Trevor_Pyman

Trevor Pyman

Trevor Pyman

Australian politician


Trevor Ashmore Pyman (25 December 1916  2 April 1995) was an Australian diplomat.

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

Family

The son of Francis George Servante Pyman (1884–1964), and Blanche Ashmore Pyman (1888–1946), née Mitchell,[1] Trevor Ashmore Pyman was born at Ripponlea, Victoria on 25 December 1916.[2] He had two brothers, Clive Francis Henry Pyman (1913–1995),[3] and James Brice Pyman (1923–1987).[4]

Trevor Pyman married Margaret Haddon Hall on 1 August 1942;[5] they had four children, three sons,[6] and a daughter.[7]

Education

Pyman was educated at Caulfield Grammar School, as were his two brothers.[8] He was an excellent schoolboy footballer for CGS,[9] and was dux of the school in 1934.[10]

He attended the University of Melbourne, and attained the following qualifications:

Law

On 4 September 1945, in the Victorian State High Court, Pyman was admitted to practise as a barrister and solicitor.[15]

Military

He served in the Second AIF from November 1941 to October 1944;[16] and he remained "on strength" until he was retired (effective date 30 December 1971) at the end of 1971.[17]

Diplomat

Pyman joined the Australian Diplomatic Service in 1944; having been discharged from the army to do so.[18]

During his fourteen-year tenure in the diplomatic service he worked with Dr Evatt as part of the Australian Delegation to form the United Nations.

He later worked as Australia's Acting High Commissioner to Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, and as Head of Chancery and Counsellor at the Australian Embassy in Washington, D.C. While in Washington he also served as one of Australia's representatives to the United Nations General Assembly in New York City.

Retired

He was retired from the Public Service, on medical grounds, in December 1977.[19]

Australian Outlook

Pyman's influential article, "The United Nations Secretary-Generalship: A Review of its Status, Functions and Role", written immediately after the (September 1961) death of the U.N. Secretary-General, Dag Hammarskjöld, in a plane crash in Northern Rhodesia, was published in Australian Outlook, now known as the Australian Journal of International Affairs, in December 1961.

See also


Footnotes

  1. Webber (1981), p.311.
  2. Wilkinson (1997), p.103.

References

  • Pyman, T.A., "The United Nations Secretary-Generalship: A Review of its Status, Functions and Role, Australian Outlook, Vol.15, No.3, (December 1961), pp. 240–259. doi=10.1080/00049916108565402
  • Webber, Horace (1981). Years May Pass On... Caulfield Grammar School, 1881–1981. Centenary Committee, Caulfield Grammar School, (East St Kilda). ISBN 978-0-9594242-0-1.
  • Wilkinson, Ian R. (1997). The Fields At Play – 115 years of sport at Caulfield Grammar School 1881–1996. Playright Publishing. ISBN 978-0-949853-60-8.

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