Compound.  Some were rented privately.
A German group was carousing noisily and even played their national anthem. Bill was fed up with this and taped it and played it back at twice the volume. There was some muttering, then silence followed. Later on Bill was posted to Bougainville and I went over to the Lands Department in Port Moresby. But we always kept in touch. 
We left PNG after after Independence in 1975. Bill and Joan decided to live at Bathurst even though parents lived in Sydney. They wanted to settle in an area with four seasons and one that had good cultural and education facilities.
Bill taught in the convent schools for a while and then became a businessman. He had a electrical shop selling lights and he ran a laundromat. He sold these after he built his rental units in Durham Street, Bathurst.
I would visit them and we would have eggs Florentine for breakfast  at their son Chris's reaturant in central Bathurst. Bill and Joan were practicing musicians and, right up to his death, Bill was in charge of the Bathurst Orchestral Group.
He and Joan often travelled to music festivals in country NSW and New Zealand.  Their younger daughter Penny is a brilliant violinist who once was a member of  the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra. She now works as a journalist in Alice Springs. She spent time in Holland where Bill was born 71 years ago. 
Bill was born in Rotterdam, Holland on 19 June 1940. During the war his father volunteered as a cook when he was captured by the Germans. He was a butcher by trade. The family lived together in an upstairs apartment while big pots of stew were cooked downstairs. So they survived the war.
His father joined the Dutch army and went to Indonesia after the war. Sukarno and the Moslems vied for control  and independence for Indonesia. Bill attended school and one day there was heavy shooting. His dad collected him and got his family to close the shutters and to stay inside. Moslem terrorists shot all the red coated police and army personnel they could... about 100.
The family returned to Holland and he went to school there. They returned to Indonesia in 1947 after things settled down and Bill had to have lessons in Indonesian after they got Independence. His father was a sausage maker and got a job in Borneo but he tossed it in as there was lots of violence there.
He didn't want to go back to Holland so where? South Africa, Argentina, Canada or Australia? And that's how Bill ended up in Australia. He attended primary and secondary schooling here and learnt the piano after school. Through his Roman Catholic connections he got a job at a garage and then studied science/ industrial chemistry for first year university.
Bill then worked for a paint maker who offered more money once Bill was approved for ASOPA. Bill was to join the 1961-62 ASOPA intake but he had a cut on his face from a close shaver which needed to be checked out by a specialist for a possible skin problem. He was automatically included in the 1962-63 intake.
Bill's love of music which stayed with him to the end. He was in pain from asbestosis and was heavily drugged when admitted into Bathurst Hospital a week ago.  On Christmas night at 3 am Helen sang Silent Night and her father struggled up and managed to sing a few lines with her.
Bill is survived by his wife Joan, his two daughters Helen and Penelope and his sons Christopher and Timothy.
His funeral is set down for 11.30am on Friday 6 January at St Michael and St Johns Cathedral, Bathurst.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Bob's Birthday Bash Moves South

Following from the blog's last post, Bob Davis celebrated his birthday again a little bit further south. Ian McLean reports:

Bob Davis' birthday bash in our nation's capital at the Weston Club
was a nice mix of family, friends, former colleagues at Canberra
Grammar School ... and stalwart Asopians Keith and Ingrid Jackson, Rod Hard and Ian McLean.

The brief remarks by guests about their recollections of Bob's earlier
days soon turned into a "Roast" with the stories and the language
become increasingly raunchy, and hilarious (you had to be there).


The first photo shows the guest of honour flanked by freeloading
friends Keith and Ingrid (left) and Ian and Rod (right).
Ian wasn't sure what was taking place in this photo, but as
he's always looking for some way to blackmail the rich and infamous,
he just kept his finger on the shutter release.
Rod chatting with Bob's son-in-law and daughter.
Bob cutting his birthday cake under the supervision of his
amazing grandson Ned and granddaughter May.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

The Moose turns 70

Last Sunday family and friends gathered at Tweed Heads to join Bob (Moose) Davis on his 70th birthday. A group of Asopians were also present:
Young Bob (Moose) Davis

Henry, Barry, Diane, Dave, Bob, Brian and Denis

Brian, Dave and Colin
Brian from Northern Rivers and Dave from Sydney come for the day.

Henry and Bob

Jamie and Barry Vincent
Barry and Jamie came down from Hervey Bay

Ros and Denis Burrell

Dubbo Dave Kesby

Elissa, Smoth Brian and Colin

Bob, Diane, Denis, Ros and Henry

Bob receives his birthday cake


Photos by Elissa Kesby, Diane and Bill  Bohlen






Saturday, November 05, 2011

Burra S.A. Visit

On a recent trip to South Australia, with a group of friends, we stopped at Burra and called in on Val who kindly served afternoon tea for us.


Val lives in The Smelters Home, a former Burra hotel built in 1849, a very nice historical place.



Val and Diane on the terrace of her former hotel.

Cheers,

Bill and Diane

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Bill and Diane's USA Tour 2011

We've just returned from a great trip through the United States of America, traveling over 10,000 km by plane, car and coach. 

Click to enlarge map

We stayed in Los Angeles for a couple of weeks with our daughter Sonya, SIL Bernard and grandson Fox. They showed us around LA and of course tinseltown where they live. It was great spending some time with them.
The family together in Los Angeles

Then we flew to New York where we stayed for a couple of days before joining our 23-day cross country tour as shown on the map above.
 A boat trip took us out to the Statue of Liberty

In Yellowstone National Park we came very close to a grizzly bear, on the same day some poor hiker was attacked and killed a little further in from where we were.
Close encounter with a grizzly bear

Some of the waterfalls in the Yellowstone National Park are fabulous as is the scenery everywhere in the park.
Waterfall in Yellowstone

Of course Old Faithfull didn't disappoint us even though we had to wait over an hour for its performance.
Old Faithful in discharge mode


In the Grand Canyon

From Las Vegas, we took a helicopter flight over the Hoover Dam into Grand Canyon where we landed in the canyon for a champagne lunch.
Flying over Hoover Dam

And finally we arrived back in Los Angeles which was the place the old Route 66 terminated at Santa Monica Beach.
Route 66 ends at Santa Monica Beach

If you follow Diane's blog, you'll see more details of the trip over the next few weeks.

Cheers,

Bill and Diane




Friday, June 03, 2011

MINI REUNION IN SOUTH AUSTRALIA

In April, Colin, Peter and Margaret went to SA to visit Val, Lorraine and David. They are all from the 62/63 ASOPA intake. Margaret supplied the following photos and information.
Val lives in a heritage listed corner hotel (Smelter Inn 1849), in Burra Nth on the Barrier Highway. We stayed in the top end of the single storey bulding which Val has set up very comfortably with bedrooms, sitting rooms and a kitchen. The bathroom has been updated with a heated floor which you sure need as tempertures plummet!

 Burra is full of historic buildings. Peter and Margaret outside  the Police Station

Colour coordinated Colin

Colin left and Val right
Val took us on many sight seeing tours. We travelled through little villages before coming across Martindale Hall.Wow this building is really something, having featured in the movie Picnic at Hanging Rock. It is a large square building with rooms radiating around a square downstairs hall overlooked by a second storey with a glorious staircase. it is managed and run as a B&B set up as well for 'Host a Murder' parties.
The Collegians, Dave, Lorraine, Colin and Peter
The Antique Fair was set up over the weekend at the High School and Town Hall. We arranged for Lorraine and David to come up from Adelaide for lunch and have a potter. It was lovely to have a catch up and the collegians had great discussions.
St Mary's Church
 We went to the Anglican Church St Marys which is part of the Willochra Diocese. There is a magnificent organ within however the dear old organist played the hymns far too quickly! It was a very cold morning!
The Grande Hotel
 Val took us back to Adelaide and kindly placed us in the Grande at Glenelg, a beautiful position overlooking the Ocean. We left the following morning for Newcastle; Colin left very early for Brisbane.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Road to Sirinumu Dam

Those of you who have lived in Port Moresby, you are probably familiar with the Sirinumu Dam above the Rouna Hydro-electric power station. It was a popular picnic spot for a Sunday outing including a swim.

Well look at it now:






We used to drive up to Sirinumu Dam on Sundays in my Ford Falcon sedan. Don't think that would be possible now.

The pictures were taken by Ben and Rebecca who both still work in Papua new Guinea