Read Voices from the Air Online
Authors: Tony Hill
I think that poetry is the thing that I should have stuck at all through. The result is I've got a small body of verse which I'd stand by . . . But I very much regret that I haven't written a great deal more.
32
Talbot Duckmanton's brief time reporting the war crimes trials at the end of the war closed the circle on his war years that had
begun as a young ABC broadcaster reporting from the Sydney Harbour Bridge during the first national blackout. He spent much of the war as a pilot in the RAAF and never lost his love of planes and flying, but his great skill was as a broadcaster.
After the war he continued his career as a field commentator and announcer, and in the late 1940s he also hosted a weekly music program,
Starlight and Serenades
, featuring many of the famous American bands and performers of the time. He was a commentator for the Empire Games and was part of the BBC radio commentary team for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth, broadcasting from the Victoria Memorial outside Buckingham Palace.
Other skills came into play as he began taking on senior management roles in the ABC. He was the ABC manager overseeing the introduction of television in 1956 and became an international adviser on television to several other countries through the Colombo Plan and UNESCO. He rose to become a long-serving general manager of the ABC, from 1965 until 1982.
His work as a war correspondent was brief and was overshadowed by his later career at the top of the ABC; and his time in the field, mostly at Morotai, was dominated by its role as a reception and staging point for POWs and as the site of the first war crimes trials. He had no opportunity for the shared experience of battle with the soldiers in the field as did other correspondents, but he was immersed in the tales of the POWs and the crimes of the Japanese on trial at Morotai and his reporting was an important concluding chapter to the ABC's coverage of the war.
I
find that I have trodden well-travelled ground in researching Chester Wilmot â tracing the chronology of Wilmot's movements and his coverage of the war through his scripts, letters and diaries has inevitably traversed many of the same highlights and anecdotes first unearthed by Neil McDonald in his excellent book,
Chester Wilmot Reports
. However, the stories of Wilmot's colleagues â the other ABC war correspondents â are largely unknown.
A very useful source has been Frank Legg's book,
War Correspondent
, which has provided wonderful detail about reporting from the field and about Legg's own assignments, and I have drawn on it liberally throughout. The primary sources for this book are the document and sound archives of the ABC, the National Archives, the Australian War Memorial, the National Library and the State Library of New South Wales. I have also had the co-operation of the correspondents' families and they have generously provided access to family documents. It has been a privilege to work with them on this fascinating journey of discovery and would not have been possible without them.
My grateful thanks go to:
Jane Wilmot Crane, Rosalind Hinde, Richard Legg, Dudley Leggett, Rob Leggett, Lorelei Kerr, Dr John Lennard, Joanne Lennard, Brendan Lennard, Elizabeth-Ann Crossing, Moira Marien, Frank Marien, Merrick Marien, Claire Simpson, Julia Golding-Kostopoulos, Gregory Pikler, Julian Hailes, David Hailes, Peter Hemery, Lyndie Hemery, Peter Thompson, Meredith Stokes, Jonathon Stokes, Tony Fawcus, Wendy Fawcus, Anne MacFarlane, Fiona MacFarlane, Geoffrey MacFarlane, John MacFarlane, Suzanne Skira, Chris Edwards, Diana Chick, Vivienne Benton, John Benton, Jon Paull, Fay Barnes, Christine Lowndes, Robert Lowndes, Craig Duckmanton, Susi Bayes, Kim McKenzie.
At ABC News, thanks to Gaven Morris for his support, and to Michael Reid and Gordon Lavery for both support and feedback on the manuscript. Jane Benson was my partner on the original history of the ABC's foreign correspondents many years ago. Guy Tranter of ABC Archives provided generous assistance and patient advice over the years. Thanks also to John Spence and Mary-Jane Stannus, and to Ali Edwards of ABC Rights Management for her great kindness in reviewing the manuscript during her holidays. Peter Cave for his generosity in sharing information about John Elliott. Michele Harris for final fact-checking. Katie Stackhouse and Lachlan McLaine at ABC Books. The staff at the National Archives and Sue Ducker and her team at the Australian War Memorial. And Gillian most of all, who has edited this book through all versions from start to finish.
Introduction
1
     Â
Neville Petersen,
Policy Formation in the ABC News Service, 1942â1961
, University of Sydney, 1978
2
     Â
Regulations for Press Correspondents Accompanying a Force in the Field, 1940, NAA
Chapter 1
1
     Â
Attributed to Albert Einstein (disputed)
2
     Â
Broadcasting in Australia
, Ian K Mackay, Melbourne University Press, 1957
3
     Â
Note from GB Shaw's Secretary to Arthur Mason 20 September 1933, NAA
4
     Â
Airmail letter from GH Morison to ABC 27 August 1937, NAA
5
     Â
RT Peyton-Griffin cable to ABC, 16 January 1938, NAA
6
     Â
Commentary by Peter Russo 8 July 1940, NAA
7
     Â
Guenther Stein script,
Hong Kong Today
, 17 November 1938, NAA
8
     Â
Letter from ABC General Manager Charles Moses to Arthur Mason 7 October 1938, NAA
9
     Â
Hugo Jackson commentary from London, 16 April 1939, NAA
10
   Â
Arthur Mason cable to ABC, 1 September 1939, NAA
11
   Â
Article by Arthur Mason September 1939, NAA
Chapter 2
1
     Â
NBC Mobile Units promotional pamphlet, attachment to NBC letter to TW Bearup, 19 May 1938, NAA
2
     Â
Wireless World
, 19 April 1935
3
     Â
TW Bearup, memo to the ABC, 25 August 1938, NAA
4
     Â
Memo from Dudley Leggett to the General Manager, 16 December 1939, NAA
5
     Â
Cowra Leader
, 4 December 1939, NAA
6
     Â
BBC Observers at The Front, note in ABC files, 20 February 1940, NAA
7
     Â
Policy Formulation in the ABC News Service
, Neville Petersen
Chapter 3
1
     Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 22 September 1940, NLA
2
     Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 22 September 1940, NLA
3
     Â
Chester Wilmot script,
The Nazi Party Rally at Nuremberg
, 30 August 1939, NLA
4
     Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 30 August 1940, NLA
5
     Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 30 August 1940, NLA
6
     Â
Memo from ABC GM, Charles Moses, 15 January 1940, NAA
7
     Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 30 August 1940, NLA
8
     Â
Edith Irwin telegram to Chester Wilmot, 31 August 1940, NLA
9
     Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 2 September 1940, NLA
10
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to Edith Irwin, 13 September 1941, NLA
11
   Â
Lawrence Cecil letter to the ABC, 15 October 1940, NAA
12
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his family, 29 October 1940, NLA
13
   Â
Gazette issue 30813, UK Force War Records
14
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his father, Derna, 2 February 1941, NLA
15
   Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 3 November 1940, NLA
16
   Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 4 November 1940, NLA
17
   Â
Official History â Australia in the War of 1939â1945
, Series 1, Vol 1, AWM
18
   Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 7 December 1940, NLA
19
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his family, 30 November 1940, NLA
20
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his family, 30 November 1940, NLA
21
   Â
Chester Wilmot report, The Right to Send Press Cables, 26 January 1942, NAA
22
   Â
Chester Wilmot,
Tobruk
, Viking, 2007 edition, p 4
23
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Australians in the Frontline
, 26 December 1940, NAA
24
   Â
Lawrence Cecil script,
How Recordings were Made and Despatched the Libyan Campaign
, NAA
25
   Â
Lawrence Cecil letter to the ABC, 27 December 1940, NAA
26
   Â
Lawrence Cecil letter to the ABC, 27 December 1940, NAA
27
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Australians In the Frontline, Sollum
, 26 December 1940, NAA
28
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Australians In the Frontline, Sollum
, 26 December 1940, NAA
29
   Â
Lawrence Cecil,
How Recordings were Made and Despatched During the Libyan Campaign
, 1941, ABC Archives
30
   Â
Frank Dixon diaries, 4 January 1941, NAA
31
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
The Capture of Bardia
, 10 January 1941, NAA
32
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Bardia Falls
, NAA
33
   Â
Australian War Memorial - https://www.awm.gov.au/military-event/E222/
34
   Â
Lawrence Cecil,
How Recordings were Made and Despatched During the Libyan Campaign
, 1941, ABC Archives
35
   Â
Lawrence Cecil letter to the ABC, 13 January 1941, NAA
36
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his father, Derna, 2 February 1941, NLA
37
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his mother and father, 20 January 1941, NLA
38
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
What I Saw At Tobruk
, 24 January 1941, NAA
39
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
What I Saw At Tobruk
, 24 January 1941, NAA
40
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
What I Saw At Tobruk
, 24 January 1941, NAA
41
   Â
Frank Dixon diaries, 22 and 23 January 1941, NAA
42
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his family, Cairo, 25 February 1941, NLA
43
   Â
Lawrence Cecil script,
How Recordings were Made and Despatched During the Libyan Campaign
, NAA
44
   Â
Chester Wilmot script, Derna, 30 January 1941, NAA
45
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his father, Derna, 2 February 1941, NLA
46
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his father, Derna, 2 February 1941, NLA
47
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his father, Derna, 2 February 1941, NLA
48
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his father, Derna, 2 February 1941, NLA
49
   Â
Lawrence Cecil script,
Hitch-hiking in the Desert
, March 1941, NAA
50
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
The Road to Bengasi Part 1
, 8 February 1941, NAA
51
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
The Road to Bengasi Part 1
, 8 February 1941, NAA
52
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
The Last Round Up in Cyrenaica
, 7 February 1941, NAA
53
   Â
Alan Moorehead,
The Observer
newspaper, 17 January 1954,
54
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
All Quiet on the Western Desert
, 17 February 1942, NAA
55
   Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 30 August 1940, NLA
56
   Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 6 March 1941, NLA
57
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his family, 25 February 1941, NLA
58
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
A Letter from the Front No 1
, March 1941, NAA
59
   Â
Chester Wilmot article, âField Unit's Escape from Greece',
ABC Weekly
, 8 May 1941, NAA
60
   Â
Frank Dixon memo to McCarthy, 4 April 1941, NAA
61
   Â
Chester Wilmot article, âField Unit's Escape from Greece',
ABC Weekly
, 8 May 1941, NAA
62
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to Edith Irwin, 3 April 1941, NLA
63
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
A Letter from the Front No 2
, 16 April 1941, NAA
64
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Blowing the Road
, April 1941, NAA
65
   Â
Chester Wilmot article, âField Unit's Escape from Greece',
ABC Weekly
, 8 May 1941, NAA
66
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Monastir Gap
, 17 April 1941, NAA
67
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Monastir Gap
, 17 April 1941, NAA
68
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Monastir Gap
, 17 April 1941, NAA
69
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
A Letter from the Front No 3
, 5 May 1941, NAA
70
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to Edith Irwin, 7 July 1941, NLA
71
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to Edith Irwin, 7 July 1941, NLA
72
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to Edith Irwin, 7 July 1941, NLA
73
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to Edith Irwin, 7 July 1941, NLA
74
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to Edith Irwin, 7 July 1941, NLA
75
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his family, 5 May 1941, NLA
76
   Â
Lawrence Cecil report to the ABC on the Field Unit's operations in the Middle East, April 1942, NAA
77
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Air Power and the Greek Campaign
, 5 May 1941, NAA
78
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
A Letter from the Front No 6
, 8 June 1941, NAA
79
   Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 3 June 1941, NLA
80
   Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 3 June 1941, NLA
81
   Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 3 June 1941, NLA
82
   Â
Chester Wilmot report to the ABC, Re: Withdrawal of My Accreditation, 10 November 1942, NAA
83
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to Edith Irwin, 30 May 1941, NLA
84
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his parents, 13 May 1941, NLA
85
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to Edith Irwin, 30 May 1941, NLA
86
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
HMAS Perth in the Mediterranean
, 12 June 1941, NAA
87
   Â
Chester Wilmot article,
ABC Weekly
, 9 August 1941, ABC Archives
88
   Â
www.navy.gov.au/hmas-perth-i
89
   Â
www.awm.gov.au/unit/U56059/
90
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
The Surrender of Sidon
, 24 June 1941, NAA
91
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
The Surrender of Sidon
, 24 June 1941, NAA
92
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to his mother, 26 June 1941, NLA
93
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
A Letter from the Front No 8
, 23 June 1941, NAA
94
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Queenslanders Attack Merdjayoun
, 25 June 1941, NAA
95
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Queenslanders Attack Merdjayoun
, 25 June 1941, NAA
96
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Queenslanders Attack Merdjayoun
, 25 June 1941, NAA
97
   Â
Chester Wilmot diaries, 26 June 1941, NLA
98
   Â
Chester Wilmot letter to Edith Irwin, 6 July 1941, NLA
99
   Â
Chester Wilmot script,
Hard Fighting at Damour
, 9 July 1941, NAA
100
 Â
AWM â www.awm.gov.au/military-event/E282/
101
 Â
Lawrence Cecil letter to ABC, 16 July 1941, NAA
102
 Â
TW Bearup letter to W Macmahon Ball, 29 September 1941, NAA
103
 Â
ABC Records Messages Home, film footage, September 1941, Damien Parer, F01148 â AWM
104
 Â
Lawrence Cecil letter to the ABC, 19 August 1941, NAA
105
 Â
Chester Wilmot,
Tobruk
, Viking, 2007 edition, p.100