100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

An Australian story: how Roy overcame adversity to reap the rewards of a colourful life at 103

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Pause to remember: full list of Coast’s ANZAC Day services

If you have photos from any of the local ANZAC Day services you’d like to share with Sunshine Coast News readers, email news@sunshinecoastnews.com.au. ALEXANDRA HEADLAND 11am More

Mayor backs Olympic venue after clubs voice concerns

New Sunshine Coast mayor Rosanna Natoli says she supports an Olympic venue that will lead to the relocation of two rugby league clubs. Ms Natoli More

Ex-Army captain reflects on time in Afghanistan

A Sunshine Coast veteran has reflected on his deployment to Afghanistan as he prepares to oversee an ANZAC Day gathering at Maroochydore. Former Army captain More

Two hospitalised after fumes reported in plane cockpit

Two men have been transported to hospital from Sunshine Coast Airport after fumes were reported in the cockpit of a Bonza flight from Avalon More

Surf lifesaving icons get behind sport’s Olympic push

A host of surf lifesaving legends have joined a concerted move for the sport to feature at the Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games. The International Life More

Photo of the day: drizzly morning

Timothy Bell snapped this image of Mount Coolum shrouded in mist, during a morning stroll on the boardwalk at Yaroomba. If you have a photo More

Last month, Roy McFadyen turned 103. He still lives independently in his Golden Beach home, still takes and develops his own photos in a darkroom he built, and recently celebrated his remarkable book – an autobiography called At A Cost, going into its third reprint.

Lively and quick-witted, he lost his driving licence at the grand old age of 102, and has even conquered rounds of throat and bowel cancer.

His has been a life full of ups and downs – from being in orphanages as a small child to becoming a successful mechanical engineer, businessman and inventor.

Born in the same year as the Spanish flu, Roy lived through the Great Depression and World War II and still has an amazing recall of places, names and dates that contributed to putting his life’s story into words and pictures when he retired from Melbourne to Caloundra in 1981.

As one reviewer of his book, Rod Moss, wrote: “This is not just an historical account of life in rural Australia from 1920 to 1960. It is an acutely personal story of the pain of growing up with a father he never knew, a mother incapable of normal maternal care and an early childhood spent largely in orphanages.”

“My Mum decided to kick me out when I was 15 and I was sent on my way,” Roy said.

“I had a myriad of small jobs. It was the middle of the Depression and you had to be lucky to get a job at all.”

With just a bicycle and a box camera, he cycled from Melbourne to Bendigo.

“It was about 600km to the Mallee, but I was lucky I went to the farms. In the city, you were struggling for food generally but on the farms, there were an excess of sheep and chooks and you never went without food.”

That changed when he ventured up to the Northern Territory in 1938 to work on stations outside Alice Springs: “It was the pioneering days of Central Australia and food was scarce.”

Roy McFadyen in his darkroom.

But Roy formed a strong bond with the local Indigenous people and many of the Aborigines among his friends are featured in his historic photographs of men, animals and machines on the land.

“I got on very well with them. They helped me and I helped them – I’d bring them bags of flour and such from my own money to help out.”

When World War II started, Roy joined the Royal Australian Air Force and, using his skills gained in technical training, he serviced Hudson and Beaufort bombers. It was during this time he lost his brother Bob, who died when his plane disappeared in action over the Pacific. Roy had two other brothers and a sister, but he is the last one left.

Follow us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/scnews2020/

After the war, Roy established his own aircraft-maintenance business, Aeroswan, in Swan Hill, Victoria, working in aviation from 1953 to 1979 before selling out to other licensed aircraft engineers and retiring at 61.

He and his wife Lola had two children, Lynda and Ian, and then five grandchildren and now two great grandchildren.

His daughter Lynda said that losing Lola after 74 years of marriage had been the most difficult time in her dad’s life.

“He cared for her as long as he physically could as she succumbed to the terrible disease dementia,” Lynda said.

Former Northern Territory administrator Ted Egan praised Roy for rising above adversity.

Former Northern Territory administrator Ted Egan has compared Roy’s book to other great Australian books “written by self-effacing men who encountered all forms of discrimination and exploitation in their lives but rose above adversity to become owners of stories that deserve a prominent place in Australian literary and social history”.

Roy’s amazing black-and white photographs are also an insightful and accurate portrayal of a sometimes-grim period in Australian history.

“This book is about my life and work. It is also about the legacy of my parents’ actions in the 1920s,” he said.

“For their convenience, I was put into orphanages for most of my early childhood. And then, although I tasted something of a ‘normal’ family life until I was 15, I was again dismissed – into the hard times of the Depression.

“This enforced independence shaped my outlook. I saw hard work and doing things well as the way to cope with any situation.

“From the age of 15, in the Mallee region of north-west Victoria, I ploughed and sowed, harvested and harrowed; east of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory, I built stockyards and houses, sank wells and rode with cattle.

“With the war, I used my hard-won mechanical skills in military aircraft maintenance, and post-war I set up my own motor garage. With the rise of light aircraft in the agricultural industries in the 1960s and ’70s, I established a flourishing aircraft-maintenance business.”

Love nostalgia? So do we. Help keep more great Coast memories alive by subscribing to our free daily news feed. Go to Subscribe at the top of this story and add your name and email. It’s that simple.

No one is more amazed than Roy that he has reached such a ripe old age, given the inherent dangers of his many jobs and the trials with his health. In fact, he said he hadn’t even had a broken bone.

One of his closest calls was when he was gathering hay on a horse-drawn cart in the Mallee and was sitting atop a load that was going through some timber. The reins on one side snapped and the horses took off through the trees. All Roy could think was “I’ve got to get out”.

But when he went to jump, he tripped on the tension wires supporting the load, narrowly missing the rolling wheels.

“I hit the ground without a scratch but the wagon was wrecked,” he said.

Roy’s book At a Cost is available at The BookShop at Caloundra for $40, or email him at  vicroy167@gmail.com

This article was provided by our sister publication, Your Time Magazine

[scn_go_back_button] Return Home

Subscribe to SCN’s daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.