| BROWN,
Philip Lawrence (1904-1996), historian, was born in Manchester,
England, on January 15, 1904, the elder surviving son (a twin brother
died in infancy and there were three older sisters) of Dr. Francis
Brown, an Anglican priest and schoolmaster, and his wife Ada.
The family migrated to Geelong where Dr. Brown served as headmaster of
the Church of England Grammar School, first in Geelong (1912-13), then
at Corio (1914-29).
As a boy, and
later, Philip was friendly, scholarly, and dutiful, with a nice
combination of humour and serious purpose. In 1923, entering
Trinity College at Melbourne University with a scholarship, his
historical studies began in earnest, although he interrupted his Arts
course to take a cadetship with the Melbourne Argus. After a
year or two of intense journalistic labours, he took a break in South
Australia, recuperating from an illness with friends, working as
jackaroo and boundary rider for two years, and then learning the
techniques of opal mining at Coober Pedy. Later, as an
historian, he acknowledged these years as "prime sources of
knowledge".
Philip, in
accordance with his father's wishes, completed his degree, graduation
BA in 1930. In the same year his father's successor, James
Darling, persuaded the School Council that the 1907 history and
register of the school should be revised and brought up to date.
Philip was commissioned for the task, but, as it developed, he became
convinced that an entirely new work was needed. Before this had
got very far, he was diverted into what became his magnum opus,
spanning forty years, although he never completely abandoned his
original work.
The new work was
the organizing, transcribing, editing and publishing of the papers at
Golf Hill, Shelford, in the keeping of Janet Biddlecombe (1866-1954),
youngest daughter of George Russell (1812-1888), manager from 1836 of
the pastoral Clyde Company, a joint stock concern formed in
Scotland. The co-operation of the two was to provide a rich
store of nineteenth century history, embracing Tasmania, Geelong, the
Western District, Britain and the intertwinings of the four through
the fortunes of individuals and families.
The successive
volumes, The Narrative of George Russell with Russellania and Selected
Papers (Oxford University Press, 1935) and seven volumes of Clyde
Company Papers, spanning 1821-1873 (and published between 1941 and
1971), are superb examples of meticulous editing, accurate and
imaginative scholarship, complex typesetting and fine
craftsmanship. In presenting Philip for his honorary Deakin
doctorate, Professor Francis West said they "set new standards in
the writing of Australian history; indeed, it has been said that his
work is without equal in Australian historical scholarship".
This huge
enterprise was achieved despite many moves. In 1934 Philip went
to England to find a publisher and to see his family, his parents
having gone home in 1930 to be nearer their daughters. In Oxford
he had access to the most scholarly of presses, with its great
resources of editorial advice and assistance, and also to the Bodleian
and other libraries. Then the war interrupted his work and in
May 1840 he enlisted in the 35th Light Anti-Aircraft (or Oxford
Territorial) Regiment; after officer training, he was posted to the
60th List Anti-Aircraft Regiment in Glasgow.
Late in 1941 he
went, as a lieutenant in Glasgow's Territorial 18th LAA Regiment, to
Abadan, where he helped protect the Anglo-Persian Oil Company's
installations. When the Japanese entered the war, he asked for a
transfer to the AIF, but before it came through, he had taken part in
the Italian campaign. Back in Australia in 1944, he was posted
successively to the anti-aircraft school in Sydney, the Army
Intelligence School at Southport and the 2/4 LAA Regiment in the
Atherton Tableland. He was then aide-de-camp to Major-General
J.S. Whitelaw, serving for a year in Perth and attending the War
Crimes trials at Rabaul before his discharge in June 1947.
In Melbourne in
March 1944 Philip married Jean (known as Janet), the daughter of
Queensland grazier, Alexander Howatson. In 1947 the couple
bought Allanvale, a 28 hectare farm at Leopold, where he farmed sheep
and cattle while working on his many historical projects. In
1958 they moved to Newtown.
Philip was
president of the Geelong Historical Society for 17 of the years
between 1949 and 1970, and it can truly be said that he made an
unparalleled contribution to its rise to pre-eminence among its peers
in Australia. He served on the National Trust of Australia from
1956 to 1961; he was the Geelong representative on the Victorian
Committee of Affiliated Historical Societies (under the aegis of the
Royal Historical Society of Victoria); he was a member of the
Melbourne Anglican Synod from 1960 to 1971, and gave unstinted help to
other bodies, including the La Trobe Library, and to many individual
researchers (simply never refusing a request for help).
All the while he
contributed to journals such as Investigator, to the Australian
Encyclopedia, Historic Buildings of Victoria, the Dictionary of World
History, and the Australian Dictionary of Biography (eighteen
articles, mostly on Victorian pastoralists). He also edited
three more books: Foster Fyans' Memoirs (Geelong 1986), The Challicum
Sketchbook 1842-53 (Canberra 1989), and The Todd Journal of 1835
(Geelong 1989). Interest at Deakin University in his greatest
work prompted the production of two plays by its drama department
Clyde Company Station and Ladies of Fortune. Philip's historical
contributions earned him Life Membership of the Geelong Historical
Society, a Fellowship of the Royal Historical Society of Victoria, and
an Honorary Doctorate from Deakin University.
Piety, in both
its Roman and its Christian sense, marked Philip Brown from first to
last. He was gentle and benign, but with an undimmed clarity of
mind until his nineties. In his research he was already to help
others. He shed both warmth and light on to other lives, and
into what, without his heroic work, would have remained neglected
papers in dusty archives.
He is survived by
his wife, Janet, their son, Ian, and a daughter, Sarah. Their
eldest child, Janet, died in 1990.
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