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Whyte, Mary Grace

  • 1926-

Mary Grace Whyte was born Mary Grace Asche on 23 March, 1926 to missionary parents. She graduated with Bachelors degrees in medicine and surgery at the University of Melbourne. In February 1951 she married Isaac Neilson Whyte. After he was ordained in 1952, they went to the New Hebrides (Vanuatu) with the Australian Presbyterian Board of Missions. They were based in the village of Wintua in South West Bay on the island of Malekula, 1952-1957. The Whytes had seven children; the eldest four spent their early years in Wintua.

Mary Grace provided medical care in Wintua and surrounding villages and introduced preventive measures such as inoculations against tuberculosis and using mosquito nets to protect from malaria. She was also engaged in talking to women about their health, especially childbirth. The Whyte family returned to Australia in 1957 as Neilson was experiencing a lot of pain from war service injuries. Mary Grace made subsequent visits to South West Bay throughout her life. She is also an artist who has painted many scenes of the New Hebrides.

Whyte, Isaac Neilson

  • Person
  • 1919-1972

Isaac Neilson Whyte was born on 28 November 1919 in Ulster, Northern Ireland. His family moved to Australia in 1927 and had a dairy farm in Victoria. Neilson served with the Australian Army in 1940-1945 and fought with the Rats of Tobruk. He was captured by the German forces and spent four years as a prisoner of war. He read a lot in custody and began to consider studying theology. On his return to Australia, he studied for a Bachelor of Arts at the University of Melbourne and theology at the Presbyterian Theological Hall at Ormond College. He was ordained on 10 March 1952 and commissioned for missionary service.

Neilson married Dr Mary Grace Asche in February of 1951 and in December 1952 they began their mission service in the New Hebrides (Vanuatu) with the Australian Presbyterian Board of Missions. The Whytes were based in the village of Wintua, South West Bay on the island of Malekula 1952-1957. Neilson and Mary Grace had seven children; the four eldest children spent their early years in Wintua. Neilson spent a lot of time away from Wintua as he was responsible for 17 villages in the region. He also helped bring about a peace agreement between village leaders in Big Nambas territory and a peace house was built to mark the agreement. The 1957 Assembly was held in Wintua and Neilson was inducted as Moderator. Shortly after the Assembly, the Whyte family returned to Australia as Neilson was experiencing some physical ailments associated with his war service. On his return to Australia he went on to serve in parishes at Goodwood, Learmonth and Donald. After years of pain and ill health, Isaac Neilson Whyte died in Melbourne in February 1972 at the age of 52.

Whitehouse, John Owen

  • Person
  • 1815-1907

Missionary in India, 1842-1857. On his return to England he was, on several occasions, acting Secretary of the London Missionary Society.

Whippy, Isobel

  • Person
  • 1939 -

Isobel Whippy was born at Wiluna, Western Australia, in 1939. After teaching Aboriginal children in the Kimberley area of W.A., and Maori children in northern Aotearoa/New Zealand, she went to Fiji in 1963 and married at Levuka in 1966. She wrote several short plays for school children from 1968 onwards. 'Pritchard', her first major drama, won a $100 prize in a drama contest for the South Pacific Festival of Arts in Suva in May 1972.

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