Hermes Baby Portable Typewriter, base and lid : Lieutenant Colonel J L Treloar, Headquarters AIF

Place Oceania: Australia, Australian Capital Territory, Canberra
Accession Number REL45594.001
Collection type Heraldry
Object type Heraldry
Physical description Bakelite, Steel
Maker E Paillard & Co INC. Yverdon. Switzerland
Place made Switzerland
Date made c 1940
Conflict Second World War, 1939-1945
Description

Hermes baby steel typewriter, finished in grey hammertone paint, complete with a square, shallow, steel base tray and connecting steel lid. All the keys are in black Bakelite with the exception of the two shift keys, tab and backspace keys, which are in grey. There is a reel to reel black ink ribbon attached. Painted on the top of the lid is 'VX 39804 J. L. TRELOAR. 61172'.

History / Summary

John Treloar was born on 10 December 1894 in Melbourne. After completing his schooling in 1911, Treloar joined the Department of Defence as a military staff clerk. He enlisted in the AIF in August 1914 and, after a period of training, served on Gallipoli as a staff sergeant. Having been on the peninsula since April, Treloar was evacuated in September suffering from enteric fever and was eventually invalided to Australia.

Treloar recovered his health and resumed his service, this time as a lieutenant with the role of equipment officer in No. 1 Squadron of the Australian Flying Corps. In July 1916 he was transferred to France as confidential clerk to Brigadier General Brudenell White at the 1st Anzac Corps Headquarters.
In May 1917 he began the work that would dominate the rest of his life when he was selected to organise the fledgling Australian War Records Section with the rank of captain. The section's work would form the basis of much of the Australian War Memorial's collection. Six days before the end of the war he married Clarissa Aldridge in London and, in December 1918, was promoted to major.

The war over, Treloar began the painstaking work of sorting and categorising the large body of war documents under his charge, laying the basis for the collection still used by historians and researchers to the present day. Devoted to the Australian War Memorial, Treloar became the institution's director in 1920, working tirelessly for the more than three decades and living next to his office. At times credited with keeping the Memorial going, he also ensured that the Memorial took over the publication and distribution of the 12 volume official history of Australia in the First World War, when the series encountered difficulties in the 1930's.

Treloar left his position at the Memorial during the Second World War when he was made head of the Department of Information. He took charge of the Military History Section at Army Headquarters and began the process of establishing a collection of Second World War relics and documents. He returned to the Memorial after the war and was described by one employee as the most complex character he had ever met. For the most part, however, he was aloof from his staff, working alone in his office. Unable to delegate, Treloar worked punishing hours until his death from an intestinal haemorrhage on 28 January 1952.