South Australia’s Motoring Heritage – a Pictorial – Pre-order

South Australia's  Motoring History bok by Richard Mareschel

From social and cultural impact, to sport and the famous Bay to Birdwood rally, the early automobiles were a driving factor in shaped South Australia’s vibrant history

Researched and curated by Adelaide-based historian Richard Maerschel email: [email protected]


Printed mid-2026 for publishing distribution late 2026

Meet the author…
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The book is in production. We will send you a promotional email when pre-order and distribution details are available.

TOOULI, James

ISBN 978-1-923265-90-5
PAPERBACK

The Flinders Department Of Surgery

 

Reflections of the early years

The Flinders Department of Surgery: Reflections on Early Years by James Toouli offers an intimate glimpse into the formative years of a unique institution in Australian medicine. This collection of reflections from those present at the inception of the Flinders Department of Surgery provides readers with an understanding of how the department evolved into a vital part of the South Australian community.

In the early years, Flinders Medical Centre was distinct in its approach, where academic heads were also clinical leaders, fostering a culture of innovation in research and teaching. Through personal memories and experiences, this book captures the spirit of collaboration and ambition that defined the department. James Toouli’s introduction acknowledges the subjective nature of memory,
embracing the imperfections and personal nuances that make these reflections both rich and authentic.

Featuring contributions from those who helped shape the department, including a poignant chapter from the late Jim Watts, the book serves not only as a historical record but as a tribute to the visionaries who laid the foundation for what Flinders would become. It is a testament to a golden era, reminiscent of a modern-day Camelot, where ideals flourished, and the seeds of excellence were sown.

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About the Author

 

JAMES WAS BORN IN Limassol Cyprus and came to Melbourne with his parents and sister when 9 years old. He graduated in
Medicine at Monash University in 1970, FRACS 1977 and PhD in Surgery in 1979. He came to Adelaide as the first trainee registrar in Surgery at Flinders medical Centre and was on the resident staff when Flinders Medical Centre opened in 1976.

James was appointed as Lecturer in Surgery in 1982 and held academic positions to promotion in 1989 as Professor of Surgery.
He took over as head of General Surgery in 1986, renamed the unit Gastrointestinal Surgery Unit and remained its head until 2000.

During his professional career he held several leadership positions in Surgery nationally and internationally. He led a successful
research programme that was well funded by NHMRC and other funding agencies. Consequently, numerous surgeons and researchers from Australia and overseas obtained their research training in his unit, and many have become leaders in Surgery.

James also has made contributions to medical and surgical education being in the forefront of several changes in methods of teaching and assessment. He has initiated several training programmes nationally and internationally for which he was recognized as a member of the Order of Australia.

James is married to Helen and has two children and five grandchildren. He lives in Adelaide and on his retirement from surgery continues to enjoy the very active arts scene in Adelaide.

TURPIE, Brian

ISBN 978-1-923265-73-8
HARDCOVER

The Hume

 

An historical and nostalgic look at 50 years of interstate road transport on the Hume Highway

Join the Author on this nostalgic trip down Memory Lane. Read about the Pioneers of road transport on the Hume. The Transport Companies and their Legendary Drivers. The Old Time Roadhouses, the Larrikans and the Villains. Come along for a trip down the real Hume Highway with me. Read the true story of the Razorback and Yass Blockades. Share the humorous tales of old school rules and more

BOYUM, Eva

ISBN 978-1-923156-69-2
PAPERBACK

ISBN: 978-1-923386-42-6
EBOOK

In The Nick Of Time

 

an autobiography

A GUIDE TO SURVIVAL

Beginning with a picture of life in Eastern Europe in the early 20th century and the effect of WWI on the family fortunes, this story details the life of a young Hungarian girl from her origin in a small town, through the disruption of WWII and the Holocaust.

During these turbulent years, a large number of highly improbable events – often with split-second timing – and some very
honourable people, contributed to the whole family’s survival and its emigration to Australia where the author pursued a long and worthwhile career and an interesting retirement.

WELFORD, John

ISBN 978-1-923214-93-4
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The Road To Nakuru

 

An East African Memoir

The Road to Nakuru is a memoir of Africa and England as told by John Welford about his childhood and young adulthood and that of his brother Geoff , in Kenya and England. It includes a trip to Canada in the late 1960s, that they both made.

The book is also a biography of both their remarkable parents, Spencer (“Spen”) and Peggy Welford, who met in interesting circumstances in Nairobi in 1943. It tells of their romance and marriage and their story after that. Accounts of their ancestors is
also contained in the unfolding history.

The story revolves around a town in Kenya’s Rift Valley Province, called Nakuru. The book opens with a recollection of a perilous
childhood journey to Nakuru and the memoir finishes in that place in 1971, where Spen died. There is a postscript that details what
happened to the rest of his family after that.

About the Author

 

JOHN WELFORD WAS born in Nairobi in 1946. His mother was a Scots South African from Cape Town. His father was English, from Lymm in Cheshire, but he had been working in Kenya since he was 18. They met in Nairobi during World War 2 and married in January 1944.

John and his brother were brought up on farms in Kenya until the 1952 Mau Mau uprising in Kenya. Because of their farm’s proximity to terrorist hideouts, John’s parents made the difficult decision to send their boys to England. It was a 2 day flight on a Handley Page Hermes. They were met by their Aunt Alice, their father’s sister.

For the next four years they lived with their Auntie and Granny and went to school in South Devon, going back to Kenya for a Summer holiday only once in that time. When they finally returned to Kenya, John and his brother had to go to boarding school in Nairobi from when he was ten until he left school, eight years later.

Then followed another sojourn in England, studying for a B.Sc. During that time he learnt to sail and then became a sailing instructor in his vacations. A trip to Canada – picking tobacco in Ontario – earned him enough money to go back to Kenya for Christmas 1968.

He found a job teaching Maths and Science at a Prep School in Kenya and did that for 8 years at two different boarding schools. He met a young lady from Geelong, Australia, who came to teach at his school and they got married at Morrisons, near Meredith, in 1976. He has lived in Victoria ever since.

Because he had no teaching qualification, John spent the next five years tuning cars, having bought the franchise for Geelong from Home Tune.

In 1981, He went back to teaching (with Permission to Teach) at Geelong Grammar School. This meant having to teach full time, as well as gain a Diploma of Education at Melbourne University. He spent the next 20 years teaching at GGS, including 15 years at Timbertop, Geelong Grammar’s Year 9 campus near Mount Buller, in Victoria. It was an outdoor, physical life which he very much enjoyed.

John contracted pneumonia at the end of 1999 which later turned into Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and he spent 8 years recovering slowly from that. Since leaving Geelong Grammar he has worked part time at local Ballarat schools and became a mentor for troubled kids including two with Asperger’s syndrome.

He has also became a leader and facilitator for the Pathways Foundation which runs contemporary Rites of Passage camps for teenage boys, and their fathers or significant male mentors. The Victorian camps for boys are run on his property, in the bush south of Ballarat where he lives with his wife, Gaye. In his spare time, he still teaches sailing with Sailability in Ballarat, and he drives a ‘hot’ 50-year-old Peugeot 504 in rallies and autocrosses for fun.

MAERSCHEL, Richard

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See inside the book

ISBN 978-1-923333-42-0
PAPERBACK

Blumberg Hill

 

The Silent Witness To The Events And People Of Birdwood

Blumberg Hill is the fourth in a projected series of seven books focussing on some South Australians – why they came, what they and their descendants did, and why the State is better for their achievements.

Author Richard Maerschel’s aim is to shine a light onto several unknowns, to propose answers to some hard questions, and to correct a few misconceptions.

His subjects are mainly 19th century German-speaking migrants, their relations with Anglo-Saxons and Irish, and rural transport and communications. For this series so far Richard has written over 800 pages with hundreds of references, photos and maps.

Available week of 18th November 2024