MCCORMACK, William Thomas Bartholomew
Service Number: | Officer |
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Enlisted: | 8 January 1915 |
Last Rank: | Major |
Last Unit: | 10th Field Company Engineers |
Born: | Heathcote, Vic., 1 January 1878 |
Home Town: | Elsternwick, Glen Eira, Victoria |
Schooling: | Not yet discovered |
Occupation: | Civil Engineer |
Died: | Pneumonia, Melbourne, Vic., 23 January 1938, aged 60 years |
Cemetery: |
Brighton General Cemetery, Victoria |
Memorials: | Great Ocean Road Memorial Arch, Ringwood Country Roads Board WW1 Honour Roll |
World War 1 Service
8 Jan 1915: | Enlisted AIF WW1, Major, Officer, 10th Field Company Engineers | |
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20 Jun 1916: | Involvement Major, 10th Field Company Engineers, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '5' embarkation_place: Melbourne embarkation_ship: HMAT Runic embarkation_ship_number: A54 public_note: '' | |
20 Jun 1916: | Embarked Major, 10th Field Company Engineers, HMAT Runic, Melbourne |
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Add my storyBiography contributed by Faithe Jones
William Thomas Bartholomew McCormack (1879-1938), civil engineer and public servant, was born on 1 January 1879 at Heathcote, Victoria, son of Thomas McCormack, Irish-born publican and his wife Emily, née Ewen, of Sydney. Educated at the local state school and privately, he worked as a clerk in the shire office at Seymour before being appointed in 1902 secretary and shire engineer at Mirboo, Gippsland. On 27 September 1904 at Mirboo Catholic Church, he married Margaret Muirhead. Certificated as municipal surveyor, hydraulic engineer and municipal clerk (Victoria) and engineer (New South Wales), he worked as shire engineer at Lockhart, New South Wales, and Korumburra, Victoria, before being appointed in 1909 to the Public Works Department as assistant engineer, engaged in constructing roads and levees and reclaiming swamps. He was an honorary lecturer in engineering at the University of Melbourne in 1913-15, a foundation member of the Institution of Engineers, Australia, and a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers, London.
In March 1913 McCormack was appointed one of the three foundation members of the Country Roads Board of Victoria. In 1913-15 they travelled widely, frequently on horseback, to lay the foundation of the State's road network. McCormack's knowledge of local government, his diplomatic skills and quiet, equable personality made him a successful ambassador for the board in its negotiations with sometimes fractious shire councils.
A lieutenant in the Australian Intelligence Corps in 1911-14, McCormack enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force in January 1916 and in June embarked as major commanding the 10th Field Company, Engineers. In 1917 he acted as commanding royal engineer, 3rd Division, under his mentor Major General (Sir) John Monash. Following the battle of Messines he was mentioned in dispatches and in August 1918 was awarded the French Croix de Guerre. After the war he briefly studied British road construction, town planning, sewerage and water-supply.
Returning to Australia in April 1919 McCormack resumed his work with the Country Roads Board, taking charge of the construction, initially by returned soldiers, of the Great Ocean Road which reached Eastern View in 1922 and, eventually, Apollo Bay in 1932. Acting chairman of the board during William Calder's visit to Europe and the United States of America in 1924, he was appointed chairman upon Calder's death in March 1928. During his decade in office about 11,000 miles (17,703 km) of roadway were under his jurisdiction and in that time much of its macadam surface, suitable for horse-drawn vehicles, was replaced with more durable bitumen and gravel. He also established the board's research laboratory. In 1937 McCormack visited North America to study advances in road-building and published a report on his return.
Contemporaries observed that McCormack spoke of roads with poetic eloquence, insisting that they should 'follow the lines of Nature' for aesthetic as well as practical reasons. He was committed to providing 'a road to every farmer's gate' and urged the use of local materials wherever possible.
A pianist and composer of dance music, McCormack was also a member of Victoria Golf Club and donor of the McCormack cup to the Melbourne division of the Institution of Engineers. He died in Melbourne from pneumonia on 23 January 1938 and was buried with Catholic rites in Brighton cemetery. His wife, daughter and two sons survived him. Memorials to him include an archway at Eastern View, opened by General Sir Harry Chauvel in 1939.
http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/mccormack-william-thomas-bartholomew-7321