The 1998 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 8 June 1998 by the office of the Governor-General. [1]
The Birthday Honours were appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours are awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June.
Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|
Professor Antony Wilks Burgess | For service to scientific research and clinical medicine, particularly through research into the early diagnosis and treatment of cancer, and for developing structures to link diverse research units to facilitate the exchange of information and protocols. | [1] |
Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|
Professor Donald Alexander Aitkin | For service to higher education and to the community as a scholar, writer, teacher, mentor, and leader in the Australian universities sector. | [1] |
Anonymous | For service to international affairs and to the promotion and protection of human rights. | |
Professor Ronald Newbold Bracewell | For service to science in the fields of radio astronomy and image reconstruction. | |
The Most Reverend Dr Peter Frederick Carnley | For service to the Anglican Church of Australia and to the community through his contributions to theology, the nurturing of ecumenicalism between the churches and their faiths, and in the cause of social justice. | |
Professor Yvonne Edna Cossart | For service to medicine as a specialist in infectious diseases, especially in the areas of virological research, epidemiology and disease prevention, and to education. | |
Patricia Ann Crook | For service to the small business sector and to trade development. | |
Dawn Fraser MBE | In recognition of service to the community, particularly as a sports consultant and administrator, and through organisations for people with disabilities and to the environment. | |
Robert Alan Grice | For service to the accountancy profession, to education, and to the community, particularly through the Scripture Union of Australia and Project Australia. | |
Associate Professor Susan Carol Hayes | For service to the community, particularly through research on criminality in the young and the problems faced by people with developmental disabilities in the criminal justice system. | |
Dr Geoffrey Sinclair Heithersay | For service to dentistry, particularly in the field of endodontics, and for his contribution to the inauguration and development of post-graduate endodontic training in Australia. | |
Dr Judy Isabel Henderson | For service to developing countries, particularly as chairman of Community Aid Abroad and Oxfam International, and to the community through the promotion of environmental issues. | |
Emeritus Professor Mollie Elizabeth Holman | For service to scientific research, particularly relating to the autonomic nervous system and the control of smooth muscle, and to education and university administration. | |
Dr Ernest Cosmo Manea AM | For service to the community of Bunbury, to local government, to regional planning and development, and to the advancement of the harness racing industry. | |
Graeme Julian Samuel | For service to the community in a broad range of roles within arts, business, education, health, sport and community organisations. | |
Joseph Saragossi | For service to the glass and aluminium industry, and to the Jewish community. | |
Rex Kenneth Stevenson | For service to international relations. | |
The late Anthony James Sweeney | For service to the community through the Sir David Martin Foundation and the St George Foundation, and to the finance sector through the St George Bank. | |
Professor David John Tiller | For service to medicine, to medical education and to medical research, particularly in the field of kidney disease and hypertension. | |
Branch | Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Navy | Vice Admiral Christopher Alexander Barrie, AM , RAN | For distinguished service to the Australian Defence Force as Deputy Chief of Naval Staff and Vice Chief of the Defence Force. | [1] |
Army | Major General Desmond Maurice Mueller, AM | For distinguished service to the Australian Army and the Australian Defence Force in the fields of force development and logistics. | |
Air Force | Air Marshal Errol John McCormack AM | For distinguished service to the Royal Australian Air Force as Commander Integrated Air Defence System, Malaysia and Deputy Chief of Air Force. | |
Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|
Professor Anthony Irvine Adams | For service to the community in the field of epidemiology and to the public health, particularly through public health policy development and program delivery. | [1] |
John Alexander Andre | For service to the beef cattle industry, particularly in relation to product quality assurance, quarantine and animal health issues, and the problems of chemical residues. | |
Alexander William Arbuthnot | For service to Landcare and the management of natural resources, and to the dairy industry through the United Dairy Farmers of Victoria and the Victorian Farmers Federation. | |
Professor Yianni Ioannis Attikiouzel | For service to science and technology in the field of electrical and electronic engineering with particular regard to his research into the application of neural networks to industrial and medical problems, and to the Greek community of Western Australia. | |
Stella Axarlis | For service to the community in the areas of training and employment opportunities, to business and to children with special needs. | |
Michael Weir Barrett | For service to the community, particularly to ex-service men and women and their families, and through the Northern Territory Division of the Australian Red Cross as executive director since 1991 and the St John Ambulance Council since 1988. | |
James Edward Barry MBE | For service to sport, particularly gymnastics, through the Australian Gymnastics Federation and the International Gymnastics Federation. | |
Marco Belgiorno-Zegna | For service to engineering. | |
Marcus Charles Blackmore | For service to business and industry, particularly through the development of the natural health products industry, and to the community. | |
Elisabeth Janet Calvert-Jones | For service to children with hearing impairments, particularly as chairman of the Advisory Council for Children with Impaired Hearing, to the Murdoch Institute for Research into Birth Defects, and to the community as a benefactor and supporter of charitable organisations. | |
Michael Glenn Chugg | For service to music and the performing arts, particularly in relation to the promotion of Australian artists and to fundraising for youth and children's charities. | |
Dr Geoffrey Malcolm Clarke | For service to the development and advancement of the specialty of intensive care, to education, and to anaesthesiology, particularly as inaugural dean of the Faculty of Intensive Care, Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists (1993–1997). | |
Richard Cleaver CBE | For service to the aged in the community, in particular as the founder and chairman for more than 37 years of Swan Cottage Homes Incorporated. | |
Helen Margaret Colman | For service to arts administration, particularly as general manager of the Arts Council of New South Wales. | |
Lorraine Joyce Crapp | For service to sport, particularly swimming at national and international levels, and to the community through the promotion of sport and the benefits of a healthy lifestyle. | |
Dr Gwenda Beed Davey | For service to the protection and preservation of Australia's traditional folklore and folklife. | |
Bruce Ian Dickson | For service to sport in the administration of sailing and yachting at state and national levels. | |
John Douglas Donoghue | For service to the sport of rowing at club, national and international levels and to the Australian Olympic movement. | |
Dimity Ann Dornan | For service to children with hearing impairments through the establishment of the Hear and Say Centre and the Queensland Children's Cochlear Implant Program. | |
Michael Bernard Easson | For service to the community through the trade union movement and for his contribution on many boards and committees across a wide range of commerce and industry. | |
Dr Joseph Epstein | For service to medicine, particularly in the field of emergency medicine as a clinician, educator and administrator, and as founder of the Medical Emergency Adult Retrieval Service in Victoria. | |
George William Carruthers Ewan | For service to vocational education and training through the Melbourne Institute of Textiles and to the community, particularly through Special Olympics, Victoria. | |
Anne Mary Ross Fairbairn | For service to Australian literature as a poet and to international relations, particularly between Australia and the Middle East through translations of poetry and cultural exchanges. | |
John Vincent Fisher | For service to people with disabilities, particularly through the Abilympics Association and the promotion of work, living and leisure skills. | |
Lady Renee George | For service to the community as a fundraiser through the Arthur and Renee George Foundation, the Australian Red Cross, the Greek Orthodox Church, and the Sydney Children's Hospital. | |
Prue Gillies | For service to education, in particular as principal of Ruyton Girls' School and to the community. | |
Dr Eric Gross | For service to music as a composer and educator particularly through the University of Sydney and the Fellowship of Australian Composers. | |
Emeritus Professor James Seymour Hagan | For service to higher education and to the study of Australia's labour and social history. | |
David Anthony Harley | For service to environmental management and accountability and to support for the adoption of new technologies for environmental improvement. | |
Sister Jillian Mary Havey | For service to education, in particular Catholic school education as principal of St Dominic's Priory College, North Adelaide. | |
Jean Francis Hay | For service to the Manly community through local government, community action and sporting groups, and as a fundraiser for welfare and health education programmes. | |
Dr Robert Anthony Neville Henry | For service to international aid through the Australian Red Cross Society and to medicine. | |
Peggy Joy Lucille Holroyde | For service to the cultural development of Western Australia, particularly through the Indian Ocean Arts Association and the Indian Ocean Cultural Council. | |
Professor Arnold Leighton Hunt | For service to athletics and to youth through Little Athletics. | |
Professor Graham Allen Ross Johnston | For service to science in the research fields of bio organic chemistry and pharmacology, to scientific organisations, and to science policy development. | |
Basil Jones | For service to music, particularly music education through the Queensland Conservatorium of Music. | |
Clive Raymond (Kim) Jones | For service to the development of Australia's business relations with Japan and France, and for his contribution to peace initiatives in the disarmament field. | |
Hazel Elizabeth Kenny | For service to the community in the Melville and Applecross areas, and to the Women Justices' Association of Western Australia. | |
Michael John Kent | For service to the community through support for charitable organisations and sporting bodies, and to business and retail industry associations. | |
Wallace Macarthur King | For service to the construction industry, to the Australian Constructors Association and to the community. | |
Dr William Alexander Land, RFD | For service to medicine as a dermatologist and to the Australasian College of Dermatologists since 1966. | |
Professor Roger Alexander Layton | For service to marketing, research and teaching, particularly as chair of marketing at the University of New South Wales. | |
Joseph Lo Bianco | For service to the development of language policy and planning in Australia and overseas. | |
Joseph Hamilton Marshall | For service to people with hearing impairments, particularly through the Deafness Foundation of Victoria. | |
Dr Allan William Martin | For service in the field of Australian historiography as a teacher scholar, and biographer and as Foundation Professor of the History Department at La Trobe University. | |
Michael Leslie Marx | For service to the community, particularly through representation on state and national Jewish organisations, and to youth services in the Waverley area. | |
Dr John Philip Masel | For service to medicine in the field of paediatric radiology, including service as Director of Metropolitan Paediatric Radiology and as Director of Radiology, Royal Children's Hospital, Brisbane. | |
Dr Michael George McCall | For service to industry and to the community, particularly through the provision and development of health care in Western Australia. | |
Ian McKay Milne | For service to social welfare and international relations through the Leprosy Mission International since 1978 and the Asia Pacific Christian Mission for over thirty years. | |
Eric John Milson | For service to the Australian theatre industry, both professional and amateur, in particular, as head of the Department of Musical Theatre at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts. | |
John Edgar Minson | For service to country music and to the entertainment industry, and in particular for his contribution in establishing Tamworth as the country music capital of Australia. | |
Dr William Russell Boyd Morrison | For service to engineering education, particularly the science and practice of engineering, to mechanical engineering, and to the commercialisation and export of Australian technology. | |
June Nixon | For service to church music in Australia, particularly as the director of music at St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne, and as an organist, teacher and composer. | |
The late Marcia Rachael O'Keefe | For service to the community as an advocate for the improved management and treatment of breast cancer. | |
Sister Patricia Geraldine Pak Poy | For service to the community particularly as national coordinator of the Australian Network of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines since its inception in 1993. | |
Professor Lesley Hannah Parker | For service to education, particularly through promoting gender equality in mathematics and science education. | |
Emeritus Professor Hugh Whitelaw Stuart Philp | For service to education in the areas of research, teaching and administration and as an advocate for the provision of education as a basic human right, particularly for disadvantaged members of the community in both Australia and developing countries. | |
Ian Henry Pike | For service to the law as Chief Magistrate of New South Wales, to the reform of the civil justice system, and to the community, particularly through organ music. | |
Phillip Elliott Playford | For service to geology, and to historical research on early Dutch exploration and shipwrecks in Australia. | |
Michael Thomas Quinn | For service to business and commerce, and the automotive industry in particular, as an executive member of the board of Mitsubishi Motors Australia for 16 years, and managing director for 11 years. | |
Dr Dorothy Jane Radford | For service to medicine and medical education, particularly in the area of neonatal and paediatric cardiology. | |
Ronald Edwin Rankin | For service to the community, particularly through his involvement with surf lifesaving for over thirty years at club, state and national levels. | |
Associate Professor Kevin Albert Rickard RFD | For service to medicine, particularly in the field of haematology and the problems associated with haemophilia, and for consultancies to the Royal Australian Navy and the Australian Defence Force. | |
William Murray Rogers | For service to the food industry, particularly through the Australian Food Council and Kellogg (Australia) Pty Ltd and to the community. | |
Cyril Joseph Rowe | For service to the advancement of the greyhound racing industry. | |
John Francis Ryan | For service to the Northern Territory through business development, and to government boards and authorities. | |
Phillip Halford Scanlan | For service to international relations, particularly Australian-American relations as the founder and inaugural chairman of the Australian-American Educational Leadership Dialogue, and to the community through the promotion of awareness of public health. | |
Emeritus Professor George Seddon | For service to the preservation of environmental and cultural heritage through education and writing, and to the community through the promotion of town planning issues. | |
Professor Fenton George Sharpe | For service to education, particularly administration, at secondary and tertiary levels. | |
William Simpson | For service to the administration and business of government at local and state levels, in particular as Chairman of the NSW Commissioners of Inquiry for Environment and Planning since 1980 and previously as Chairman of the NSW Local Government and Town Planning Appeals Tribunal. | |
Emeritus Professor Robert Henry Tufrey Smith | For service to the advancement of tertiary education, particularly through the Australian Education Office in North America, the Australian Vice-Chancellors Committee, the University of New England and the University of Western Australia, and to geography. | |
David Welsford Smithers | For service to the community through the National Heart Foundation, and the Institute of Chartered Accountants, and to the Sydney 2000 Olympic Bid as a member of the Board and Chairman of the Finance Commission. | |
Dr Donald James Bourne St John | For service to medicine, particularly in the field of gastroenterology and research into the causes and means of early detection of colorectal cancer. | |
Harry Andrew Standfast | For service to science in the field of entomology, particularly research into veterinary virus vectors and mosquito control. | |
Dr Neil Anthony Streten | For service to the science of meteorology and for improving understanding of the meteorology of Antarctica and its interrelation with the climate of Australia. | |
Margaret May Tabberer | For service to the community, particularly through support for charitable organisations, and to the advancement of the Australian fashion industry. | |
Professor Kenneth Taylor | For service to conservation and the environment through historic cultural landscape preservation and education. | |
Professor Peter Lindsay Thompson | For service to medicine, particularly in the field of cardiology and coronary care, to the Australian Medical Association and to the National Heart Foundation. | |
Dr Bryan Edmund Todd RFD , ED | For service to community health, particularly through the Queensland Asthma Foundation, the Society for Crippled Children and the Australian Medical Association, and for public service through the Corrective Services Commission and the Department of Veterans' Affairs. | |
Professor David Lawrence Trimm | For service to research and teaching in the fields of chemical engineering and industrial chemistry, and as a practitioner of the science of catalysis and its propagation at an international level. | |
Patrick John Underwood | For service to primary industry, particularly the cattle industry, and to the community. | |
Leonard Frederick Willot Vickridge, OBE , VRD | For service to the community, particularly through the Carers Association of Australia and its support services for carers of people with dementia and the frail or aged. | |
Albert Kevin Robert Watson | For service to the community through fundraising activities for charities, to commerce and to the arts. | |
Eileen Mary Watt | For service to the community as both National and Victorian President of the War Widows Guild of Australia. | |
Judith Mary White | For service to the community, particularly in the field of Australian history, to women, to the rural sector, to the arts and to economic development in the Hunter Region. | |
Brigadier Donald Willett | For service to the community, particularly through the Royal United Services Institute, the Victoria League for Commonwealth Friendship, Toc H and the Joint Commonwealth Societies Council. | |
Dr John Aubrey Henry Williamson | For service to medical research, particularly in the fields of hyperbaric medicine and marine envenomation, to the Surf Life Saving Association of Australia and to St John Ambulance Australia. | |
Michael James Willson | For service to the environment at local, state and national levels, to tourism and to the community of Kangaroo Island. | |
His Honour Judge Andrew Bray Cameron Wilson | For service to law, particularly criminology, and to the Australian Crime Prevention Council. | |
Wilma Elizabeth Forster Young | For service to the welfare of ex-service personnel, particularly ex-servicewomen, and to the community. | |
Dr Elwood Curtin Zimmerman | For service to entomology, particularly through scientific research in Australia and the Pacific Region and the philanthropic support of this research. | |
Branch | Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Navy | Captain Brian Donald Robertson | For exceptional service to maritime warfare and as Commanding Officer of HMAS Perth. | [1] |
Captain Gordon Allan Wellham | For exceptional service to the Royal Australian Navy, in particular as Director Activity Based Management Project. | ||
Army | Colonel John Roby Cox | For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force and the Australian Army, in particular Land Command, in the field of capability development. | |
Major General Timothy Roger Ford | In recognition of service to the Australian Army in the fields of Land Force Development and Operational Command. | ||
Colonel Kenneth James Gillespie CSM | For exceptional service to the Australian Army and the Australian Defence Force, particularly in the development of the Australian Theatre Joint Intelligence Centre. | ||
Major General Stephen Golding RFD | For exceptional service to the Army Reserve. | ||
Brigadier Ross Lindsay Gordon Grant | For exceptional service to the Australian Army in the fields of Logistics and Material Management. | ||
Colonel Colin McOlvin Sharp CSC | For exceptional service to the Australian Army in the field of Logistics. | ||
Brigadier Duncan Robert Warren RFD | For exceptional service to the Australian Army in the fields of Training and Operations, in particular as Commander 5th Training Group and Commander 13th Brigade. | ||
Air Force | Wing Commander Alexander John Danischewski | For exceptional service to the Royal Australian Air Force in the field of Information Systems and Technology. | |
Air Vice-Marshall Neil Alexander Smith MBE | For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in the fields of Aeronautical Engineering and Logistic Support of Military Aviation. | ||
Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|
James Ashley Aitken | For service to the community of the Penrith District, particularly through youth welfare and service organisations and to local government. | [1] |
Albert John Alford | For service to the community of Casuarina as co-ordinator of the Senior Citizens Tuesday Club. | |
Mildred Joyce Alford | For service to the community of Casuarina as co-ordinator of the Senior Citizens Tuesday Club. | |
Richard Ernest Allchin | For service to the community of Caloundra particularly through the Caloundra Sub-Branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia and the Sunshine Coast Sub-Section of the Naval Association of Australia. | |
Ian Bell Allen | For service to the rock-n-roll music industry and to youth. | |
Brian Joseph Allom | For service to the horseracing industry and to the community. | |
Noel Fraser Allom | For service to the welfare of veterans, particularly through the Kedron Wavell Sub-Branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia, and to fishing. | |
John Gilbert Anderson | For service to the conservation of Norfolk Island's natural history as Foundation President of the Norfolk Island Conservation Society since 1976. | |
Thomas Stewart Andrews | For service to school sports, particularly as a coach, organiser and team manager of primary school sports in Queensland. | |
Vaivao John Elcombe Antonio | For service to the Pacific Islander and Polynesian communities. | |
Pauline Arnold | For service to Orange and the surrounding district as a music teacher, accompanist, conductor, fundraiser, and founder of choirs. | |
Beresford Francis Garnet Arthur | For service to veterans, particularly through the 8th Division Signals Association. | |
Kathlyn Margaret Ballard | For service to fine arts, particularly as a water colour artist, to arts organisations and to art education. | |
Muriel Paige Barrington | For service to the community as a volunteer for the Girl Guides Association of South Australia, and as foundation supervisor of the Warradale Meals on Wheels kitchen. | |
Elizabeth Lauretta Barron | For service to nursing in North-Western Tasmania, particularly as an administrator. | |
Margaret June Barton | For service to the community of Cockburn, particularly through the provision of children's services, and to local government. | |
Margaret Joan Barton-Johnson | For service to the community, and in particular, the victims of domestic violence, through Bethany Family Homes and Jireh House. | |
Arthur Beasley | For service to the residents of the Bowral district, particularly through community and service organisations. | |
Reginald Beck | For service to the community of Proserpine for over 40 years, particularly as an honorary auditor for community organisations. | |
John Bertram | For service to the community of Hamilton as a volunteer with local charities including the Red Cross, Meals on Wheels, and veterans organisations. | |
The late John Andrew Blanch | For service to people with visual impairments through the Victorian Association for the Blind and the Victorian Blinded Soldiers' Association, and to the community. | |
Marjorie Joyce Bowden | For service to community health in the Northern Territory, particularly through Alice Springs Health Services. | |
Marie Constance Boyle, MBE | For service to the community and to veterans through the Australian Red Cross, and the Australian Women's Vietnam Veterans Association. | |
Senior Sergeant John Geoffrey Brookes | For service to the Gippsland Region through his involvement with youth, the aged, sporting events and as an Aboriginal Liaison Officer. | |
The Reverend William Arthur James Brown | For service to the community as an Honorary Padre to ex-service organisations for more than 27 years, and as a welfare, publicity officer and delegate to the Newcastle District Council of the R&SL of Australia. | |
Clare May Bryson | For service to the community of Wauchope, particularly the aged. | |
Brian Patrick Buggy | For service to music, particularly music education and to training and conducting youth orchestras and ensembles. | |
June Mary Bullivant | For service to the community, particularly through the Granville Train Disaster Memorial Committee, the Granville Historical Society and Rotary. | |
Sister Dora Elizabeth Burchill | For service to nursing, particularly as an historian, author and philanthropist. | |
Harold James Burgess | For service to the advancement of amateur cycling. | |
Donald Stanley Byrne | For service to the communities of Port Headland and Newman as an industrial chaplain, and to the Baptist Church as a minister and missionary. | |
Anthony Joseph Cadet-James | For service to road safety, particularly motorcycle rider education and training in the Northern Territory through the Road Safety Council and the Motorcycle Association. | |
Elizabeth Mabel Caldwell | For service to the Uniting Church through the Lillian Martin Home and Scots Church, Hobart, and to the War Widows' Guild of Australia in Tasmania. | |
Kelva Mary Campbell | For service as a voluntary fundraiser for the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (Western Australia Chapter) and diabetes research. | |
Peter Carne | For service to youth as a volunteer worker for many years in the education and coaching of students in mathematics. | |
Nancy Ellen Carney | For service to the community, particularly through the Royal Victorian Institute for the Blind, the Red Cross and the Country Women's Association. | |
Mollie Catchpole | For service to the community of Rosebud, particularly the aged and to the Rosebud Corps of the Salvation Army. | |
Helen Cattalini | For service to the community through the promotion of tolerance, respect and understanding between people with different cultural backgrounds and histories. | |
Alexina Lilian Chalmers | For service to the community of Portland, particularly through the Portland Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts, the Western Region of the Victorian Arts Council, the Green Triangle Arts Network and the Historic Buildings Restoration Committee. | |
Elizabeth (Betty) Chambers | For service to the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, through the Parkville Auxiliary. | |
Iris Edna Chardon | For service to the South Australian Branch and Stirling Sub-Branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia Women's Auxiliaries, and to the community of Stirling. | |
Kiu Choi Cheng | For service to the Chinese community as founding member and vice president of the Box Hill Chinese Elderly Citizens Club. | |
Charles Campbell Coghlan | For service to the horseracing industry in Victoria through the Burrumbeet Park and Windermere Racing Club, the Ballarat Turf Club, and the Ballarat District Racing Association. | |
The Reverend Vernon James Kedward Collins | For service to the community, particularly in the areas of chaplaincy and hospital administration. | |
Arthur Aloysius Commerford | For service to the community, particularly the aged, as the instigator of the Grafton Community Bus Service. | |
Maxwell Joseph Lorimer Cooke | For service to music education, particularly piano pedagogy and the development of music students. | |
Ernest Alexander Cork | For service to the community of Dorrigo through agricultural and sporting organisations. | |
Yvonne May Cowling | For service to conservation, particularly as a registered wildlife shelter operator and educator. | |
Jennifer Mary Crew | For service to the Armidale community, particularly through the North and North-West Community Legal Centre, the Guyra Local Aboriginal Land Council and other community organisations. | |
John Frederick Crowther | For service to local government through the Lismore City Council and to the community. | |
Noel David Cullane | For service to the rural community of the Cowra and Canowindra Districts particularly through river and farm management improvements initiatives and the Rivers Bush Fire Brigade. | |
Rodney Neville Cullen | For service to the Australian sugar industry through the Sugar Research Institute, Mackay, and the Bundaberg Sugar Community. | |
Robert Edward Charles Cure | For service to the community as a radio broadcaster, and in particular as presenter of the ABC Breakfast Show on Radio 7ZR. | |
Sylvester Claude Davey | For service to the community of South West Rocks as an honorary treasurer and auditor for community, sporting and charitable organisations. | |
Ype Dominicus de Bruin | For service to the Dutch community in Australia, particularly in the areas of culture, welfare and aged care. | |
William Thomas Dedman | For service to the veteran community as a hospital visitor, welfare officer and advocate for the Australian Federation of Totally and Permanently Incapacitated Ex-Servicemen and Women (WA Branch). | |
George Andrew Derham | For service to veterans, particularly through the Returned and Services League of Australia, Victorian Branch, and the Totally and Permanently Disabled Soldiers' Association of Victoria. | |
Stuart Henry Dibley | For service to veterans, particularly through the Newcastle Branch of the RAAF Association, and to the community. | |
Isabelle Hewitt Dickson | For service to the community of Brighton, particularly through St Philip's Anglican Church and the Red Cross. | |
Norman Mons Dickson | For service to the community of Brighton, particularly through the Senior Citizens Club. | |
Dr Mervyn Harold Doobov | For service to the religious and cultural support of the Jewish community in the Australian Capital Territory. | |
Suzanne Rose Doobov | For service to the religious and cultural support of the Jewish community in the Australian Capital Territory. | |
Thomas John Doyle | For service to business and commerce as a restaurateur and to the community through charitable organisations. | |
The Reverend Frank Maxwell Drysdale | For service to the community, to education through the invention of the game 'Numero' and to the Uniting Church in Australia. | |
Tjerk Carolus Dusseldorp | For service to education and to the community through the establishment of the Workskill Australia Foundation. | |
Frederick Cullen Dyett | For service to the real estate industry and to the community of Bendigo. | |
George Savvas Eleftheriades | For service to the Greek and wider community particularly through the Hellenic Advancement Council, as the Collegiarch of the Athenaeum, the Greek Orthodox Christian Society and the St Nicholas Australian Settlement Union. | |
Dr Robert Cecil Englebrecht | For service to rural medicine, corrective services, and the community of Cooma. | |
The late Brian William Esler | For service to the community of Albury and District, the Hume Permanent Building Society and the Rotary Club of Albury. | |
The late Harold Percy Evans | For service to music as a composer and conductor and as the musical director of the Coffs Harbour City Voice Choir. | |
James Frederick Evans | For service to lawn bowls at international, national, state, district and club levels. | |
Dr Lloyd Lindsay Carey Evans | For service to medicine, particularly in the field of general practice, and to the Stirling community. | |
Ronald Douglas Faraday | For service to swimming through the Northern District Swimming Association and the New South Wales Amateur Swimming Association, and to the community. | |
Dawn Lillian Ferguson | For service to the GFS – an Anglican Ministry and to the Linnet Choirs of Sydney. | |
John Lindsay (Jack) Fitzgerald | For service to veterans as Secretary of the Ex-Prisoners of War and Relatives Association of Victoria. | |
Shirley Elizabeth Fitzgerald | For service to the community through breast cancer support services and fundraising to benefit research. | |
Sister Naomi Joy Fogarty | For service to the Aboriginal community as a health educator and nurse. | |
Pauline Frances Forbutt | For service to swimming, as an instructor in Young, and as a referee at club, district, country, state and national championships. | |
Michael Foster | For service to the community of the Australian Capital Territory, particularly through jazz music and rugby union football as a benefactor and administrator, and to journalism. | |
Thomas Patrick Foster | For service to the community of Mandurama particularly through Lions Club International, Leos and the fire brigade. | |
Stanley Max Paul Fowler | For service to the heavy horse industry, particularly as a breeder, exhibitor and judge in promoting the Clydesdale horse breed. | |
Henry James Fox | For service to the community through the Family and Friends of Missing Persons Group Inc. | |
Ian Leslie Fuzzard | For service to the Berrigan community through local government, service groups, sporting clubs and church committees. | |
John Bernard Gaffney | For service to the Victorian justice system as registrar of the Court of Appeal, to the community and to sport. | |
Faye Gloria Gardam | For service to the community of the North West Coast of Tasmania as a social historian on local and maritime history. | |
Mack Gardner | In recognition of service to the Aboriginal community, particularly the Martu community as a leader and custodian of their heritage | |
John Andrew Glover | For service to local government, particularly through the Yass and Goodradigbee Shire Councils, and to the community. | |
Linda Iris Hale | For service to the community through the Music and Drama Cultural Committee of the Queensland Country Women's Association and through the Surfers Paradise Branch. | |
John Hall | For service to the community and to music as the Conductor of the Adelaide Harmony Choir, and as an organist, teacher, and accompanist. | |
John William Hall | For service to surf lifesaving and to Australian Rules football. | |
Ronald Douglas Hall | For service to the welfare of veterans and to the community. | |
Sister Carmel Mary Hanson | For service to social welfare, particularly through the provision of care and support for many disadvantaged groups. | |
Dr James Scott Harbison | For service to the community of Bowral, particularly through the Harbison Memorial Retirement Village. | |
Lyndon Clifford Harris | For service to sport through cricket and football organisations in the Derwent Valley. | |
Katherine Osborne Harrison | For service to the local community, in particular the Shoalhaven Historical Society. | |
Keith Edward Hawke | For service to rugby union football in the Australian Capital Territory for more than 50 years as a player, coach, selector and administrator. | |
Jocelyn Penelope Fancourt Hebbard | For service to the community, particularly through the ANU Club for Women, the Abbeyfield Society, the Anglican Church and youth organisations. | |
Philip Thomas Hennessey | For service to local government engineering, as Director of Engineering Services for Redland Shire Council. | |
John Norris Henry | For service to the aged, particularly through meals on wheels and the provisions of transport to medical appointments. | |
Athol Harold Hetherington | For service to the community through the Temora Swimming Club and Learn to Swim campaigns. | |
Dr Stephen Hinchy | For service to rowing at club, state and national levels as an administrator and team medical officer. | |
Shirley Anne Holloway | For service to the community of Flinders Island, in particular as Mayor of the Flinders Island Municipality. | |
Enid Dixon Home | For service to the community of Albany as a fundraiser and voluntary worker with service organisations and community groups. | |
Donald Kingston Hones | For service to the Pacific Islander community, particularly as a voluntary English and second language teacher and tutor and through the counselling and support of youth within the juvenile justice system. | |
Paul Douglas Hope | For service to the welfare of veterans through fundraising activities to establish memorials to servicemen who died in the Battle of Milne Bay and at Gona, and to providing medical facilities for the people of Gona and Buna, Papua New Guinea. | |
Walter Charles Hopkins | For service to youth, particularly through Scouts Australia and the YMCA, and to the community. | |
Merven Arnold Hoppner | For service to the community of Wynnum-Manly through sports activities, particularly for youth, and to Rugby League as a member of the judiciary of the Brisbane Rugby League for over 30 years. | |
Dr Gregory David Hotchkis | For service to the development of special educational curriculum and research. | |
Peter Gordon Howarth | For service to the community, as founder of the Primary Club of Australia, and as a fundraiser for charitable organisations involved in meeting the sporting and recreational needs of people with disabilities. | |
Alan Noel Hudson | For service to the community of Port Stephens, through the Royal Volunteer Coastal Patrol and the Nelson Head Lighthouse Trust. | |
Jade Hurley | For service to the entertainment industry and to the community, particularly in the area of fundraising for groups including the Arthritis Foundation of NSW, the Australian Cancer Foundation for Medical Research and Camp Quality. | |
Keith James Irwin | For service to the veterans of the 36th Battalion, particularly as the President and Editor of the Association's journal 'Marching On', for over 35 years. | |
Laura Mary Ivey | For service to the community as a fundraiser for the Cancer Research Institute of Western Australia and for other charitable organisations. | |
Alfred Brian Maxwell James | For service to the community and to cricket through the Hornsby Ku-ring-gai and Hills District Cricket Association, the Interdistrict Cricket Association and the Northern Metropolitan Cricket Council. | |
Wendy May James | For service to the community through the promotion of women's issues in the Northern Territory. | |
William Jones | For service to veterans through the Returned and Services League of Australia at state, district and local levels, to local government and to the community. | |
Keith William Joyce | For service to the community of the Coburg District, particularly as Chairman of Trustees of the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park to local government, to the Coburg Historical Society and to service organisations. | |
Anatol Karel | For service to the Russian community in Melbourne, particularly through the St John of Kronstadt-Russian Welfare Society, the Russian Orthodox Church, and in the field of ethnic broadcasting. | |
Elizabeth Norma Kean | For service to the communities of Castle Hill and Baulkham Hills, particularly through the Hills Community Aid and Information Service and the Australian Red Cross, New South Wales Division. | |
Alan Blair Kell | For service to church and community organisations, in particular as chairman of the Board of Woodfield Lodge and Nursing Home, to the Royal Agricultural Society of New South Wales, and to the construction industry. | |
Associate Professor John Patrick Kennedy | For service to agricultural education, to the sheep and wool industries, and to the community. | |
Marshall William Kropp | For service to the community through the Currumbin Beach Vikings Surf Life Saving Club for over 50 years as president, patron and lifeguard, and to the Gold Coast City Council. | |
Betty Lurline Kruse | For service to community health, particularly as a diabetes educator in the Northern Rivers District. | |
Terence John (Terry) Lamb | For service to the sport of Rugby League football and to the community through fundraising. | |
Roy Esmond Law | For service to the community, particularly to veterans through the Gunnedah Sub-Branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia. | |
The Very Reverend Graeme Russell Lawrence | For service to the Anglican Church and to the community, particularly as a fundraiser and administrator during the restoration of the earthquake damage to Christ Church Cathedral in Newcastle. | |
Iris May Lawrence | For service to the community of Newcastle, particularly in the area of veterans' welfare, and to the Newcastle Surf Life Saving Club. | |
Margaret Linton | For service to the community of Dunolly and district, particularly youth, through the Girl Guide movement. | |
Arthur Litis | For service to the community as a benefactor for charity, particularly the ACTIV Foundation, and to the Greek community of Western Australia. | |
Iris Litis | For service to the community as a benefactor for charity, particularly the ACTIV Foundation, and to the Greek community of Western Australia. | |
Ralph Mervyn Lucas | For service to floriculture in South Australia as a grower, administrator and judge. | |
Amelia Dorothy Ludwell | For service to the welfare of aged people as a volunteer with the auxiliaries of the Royal Freemasons' Homes Victoria and the Alfred Hospital. | |
Ilmars Lusis | For service to the Latvian community of South Australia. | |
Charles Kevin McCormick | For service to the Bankstown community through sporting organisations, aged persons' associations, schools, charities and youth groups. | |
Kevin Alister McDougall | For service to rugby league football, at both senior and junior levels. | |
Alan Macfarlane ED | For service to the community, particularly through the 2/24 Australian Infantry Battalion Association. | |
William Francis McGinty | For service to local government through the Swan Hill Shire Council, and to the community of Robinvale. | |
Jane Alice Camilla Macgowan | For service to the arts through the establishment and support of the Brandling Street Studios in Alexandria, Sydney. | |
Kenneth Albert McKeown | For service to photography at local, state, national and international levels. | |
William John McManus | For service to the local community, particularly through the Yass District Hospital Board and the Yass Committee for the Care of the Aged. | |
The late Sister Marie Bernarde Madigan | For service to the arts as a music teacher and for her research on Dame Joan Sutherland's career and contribution to opera. | |
The late Anthony Manicaros | For service to ethnic broadcasting in Australia, particularly through the Ethnic Broadcasting Association of Queensland and the National Ethnic and Multicultural Broadcasters Council. | |
William Leonard Marr | For service to primary industry as a breeder and exhibitor of poultry, particularly the Ancona bantam breed. | |
Raymond Marriott | For service to youth, particularly through the scouting movement, and to the community. | |
Sidney Plassy Marshall | For service to the NSW Branch of the Ex-Prisoners of War Association and to youth through scouting. | |
Dorothy Mathison | For service to the community, particularly the Queensland Country Women's Association. | |
Peter Stuart Meeking | For service to local government, disaster management, the Australian Institute of Valuers and Land Economists, and to the community. | |
Dr Anne Margaret Mijch | For service to medicine, particularly in the treatment and care given to patients with infectious diseases including HIV/AIDS. | |
John Francis Miller | For service to people with impaired hearing through the John Pierce Centre, and to the community. | |
Francis Leo Mills | For service to the community, in particular through bushfire prevention measures. | |
Lorna Mobbs | For service to the community, in particular to the Randwick and Coogee Ladies Swimming Club and as a fundraiser for the Randwick Lantern Club for Deaf and Blind Children. | |
Peter Thomas Mobbs | For service to greenkeeping and to lawn bowls. | |
Frank Moore Montgomery | For service to community and charitable organisations, particularly as a financial administrator. | |
John Osborne Moon | For service to the community of Cowra, particularly through service clubs and welfare organisations. | |
Jean Ayala Moore | For service to the community, and in particular to people with disabilities, through crossroad Queensland and the Ipswich Blue Nursing Service auxiliary. | |
Janice Blair Morris | For service to education, in particular to children with special needs, and to disadvantaged youth as a foster parent. | |
Colin Harry Morwood | For service to the community and to gymnastics. | |
Major Heather Joy Moulden | For service to children, families and youth, particularly through the Salvation Army. | |
William Thomas John Moyes | For service to hang gliding as a manufacturer and as a promoter of competition and the use of safer equipment and techniques. | |
Dr George Friedrich Mutze | For service to the Saddleworth community as a general practitioner and to the Lutheran Church. | |
Magdalena Nagy | For service to multiculturalism, particularly through the Hungarian community and to the welfare of aged people and disadvantaged youth. | |
Ellen Kathleen Nash | For service to women through the Catholic Women's League and the Country Women's Association of Tasmania. | |
Brian Nebenzahl RFD | For service to the publishing industry, and to the community. | |
Dr Ian Douglas Nichols | For service to the community of Wynyard, in particular to the SpencerPark Homes for Aged People and the Lions Club. | |
Geraldine Shirley Dakin Nolan | For service to the community of Corowa, in particular, through organisations involved in commemorating historic events and to the welfare of aged people. | |
Elaine Maude O'Brien | For service to the community, in particular, through the Order of the Eastern Star as Secretary of the United Grand Chapter of Australia. | |
Albert George Thomas O'Cass | For service to the horseracing industry, particularly as President of the NSW Master Farriers Association and as President of the National Farriers Association of Australia. | |
Evelyn Shirley O'Donnell | For service to youth through school, sporting and service organisations. | |
The Reverend Father Vincent Benedict O'Donoghue | For service to the Catholic Church as a missionary and parish priest. | |
Shirley Ellen O'Reilly | For service to netball in the Port Augusta area and as a player, coach, administrator, umpire and fundraiser. | |
Peter John O'Rorke | For service to the Lake Bolac community, particularly through local government, rural bushfire brigades, and surf lifesaving associations. | |
Constance Ord | For service to the performing arts as artistic director of the Old Mill Theatre, Perth. | |
Eva Elizabeth Osborne | For service to youth as a music teacher, Sunday School teacher, and as a leader and counsellor for scouts, guides and youth fellowship members. | |
Ross Henry George Panton | For service to local government, and to the community of Narrabri and surrounding districts. | |
Robert Edward Charles Parker | For service to the community of Dubbo, particularly through organisations caring for the aged, youth and the disadvantaged. | |
Alice Uletta Patterson | For service to the community of Ipswich, particularly through arts and heritage organisations. | |
The late Geoffrey Mark Pearce | For service to the community through raising public awareness of AIDS related issues. | |
Robert James Pearce | For service to music, particularly through the pipe band movement as a player, tutor, administrator, adjudicator and craftsman. | |
Jean Valerie Peare | For service to netball and to the community of the Hawkesbury district. | |
Astley George Pearse | For service to children and adolescents through the Wagga and District Pony Club. | |
Penelope Ann Penhall | For service to education through the development of the Learning Assistance Programme. | |
Lionel Fancis Perry | For service to the Gold Coast community, in particular, through Rotary, Meals on Wheels, and surf lifesaving. | |
Izabella Picheta | For service to the Polish community in South Australia, particularly through the Federation of Polish Organisations and the Polish Women's Circle. | |
John Ronald Pickering | For service to podiatry, particularly in the areas of surgery and education. | |
Joyce Mary Pope | For service to the community of Ashburton and Glen Iris for over thirty-five years. | |
Joan Frances Priest | For service to literature as a writer and as a supporter of other writers. | |
Stanley Douglas Prosser | For service to the conservation and continuing environmental management of Lake Illawarra. | |
David Lyle Purnell | For service to the community, in particular as an advocate for social justice, peacemaking and reconciliation, and to the Society of Friends (Quakers). | |
John Henry Puttnam | For service to the community, particularly to the welfare of ex-service personnel and their families. | |
Beverley Ann Radmore | For service to nursing, in particular at Mount Druitt and Blacktown Hospitals, in the field of stomal therapy. | |
Ian Septimus Rainford ED | For service to the community through civic, service and charitable organisations. | |
Olga Padmavati Ramasamy | For service to the community, particularly through the Australian Asian Association, and to women through the National Council of Women of Western Australia and the Pan Pacific and South East Asia Women's Association. | |
Dorothy Ellen Ransom | For service to the community in particular, through the Australian Federation of University Women and the Senate of the University of Western Australia. | |
Bernice Marjorie Ravenscroft | For service to the community, particularly youth, through the Suicide Prevention Agency Samaritan Befrienders in Perth. | |
Dr Robert James Rawson | For service to youth, in particular, as State Director of the Scripture Union of Queensland. | |
Nita Isobel Reed | For service to the Taree and district community, in particular, through the Mid North Coast Kidney Association. | |
Thomas Ashton Reed | For service to the community of Orange and to the Prisoners of War Association. | |
John Ashley Reeves | For service to the surf lifesaving movement at club, state and national levels. | |
Associate Professor Peter John Reichenbach | For service to physical education and sports science, and to the community. | |
Neil Edward Reid | For service to students with physical or intellectual impairments as Principal of Geebung Special School. | |
Ene Mai Reinpuu | For service to the Estonian community, particularly as president and Honorary Secretary of the Estonian Society of Adelaide, and as Honorary Secretary of the Council of Estonian Societies in Australia. | |
Clifford Bernard Richards | For service to the community, particularly in the area of industrial relations, and to Australia Post. | |
Richard John Rodda | For service to the South Australian Olympic Council and the South Australian Commonwealth Games Association. | |
Henry Holder Rogers | For service to the community of Horsham, particularly through the Gorsham Sub-Branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia. | |
Dr Wendell John Rosevear | For service to medicine in the prevention of drug, alcohol and sexual abuse and to the treatment and counselling of people with HIV/AIDS. | |
Enid Leone Ross | For service to the community through Kantane Child and Family Health Services. | |
John Anthony Saunders | For service to people with impaired vision as a reader for the Hear-A-Book service, and to the community. | |
Gloria Helen Schultz | For service to the community, in particular, through fundraising for a mobile mammography van to service rural areas of southern New South Wales. | |
George Leslie Schwennesen | For service to the community of Surat and to local government, in particular as Mayor of Warroo Shire Council. | |
Frederick Moffat Scott | For service to youth through the Scout Association of Australia. | |
Ivy-May Sheahan | For service to the community, in particular, through the Australian Consumers Association. | |
Norma May Shuttlewood | For service to the community through the Mackay Eisteddfod Committee and the Catholic Women's League Australia. | |
Valda Marie Silvy | For service to the arts in the Penrith area, particularly through the Joan Sutherland Performing Arts Centre. | |
Paul Otto Sitzler | For service to construction development in the Northern Territory, and to the community, particularly through service clubs. | |
Arthur William Thomas Smith | For service to the community, particularly through hockey, Australian Rules football and surf lifesaving organisations. | |
Charles Redmond Smith | For service to the community, particularly to people with disabilities through the Self Help Organisation. | |
Edward Allan Smith | For service to the Shoalhaven community as a fundraiser and entertainer with the 'Shoalhaven Singers'. | |
James Maxwell Smith AFSM | For service to the community of Stanley, in particular, through the Circular Head Council and as Chief of the Stanley Fire Brigade. | |
John Richard Spooner | For service to youth, particularly through the Peer Support Foundation Ltd, the Manly Warringah Youth Accommodation Association and the Northern Beaches Youth Community Fund. | |
Frank Thomas Stagg | For service to the community through the Melbourne Lord Mayor's Charitable Fund for Metropolitan Hospitals and Charities. | |
Reverend Ronald Douglas Stancombe | For service to the Anglican Church as an Honorary Deacon and to the community, particularly the welfare of aged people. | |
William Barrie Statham | For service to the community of Macleay Island, in particular as a volunteer with the ambulance and bush fire service. | |
Beatrice Anne Stone | For service to youth through the Guiding and Scouting movements, and to environmental education programmes. | |
Robert Summerton | For service to the veteran community, in particular, through the Totally and Permanently Disabled Soldiers Association of Victoria. | |
John William Sunners | For service to the community, in particular to youth, through the Scouting movement in South Australia. | |
Wallace Charles Sutherland, MBE | For service to veterans, in particular, through the Tasmanian Branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia. | |
The late Ailsa Macvey Swan | For service to conservation of the environment, particularly in the study and preservation of Australia's ornithological heritage. | |
Thomas Peter Synan | For service to the Gippsland community and to local government. | |
Eileen Faith Tasker | For service to the performing arts as the principal teacher of ballet at the National Theatre Ballet School. | |
The Most Reverend Father Marcos Khella Tawfik | For service to the community as a priest of the Coptic Orthodox Church in New South Wales. | |
William Joseph Thomas | For service to the community of Walbundrie and to Australian Rules football. | |
Thomas William Foster Thorpe | For service to the communities of Box Hill and Burwood, through local government and to youth through the scouting movement. | |
Patricia Madeline Tompkins | For service to the ex-service community. | |
Margaret Forsyth Tucker | For service to establishing and developing the blueberry industry in Australia, in particular as a grower and as an executive member of the Australian Blueberry Growers Association. | |
Luigi Angelo Tuia | For service to the community, in particular to the welfare of people in residential aged care services, and to local government. | |
William Durrant Upson | For service to the music industry in Western Australia. | |
Muriel Nina Valentine | For service to the community of Ballarat. | |
Donald Henry Vallance | For service to veterans through the Walpeup Sub-Branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia, and to the community. | |
Amelia Joan Van Houten | For service to the community through the Doncaster Pocket Theatre. | |
John Charles Veszely | For service to the Hungarian community in Perth. | |
Charles Norman Wallace | For service to the community of Port Macdonnell and District and to veterans through the Port Macdonnell Sub-Branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia. | |
Colleen Patricia Wardell | For service to the community through the Asthma Foundation of New South Wales. | |
Judith Alison Warden | For service to the community through health care organisations. | |
Dr William Webb | For service to sports medicine, in particular as the Principal Medical Officer for Australian Rowing. | |
Ian Charles Westrip | For service to the arts, in particular music, as a teacher and performer in Western Australia. | |
Edward Roy Whitehead | For service to lawn bowls and to the community of Rushworth. | |
Bernard Williams | For service to the community through the Redcliffe Sub-Branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia. | |
Claris Dulcie Williams | For service to the Monto community in the provision of health services and facilities for the care of aged people. | |
David George Williams | For service to soccer as a competitor, administrator, journalist and commentator for over fifty years. | |
Leslie Cameron Williams | For service to conservation of the environment in the Edithvale-Seaford area, and to local government and the community. | |
George Robert Willoughby | For service to hockey and to the community of Henley and Grange. | |
Patricia Adeline Wilson | For service to the community of McMinns Lagoon through the Keep Australia Beautiful campaign, the McMinns Lagoon Reserve Association and the McMinns Lagoon Volunteer Fire Brigade. | |
Beatrice Blanch (Queenie) Witte | For service to the community through the Wollongong branch of the Country Women's Association. | |
Marjorie Wagner Wood | For service to youth through the Girl Guides Association of Australia and the Conference of Australian Youth Organisations. | |
Brian Barry Woods | For service to the community as a fundraiser and entertainer. | |
Linley Delys Woods | For service to the community as a volunteer hospital worker at the Royal Perth Hospital. | |
Donald John Woon | For service to the community, to local government, and to cricket through the South Australian Cricket Association and the Australian Country Cricket Council. | |
Roslyn Christine Worthington | For service to children with life-threatening illnesses through the Make-a-Wish Foundation. | |
Abdul Majid Zahra | For service to the community through the Ethnic Child Care Family and Community Services Co-operative Limited, NSW. | |
Branch | Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Navy | Warrant Officer Terrence James Rowell | For meritorious service to the Royal Australian Navy Submarine Squadron and to the Royal Australian Navy Submarine Escape Training Facility. | [1] |
Chief Petty Officer Trevor Charles Smee | For meritorious service to the Royal Australian Navy in particular as the Senior Non-Commissioned Officer-in-Charge of the Communications Section, Weapons Electrical Mobile Operational Technical Unit, Maritime Command. | ||
Commander Paul Anton Field | For meritorious service as Principal Staff Officer to the Chief of Logistics, Support Command Australia (Navy). | ||
Warrant Officer Garry James McDonald | For meritorious service to the Royal Australian Navy in the fields of Personnel Management and the Management of Service Messes. | ||
Army | Warrant Officer Class One Garry John Alterator | For meritorious service to the Australian Army as the Regimental Sergeant to the Australian Army as the Regimental Sergeant Major of 1st Field Hospital, School of Army Health and South Queensland Logistic Group. | |
Warrant Officer Class Two Brendan Francis Downs | For meritorious service to the Australian Army in the field of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering. | ||
Warrant Officer Class One Danny John Hawkins | For meritorious service to the Australian Army in particular as Regimental Sergeant Major of Base Administrative Support Centre, Randwick and Headquarters Logistic Support Force. | ||
Warrant Officer Class One Darryl John Kelly | For meritorious service to the Australian Army as Regimental Sergeant Major of the 7th Field Regiment and of the Base Administrative Support Centre, Liverpool, New South Wales. | ||
Warrant Officer Class One John William Sturgeon | For meritorious service to the Australian Army and the Royal Australian Air Force in the field of Aircraft Logistic Support. | ||
Warrant Officer Class One Stephen Charles Ward | For meritorious service to the Australian Army, particularly in Regimental and Training Appointments. | ||
Air Force | Warrant Officer Cecil John Boshammer | For meritorious service to the Royal Australian Air Force as a Flight Engineer. | |
Chaplain Douglas Reginald Parker RFD | For meritorious service to the Royal Australian Air Force as a chaplain in the Reserve Force. | ||
Warrant Officer Richard Salt | For meritorious service to the Royal Australian Air Force in the field of Operational Maintenance for the C130 Hercules aircraft. | ||
The 2002 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 10 June 2002 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 2001 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 11 June 2001 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 2000 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 12 June 2000 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1999 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 14 June 1999 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1997 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 9 June 1997 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1996 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 10 June 1996 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1985 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 10 June 1985 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1986 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 9 June 1986 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1987 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 8 June 1987 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1988 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 13 June 1988 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1989 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 12 June 1989 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1990 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 11 June 1990 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1991 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 10 June 1991 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1992 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 8 June 1992 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1993 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 14 June 1993 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1994 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 13 June 1994 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1995 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 12 June 1995 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1984 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 11 June 1984 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1983 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 13 June 1983 by the office of the Governor-General.
The 1981 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were appointments to recognise and reward good works by citizens of Australia and other nations that contribute to Australia. The Birthday Honours are awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations and were announced on 13 June 1981 in Australia.