Russell J. Oakes


Russell John Oakes was an Australian writer of short stories and plays, perhaps best remembered for his play Enduring as the Camphor Tree, described by one critic as "Australia's first great play".

History

Oakes was born in Paddington, New South Wales, a son of William John Oakes and Maude Matilda Oakes, later of Pagewood, New South Wales.
Like many Sydney children in the 1920s, he contributed to "The Enchanted Castle" and "Treasure Tower" pages for children in The Telegraph and became a member of their Junior Literary Society.
He was also a member of the Sydney Sun's "Sunbeamers" and later their Free-Lance Club, which had clubrooms at Burdekin House, where they held a reading of his play As Between Gentlemen on 18 August 1931.
He joined the Regular Army, and was stationed with the Field Ambulance in Western Australia, where he joined the Society of Playwrights and was its chairman in 1939. After the outbreak of WWII he was reassigned as an army instructor in Sydney, then was sent to Papua New Guinea on active service.

Works

His works include:
Oakes married Joy Truelove of Kingsford, New South Wales on 28 June 1941. Their home in 1952 was at 36 Leonard Avenue Kingsford.
They had two sons, Geoffrey and Owen, one of whom was born on 17 September 1944.