Jump to content

Elizabeth Wood-Ellem

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dr Elizabeth Wood-Ellem (10 September 1930 – 8 September 2012) was a Tongan-born Australian historian actively engaged in the life of Tonga[1] and author of the definitive biography of Queen Sālote Tupou III of Tonga.[2]

Birth and family

[edit]

Born Elizabeth Olive Wood near Nuku'alofa, Tonga, she was often known as Bess or Pesi Wood. She was a daughter of Reverend Dr A. Harold Wood OBE (1896–1989), a renowned Methodist then Uniting Church minister and educator, and medical Dr Olive K. Wood (née O'Reilly), who were Australian missionaries in Tonga from 1924 to 1937.[2] She had five brothers and sisters, including Janet Secomb, herself a missionary to Tonga, actor Monica Maughan and Uniting Church minister and hymnologist Rev. Dr H. D'Arcy Wood.

Education

[edit]

Moving to Australia in 1937, Elizabeth was educated at Methodist Ladies' College in Melbourne where, in her final year, she topped the state of Victoria in Greek and Roman History.

At Melbourne University, she majored in English and History, gaining a BA in 1953, and would later undertake her PhD there.

Career

[edit]

Wood-Ellem earned her living as a book editor and indexer, initially at Angus & Robertson in Sydney, then London (1960–72) with Macmillan and Paul Hamlyn, and later worked freelance.

She was appointed an archivist at King's College, Cambridge University, to sort and catalogue the papers of British novelist E. M. Forster after his death in 1970.[2] Churchill College, Cambridge then engaged her as Assistant Librarian for Archives to catalogue Sir James Grigg's papers and A.V. Alexander's correspondence.

She completed a PhD in Tongan history in 1982 at the University of Melbourne and remained a Senior Fellow there at the time of her death. She published her biography of Queen Sālote of Tonga in 1999. Fairfax’s Pacific correspondent Mike Field said of it:

‘If I were nominate a single, superb book on the Pacific, Queen Sālote of Tonga: The Story of an Era 1900-1965 is one of the finest pieces of historical research and insight, anthropology and understanding of Tonga that you’ll ever find. You don’t even have to be vaguely interested in Queen Sālote, but in how Tonga works.’

Notable books she edited include The Songs and Poems of Queen Sālote (2004) and Tonga and the Tongans: Heritage and Identity (2007).

In 2008, King George Tupou V recognised her singular contribution to Tonga by bestowing on her the title of Commander of the Order of the Crown of Tonga.[2]

Publications

[edit]
  • Wood-Ellem, Elizabeth (1999). Queen Sālote of Tonga: The Story of an Era, 1900–1965. Auckland, N.Z.: Auckland University Press. ISBN 978-1-86940-205-1. OCLC 262293605. Archived from the original on 20 February 2012.[3]

Notable books she edited include:

  • The Songs and Poems of Queen Sālote (2004)
  • Tonga and the Tongans: Heritage and Identity (2007)

Honours

[edit]
National honours

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Tongan royal historian Dr Elizabeth Wood-Ellem dies, (11 September 2012, 17:29 AEST), Radio Australia
  2. ^ a b c d Wood, H. D'Arcy; Ball, Olivia (5 October 2012). "Historian lauded for book on Pacific". The Age. Melbourne: Fairfax Media. Retrieved 23 November 2012.
  3. ^ Newell, William (1 April 2004), "Elizabeth Wood-Ellem. Queen Salote of Tonga: The Story of an Era, 1900-1965.(Book Review)", The Australian Journal of Anthropology, 15 (1), Australian Anthropological Society: 122(2), ISSN 1035-8811
  4. ^ "Royal orders presented at Palace". Matangi Tonga. 1 August 2008. Archived from the original on 21 January 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2022.