Harry Hodge Australia

Born
1904 in Australia
Died
28 January 1973 in Australia
Age
68-69 years
Credited for

writing

Also known as

Alfred Harold Hodge

AusReprints

Harry Hodge (1965?-1970?)

Biography

Hodge was born at Hill End, a gold mining town in central west NSW, the grandchild of men who had sought their fortune there during the gold boom. Aged 11, he moved to Bathurst for high school and subsequently became a teacher. Attending night school while teaching in Sydney, he graduated with a Bachelor of Economics in 1931.

He was employed at Newcastle Boys' High School from 1937 until he enlisted in the Australia Army, Second Australian Imperial Force (AIF) after Japan entered the second world war. He gained the rank of Flight Lieutenant in the RAAF before his discharge in 1946.He returned to Newcastle Boys' High School as Economics Master, before becoming Deputy Headmaster at Belmont High School (1953) and then Headmaster at Raymond Terrace High School (1956).

Before the war, Hodge contributed newspaper articles and wrote “Death in the Morning” (1938). On his discharge from the military he contributed to Camp Pie, a collection of military cartoons.

He also wrote two pulp novels, Mesa Gold (Associated General Publications, 1945) and Speedway Vendetta, the result of a bet with a colleague about whether they would be accepted for publication. 

Hodge retired in Newcastle in 1966, but lived part time in Hill End while researching his three-volume history of the Hill End-Tambaroora goldfield in the late sixties. He also wrote A Guide to Historic Hill End.

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Status

Created

  • 27 Dec 2019

Last updated

  • 25 Feb 2020