David Griffin (Australian)


David Griffin
74th Lord Mayor of Sydney
In office
1972–1973
Preceded by Sir Laurence Emmet McDermott
Succeeded by Sir Nicholas Shehadie
Personal details
Born 1915
Leura, Australia
Died 25 March 2004(2004-03-25)
Mittagong, Australia
Nationality Australian

Sir David Griffin (8 July 1915 – 25 March 2004) was an Australian lawyer and businessman, and the Lord Mayor of Sydney from 1972 to 1973. He was a prisoner of war at Changi in Singapore during World War II, and a poet.

Griffin was born in Leura in the Blue Mountains and was educated at Cranbrook. In 1941 he sailed for Malaya and was present in Singapore at its fall to the Japanese in 1942. A prisoner of war in Changi for three years, he was released in 1945.

He returned to the legal profession in Sydney. He was elected to the council of the City of Sydney in 1962 representing the Civic Reform group, before becoming Lord Mayor in 1972.[1]

Griffin had been involved in radio and the theatre, and in 2002 published a book of poems written in Changi, including The Happiness Box. While in Changi, he collected many poems written by Australian and British soldiers there, and kept them in a cardboard box for over 45 years before releasing them. He retired to Mittagong in the Southern Highlands of New South Wales, and died on 25 March 2004.[2]

References

Preceded by
Sir Laurence Emmet McDermott
Lord Mayor of Sydney
1972-1973
Succeeded by
Sir Nicholas Shehadie