The 2005 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 13 June 2005 by the Governor-General, Michael Jeffery. [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 |
---|---|---|
The Honourable James Alexander Bacon | For service to the Tasmanian Parliament, to developing strategies for long-term social, economic and environmental benefit, and to support for a vibrant arts and cultural life in the State. | [1] |
Stella May Bywaters | For service to the international community, during an unsafe and dangerous period in Uganda, through the provision of humanitarian aid and nursing care to improve the lives of the sick, poor and dispossessed and to the Salvation Army. | |
Douglas Neville Daft | For service to leadership in the global business community, commitment to corporate social responsibility, contributions in the field of education, and support for community based development initiatives. | |
The Honourable Dame Margaret Georgina Guilfoyle | For significant contributions to public life in Australia in support of hospital and health administration, social justice and education, to young people as a role model, and to the Australian Parliament. | |
His Eminence Cardinal George Pell | For service to the Catholic Church in Australia and internationally, to raising debate on matters of an ethical and spiritual nature, to education, and to social justice. | |
Dame Margaret Catherine Scott | For service to the arts and commitment to cultural development, particularly in the field of dance as Founding Director of the Australian Ballet School and to encouraging young artists to achieve the highest standards in their careers. |
Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|
Roslyn Allan | For service to the finance sector, particularly through the development of postgraduate and distance education, training courses and professional standards. | [1] |
Charles Hamilton Bell | For service to business, to management development, and to the community through support for and promotion of a range of charitable and cultural organisations. | |
Dr Coral Mary Bell | For service to scholarship and to teaching as a leading commentator and contributor to foreign and defence policy debate internationally and in Australia. | |
Emeritus Professor Freda Briggs | For service to raising community and professional awareness of child abuse and neglect and as an advocate for effective child safety education programs. | |
John Graham Brown | For service to promoting rural and regional economic development initiatives in Victoria, to the community through sporting and emergency services activities, and to the wine industry. | |
Michael Joseph Carmody | For service to the community in the area of taxation administration and reform through innovative approaches to the design and implementation of new policies and operations. | |
Virginia Anne Chadwick | For service to conservation and the environment through management of the environmental, heritage and economic sustainability issues affecting the Great Barrier Reef, and to the New South Wales Parliament, particularly in the areas of child welfare and education. | |
Norman Coldham-Fussell | For service to business and commerce, particularly the mining and travel sectors, and to the community through a range of church, social welfare, musical and educational organisations. | |
John Harry Conomos | For service to the Australian automotive industry through contributions to policy formulation, economic reform initiatives and the development of environmental and safety standards. | |
The Reverend Timothy Ewen Costello | For service to the community through contributions to social justice, health and welfare issues, international development assistance, and to the Baptist Church. | |
William John Farmer | For service to the community through contributions to Australia's international relations and to major public policy development including domestic security, border systems, immigration, multicultural affairs and Indigenous service delivery. | |
Sister Patricia Ellen Franklin | For service in the field of international humanitarian relief and to children in South East Asia, particularly in Vietnam, through the establishment and administration of education and social welfare programs. | |
Janice Lillian Fullerton | For service to librarianship through the facilitation of wider community access to the collections of the National Library of Australia, the preservation of cultural heritage in digital forms, and collaboration with other collecting agencies nationally and internationally. | |
Diana Eirene Gibson | For service to the community through philanthropy and support for a broad range of health and aged care, medical research, child welfare and cultural organisations. | |
The Honourable Justice Alan Henry Goldberg | For service to the judiciary, particularly in the areas of competition law and equity, and to the community as a contributor to debate on human rights and civil liberties and as a supporter of the arts. | |
Professor Shirley Diane Gregor | For service as an educator and researcher in the field of information systems and to the development of applications for electronic commerce in the agribusiness sector. | |
Professor Eric Albert Haan | For service to clinical genetics, particularly as a researcher and practitioner, to education, and to the community as a contributor to the debate on the ethical, legal and social implications in science. | |
Geoffrey Norman Handbury | For service to the community as a benefactor to a broad range of educational, health, social welfare, environmental, youth and cultural organisations, and to international humanitarian relief through the activities of Care Australia. | |
Helen Handbury | For service to the community as a benefactor to a broad range of educational, health, social welfare, environmental, youth and cultural organisations, and to international humanitarian relief through the activities of Care Australia. | |
Professor Thomas William Healy | For service to science as a researcher and academic in the area of physical chemistry, and to the community through support for the activities of the Ian Potter Foundation and Philanthropy Australia. | |
David Taylor Irvine | For service to furthering Australian international interests and the development of trade links, particularly in negotiating a bilateral agreement with China for the supply of energy. | |
Professor Graeme John Jameson | For service to engineering, science, industry and the environment as an inventor and through contributions in the fields of fluid and particle mechanics, mineral processing, water and wastewater treatment and particle technology. | |
The Honourable Justice Stanley Graham Jones | For service to the community through contributions to the establishment of higher education institutions and legal and judicial services in central Queensland. | |
Christopher David Jordan | For service through the provision of high-level advice to government in relation to the development and implementation of taxation legislation and reform of Australia's taxation system. | |
The Honourable Justice Murray Bryon Kellam | For service to the law through a range of judicial and legal training roles in Australia and the Asia-Pacific region, and to the community, particularly through support for the activities of the Jesuit Refugee Service in Thailand and for disadvantaged people in Melbourne. | |
Geoffrey Howard Levy | For service to the community through support for and philanthropic contributions to a broad range of arts, sporting and charitable organisations. | |
Emeritus Professor Donald Anthony Low | For service to scholarship and learning through the study of history focussed on Asia, particularly South Asia, East Africa and broader Commonwealth history. | |
Professor Arthur Maurice Lucas | For service to educational administration through developing initiatives and collaborations between Australian and British tertiary institutions, and through raising awareness internationally of the quality and significance of Australian scientific research. | |
Isador Alexander Magid | For service to the community through fostering the development of educational institutions in Australia and Israel, promoting tolerance and co-operation, and contributing to a broad range of charitable organisations. | |
The Honourable Justice Jane Hamilton Mathews | For service to the judiciary, to the legal profession, to the University of New South Wales, and to music. | |
Nelson John Meers | For service to the preservation of Australian cultural life and to the community through donations and support for a broad range of arts organisations and projects to conserve the Mitchell Library's collection of documented Australian heritage. | |
David Allen Mortimer | For service to business and commerce through innovative and visionary leadership, as an adviser to government, and to the community. | |
Allan Edward Moss | For service to the investment banking industry through innovative management practices and support for moves to raise standards in the financial services industry, and to the community. | |
The Honourable Jocelyn Margaret Newman | For service to the community through contributions to the development of government policies in relation to social security reform, as an advocate for women's issues, particularly in the health and welfare areas, and as a supporter of local organisations in Tasmania. | |
Brother Kenneth William Payne | For service to education through leadership and representational roles in the secondary and tertiary sectors and with professional organisations, and to school Rugby Union football. | |
Myra Evelin Pincott | For service to women and their families in rural and remote areas through contributions to the development of policies relating to health and welfare, aged care, local government and reconciliation. | |
Professor Eric Charles Reynolds | For service to community dental health through research and development of preventative and restorative products, to dental education through curriculum development, and as an administrator and teacher. | |
His Excellency David James Ritchie | For service to ensuring Australia's long-term security interests in the region through efforts to gain co-operative action to address the threat of terrorism. | |
Dr Iain James Ross | For service to industrial relations through contributions to institutional reform, particularly the development of a universal superannuation system and enterprise bargaining, and as a teacher and researcher in the field. | |
Geoffrey James Spring | For service to educational administration and reform, particularly through the development of national goals for schooling to improve outcomes, and in the area of vocational education and training. | |
The Honourable Robert Clive Tadgell | For service to the judiciary, to the law, and to the community through contributions to higher education institutions and the Anglican Church in Australia. | |
Professor Barrie Vernon-Roberts | For service to medicine as a researcher, educator and administrator, particularly in the areas of disorders of the bones and joints and pathology of the spine. | |
Geoffrey David Walsh | For service to politics as National Secretary of the Australian Labor Party and to the community in the areas of tertiary education and promoting closer ties between Australia and Hong Kong. | |
Richard Egerton Warburton | For service to business and commerce through contributions to a range of government and industry bodies and business enterprises, particularly in the areas of corporate governance and policy formulation, and to the community. | |
The Honourable Justice Marilyn Louise Warren | For service to the judiciary and to the legal profession particularly the delivery and administration of law in Victoria, to the community in areas affecting the social and economic conditions of women and to forensic medicine internationally. |
Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|
Christopher Murray Abbott | For service to the finance industry, particularly through venture capital projects, and to the development of the biotechnology industry in Australia through entrepreneurial and advisory roles. | [1] |
Mesfin Alazar | For service to the people of the Anagu Pitjantjatjara Lands through lobbying and negotiation to improve health, education and community infrastructure. | |
Dr Robert Trevor Anderson | For service to psychiatry, to the visually impaired, particularly through the Royal Victorian Institute for the Blind, and to veterans and their families. | |
Mebrak Araia | For service to the people of the Anagu Pitjantjatjara Lands through lobbying and negotiation to improve health, education and community infrastructure. | |
Wendy Joan Archer | For service to netball administration in New South Wales, particularly in the Hunter Region. | |
Donald Campbell Bailey | For service to architecture, particularly through the Royal Australian Institute of Architects and the Board of Architects of New South Wales. | |
David Alexander Baird | For service to the community, particularly through fundraising for the establishment of the Australian Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial at Ballarat. | |
Bernard Douglas Banton | For service to the community, particularly as an advocate for people affected by asbestos-related illnesses. | |
Carolyn Jane Barker | For service to business through management and educational organisations, and to the arts through the Queensland Orchestra. | |
Robert John Beavis | For service to the mining industry, particularly through the development of more efficient and safer equipment. | |
Dr Richard Alan Benn | For service to medicine, particularly as a practitioner and educator in the fields of clinical microbiology and infectious diseases. | |
Dr John Michael Bennett | For service to the law, particularly in recording Australian legal history and as a biographer of eminent members of the legal profession. | |
John Anthony Berger | For service to the community and to the environment through natural resource management and the promotion of sustainable agriculture practices. | |
Professor Samuel Frank Berkovic | For service to medicine as a neurologist, particularly in the field of epilepsy research and treatment. | |
Janet Shirley Beven | For service to the community as a foster parent and respite carer for children with a range of disabilities, and through advocacy efforts to improve access to allied health care and special education. | |
Professor Elie Leslie Bokey | For service to medicine as a colorectal surgeon and through the establishment of surgical education programs, research, and medical administration. | |
Howard Frederick Bolling | For service to the community through major fundraising initiatives to support medical research through the Westmead Millennium Foundation. | |
Anna Marie Borzi | For service to the financial services industry, particularly as a senior analyst and manager of research activities. | |
Micheli Borzi | For service to business and tourism development, particularly in far north Queensland through industry advisory bodies, local government, and community organisations. | |
June Elizabeth Bothwell | For service to netball administration, particularly through the restructuring and development of Netball Queensland. | |
Christopher James Brangwin | For service to education, particularly through the establishment of the International Baccalaureate Diploma Program as a recognised pre-university qualification in Australia. | |
Gordon Timothy Bray | For service to broadcasting as a sports commentator, to the promotion of Rugby Union football, and to the community. | |
Bryan Neathway Brown | For service to the community through a range of charitable organisations committed to providing assistance and support to families and young people and to the Australian film and television industry. | |
Thomas Peter Bruce | For service to the law, particularly in the area of assessment of costs of litigation, and to post-secondary education. | |
Dr Alan Lindsey Bundy | For service to librarianship in university, school and public libraries, to professional development, and to promotion of the role of librarians in educating people in the use of information resources. | |
Anne Elizabeth Cahill Lambert | For service to health care administration, particularly through contributions to improve hospital services for women and children. | |
Charles Arthur Campbell | For service to the community through conservation and heritage organisations in the Australian Capital Territory and the development of extended care services through St John Ambulance. | |
Dr Gerard Edward Carroll | For service to medicine as a cardiologist and as a general physician, particularly through the provision of health services to regional and rural areas, and to medical education. | |
Peter Ross Carthew | For service to the community of the Ararat region through involvement with civic and charitable organisations, regional development initiatives, and local government. | |
Professor Ian Douglas Caterson | For service to medicine as an endocrinologist, particularly through research and clinical practice in the fields of obesity, diabetes and nutrition, and to medical education. | |
Lloyd Edgar Chrystal | For service to business and commerce, and to the community particularly through health care in Western Australia. | |
Emeritus Professor Robert Llewellyn Clancy | For service to cartography as a collector and curator of early maps of Australia, and to medicine in the field of immunology. | |
Brian Raymond Coffey | For service to literature, particularly through the publication and promotion of the literary work of new writers. | |
Glenn Andrew Cooper | For service to the food and beverage industry, and to the community through support for cultural, charitable and sporting organisations. | |
Captain Silvester John Costelloe | For service to the maritime industry as a harbour master, and to the community through a range of health sector organisations. | |
Professor Richard Graham Cotton | For service to science through genetic research, particularly through the development of technologies to detect gene mutations that underlie birth defects or cause disease and through efforts to document findings. | |
John William Crompton | For service to local government and to the community, particularly through the Victor Harbor Council and the Southern and Hills Area Local Government Association. | |
Elizabeth Sarah Crossing | For service to the community through health care consumer advocacy, and the establishment of the Breast Cancer Action Group NSW and Cancer Voices NSW. | |
Dr Brian Davies | For service to occupational health and hygiene, particularly in relation to the coal industry, and through the Australian Institute of Occupational Hygienists. | |
John Grant Denton | For service to the Anglican Church of Australia and to the international community through the programs of World Vision. | |
John Stanislaus Doherty | For service to the community through administrative and fundraising roles with a range of hospital and health care organisations, and to the television industry. | |
Bruce George Donald | For service to the law and to the community through commitment to public interest issues affecting broadcasting, the environment, Indigenous organisations, and trade practices law. | |
Dr Jonathan Brookes Douglas | For service to medicine, particularly through a range of medical and administrative roles, professional organisations, and specialist training programs for physicians. | |
Colin James Dwyer | For service to secondary education and to the community through the Catholic education system in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. | |
The Honourable John Edward Ellis | For service to the administration of justice, to the development of family law in Australia, and to judicial education. | |
Dr Patrick Michael Fernando | For service to psychiatry, particularly in the field of child and adolescent mental health, and to the community through social welfare organisations. | |
Ian Douglas Ferrier | For service to the administration of Rugby Union football through financial management roles, restructuring, and business development. | |
Glenn Ailsa Fisher | For service to the community, particularly through the Turner Syndrome Association of Australia and the development of a range of support services. | |
William John Forrest | For service to the community through support for arts and charitable organisations as a benefactor and adviser. | |
Professor Hans Charles Freeman | For service to science and scientific research in the field of bio-inorganic chemistry, particularly through the establishment and development of the discipline of crystallography in Australia. | |
Dr Judith Alison Fryer | For service to medicine as an anatomical pathologist, and as an educator in the field of neuropathology. | |
Professor William Leonard Gammage | For service to education and to the community in the area of Australian history through teaching, writing and historical research. | |
Peter Brian George | For service to surf lifesaving, particularly through administrative roles and the implementation of changes to education and training programs. | |
Daniel Thomas Gilbert | For service to the law and to the community, particularly Indigenous Australians, in relation to social justice and welfare issues. | |
Elizabeth Margaret Gilchrist | For service to youth through the Guiding movement and organisations that develop and promote the interests of young people. | |
Professor Edgar Gold | For service to maritime law and protection of the environment as a policy developer and adviser, and through academic roles and involvement in international maritime organisations. | |
Dr Donald Golinger | For service to medicine, particularly through the introduction of training programs in general surgery and the establishment of multi-disciplinary assessment and treatment services for breast disease. | |
David William Grant | For service to business and commerce, to the community through promoting sport, business and charitable events, and to support for education and training programs. | |
Richard Ashton Green | For service to tourism and to the community through support for a range of cultural, educational, sporting and musical events in South Australia. | |
Professor Alexander Dmitrievich Grishin | For service to the visual arts and to contemporary Australian artists as an educator, critic and writer, and as an art historian. | |
Dr Bruce Heath Gutteridge | For service to the development and provision of diagnostic medical pathology services, and to the community through the Friends of the Queensland Art Gallery. | |
Annette Jean Hall | For service to public health and to the community through health services and rural financial counselling, particularly on the Eyre Peninsula. | |
John James Hanley | For service to the wine industry as a judge, writer and educator, and to the community through the Royal Agricultural Society of Western Australia. | |
Kenneth Carl Hansen | For service to the community of the Finke River Mission, particularly through the recording of the Pintupi/Luritja language and the development of educational resources to aid literacy. | |
Lesley Ellen Hansen | For service to the community of the Finke River Mission, particularly through the recording of the Pintupi/Luritja language and the development of educational resources to aid literacy. | |
John Hasker | For service to the energy industry and to the community through leadership roles, particularly with the Australian Red Cross Blood Service. | |
Adjunct Associate Professor James Kell Hawkins | For service to dentistry, particularly as an educator and practitioner, to professional development, and to the community. | |
Robert Norman Herbert | For service to industry, particularly in the areas of industrial relations reform, industry training and skills development. | |
Reginald Thomas Hope | For service to state and local government, and to the community of Devonport. | |
John Talbot Horder | For service to public administration, particularly financial management practices in public sector agencies, to corporate governance, and to the accounting profession. | |
Major Baden Newton Jeffrey | For service to the community of Western Australia through chaplaincy services, particularly in the Fire and Emergency Services Authority. | |
Professor Ian Stuart Jones | For service to medicine, particularly in the fields of obstetrics and gynaecology as an educator, practitioner and administrator, and to the Royal Australian Navy Reserve as a medical specialist. | |
Jeremy Sean Jones | For service to the Jewish community, and to multiculturalism and international relations in the area of interfaith dialogue. | |
Professor Brian Herbert Kay | For service to medical science and public health, particularly through research into the control and elimination of mosquito-borne arbovirus diseases in Northern Australia and Asia. | |
The Reverend Dr Bruce Norman Kaye | For service to the Anglican Church of Australia, particularly as General Secretary of the General Synod and as a scholar and author of texts on theology and church history. | |
Clive William Kitchin | For service to the community through the Royal Flying Doctor Service and the administration of health services for people in rural and remote areas, and to the legal system. | |
Phillip George Knightley | For service to journalism, particularly as a leader in journalistic investigations and reporting of issues of public concern, and as an author. | |
Venerable Master Chin Kung | For service to the Buddhist community in Queensland, particularly through the promotion of Buddhism and the fostering of interfaith activities between diverse ethnic groups, and to the community through support for educational and health institutions. | |
The Honourable Dr Diana Vivienne Laidlaw | For service to the South Australian Parliament and to the community, particularly through support for the arts and improved transport systems. | |
Professor Kenneth John Langford | For service to water resource management, particularly through organisations that regulate and research water supply, quality and usage. | |
Dr Maxwell Gordon Lay | For service to engineering, particularly through leadership in the delivery of quality road infrastructure and the development of new contract management processes, and as an educator and historian. | |
His Honour Judge Gordon David Lewis | For service to the law through the judiciary and as a practitioner, particularly in the area of professional accountability, and to the community through a range of sporting and social welfare organisations. | |
Dr Brian Lawrence Lloyd | For service to medicine as a clinician, particularly as a cardiologist, and to hospital and health services administration. | |
Bruce Lloyd | For service to natural resource management, particularly through the landcare movement, and to the Australian Parliament. | |
Maxwell Thomas Lockwood | For service to public health through the Arthritis Foundation of Queensland and Arthritis Australia, and to the community. | |
Catherine Juliet Lyons | For service to the law and to the community, particularly through assisting members of disadvantaged groups to have greater understanding of the criminal justice system. | |
Peter Gilbert Mackie | For service to the agribusiness sector and Australian fodder industry through research and development, and by promoting trading links with Japan. | |
Jock Alexander Mackinnon | For service to academia as an educator and administrator, and to the community through support for a range of charitable and religious organisations. | |
The Honourable Robert Roy Maclellan | For service to the Victorian Parliament, particularly in the areas of planning and transport, and to the community. | |
Dr Peter Walter Madden | For service to medicine through the establishment and administration of the Queensland Eye Bank. | |
Dr Christopher Robert Margules | For service to conservation and the environment, particularly through innovation in the fields of biodiversity assessment and conservation planning, and through collaborating on projects at both local and international level. | |
Eric John Martin | For service to conservation in the Australian Capital Territory, particularly through the ACT Heritage Council and the National Trust of Australia (ACT), and to the community. | |
Rosalie Ruth Martin | For service to business and commerce, particularly through the provision of educational services to the finance sector, and to the community. | |
William James Masterton | For service to the building industry, particularly in the field of residential development and housing design and construction methods, and to the community. | |
Gerald Byrne Maynard | For service to the information technology industry and to education, particularly through the establishment of professional standards and accredited courses of study in vocational training institutions. | |
Harry Kevin McCann | For service to the law, particularly in the areas of mining, corporate and commercial law, and to business and the community. | |
Professor Sybil Jennifer McCulloch | For service to the community of South Australia through a range of organisations involved in health and aged care. | |
Deborah Jane McCulloch | For service to the community as a proponent of equal opportunities for women, Indigenous Australians and people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds. | |
Edward Joseph McGuire | For service to the community, particularly through support for health care and welfare organisations, and to broadcasting. | |
Professor Russell Gordon Mein | For service to science in the field of flood hydrology and urban water resources and for contributions to research, teaching and professional practice. | |
Dr Philip Clayton Minter | For service to international relations, particularly through the promotion of commerce and trade between Australia and the United States of America. | |
Michael Andrew Montgomery | For service to local government and regional development in New South Wales, particularly as a proponent for improved roads and transport links in rural areas. | |
Professor Kenneth James Moores | For service to academia as an educator and administrator, and to the accounting profession though a range of financial and business organisations. | |
Professor Elizabeth Agnes More | For service to education, particularly in the fields of communication, management and organisational change. | |
Mary Louise Morris | For service to conservation and the environment, particularly in the field of environmental practices, and through the advancement of a multi-disciplinary approach to managing environmental change. | |
Dr John Geoffrey Mosley | For service to conservation and the environment through a range of national and international World Heritage list campaigns, and the introduction of conservation legislation. | |
Dr Thomas Julian Murphy | For service to the community of Longreach, particularly to the Stockman's Hall of Fame, and to a range of local organisations. | |
Ronald James Murray | For service to the community as a transport operator and provider and to the tourism industry through contributions to a range of planning and development organisations. | |
Colin Robert Neave | For service to public administration and to the banking and finance industry, particularly through dispute resolution. | |
Clive Douglas Newman | For service to literature, particularly through the publication and promotion of the literary work of new writers. | |
Associate Professor Graham Leonard Newstead | For service to medicine in the field of colorectal surgery, particularly through the development of the Colorectal Surgical Society of Australasia, the implementation of international specialist surgical training programs, and the promotion of health awareness initiatives. | |
Raymond John Noack | For service to the retail motor industry, particularly through involvement with industry bodies at a state and national level. | |
The Honourable Howard William Olney | For service to the law and the judiciary, particularly in relation to Indigenous land issues. | |
Professor Trevor Reginald Parmenter | For service to education and to the community particularly in the design and development of vocational and best practice initiatives in the field of developmental disability studies. | |
Morris John Peacock | For service to thoracic medicine, particularly as a pioneer of innovative surgical techniques and as an educator. | |
Paul Joseph Perkins | For service to the community through the management of electricity, water and waste water utilities and liaison between industry, the environmental movement and international markets. | |
Harry William Peters | For service to the seafood industry, particularly through addressing the interests of seafood importers and the domestic fishing industry, and as an industry representative to government food regulatory authorities, and to the community. | |
Cosmo James Petrich | For service to the rural community, particularly regional and economic development on Cape York Peninsula. | |
Michael Christopher Power | For service to the building and construction industry, particularly in the field of civil engineering, and to the community through roles with a range of charitable and sporting organisations. | |
John Hartley Poynton | For service to the business and finance sector, particularly professional conduct and regulation, and to the community through a range of charitable institutions. | |
Dorothy Edna Pryce | For service to the community, particularly through the provision of mental health services as an administrator and educator. | |
The Honourable Rodney Norman Purvis | For service to the law and to the judiciary, particularly through the promotion of international law, and to the community through a range of charitable and religious organisations. | |
Dr David Wyndham Quin | For service to the community in the field of housing for the disadvantaged, and to medicine as a general practitioner in Papua New Guinea. | |
Peter Brian Rakich | For service to cricket as an administrator and player, and to business and commerce. | |
Margaret Anne Rankin | For service to public health, particularly through the provision of information and support to people with hereditary haemochromatosis. | |
Professor Stuart John Rees | For service to international relations, particularly as Director of the Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Sydney and through the establishment of the Sydney Peace Prize. | |
Professor Alexander Lyon Reid | For service to medicine as an academic, administrator and practitioner, particularly in the development of medical education and rural health in Australia. | |
Dr Winston Selby Rickards | For service to medicine, particularly in the field of child psychiatry, and as a contributor to the advancement of child and adolescent mental health at a national and international level. | |
William Herbert Rutledge | For service to the thoroughbred racing industry, particularly through representation on state and national organisations, and to the community of the Gosford region. | |
Dr Michael Hugh Ryan | For service to medicine, particularly in the field of ophthalmology as a practitioner and researcher. | |
The Honourable James Miltiadis Samios | For service to the community, particularly in the area of multicultural affairs, to the New South Wales Parliament and to the arts. | |
Jillian Shirley Segal | For service to business law in Australia, particularly in the areas of financial services reform and market regulation, and to the community through a range of organisations. | |
Martin Ritchie Sharp | For service to the arts as a painter and graphic designer, particularly contributing to the pop art movement in Australia and providing support for emerging young artists. | |
Patrick Francis Sheehy | For service to local government through the Penrith City Council, and to the community of Western Sydney, particularly in the areas of education and health services. | |
Professor Gillian Myrna Shenfield | For service to medicine, particularly in the field of clinical pharmacology and therapeutics in Australia, and to education. | |
Professor Richard Shine | For service to science in the field of herpetology as a researcher and educator, and through contributions to a range of Australian and international herpetological organisations and publications. | |
Jane Singleton | For service to the media and to the community through a range of industry, arts, charitable and consumer organisations. | |
Professor Thomas Frederick Smith | For service to higher education, particularly research policy and administration, to science and technology development, and to science education. | |
Brian Clyde Snape | For service to conservation and the environment, particularly through Trust for Nature (Victoria) and Birds Australia. | |
Dr George Bryce Soutter | For service to paediatric medicine, particularly the diagnosis, management and care of children with disabilities, and to the decorative arts. | |
Major Gerben Stelstra | For service to the community, through the promotion of interfaith dialogue and understanding, to ecumenical organisations, and to the Salvation Army in Australia. | |
Dr Ross Sweet | For service to medicine in the fields of obstetrics and gynaecology, to professional associations and health related organisations, and to the community. | |
The Reverend Peter Ashley Thomson | For service to the community through the support of projects to assist and improve social justice and community development. | |
Shirley Grace Thorn | For service to agriculture and to the community in rural areas of Western Australia through contributions to a range of social, industry-based and educational organisations. | |
John Thorpe | For service to the tourism and hospitality industry, particularly through the Australian Hotels Association, and to the community. | |
Professor Charles Harrold Tranberg | For service to engineering, particularly in design and construction management of bulk materials handling at marine facilities in Queensland, and to education. | |
Stephen Henry Wallace | For service to the Australian film and television industry as a director and to the Australian Screen Directors' Association. | |
Graham Douglas Walters | For service to accountancy, to business, and to the community as a fundraiser. | |
Emeritus Professor William Allen Walters | For service to reproductive medicine as an educator and researcher, and to human bioethics, particularly in the area of in vitro fertilisation. | |
Rachel Claire Ward | For service to raising awareness of social justice through lobbying, mentoring and advocacy for the rights of disadvantaged and at-risk young people, and support for the Australian film and television industry. | |
Dr Rodney Dennis Watkins | For service to optics and optometry through the development and manufacture of ophthalmic equipment designed for use in remote locations throughout the world. | |
Dr Neville Deane Webb | For service to higher education, particularly as a language teacher and academic administrator, and to alumni affairs through promoting the importance of teaching excellence and maintaining the quality of educational standards. | |
Emeritus Professor Saxon William White | For service to medicine and to medical education, particularly through the planning and development of innovative curriculum, as a researcher in the field of human physiology, and to the Hunter Valley community. | |
Michael Minell Wilson | For service to the community, particularly through the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund, and to the South Australian Parliament. | |
Dr David Leon Woolley | For service to literature as a scholar and as a historian of the life and works of Jonathan Swift, and to music. | |
Lawrence Allan Wright | For service to community health through the promotion and administration of organisations concerned with cancer control including the Cancer Council of Australia, the Clinical Oncological Society of Australia and the National Laryngeal Cancer Support Committee. | |
Ian Garth Yates | For service to the welfare of the aged in South Australia, and to a range of community health and educational organisations. | |
Dr Robert Theam Yeoh | For service to the community as an advocate for the welfare of people living with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia, their carers and families, and to the aged. |
Branch | Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Navy | Captain Simon Terence Cullen | For exceptional service in warlike operations as the Chief of Staff, Headquarters Joint Task Force 633 and as the Commanding Officer of HMAS Sydney and Albatross. | [1] |
Commodore Geoffrey Alan Ledger | For exceptional service to the Royal Australian Navy and the Australian Defence Force as Director of the Aviation Capability Improvement Team and Commander Australian Navy Aviation Group. | ||
Commodore Matthew John Tripovich | For exceptional service to the Royal Australian Navy as Director General Navy Capability, Performance and Plans, Commodore Flotillas and Director General Navy Personnel and Training. | ||
Warrant Officer David Turner | For exceptional service to the Royal Australian Navy as Staff Officer Navy Reserve Policy and Warrant Officer of the Navy. | ||
Army | Lieutenant Colonel Ronald John Eddington | For exceptional performance as Commanding Officer of the Army Financial Services Unit in the provision of financial management and as Head of Corps, Royal Australian Army Pay Corps in personnel management performance. | |
Lieutenant Colonel Luke Foster | For exceptional performance as the Defence Adviser Honiara, accredited to Port Vila | ||
Brigadier David Gordon McKaskill | For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in the field of capability development as Director Simulation at the Combined Arms Training and Development Centre, as Director Future Warfare in Policy Guidance and Analysis Division and as Director Land Combat in Land Development Branch, and Acting Director General Land Development. | ||
Brigadier Aziz Gregory Melick | For exceptional service as Commanding Officer of 12th/40th Royal Tasmania Regiment and as Commander 8th Brigade. | ||
Colonel Stephan James Rudzki | For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in the field of Health Services as Commanding Officer, Canberra Area Medical Unit, Staff Officer Grade One Health Capability Development in the Defence Personnel Executive, Chief of Health on the Headquarters Peacekeeping Force while deployed on the United Nations Mission of Support in East Timor, and as Director Preventive Health in Defence Health Services Branch. | ||
Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Paul Tulley | For exceptional service to the Australian Army as the Liaison Officer to the US Marine Corps; Commanding Officer Land Command Battle School; and as the Commanding Officer/Chief Instructor Combined Arms Battle Wing, Combat Training Centre. | ||
Colonel Phillip Thomson White | For exceptional service in the fields of leadership and training as the Commanding Officer of the Western Australian University Regiment, Project Team Leader of the Royal Military College of Australia and Commandant, Regional Training Centre, Western Australia. | ||
Air Force | Group Captain Terrence Charles Delahunty | For exceptional service to the Royal Australian Air Force as Officer Commanding Number 44 Wing, Project Officer for the formation of Surveillance and Response Group and Chief of Staff of Surveillance and Response Group. | |
Wing Commander Stephen James Kerr | For exceptional service as a Project Officer, Commanding Officer, Operational Commander in the Middle East and Temporary Officer Commanding Number 92 Wing to the Royal Australian Air Force Maritime Patrol and Response capability. | ||
Wing Commander Gary James Martin | For exceptional service as Commanding Officer of Number 37 Squadron. | ||
Air Vice-Marshal Bruce Hamilton Short | For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in senior appointments within the Defence Health Services, particularly as the Surgeon General to the Australian Defence Force. |
Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|
Gwendolyn Joan Abikhair | For service to people with disabilities through the Riding for the Disabled Association, particularly through the establishment of facilities in Albury. | [1] |
Trevor James Adams | For service to the community of Bruny Island, particularly fundraising through the Bruny Island Cork Club. | |
Elsie Joy Addis | For service to the community of Nyabing through a range of service, social support and youth organisations. | |
Colin John Alexander | For service to the community of Canberra, particularly through the establishment and management of a national basketball team. | |
The Reverend Noel Stephen Allen | For service to the Anglican Church of Australia, particularly through providing chaplaincy services at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. | |
Robert Roy Anderson | For service to the community through local beautification schemes and ex-Service organisations. | |
Eric David Anderson | For service to the community of Rockhampton through support for cultural, primary industry and service organisations. | |
Ray Thomas Anderson | For service to the community through the Anglican Church of Australia, particularly through the provision of support for homeless children and youth, the aged, and people with disabilities. | |
Philip Gwyther Atherton | For service to education through the administration of tertiary and further education institutions, and to the sugar industry. | |
Kenneth Leslie Baggs | For service to athletics through the establishment and administration of the annual ironman triathlon in Forster-Tuncurry. | |
Margaret Dorothy Baldwin | For service to youth as a sports coach and administrator, particularly with the Mosman Park Primary School. | |
Geoffrey Roy Ball | For service to education, particularly promoting the study of mathematics and to professional associations. | |
Margaret McNeill Banks | For service to children with vision impairments through contributions in the specialised field of behavioural optometry. | |
Betty Eileen Barnes | For service to education as a teacher and consultant, particularly through contributions to dance and physical education syllabi. | |
John William Barrett | For service to Rugby League football, and to the community of the Balonne Shire, particularly through local government. | |
Keith Henry Barry | For service to the community of Ballina through service, veteran and horticultural organisations. | |
Graeme James Barwick | For service to the community, particularly through the Association of Independent Retirees and the Uniting Church of Australia. | |
Coralie May Batchelor | For service to nursing and humanitarian aid through the Nepal Plastic Surgery Program and the Adventist Development and Relief Agency. | |
Norma Irene Beer | For service to people with spinal disabilities, particularly as a home visiting nurse with the Paraplegic-Quadriplegic Association of Western Australia, and through support for wheelchair sports. | |
Sydney Benjamin | For service to the community, particularly through public speaking programs, Jewish communal organisations and Freemasonry. | |
Helen Bersten | For service to the community as an historian, particularly through the Australian Jewish Historical Society. | |
Rupert John Bills | For service to the community of Dubbo through a range of service, historical, sporting, veteran and church organisations. | |
Mary Elaine Binks | For service to local government, particularly through the Devonport City Council, to the promotion of women's affairs, and to the community. | |
Cecil Audley Black | For service to the community of Gladesville through the Returned and Services League of Australia in relation to meeting the needs of veterans and their families and to young people in the local area. | |
Noel Edwin Blount Greene | For service to people with disabilities through the provision of vocational training and welfare support services. | |
Kenneth Alexander Blyth | For service to the community, particularly through research into and preservation of historical material relating to the sugar industry. | |
Shirley Margaret Bourne | For service to the community and to the visual arts, particularly as an advocate of the traditional realist style, and as a painter, teacher and adjudicator. | |
Basil Clyde Bowman | For service to youth through the Scouting movement, particularly in the Goldfields region of Victoria. | |
Priscilla Mary Boxall | For service to the community of Kangaroo Island, particularly through welfare, service and aged care organisations. | |
Robert Lawson Boyd | For service to sport as a water polo coach, administrator and referee, and through the development of junior competitors. | |
Roger Hardinge Braham | For service to the community of Tenterfield and to equestrian sport through the Pony Club Association of New South Wales. | |
Janice Breen | For service to the performing arts as a choreographer and teacher and to the community through support for a range of fundraising events. | |
Kathleen Lillian Brewster | For service to the community, particularly through the Council on the Ageing (NSW) Inc. | |
Harold Thomas Brissenden | For service to music education, particularly through the introduction and development of techniques for teaching music to children. | |
Dr Ida Bell Brodrick | For service to the community through the administration of public health programs, particularly in the areas of maternal and child health. | |
Alan James Brown | For service to local government in the Wide Bay Burnett region, and to the community through tourism, training, health and sporting groups. | |
David Eric Brown | For service to the communities of Strathfield and Burwood, particularly through Meals on Wheels. | |
Councillor Peter Andrew Bryant | For service to local government and to the community of Rockdale. | |
Arthur John Buchan | For service to education as a teacher and administrator, to Rugby Union football, and to the community. | |
Elizabeth Ann Buchanan | For service to conservation and the environment, particularly through the Rozelle Bay Community Native Nursery. | |
Bert Cecil Button | For service to the community as a radio broadcaster and administrator and through support for a range of charitable organisations. | |
Lieutenant Colonel Ian Leslie Campbell | For service to the welfare of veterans and their families. | |
Robert Elliott Campbell | For service to the community, particularly through Lions International, and to Australian Rules football. | |
John Edward Carter | For service to the community of Palm Beach as a swimming teacher and lifesaver. | |
Janice Dora Cass | For service to local government and to the community of Loxton Waikerie. | |
Salvatore Cavallaro | For service to the community of Ingham, particularly through support for a range of service, aged care, church and educational organisations. | |
Margaret Lorraine Cazalar | For service to the community, particularly through the Queensland Women's Historical Association. | |
Robert Charles Chester-Master | For service to the community, particularly through a range of ex-Service, civic and charitable organisations. | |
Daphne Ruth Clark | For service to the community in Tumut, particularly through contributions to health, palliative care and service organisations. | |
Costas Cofinas | For service to education through the New South Wales Federation of Community Language Schools and to the community through the Greek Orthodox Parish of St Stephanos. | |
Barry Gwydir Collis | For service to the community, particularly through the development and delivery of road safety education programs. | |
Brian Cooke | For service to the community, particularly the welfare of veterans and their families through a range of associations. | |
John Stirling Craig | For service to community health through the New South Wales Branch of Alzheimer's Australia, and to the community through the Rotary Club of Sydney. | |
Ronald Allan Crew | For service to the building industry through the National Subcontractors Association, and to the community through service, school and health organisations. | |
John Arthur Crone | For service to amateur fishing through the Australian Anglers Association and the Queensland Amateur Fishing Clubs Association. | |
Alma Crook | For service to the community of Tenterfield, particularly as a music teacher and pianist. | |
Lynne Crookes | For service to the community through the Sydney Breast Cancer Foundation. | |
Sergeant Stuart James Cross | For service as part of the police joint Bali bombing investigation and victim identification process, known as Operation Alliance. | |
Robert Colville Crowe | For service to sport as a Gold Medallist at the Athens 2004 Paralympic Games. | |
David Thomas Currie | For service to the community through the Burns Club Scottish Country Dance Group. | |
Anthony Charles Dally-Watkins | For service as part of the police joint Bali bombing investigation and victim identification process, known as Operation Alliance. | |
Basil Mervyn Darby | For service to the community through the outreach programs of the Uniting Church in Australia and support for refugees. | |
Dr R Bruce Davey | For service to medicine, particularly through contributions to the development of services related to treating paediatric burns victims in South Australia. | |
Michael Richard Day | For service to people with disabilities through SCOPE Victoria, and to the community. | |
Deborah de Wilde | For service to the community as an obstetric social worker providing support to bereaved parents. | |
Michael Keith Deasey | For service to the community as a cathedral organist, choir director, composer and music teacher. | |
Christopher Harry Dewhirst | For service to tourism through developing initiatives in the area of commercial adventure tourism. | |
Wilfred Clyde Dews | For service to conservation and the environment and to the community of Lake Macquarie. | |
Roy Kenneth Dickinson | For service to the community of Home Hill through a range of service, church, health and emergency services organisations. | |
Michael George Digby | For service to the community, particularly through the Volunteer Rescue Association and the Glen Innes Natural Resources Advisory Committee. | |
Dr Patricia Mary Dimmock | For service to medicine and to humanitarian aid through the Nepal Plastic Surgery Program. | |
Dr Kenneth McGowen Doust | For service to medicine as a general practitioner and as an administrator. | |
Gwenneth Clara Doyle | For service to the community, particularly through the Richmond Nursing Home and church organisations. | |
Michael Maxwell Doyle | For service to the community, particularly through church organisations, including the St Vincent de Paul Society. | |
Keith William Draper | For service to the community through Rotary International and the New South Wales Branch of the Royal Life Saving Society of Australia. | |
Edwin William Dubberlin | For service to the welfare of ex-Service personnel and their families, and to the community through emergency services and sporting organisations. | |
Mary Hilary Dutton | For service to the community, particularly to children through the Nyngan Pony Club. | |
Peter James Dutton | For service to the community, particularly to children through the Pony Club Association of New South Wales. | |
Joan Rose Dwyer | For service to the community, particularly through the DEAL Communication Centre and to the law. | |
Kevin Charles Eckhardt | For service to people with disabilities, particularly through the design and manufacture of aids and equipment, and to the community of Bairnsdale. | |
Jean Margaret Edwards | For service to the community, particularly through the Victorian Baptist Women's Fellowship. | |
Patricia Majella Eggleston | For service to education, particularly by promoting the enhancement of multicultural relations within the community of Parramatta. | |
Hugh Elford | For service to people with disabilities through a range of employment, accommodation and advocacy organisations. | |
Sue Erica Fear | For achievements in mountaineering and for service to the community, particularly through support for the Fred Hollows Foundation. | |
Dr Bérrès Karlene Fenton | For service to medicine as a practitioner, educator and counsellor in the areas of drug and alcohol abuse, sexual trauma and mental health. | |
Victor William Fifield | For service to the community, particularly through the Camden Haven Aged Persons' Care Association. | |
Ivy Elfreeda Firstenberg, MBE | For service to the community, particularly through organisations concerned with issues affecting women, migrant groups and young people. | |
Karen Margaret Fitzgerald | For service to the community, particularly through the development of early intervention, assessment and treatment programs designed to prevent child abuse and neglect. | |
Maurice Reeks Fitzgerald | For service to the welfare of veterans and their families, and to the community of Wollongong. | |
Sister Fay Frances Flint | For service to the community, particularly through the establishment of the Toowoomba Hospice for palliative care services. | |
Carmeline Yvette Forbes | For service to the Sri Lankan community of Melbourne through the Ceylonese Welfare Organisation. | |
Catherine Anne Foster | For service to the community of Wagga Wagga through support for a range of health, aged care and women's organisations. | |
Paul Joffre Fountain | For service to education in the Catholic school system as a teacher and choir master. | |
Rabbi David John Freilich | For service to the Jewish community as a religious leader and in the fields of education and culture, and to the promotion of inter-faith relations. | |
Rex Basil Fuge | For service to the community of Chiltern through a range of heritage and tourist organisations, and to local government. | |
Leon Vianney Garry | For service to the community, particularly through the Volunteer Rescue Association and the Binalong Volunteer Bushfire Brigade. | |
Alexander Garsa | For service to the community, particularly through the provision of honorary legal advice to ethnic community members and organisations. | |
Ailsa Bonnie Gillett | For service to the community, particularly through the Life for Kids initiative, the Cana Communities, and the Jesuit Refugee Service. | |
Robert Allan Glass | For service to the community of Mungindi, particularly through the restoration and preservation of local historical sites. | |
Michael Kirby Gledden | For service to developing standards for the accreditation of medical and science laboratories in Australia. | |
Ian Peter Goadby | For service to recreational fishing and to the conservation of endangered marine species. | |
The Reverend Nanette Good | For service to the community through the provision of chaplaincy and pastoral care services. | |
Mervyn Goodall | For service to the community through St John Ambulance Australia. | |
Ronald Francis Goodwin | For service to the community in Peak Hill and in West Wyalong through a range of service, social welfare, church and sporting organisations. | |
Terence Roy Gordon | For service to the entertainment industry, and to the community through performances for charitable organisations. | |
Thomas Julius Goudkamp | For service to the legal profession through the Australian Lawyers Alliance and the Law Society of New South Wales. | |
Brian Lawrence Guthleben | For service to small business, and to people with disabilities through the development and manufacture of customised powered wheelchairs. | |
Edwin Habben | For service to the community of Bundamba and Ipswich, and to the Returned and Services League of Australia. | |
Kusitino Halemai | For service to the victims and families affected by the bombings which occurred in Bali on 12 October 2002 and to continuing support for an international recovery program for Bali. | |
Barbara Mildred Hall | For service to the community through contributions to a range of theatrical, philharmonic, choral and other musical groups, and as a church organist. | |
Robert Joseph Hanley | For service to education and to the community through a range of welfare initiatives for the homeless and for children with disabilities. | |
Dr Francis Victor Harder | For service to the community of the Shepparton district, particularly in the areas of adult education and health. | |
Bryce Matthew Hardman | For service to business administration as a contributor to the development of education and training programs and formulating standards of professional conduct and best practice. | |
Denis Harlow | For service to soccer as a player, coach, administrator and author and to the South Australian Soccer Federation and the Cumberland United and Campbelltown City Soccer Clubs. | |
Janet Macgregor Hawkins | For service to the communities of Woodend and the Macedon Ranges area, particularly through the preservation of local history and heritage. | |
Colonel John Sutherland Haynes | For service to the welfare of veterans and serving members of the Australian Defence Force through a range of service and ex-Service organisations. | |
Ray Heaps | For service to cricket as an administrator, particularly in the Northern Rivers district of New South Wales. | |
Geoffrey David Henry | For service to the community through the Volunteer Marine Rescue Association of Queensland. | |
Jean Helena Heriot | For service to the community through the establishment and guidance of youth choirs and to the Kodaly music teaching program. | |
Berniece Joan Hicks | For service to the community, particularly through the Cambrian Youth Choir. | |
Robin Barrows Higgs | For service to music as a pianist, teacher, concert organiser, broadcaster and recording artist. | |
Harvey John Hilary-Taylor | For service to recreational fishing, particularly in Tasmania as an administrator, historian and commentator. | |
Harold Arthur Hitchcock | For service to the community of the Kulnura and Mangrove Mountain district through agricultural, bushfire and historical organisations. | |
Dr Ralph Lionel Hockin | For service to medicine as a health services administrator and through a range of professional organisations. | |
Barry John Hocking | For service to the community through the Retired Police Association of New South Wales and New South Wales Police Legacy. | |
Stuart Wildon Hodgson | For service to the merino sheep industry through stud flock management and improvement, and to Rugby Union football. | |
Margaret Mary Hogan | For service to the community through a range of literary, historical, health and charitable organisations. | |
Maureen Audrey Holbrook | For service to arts and crafts, particularly through the preservation of embroidery and textile items. | |
Rex Hume Hollioake | For service to the community of Ballarat through youth, social welfare and sporting organisations, and through support for the Australian Ex-Prisoner of War Memorial appeal. | |
Richard James Hooey | For service to the community, particularly through fundraising and organising the Swansea Surf Life Saving Charity Day. | |
Judith Mary Houston | For service to the community in the area of social justice and to the annual music festival, 'Organs of the Ballarat Goldfields'. | |
Edward Howe | For service to the community of Penguin through a range of charitable, ex-Service and sporting organisations. | |
Arthur Ross Humphries | For service to international relations through community support projects in Papua New Guinea, particularly in the Morobe Province relating to health and service organisations and the establishment of cancer treatment facilities. | |
Dr Annemarie Jean Hunt | For service to education as an administrator and teacher, and to the community through a range of sporting, church and welfare organisations. | |
Salvatore Ianello | For service to industry and commerce particularly through support for apprenticeship training courses and youth training programs, and to the community. | |
Lilian Pearl James | For service to the community, particularly through the preservation and teaching of the Cornish language. | |
Jean Jehan | For service to the community of St George, particularly in the preservation of local history through historical and heritage organisations. | |
Susan Rita Jennison | For service to the community, particularly through Melbourne's Living Museum of the West and the Keilor Historical Society. | |
Dr Anne Mary Jequier | For service to medicine, particularly in the fields of andrology, obstetrics and gynaecology, and as a clinician, researcher and surgeon. | |
Garry Albert Johnson | For service to the community of Nambucca Heads through Rotary International and contributions to service, cultural and sporting organisations. | |
Valdek Kangur | For service to the Estonian community in Australia through preservation of culture and language and contributions to church, school and youth groups. | |
Diana Dundas Keach | For service to equestrian sport as a coach and administrator, and to the community through animal welfare and bushfire organisations. | |
Leslie Kennedy | For service to the community of Ballarat through local government, service and local history organisations and through support for the Australian Ex-Prisoner of War Memorial appeal. | |
Noel John Kennedy | For service to the sheep and wool industries in Queensland, particularly as an administrator, and to the community. | |
Garry John Kerr | For service to the community as an historian, commentator and film maker, particularly relating to Tasmania's maritime and forestry industries. | |
Robert Donald Kerr | For service to education and to supporting leadership training in developing countries. | |
Akos Kovacs | For service to sport as a gymnastics coach and administrator, to lifesaving, and to physical education. | |
Nita June Lait | For service to nursing, particularly as an administrator and through the development of medical and support services. | |
Jill Margaret Lambert | For service to the Zimbabwean community in Australia by providing employment and support services through the organisation, Zimbabwe Connection. | |
Henry Arthur Lang | For service to veterans and their families through a range of ex-Service organisations. | |
Bertrand Spencer Lawes | For service to the community through the Scouting movement and the Glenroy Sub-Branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia. | |
Janet Alma Lee | For service to the community of the Buloke Shire as a co-proprietor, journalist and photographer for the local newspaper. | |
Dr Ronald Gordon Lewis | For service to medicine, particularly in the field of cardiology as a clinician, educator and administrator, and to the community. | |
Alan David Lillecrapp | For service to the community of the Barossa Valley through a range of service, church, environmental and health organisations. | |
Krystyna Luzny | For service to the Polish community in Australia through a range of cultural, historical and ex-Service organisations. | |
John Ranken Lyle | For service to local government and to the community of Gunnedah. | |
Michael John Lyne | For service to the community of Inverell through aged care and sporting organisations. | |
Frank William Lyons | For service to education, particularly Technical and Further Education in regional Victoria, and to the community through a range of service and church organisations. | |
Jean Irene Macaulay | For service to senior citizens in the Canberra community through the activities of the Monday Club. | |
Franz Mairinger | For service to the community of the Shoalhaven area through Lions International and through support for health, emergency services and sporting facilities. | |
Constantine Malanos | For service to the Greek community in Australia, particularly through St Basil's Homes for the Aged and the Australian Hellenic Educational Progressive Association, and to education. | |
The Reverend Dr Edwin David Manton | For service to the community through a range of ministries within the Uniting Church in Australia. | |
Eusebio Marcocci | For service to the community, particularly through the fundraising projects of My Room at the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne. | |
Dennis Lionel Marsden | For service to the sport of full-bore rifle shooting in Western Australia. | |
Barry Francis Martin | For service to ex-Service personnel and their families through the Vietnam Veterans' Federation of Australia. | |
Brian Francis Matthews | For service to the community of Devonport, particularly through sporting clubs and associations. | |
Bryce Maxwell Matthews | For service to veterans and their families through a range of ex-Service organisations, and to the community, particularly through the Scouting movement. | |
Arnold Eric Mattson | For service to the community of Newcastle, particularly youth through brass band music. | |
Robert Norman McDonald | For service to the auditing profession, particularly through the Institute of Internal Auditors. | |
Paul McDonald Smith | For service to the visual arts as a painter and lecturer and to the Victorian Artists Society. | |
Albert Geoffrey McElhinney | For service to country music and to the community, particularly through support for senior citizens' groups. | |
Dr Elisabeth Lucia McIntyre | For service to the community as a lactation consultant and counsellor, and through the development and delivery of information and education courses on breastfeeding. | |
Donald Alexander McKerrell | For service to people with intellectual disabilities through the Crowle Foundation. | |
Josephine Janet McKerrell | For service to people with intellectual disabilities through the Crowle Foundation. | |
Dr Phyllis Winifred McKillup | For service to the visual arts as an artist and art historian and to the community. | |
Joan Neville McLellan | For service to the community of Warwick through a range of social welfare, cultural, service and school organisations. | |
Sister Mary Brigid McNamara | For service to the community, particularly in the area of aged care, and through the Sisters of St Joseph. | |
Julie Meadows | For service to the community through the Write Your Story program of the Makor Jewish Community Library. | |
Ernest Leonard Meakins | For service to the community of Kangaroo Island, particularly through the local Lions Club. | |
Charles Witney Medwin | For service to people with disabilities through the Nepean Centre for the Physically Handicapped and the 4th Frankston Scout Group, and to the community of Seaford. | |
Pauline Merritt | For service to the community of Tailem Bend, particularly through the activities of the local Rotary Club. | |
Keith Frederick Messenger | For service to the community through a range of church, youth and sporting organisations. | |
Victor Noel Meurant | For service to horticulture, particularly through the establishment of the Centre for Dry Tropics Agriculture, and to the community. | |
Rosemary Clare Milisits | For service to the food industry, and to the community through support for a range of charitable organisations. | |
Vilmos Milisits | For service to the food industry, and to the community through support for a range of charitable organisations. | |
Rowley Charles Miller | For service to the community of Mount Gambier through a range of ex-Service, commerce, welfare and cultural organisations. | |
Laurence Mizzi | For service to the sugar industry through the development of mechanical sugar cane harvesters. | |
Annette Elizabeth Moehead | For service to the community in the Northern Rivers area of New South Wales, particularly people with dementia, through the development of care and support services. | |
Sister Maria Mooney | For service to international relations by providing support to the community of the Sandaun Province of Papua New Guinea, particularly through the educational, health and welfare programs of the Catholic Church. | |
William Richmond Morris | For service to the community of the Australian Capital Territory, particularly through The Smith Family. | |
Ian James Morris | For service to environmental education and to the Indigenous communities of Northern Australia. | |
Reginald Francis Morrison | For service to tourism, conservation and the environment in the western areas of Tasmania. | |
Graeme Lewis Morrison | For service to the community of the Sutherland Shire through a range of sporting organisations, and to the University of Sydney Pathology Museum. | |
David William Morrow | For service to the media as a sports broadcaster and commentator, and to the community. | |
Winifred Emaline Mott | For service to the community through a range of organisations, to the collection and preservation of historic garments and lace, and to the recording of local histories. | |
Victor Edward Mourambine | For service to the Indigenous community of the Murchison-Gascoyne region. | |
Dr Doreen Musgrave | For service to dentistry, particularly in the field of paediatric dental care as a practitioner, educator and historian. | |
Peter Anthony Neall | For service to the community, particularly through a range of horseracing, sporting and charitable organisations. | |
Dianne Lesley Neville | For service to the community of Wellington, particularly through a range of organisations related to first aid, emergency service, church and youth activities. | |
Judy Elizabeth Newnham | For service to the community through the Australian Red Cross. | |
Irvine John Newton | For service to the pharmacy profession and to the community, particularly through promoting harm minimisation programs. | |
Archibald Nicholson | For service to the surf lifesaving movement, particularly through administrative and training roles. | |
John Anthony Nolan | For service to education and to the community of Scarborough. | |
John Desmond O'Connell | For service to primary industry, particularly the wool industry, and to the community through environmental and conservation organisations. | |
John Vincent O'Neil | For service to the media as a racing commentator and journalist. | |
Nanette Margaret Oates | For service to environmental management through the development of conservation programs and policies, and to the community through education about fire safety. | |
Margaret Leila Osborne | For service to the community of St Helens through a range of sporting, recreational and school organisations, and to local government. | |
Christine Vera Ostermann | For service to the community, particularly through public relations roles and fundraising for children's health organisations. | |
Jean Blyth Panton | For service to the community through medical research, and to the conservation of the environment. | |
William Joseph Parsons | For service to public sector management and administration, particularly as a contributor to the development of emergency management and disaster recovery strategies. | |
Colonel Francis Charles Pearson | For service to the community, particularly through the development of the 4th/19th Prince of Wales Light Horse Regimental Museum. | |
John Pease | For service to business and commerce and to the community of Burnie, particularly through service, youth and sporting organisations. | |
Terrence Peek | For service to people with disabilities through the facilitation of opportunities to learn sailing. | |
Stephen Richard Peers | For service to the community through St John Ambulance Australia. | |
Major Ronald Edmund Perkins | For service to ex-Service personnel and their families, and to the community. | |
John Bernhard Perry | For service to the community, particularly through a range of musical, church and disability support organisations, and to education. | |
Priscilla Ann Pescott | For service to local government, including promoting the participation of women, and to the community, through educational, water resource and cultural organisations. | |
Hazel Julia Phillips | For service to the entertainment industry, particularly in the areas of the performing arts and television, and to the community as a fundraiser for charitable groups. | |
Patricia Clare Phillips | For service to people with intellectual disabilities and their families through developing support and recreational facilities and programs. | |
Bernard James Plew | For service to the community of Darwin through service organisations including Rotary International and the Probus Club of Darwin. | |
Pauline Elsie Powell | For service to the community of Rye, particularly through a range of heritage, sporting and service organisations. | |
Percy William Price | For service to the community through a range of social welfare, disability support and sporting organisations. | |
John Frederick Prince | For service to the community, particularly to the welfare of veterans and their families, and through the Windsor Bowling Club. | |
Colin Douglas Purcell | For service to Rugby League football in the Illawarra district. | |
The Reverend Father Terence Joseph Purcell | For service to the Catholic Church, particularly through the restoration of St Benedict's Church, Broadway. | |
David Albert Purchase | For service to business and commerce through employer, industry and insurance organisations. | |
Nell McLeod Pyle | For service to the community of Maitland, particularly through the recording and preservation of social history using a range of media including period fashion displays, theatre and writing. | |
Dr Norman Thomas Pyle | For service to education, particularly through the Association for Students with Specific Learning Difficulties/Disabilities (SPELD), Queensland, and to the community. | |
Elizabeth Bridget Raines | For service to the community of Mount Wilson, particularly through a range of environmental, horticultural, civic and church activities. | |
Gilbert Murray Ralph | For service to the community through the preservation and recording of Australian mining history. | |
Dr John Spurgeon Ratcliffe | For service to engineering education as an administrator, teacher and scientist, and to the community. | |
Edna Mary Redman | For service to people with disabilities, particularly through the Spastic Centres of South Australia. | |
Joe Harry Richardson | For service to industry and commerce in the electrical contracting sector, particularly industrial relations through employee training and development, and to the community. | |
Patricia Edith Richardson | For service to industry and commerce in the electrical contracting sector, particularly industrial relations through employee training and development, and to the community. | |
Esma Hilda Robinson | For service to the community of Coonamble, particularly through service organisations. | |
Kenneth George Robson | For service to cricket as an administrator, coach and selector, and to the community of Goulburn. | |
Clive William Rogers | For service to local government, to natural resource management, and to the community of Mirani Shire in North Queensland. | |
Dr Michael John Rudd | For service to medicine as a burns specialist, and for service through the provision of immediate medical assistance to victims of the bombings which occurred in Bali on 12 October 2002. | |
Thomas Henry Sault | For service to the community of Mornington Peninsula, particularly through the promotion and protection of the natural environment. | |
Nancy Saunders | For service to the community of Newcastle through charitable activities with the Church of Good Shepherd. | |
Pastor Russell John Saunders | For service to Indigenous art and to the communities of Taree and the greater Manning Valley region. | |
Janet Patricia Savage | For service to local government and to the community of the Shire of Gnowangerup through a range of tourism, historical, sporting and civic organisations. | |
John Dale Savage | For service to sport, particularly for school children, and to the wider community of Ballina. | |
Mary Patricia Schroder | For service to the community, particularly through fundraising for charitable organisations. | |
Eda Dorothy Schurmann | For service to the community through music education and through the Caulfield Branch of the Musical Society of Victoria. | |
Robert Scott | For service to the credit union movement and to the community through a range of service, pipe band and school organisations. | |
Sister Shirley Kathleen Sedawie | For service to the promotion of inter-faith relations and understanding. | |
Vanessa Mary Seekee | For service to the community, particularly through recording the role and experiences of the Service personnel and people of the Torres Strait during World War II. | |
Professor Ronald Sekel | For service to health through technological development of a hip replacement prosthesis. | |
Craig Ronald Servin | For service as part of the police joint Bali bombing investigation and victim identification process, known as Operation Alliance. | |
Stephanie Frances Shannon | For service to paediatric nursing, particularly through providing innovative models for patient care, and to child welfare through the programs SCAN and PACT. | |
Carlyle Lee Sherriff | For service to the community of Deloraine and to the Anglican Church in Australia. | |
David Arthur Short | For service to sport as a Gold Medallist at the Athens 2004 Paralympic Games. | |
Derek Brian Sims | For service to the welfare of veterans and their families in the Murwillumbah area. | |
Malgorzata Skalban | For service to the community, particularly through multicultural and aged care organisations. | |
Margot Elizabeth Smart | For service to local government through the Launceston City Council, to the thoroughbred horseracing industry, and to the community. | |
Raymond Leslie Smee | For service to amateur sport, particularly water polo, as an administrator, coach, referee and competitor, and to the community. | |
John Smith | For service to local government through Etherige Shire Council and to regional development in Far North Queensland. | |
Noel Hopetoun Smith | For service to the community through service clubs and animal welfare organisations. | |
Roy Kenneth Smith | For service to the welfare of ex-Service personnel and their families, particularly through the Returned and Services League of Australia. | |
Margaret Rowena Smithers | For service to the community, particularly through the Australian Red Cross. | |
Alfred Ernest Snell | For service to the community, particularly through service, youth, aged care and sporting associations, and to local government. | |
Shirley June Stackhouse | For service to horticulture as a journalist, author, broadcaster and lecturer. | |
Dr Edward Gregory Stafford | For service to medicine in the field of cardio-thoracic surgery as a clinician, administrator and teacher. | |
Onella Stagoll | For service to community health through BreastScreen Victoria, focusing on education and awareness of services available to women in rural areas and those from culturally diverse backgrounds. | |
Beryl Steel | For service to the community of Mascot through school and sporting organisations. | |
Gordon Eric Steele | For service to the community through a range of ex-Service organisations. | |
Nellie Dulcie Steele | For service to the community through a range of ex-Service organisations and church groups. | |
Grace Emily Stell | For service to the community of Benalla through the use of art and craft as fundraising for charitable organisations. | |
Robert Fraser Stewart | For service to the community, particularly through the Hamilton Pastoral and Agricultural Society and as a founder of 'Sheepvention'. | |
George Bayfield Stone | For service to the community of Balmain, particularly through sporting and youth organisations. | |
James Leslie Storey | For service to the fishing industry through the development of Queensland fisheries. | |
Gwendolyn Estelle Summers | For service to the community, particularly as a fundraiser for aged care services. | |
Desmond Alwyn Taege | For service to school sport, particularly Rugby League football as a coach and administrator. | |
Tom Tehan | For service to the community of Seymour through bushfire, service, church and sporting organisations. | |
Francis Jack Thompson | For service to the community of Mount Victoria through bushfire, school, church and sports organisations. | |
Malcolm McGregor Thomson | For service to the building and construction industry, particularly as an educator in the Technical and Further Education system, and to the community. | |
Doreen F H Thorpe | For service to the community of Brimbank City, particularly as an honorary justice and through children's and senior citizens' organisations. | |
Lorraine Wendy Tiddy | For service to the community, particularly through the Peter Nelson Leukaemia Fund, and through pastoral care roles in the Mitchell Park area. | |
John Wilson Tindale | For service to ex-Service personnel and their families, and to the community of Rylstone. | |
John Ernest Tink | For service to the community of the Central West of New South Wales through the establishment of sports and recreational facilities and activities for young people. | |
Giovanni Toscan | For service to the community, particularly through the Lions Club of Darlington Point. | |
Noel John Trevaskis | For service to the community, particularly through the Australian Rotary Health Research Fund in raising public awareness of mental health issues in rural areas. | |
John Charles Tucker | For service to the community of Maitland through a range of service and social welfare organisations. | |
Norma Doris Tucker | For service to the community of Maitland through a range of service and social welfare organisations. | |
Dennis Errol Tull | For service to the community, particularly through the Newcastle Police Rescue Squad. | |
James Lovick Tyrrell | For service to primary industry, particularly the livestock sector, and to the community through bushfire, rural show and welfare groups. | |
Terry Underwood | For service to the community, particularly through business and in promotional and cattle industry roles. | |
Ian Gordon Usher | For service to the community of the Shellharbour district, particularly through the Warilla-Shellharbour Branch of the Arthritis Foundation of New South Wales. | |
Michael James Victor | For service to cycling, particularly as an administrator, technical official and event organiser. | |
John Anthony Vines | For service as a contributor to the development of brown coal mining in the Latrobe Valley, and to the community of the Gippsland region. | |
Norman Edward Wadeson | For service to the community, particularly as a contributor to the development of the Puffing Billy Railway. | |
Tetsuya Wakuda | For service to the community and the development of Australian cuisine as a chef, restaurateur and author, to vocational training, and to support for charitable groups. | |
Mary Ann Walsh | For service to people with disabilities, particularly through advocacy and advisory roles, and to the community of Bundaberg. | |
Dr Michael Warczak | For service to the community, particularly as a contributor to Ukrainian humanitarian and development causes, and through support for a range of cultural and charitable organisations. | |
Jonathon Richard Wardill | For service to medicine in the Northern Territory, and through the provision of lifesaving surgery to patients following the bombings in Bali which occurred on 12 October 2002. | |
Judith Washington | For service to librarianship, and to the community through the conservation and preservation of local history material, particularly relating to the Lane Cove district. | |
Pamela Helen Weaver | For service to the community in the field of animal welfare, particularly through the provision of dog shelter facilities in the City of Stonnington. | |
Hilda Enid Webster | For service to people with intellectual disabilities and their families, particularly through the Carinya Society. | |
Bruce Everest Welch | For service to swimming as a referee and administrator and through the education of technical officials. | |
Cedric Bayford Wells | For service to the ageing as President of Cottage Homes Inc, and to the community through ex-Service, military history and religious organisations. | |
Neil Francis Werner | For service to the performing arts, particularly through the Australian National Piano Award, and to the community of the Goulburn Valley district through health, aged care and welfare organisations. | |
Beryl Jean Whittle | For service to youth through leadership roles in the Scouting movement and fundraising. | |
Tracey Lee Wickham | For service to Australian swimming and to the development of young swimmers through teaching and coaching roles. | |
Heather Margaret Wilford | For service to the community, particularly through the Uniting Church Mayflower Retirement Village. | |
Arthur Francis Wilks | For service to sport, particularly table tennis through coaching athletes with a disability, to sports administration, and to the community through Volunteering ACT. | |
Iris Margaret Williams | For service to the community of the Sunshine Coast through a range of emergency services, church and welfare organisations. | |
Commander Lindsay Gordon Wilson | For service to veterans and their families, and to the community through contributions to museums recording naval history. | |
Emilie Eleanor Wilson | For service to the community, particularly through the Country Women's Association of Victoria and the Pan Pacific and South East Asia Women's Association. | |
Barbara Joan Wilson | For service to the community, particularly youth, as a foster carer to children with diverse needs. | |
Doris May Wilson | For service to the community of Brunswick Heads through a range of service, church and women's organisations. | |
Leslie William Wilson | For service to the community of Brunswick Heads through a range of welfare, ex-Service and church organisations. | |
Dr Paul Fairbrother Windle | For service to the community of Bega through organisations including Rotary International, the Bega District Hospital Board and the Bega Sister City Program. | |
Professor Lindon Michael Wing | For service to medicine, particularly in the areas of clinical pharmacology and hypertension. | |
Robert Martin Wohlenberg | For service to the community, particularly through youth and service organisations. | |
Philip Malcolm Wollen | For service to international humanitarian relief and to animal welfare, particularly through the establishment of the Winsome Constance Kindness Trust. | |
David John Wood | For service to local government, particularly the Wingecarribee Shire Council, and to the community through a range of tourism and sporting organisations. | |
Elaine Wright | For service to the community, particularly through Heart Support Australia's exercise program for cardiac patients at the Canberra Hospital. | |
Maurice Victor Wright | For service to the community, particularly through Heart Support Australia's exercise program for cardiac patients at the Canberra Hospital. | |
Margaret Catherine Yeatman | For service to the community, particularly youth, as a foster carer to children including those with disabilities. | |
Dr Barry York | For service to the community through research into and recording of aspects of Australian immigration, particularly Maltese migration. | |
Maria Zawada | For service to the Polish community in South Australia through organisations including the Adelaide Polish Seniors' Club, the Polish Ex-Servicemen's Association and the Polish Women's Association. |
Branch | Recipient | Citation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Navy | Warrant Officer Peter James Kenworthy | For meritorious service to the Royal Australian Navy in the fields of dental health care and dental category development. | [1] |
Warrant Officer Garry Noel Osborne | For meritorious service as Officer-in-Charge of Minesweeper Auxiliary Wallaroo and services to the Mine Warfare Branch. | ||
Army | Major Dixie Anne Duggan | For meritorious service to the Australian Army performing the duties of Senior Nursing Officer 1st Field Ambulance, 8th Brigade Administrative Support Battalion and 8th Combat Service Support Battalion. | |
Major Mary-Rose Mulvaney | For meritorious service as the Officer Commanding the Australian Defence Force School of Catering and as Staff Officer Grade Two Personnel/Logistics Headquarters Royal Military College of Australia. | ||
Warrant Officer Class 1 Christopher Douglas Reeves | For meritorious service to the Army as the Master Sapper, Headquarters Land Command Engineers, Regimental Sergeant Major of the 8th Brigade, 21st Construction Regiment and the 1st Combat Engineer Regiment, as part of the United Nations Mine Clearance Training Team in Afghanistan and as an exchange officer to the United Kingdom. | ||
Warrant Officer Class 1 Peter Kevin Robb | For meritorious service in the field of trade and training management at the Army Logistic Training Centre. | ||
Warrant Officer Class 1 Bernard Franciscus Vandenhurk | For meritorious service as the Regimental Sergeant Major of 11th/28th Battalion, The Royal Western Australia Regiment, 1st Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment and AUSBATT VIII Operation Citadel. | ||
Air Force | Warrant Officer Richard James Bohr CSM | For meritorious service as the Warrant Officer Engineer on C130 Hercules aircraft. | |
Flight Sergeant Ronald Jacob Van Den Hurk | For meritorious service as the Deployment Maintenance Supervisor at Number 3 Control and Reporting Unit. |
The 2016 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on 13 June 2016 by the Governor-General, Sir Peter Cosgrove. 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.
The 2006 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 12 June 2006 by the Governor-General, Michael Jeffery.
The 2004 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 14 June 2004 by the Governor-General, Michael Jeffery.
The 2003 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 9 June 2003 by the office of the Governor-General.
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 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 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 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.