About TOCAH
Vision Statement
Mission Statement
Aims
- Proactively collect and preserve resources relating to country Australia.
- Collaborate with other research and historical organisations to enhance access to country Australian history.
- Ensure the preservation of country Australian history in perpetuity.
- Organise and index the collection to facilitate digital access for researchers and others.
- Create a valuable collection of significance for all Australians.
TOCAH Committee Members
Mary Bishop
Cynthia Dodd
Kate McNicholl
Jan Partridge
I was born in the Upper Murray, Victoria and the family moved to a property in Central Queensland where I grew up. After schooling in Rockhampton and Brisbane, I moved to Brisbane to work and study. My father drew a block in the Chase Syndicate in Esperance and we overlanded to Esperance in the 1960s.
I worked and married in Esperance and relocated to Perth with husband and one child in the early 1970s. I divorced and with three small children I returned to study and graduated as a librarian, worked for several years in Perth and regional Western Australia until a career move to teach at the Department of Library Studies at Curtin University.
I became involved in the Local Studies Section of the Australian Library and Information Association, concentrating on the importance of local history collections in public libraries. We ran conferences, published proceedings, and promoted the importance of local history. Today most public library systems in Australia have Local Studies sections, although our emphasis on the need to employ oral historians to record the history of the local area seems limited to WA.
My interest in oral history began before full-time retirement, but after retirement I was employed as an oral historian by a local Council in Perth. I have also done contract and voluntary work. I feel that oral history honours the individual by giving a voice to their personal story, and that these stories bring new perspectives to Australian history and are powerful extensions of official documents.
Robert Peirce
I was born in Brisbane in 1948 and lived in a house at Rainworth build by my father after the Second World War. My first year of education was at the Rainworth State School before the family moved north to Bundaberg and Mackay. My secondary education was at the Church of England Grammar School in Brisbane before undertaking a degree in Mechanical Engineering at the Townsville University College and the University of Queensland.
My professional career was spent with the Australian sugar industry, primarily with CSR Ltd in various roles within the CSR sugar business. I also spent two years at the Sugar Research Institute in Mackay.
I believe the recording of Australia’s grass root history is important. Much is written about “big picture” history while the many smaller, but no less important, items of our history are not formally recorded.
Janelle Wilkie
I grew up in Chinchilla and attended primary school there. My secondary education was completed at St Margaret’s School in Brisbane. On finishing my teaching degree, I was posted to Goondiwindi State High and for many years I taught at a number of schools in the region.
Our family business is very much focused on rural Australia and I see first hand the wonderful and sometimes colourful contribution that many people have made to the history of our country. TOCAH’s vision to collect and preserve as much of this part of our heritage as is possible is a vision I share.


