© 2018 Greg & Sylvia RAY
Read more about the article Brian’s childhood polio helped feed his love of coalmines and railways
Young Brian Andrews, photographed by rail and mine enthusiast, the late Jim Webber.

Brian’s childhood polio helped feed his love of coalmines and railways

Brian Robert Andrews was born in the midst of coal and steam near his father's workplace at West Wallsend Extended Colliery at Killingworth in 1948. His father was in charge of maintaining Caledonian Collieries' fleet of coal wagons, and the family of eight lived in a company-owned house. At 17 months Brian contracted polio. He went to bed one night fit and strong and woke next morning unable to stay upright. The doctor was called and passed sentence: the infant had polio and nothing could be done. That was the beginning of a lifetime of trials…

Continue ReadingBrian’s childhood polio helped feed his love of coalmines and railways
Read more about the article Welcome home for the AIF’s 9th Division, April 1943.
Welcome home parade in Sydney for the AIF's 9th Division, April 2, 1943.

Welcome home for the AIF’s 9th Division, April 1943.

Early in World War 2, Australia wholeheartedly committed the bulk of its fighting forces to help England against Germany. Many people probably saw the war as a re-run of The Great War, and expected most of the action to occur in Europe. Some feared Japanese aggression, noting that Japan had already been at war in China for some years before Germany made its move in 1939, and that the Japanese had been conducting reconnaissance in the Pacific for some time. But it was generally accepted that the British Empire would always be more than a match…

Continue ReadingWelcome home for the AIF’s 9th Division, April 1943.
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