Phone 4342 5333         Email us.

Skip Navigation Links.
Collapse Issue 404 - 17 Oct 2016Issue 404 - 17 Oct 2016
Collapse  NEWS NEWS
Collapse  FORUM FORUM
Collapse  HEALTH HEALTH
Collapse  ARTS ARTS
Collapse  EDUCATION EDUCATION
Collapse  SPORT SPORT
Collapse  HISTORY HISTORY

Harry Ihlein: quiet, friendly and determined

I first met Harry Ihlein at Woy Woy in 1964.

Harry was about average height, clean-cut, and had a quiet and reserved nature, but when the chips were down, he could be very tough and determined.

Harry Ihlein was president of the Woy Woy branch of the Australian Labor Party, in the 60s and he had two projects and two dreams.

One dream was to get Kevin Dwyer, the Labor candidate, into State parliament and this was Kevin's second attempt to win the state seat.

Harry was Kevin's campaign manager and they worked like Trojans to win the seat.

With his determined streak truly showing, Harry drove himself and the other branch members to exhaustion in the effort to get the Labor candidate elected.

Unfortunately, at that time, the then Labor government was worn out, and the Liberals under a new rising star, Robin Askin, were pushing Labor to the wire.

This situation combined with the DLP vote gave Kevin Dwyer little chance.

Kevin was beaten and the Labour government fell.

The other project of Harry's was one of turning the old Neilson Slipper factory in Railway St, Woy Woy, into a Labor club.

Harry and his committee had Millers Brewery interested, had the required number of members and some capital.

He then tried to get some Labor Ministers in the scheme ... regretfully, all too late.

The Labor government was gone, and the club never got off the ground.

Harry had put all his dreams in the one basket, the election and the club.

He had resigned his job in the fire brigade as a sailmaker, in the hope that Kevin Dwyer would win the election and Harry would be his electorate secretary.

However, Harry was far from being destroyed and he always kept a level head and a shrewd sense of humour.

Tragically, Harry's life was cut short in a car accident at Ettalong Beach.

Harry was like one of those unforgettable people you read about in the Readers Digest.

He was friendly, good-natured, resolute, determined and a man you could trust.





Skip Navigation Links.

Skip Navigation Links.
  Copyright © 2016 Peninsula Community Access Newspaper Inc