Allan Maruff
Dr Allan Maruff | |
---|---|
Born | Ferozepore, India | 14 February 1911
Died | 19 July 1979 Brisbane, Australia | (aged 68)
Alma mater | University of Calcutta |
Occupation(s) | Doctor Tea-grower |
Known for | Founder of Nerada Tea |
Spouse |
Dorothy Haenon (m. 1936) |
Allan Peter Maruff MRCS (14 February 1911 – 19 July 1979) was an Indian-Australian medical practitioner and businessman. He was a pioneer of the tea-growing industry in Australia, as founder of Nerada Tea.
Early life
[edit]Maruff was born on 14 February 1911 in Ferozepore, Punjab Province, India. He was the son of Margaret Amy (née William) and Frederick William Maruff, an assistant civil surgeon.[1] According to Maruff's daughter, the origins of his parents were uncertain and "might have been Armenian, Georgian, Turkish or Pakistani".[2]
Maruff was raised at an orphanage in Calcutta following the deaths of his parents.[2] He studied and in 1935 joined the Indian Medical Department as an assistant-surgeon. He served as a medical officer in the British Indian Army during World War II.[1]
Medical career and public life
[edit]In 1946, following the end of the war, Maruff moved to England to complete further medical training, becoming a Member of the Royal College of Surgeons and Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians.[1] In 1949 he and two other British doctors were recruited by the Australian government to work in the Territory of New Guinea, where there was a shortage of medical professionals.[3] He later moved to Queensland, initially working in Richmond and in 1952 taking up an appointment as medical superintendent of the district hospital at Tully.[4] He settled in Innisfail in 1954.[1]
Maruff was president of the Innisfail branch of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and served on the Johnstone Shire Council from 1976 to 1979.[1]
Teagrowing
[edit]In 1959, Maruff purchased a block of land at Nerada, Queensland, in order to establish a tea plantation.[1] His interest in the area was inspired by his wife, who compared the landscape to the Indian tea-growing region of Assam.[5] He planted 15,000 seedlings in 1960, which were eliminated in a drought, then after irrigating the property successfully replanted a drought-resistant strain. By 1968 the property of 100 acres (40 ha) supporting 2.5 million trees.[1]
Maruff went into partnership with Burns Philp in 1970, establishing Nerada Tea Estates Pty Ltd. The company built a factory at Nerada with an "innovative monorail system for conveying bins of green leaf to the withering-troughs".[1] Their venture made Nerada the first commercially successful tea plantation in Australia.[6] In 1973, the plantation and factory were sold to Tea Estates of Australia which continued to sell the tea under the Nerada brand.[1] By 1976, Maruff had plans to establish a further tea plantation near Nambour, with plans to also establish a pepper plantation nearby.[7]
Personal life
[edit]In 1936, Maruff married Dorothy Enid Haenon at St Francis Xavier's Church, Calcutta.[1] His wife was the daughter of a German man employed by the East India Company and a Burmese mother.[2] The couple had five children together;[1] his daughter Maggie married federal politician John Dawkins.[2]
Maruff died in Brisbane on 19 July 1979, aged 68, of cirrhosis of the liver. He was interred at the Pinnaroo Cemetery.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l May, Dawn (2000). "Allan Peter Maruff (1911–1979)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 15. Melbourne University Press.
- ^ a b c d Rice, Zoe (2 November 2020). "'You don't advocate for change without copping flak.'". SA Life. Retrieved 20 May 2024.
- ^ "Ex-Service Doctors for New Guinea". Cootamundra Herald. 19 April 1949.
- ^ "New Tully Medical Officer". Cairns Post. 28 March 1952.
- ^ Wheatley, David (17 January 1968). "In North Queensland they'll be saying: 'have another cup of Australian tea'". The Australian Women's Weekly.
- ^ Whitington, Don (15 August 1969). "Electioneering and a cup of tea". The Australian Jewish News.
- ^ "New tea industry planned". Papua New Guinea Post-Courier. 7 May 1976.
- 1911 births
- 1979 deaths
- Indian emigrants to Australia
- Indian medical doctors
- Australian medical doctors
- People from Firozpur
- Businesspeople in tea
- Australian company founders
- People from Innisfail, Queensland
- British Indian Army officers
- Indian military medical officers
- Australian people of Anglo-Indian descent
- Deaths from cirrhosis