Friday, March 20, 2020

VALE SHIRLEY RENTON

Word has  just come through that  music  teacher, sailor  and  longtime  political activist ,  Shirley  Renton,  has died in Tasmania . She is shown above with her husband , Reverend  Alan Renton , at their farewell   in  the  Magnetic  Island   Uniting  Church  in  August 2018,  before  they departed for  Tasmania  to retire . 

At the time she was  85 , Alan 90 .  Born at Port Augusta , South Australia, Shirley developed   an  interest   in  politics  from the age of nine when she  began reading newspapers  for her mother , who suffered  from glaucoma,  and was  a  supporter of  the ALP wartime PM,  John Curtin.

Moving to Tasmania  with her parents, Shirley  became a talented pianist  , but suffered  life- threatening asthma  . To escape  the  asthma  attacks  , through a penfriend ,  she moved to  outback  Queensland , near Emerald .

Almost on his  first pastoral role as a  newly ordained  Presbyterian minister from Brisbane , came  Alan Renton ,  who  heard wonderful music being played  at a meeting of  the  local  community .  It  was  Shirley , who said he chased   her   for  two  years back  to Tasmania , before he  popped the  question .

Over their  more than 60 years together they took strong stands against the removal of  Aborigines on Cape York Peninsula  to enable bauxite mining  to go ahead ; opposed the excesses of the Joh Bjelke-Petersen  Queensland  government  , especially the treatment of  demonstrators  in public  rallies  and  the   Springbok rugby   tour  of  Australia ; supported Aboriginal  landrights .

Shirley kept large scrapbooks of those times in which they were forced to leave  Queensland  and continue their extensive  church and humanitarian activities in Tasmania.Returning  to Queensland , they both built up large book collections , Shirley amassing ones on politics in particular, distributed on  the island   and  in Townsville  when  they left for Tasmania .
 
Alan , president of the ALP  Magnetic Island branch  for many years, is   pictured  in  his  island office  with  part  of  their  library . A ham radio enthusiast, Alan communicated with many  people overseas, including Portuguese Timor  , America , Canada  and  Japan and in various parts of Australia . Whilst in Charters Towers he put a lot of effort into an attempt to establish a boarding hostel for Aboriginal  children from isolated communities and cattle stations  to  further their  education.