Tom Lewis (author)

Dr
Thomas Anthony Lewis
OAM
Born 1958
Nationality  Australia
Occupation Military Historian and Author

Dr Thomas Anthony 'Tom' Lewis, OAM (born 1958) is an Australian author, military historian, editor, and former naval officer. An author since 1989, Lewis worked as a high school teacher, and served as naval officer for 20 years, seeing active service in Baghdad during the Iraq war, and working in East Timor.

After reconstituting the Royal Australian Naval College Historical Collection - with which his Order of Australia is largely connected - Lewis was the Director of the Darwin Military Museum from 2009 until April 2014, when he took up full-time research on several World War I and II projects. Amongst these are his role as Lead Historian and Creative Designer for The Borella Ride, the re-enactment of the journey of Albert Borella VC to sign up for military service in 1915.

Dr Lewis is the author of 12 books, all of which are works of military history except for one which charts the Tasman Bridge disaster - he was raised largely in Tasmania, although born in London. He has been the editor of Headmark, the Journal of the Australian Naval Institute, since 2005.

In late 2013 Lewis was elected to the Chairmanship of the Order of Australia Association (NT) for a three year term. In 2015 he was appointed the Chairman of the Northern Territory Place Names Committee for three years.

In June 2003, Dr Lewis was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia for meritorious service to the Royal Australian Navy, particularly in the promotion of Australian naval history. He holds the degrees of BA(Dip. Ed.), MA, and PhD.[1][2]

Academic Qualifications

Dr Lewis holds the qualifications of Doctorate of Philosophy (Charles Darwin University 2004); Master of Arts (University of Queensland 1993); Diploma of Education (University of Tasmania 1984); and Bachelor of Arts (University of Tasmania 1983.)

Honours and Awards

Books

Editor

Foreword

Articles (selection from over 1000)

Documentaries

Literary Awards

• Jessie Litchfield Literary Competition 1992 - Highly Commended for novel Darwin Sayonara

• Kath Manzie Memorial Prize runner-up for "The Navy and Cyclone Tracy" - 1994 NT Literary Awards

• Kath Manzie Memorial Prize for "The Navy in Darwin in WWII" - 1995 NT Literary Awards

• Recipient of NT History Award for travel to Japan to research the WWII Imperial Japanese Fleet submarine I-124 - 1995

• Kath Manzie Memorial Prize for "The Finding of the Wreck of the Rachel Cohen in Darwin Harbour" in the 1997 NT Literary Awards

• NT University Open Essay Prize for "Which Fairmile is that?" in the NT Literary Awards 1998

• NT Literary Awards 1998 - Highly Commended Essay: "First Contact: a brief analysis of the strategic implications of the Imperial Japanese Navy Sixth Submarine Squadron's deployment in northern Australian waters in 1942". (Subsequently published by the Naval History Association.)

• Naval Officers Club National Essay Competition - 1st Place winner - "The importance of teaching naval history within the Royal Australian Navy" - 2001

• Naval Officers Club National Essay Competition - 1st Place winner - "Australia's Airpower at Sea - a proposal for a flexible and mobile force" - 2003

• Charles Darwin Essay Prize, for "The Myth of Government Cover-Up in the 1942 raids on Darwin" in the NT Literary Awards 2014

• Shortlisted in the NT Chief Minister's History Book of the Year 2014, for Carrier Attack

Other Interests

Lewis lists his recreations as astronomy, tournament chess, building sound systems, and collecting antique swords.

References

  1. It's an Honour - Honours - Search Australian Honours
  2. "Talk with Dr. Tom Lewis OAM" (PDF). Northern Territory Library. Archived from the original on 2008-07-22. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
  3. David M. Stevens. "Japanese submarine operations against Australia 1942-1944". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
  4. "Quarterly Newsletter" (PDF). The Australian Association for Maritime History, March 2000.
  5. A War at Home
  6. Lewis, Tom (September–October 2002). "Deterrence, Capacity and Skill Retention" (pdf). Australian Defence Force Journal (156). ISSN 1320-2545. Retrieved 2008-03-12.

External links