Alfonso Bernard O'Reilly

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Alfonso Bernard O'Reilly (known as Bernard) (September 3, 1903-January 20, 1975) was an Australian bushman and author.

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[edit] Early years

Alfonso Bernard O'Reilly was born at Hartley, New South Wales, son of Peter Luke O'Reilly, grazier, and his wife Jane, née McAviney. Second youngest of a large family on a mixed farm in the Kanimbla valley, Bernard went to school at Cullenbenbong, then boarded at St Canice's School, Katoomba, when his family moved to Megalong in 1910. The oldest boys left to try dairying in the rugged McPherson Ranges, Queensland. In 1916 the family moved to Sandgate, near Brisbane. Finishing school in 1917 at St Joseph's College, Bernard went to the family selections.

For the next nine years he worked the fledgling dairy and as a ranger explored the surrounding rainforest ridges and gorges of Lamington National Park. By 1926 the steadily growing number of visitors to the park encouraged the family to establish O'Reilly's Guesthouse. Bernard continued with the failing dairy and increasing guest-house duties, carting supplies and guests from the foot of the range. He married Viola Gwendoline King at St Agatha's Catholic Church, Clayfield, Brisbane, on August 20, 1931.

[edit] Stinson Air Crash

On 19 February 1937 the Stinson airliner VH-UHH disappeared between Brisbane and Sydney. With the aircraft unaccounted for after eight days, O'Reilly searched the McPherson Ranges on foot, following a private clue. On the second day he found wreckage and two badly injured survivors, later the body of a third who had fallen while going for help. Four on board had died immediately when the aircraft crashed into tall trees.

That evening O'Reilly hiked ten miles (16 km) through rainforest, returning next day with a rescue party. He assisted in carrying out the survivors by stretcher relay. O'Reilly was awarded the Albert medal, second class, for civilian bravery.

[edit] War Years & Lost World

In 1942-45 he served with the 9th Division, Australian Imperial Force, in the Middle East, New Guinea and Borneo, as acting corporal from November 1944. After the war he worked at various times at the family guest house, which became a Mecca for bird-watchers,[citation needed] and for the Department of Forestry. In 1955 he established his own small guest house in the park at Lost World and from 1957 to 1963 also worked for the New South Wales railways. He sold his unsuccessful Lost World establishment in 1963.

[edit] Later Years & Death

Following the sale of Lost World, Bernard returned to the mountains to live out his life, dying in Beaudesert Hospital on January 20, 1975 from heart failure following pneumonia. He was buried in St John's Catholic cemetery at Kerry in Beaudesert Shire. His wife and daughter survived him.

[edit] Bernard the Author

O'Reilly wrote Green Mountains (Brisbane, 1940), largely through public demand; Charles Chauvel's film, Sons of Matthew (1949), was based on it. Successful as a writer, and encouraged by his family, he published tourist pamphlets and three other narrative works on country life - Cullenbenbong (1944), Wild River (1949) and Over the Hills (1963) - as well as a book of verse, Songs from the Hills (1971).

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Persondata
NAME Cataldi, Lee
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Australian bushman and author.
DATE OF BIRTH 3 September 1903
PLACE OF BIRTH Hartley, New South Wales, Australia
DATE OF DEATH 20 January 1975
PLACE OF DEATH Australia