NewsAngle Issue 110

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Issue No. 105

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Issue 110 July 2012

Highlights

BARRY DAVIDSON

Barry Davidson

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Michelle Taylor

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One of the outstanding

Bridging the River

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things about Barry Davidson is his long-term commitment to the people and activities he loves – his family, the community, his work, the CFA, the Scouting movement, just to mention a few. Barry is best known in this town for his work in the CFA, having devoted 45 years to this involvement, holding every position in the brigade and taking on leadership roles for more than 25 years. He is a life member of Anglesea CFA. Born in West Geelong, Barry Davidson has been an Anglesea resident for his whole life (except for one year in Western Australia), and is justly proud of his family’s long history in this community, with four generations calling the town home. His grandfather, Robert, came to Australia from Scotland in 1923, landing at Fremantle and travelling overland from there due to a shipping strike. He began work in Horsham before gaining a position with the Forestry

Learning at Las Lomas 6 Thank You

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Short Story

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The Aireys Pub

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Darryl Fowler

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Kid’s Page

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Skate Park

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Wensleydale Train

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Anglesea Borefields

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Epic Adventure

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Gerrard Petrie OAM 39

Commission and shortly after moved to Anglesea to plant pine trees – something that makes Barry shudder now. It proved a good job, and after a couple of years he was able to send for his wife Martha and two sons and bring them to live in Anglesea. So began the Davidson dynasty here. Barry’s parents Eric and Ada lived and worked in Anglesea too, and were involved in building the community hall. They were keen and active supporters of their boys’ many sporting pursuits. His father was the second child enrolled at the Anglesea Primary School. Barry grew up in a house next to the old school, and has fond memories of playing with his brother in the school yard out of hours. He proudly speaks of the four generations of Davidsons attending the school – his dad and his two brothers, himself and his brother Brian, plus his children Glenn and Simon, and Brian and Yvonne’s children, Kerrie and Tina and granddaughter Julia. Sister in-law, Yvonne, and daughter Kerrie still live in Anglesea. Bill Bubb recalls happy, carefree childhood days with the Davidson boys –

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days of playing in the streets, wandering the beach, building huts, and digging holes everywhere. He particularly remembers Barry’s dad using a side car for a swing, hanging it in a tree for everyone to play in, and riding billy carts down the gravel road behind the fire station, flying straight across the Ocean Road – ‘There were no cars then,’ he said. Life in those days was simple and untroubled. When he left Anglesea PS, Barry went to Geelong Tech, and then was offered an apprenticeship at International Harvester as a motor mechanic. He travelled briefly to Western Australia and returned to work for International Harvester again. The company is now Iveco Trucks. He remains a loyal employee, currently working at the Linfox proving ground. He is now a project engineer involved in truck testing and currently deals with the problems of stress analysis, truck durability, and testing and proving trucks for the Australian market to Australian Design rules. He constantly Continued page 26


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