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OBITUARIES:
RENA M. WOOD
(Click here for PRINTER FRIENDLY VERSON)

First published
in the The Age, Melbourne,
Australia, June 16, 2007:
Can-do
outlook bolstered by simple logic
RENA MERRYL WOOD
NEWSPAPER PROPRIETOR
28-8-1911 - 8-6-2007
By IAN RICHARDSON
RENA Wood, a rare
woman of country Victoria - and not just because she was one of
the first women in Australia to own and edit regional newspapers,
from the mid-1950s - has died of no particular illness at Bethany
Nursing Home in Camberwell.
She was 95.
Rena was a woman
of extraordinary energy and self-belief - the latter without a hint
of anogance. Quite the contrary; it came entirely from a touching
mix of naivety and boundless enthusiasm, plus an occasional dash
of insensitivity.
When her first
husband, John Richardson, proprietor and editor of the Tribune
at Charlton in north-central Victoria, died at an early age in 1954,
it simply never occurred to her that she would not be able to take
over the reins.
This, despite
knowing almost nothing about journalism or printing, having four
children in their teens and sub-teens and being deeply involved
in a range of community organisations and activities.
Not only was she
not deterred, in the following few years she expanded her activities
to neighbouring towns, launching the Wycheproof News and
buying the Quambatook Times and the Manangatang Courier.
These were not
particularly wise business decisions, but apart from the Courier,
they survived until she sold her newspaper interests in 1961, soon
after marrying her second husband, William "Bill" Wood,
a Charlton shire councillor and retired farmer.
Wood was prominent
in the Freemasons and Rotary and served a term as Rotary district
governor, and these two responsibilities gave Rena a new lease of
life as his "first lady", social secretary and speech
writer as they travelled Australia and abroad on their official
activities.
All the while,
she was accumulating an impressive number of hobbies that continued
to grow even after she and Bill retired in 1982 to Rosebud.
Not least of these
was her decision, when she was 75, to become a wood work student
at the local TAFE. As a result, there can hardly be a member of
her extended family who was not given one of her coffee tables with
their distinctive tile tops.
She was widowed
again a few years later and moved into a unit at Blackburn, where
she continued a highly active life until she was in her 90s and
needed to move into residential care.
Rena would never
have agreed that she was eccentric, but who else would have once
convinced her church minister to agree to a "cash back"
deal with the collection plate? The scheme was simplicity itself
and a model of logic: each Sunday she would put a cheque for, say,
$50 in the plate, and after the service was over, she would take
back all but her contribution of $5 or $10. This meant that she
had a ready supply of cash and the minister would be spared having
to queue at his bank with bags of annoying small change.
And who but Rena
would have taken a "waste not, want not" philosophy to
such Olympian heights as she did? If it couldn't be eaten or composted,
it was recycled.
Allied to this
was a terrifyingly cavalier approach to "use by" dates
on the huge amounts of food stuffed into her cupboards. It was a
source of wonderment among family and friends that she didn't die
from food poisoning years ago. Still, when she quietly slipped away,
it was simply of old age.
She is survived
by her sons Ian (London), Jeffrey (Drysdale), daughters Ruth (Melbourne)
and Alison (Auckland) and sisters Bess Carr (Surrey Hills) and Margery
Hodgen (Adelaide), as well as 11 grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren.
-- Ian Richardson
is Rena Wood's son.
First published
in the Bendigo Weekly,
Bendigo, Australia, June 22, 2007:
Tribute
to a mother who brought much to Charlton
RENA Wood,
a former prominent resident of Charlton and one-time provincial
newspaper owner, died on Friday, June 8, in Melbourne. IAN RICHARDSON,
a former Bendigo journalist who moved to England to forge a career
at the BBC, pays this tribute to his mother...
Rena Wood was
a twin and one of nine children born to Arthur and Ethel Cox of
Melbourne.
She was married
twice. She wed her first husband, John S. Richardson, when he was
a printer with the Wonthaggi Sentinel.
They moved to
St Arnaud in 1941 when he became editor of the Mercury. Two
years later, they shifted to Charlton where John took over the Tribune.
Rena was left
a widow with four children when John died aged just 44 on their
18th wedding anniversary.
It never occurred
to her she couldn't run the Charlton Tribune herself and
combine this with her community duties and being the mother of teen
and sub-teen children.
In a typical excess
of enthusiasm she went on to launch the Wycheproof News and
to buy the Quambatook Times and Manangatang Courier.
Rena would firmly
deny that she was a feminist but she had a deep belief that anything
that could be done by a man could be done just as easily by a woman.
Further, she often
felt no need to waste time on being trained. This sometimes had
disastrous results when she would try her hand at the more complex
printing processes.
In 1960, she married
a Charlton Shire councillor and retired farmer, William H. "Bill"
Wood, and soon after she sold her newspaper interests. Some years
later, the Charlton Tribune and the St Arnaud Mercury
were combined into one newspaper, the North-Central News.
Rena's ownership
of newspapers was important to her, but this could not equal the
pride she had in being a driving force behind the establishment
of Charlton's first baby health centre.
She always regarded
it as her greatest achievement during almost 40 years in Charlton.
In 1982, Rena
and Bill retired to Rosebud where they lived until Bill's death
three years later.
She then moved
to a unit at Blackburn in Melbourne and remained there into her
early 90s, when her deteriorating health forced her to move into
residential and nursing homes.
She had been retired
in name only.
When she was 75,
she took up woodwork. She
also had a keen interest in gardening, sewing, knitting, Scrabble,
stamp collecting and painting. Oils were produced - "knocked
out" might be a more accurate term - by the dozen. And her
output became more prolific at the approach of an art exhibition.
Rena lived through
the depression and two world wars. "Waste not, want not,"
was her philosophy.
She had an alarmingly-cavalier
attitude to "use by" dates on food, and it was a cause
of incredulity that she hadn't died decades ago from food poisoning.
Rena, a resident
at the Bethany Nursing Home in Camberwell, died of nothing in particular.
It was simply of old age, as she approached her 96th birthday.
She was unfailingly
up beat about her life. "I've had a wonderful life", she
would say, and "I'm now ready to go".
Put simply: she
was an inspiration.
First published
in the Bendigo
Advertiser, Bendigo, Australia, June 21, 2007:
Wonderful
life of newspaper owner remembered
RENA WOOD - 1911-2007
Newspaper owner
Born: August 28, 1911
Died: June 8, 2007
RENA Wood had
no fear of death, always believing she had lived a wonderful life.
She died of old
age at the Bethany Nursing Home in Camberwell, aged 95.
Rena was a twin,
one of nine children born in Melbourne to Arthur and Ethel Cox.
She married my
John S. Richardson, my father, in 1936 when he was a printer with
the Wonthaggi Sentinel.
When the Second
World War broke out, he was declared unfit for military service
because of childhood rheumatic fever, so he accepted the editorship
of the St Arnaud Mercury.
Two years later,
he and Rena moved to neighbouring Charlton where he leased, then
bought, the Charlton Tribune.
Rena denied being
a feminist, but she grew up with an innate belief that anything
a man could do, a woman could do at least as well.
So, when John
died at an early age in 1954, she had no hesitation in adding the
management of the Tribune to being the mother of four children.
As if that were
not enough, she then went on to launch the Wycheproof News
as a rival to the Wycheproof Ensign, and to buy two established
newspapers, the Quambatook Times and the Manangatang Courier.
These proved to
be ill-advised ventures resulting from a typical excess of enthusiasm.
The Courier
soon closed and the News and the Times barely turned
a profit.
But the Charlton
Tribune and its associated printing business continued to do
well and to provide Rena and her family with a comfortable living.
In 1960, Rena
re-married and a year later the Tribune was sold to Ian and
Coral Cameron of Wedderburn while the other titles were closed down.
Her second husband
was William "Bill" Wood, a local retired farmer, Charlton
Shire councillor and leading Rotarian and Freemason.
Rena's considerable
social and organisational skills were given full play as the wife
of a prominent member of the Grand Lodge and during a term as Rotary
District Governor.
She was his "first
lady", his social secretary and his speech writer as they travelled
together around Australia and other parts of the world.
At the same time,
Rena continued to throw herself into Charlton's community life,
on church and school committees and the Country's Women's Association.
She was also an
enthusiastic player of golf and bowls.
In 1982, she and
Bill retired to Rosebud.
She looked back
on nearly 40 years in Charlton with pride.
Her time as newspaper
owner was a special achievement, but if asked what she was most
proud of, the answer was her leading role in establishing the Charlton
Baby Health Centre.
Rena was widowed
a second time when Bill died three years after they moved to Rosebud.
She re-located
to Blackburn, where she lived until she was in her 90s and failing
health forced her to move into residential and nursing homes.
Rena's boundless
energy was a cause of constant amazement to family and friends.
In her mid-70s,
she took up woodwork as a TAFE student.
She also became
a prolific artist and also enjoyed knitting, sewing, quilting, gardening,
stamp collecting, cooking and Scrabble.
Rena was brought
up in an age of "waste not, want not" and consequently
was "green" long before it became an admirable way of
life.
If she couldn't
eat, compost or repair something, it was recycled.
It was often joked
that if recycling were an Olympic event, she would have been a gold
medallist.
Rena is survived
by sons Ian and Jeffrey, daughters Ruth and Alison and sisters Bess
Carr and Margery Hodgen, 11 grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren.
-- Supplied
by Rena's son, Ian Richardson
First published
in the North-Central
News, St Arnaud, Australia, June 14, 2007:
Rena
Merryl Wood - 1911-2007
Rena Wood,
a former resident of St Arnaud and Charlton and one-time owner of
the Charlton Tribune, died on Friday, June 8, in Melbourne.
Ian Richardson,
now living in London, pays this tribute to his mother...
Rena Wood was
one of nine children born to Arthur and Ethel Cox of Melbourne.
Her family owned news agencies in Hawthorn and Spotswood, and her
father was also for many years a commercial traveller in the wholesale
paper trade.
She was married
twice. She wed her first husband, John S. Richardson, when he was
a printer with the Wonthaggi Sentinel. They moved to St Arnaud during
the Second World War when he became editor of the Mercury. Two years
later, they shifted to Charlton where John took over the Tribune.
Rena was left
a widow with four children when John died on their 18th wedding
anniversary. Some years later she married Charlton shire councillor
and retired farmer, William H. "Bill" Wood, who also predeceased
her.
Rena, a resident
at the Bethany Nursing Home in Camberwell, died of nothing in particular.
It was simply of old age, as she approached her 96th birthday.
During her long
life, Rena was a book-keeper, housekeeper, wife and mother, newspaper
proprietor and investor. She was also, among many other things,
an enthusiastic artist, a prolific maker of handicrafts, a very
serious recycler, a keen stamp and coin collector, a passable golfer,
and an enthusiastic and skilled indoor bowler.
It must be said
that she was a feminist and eccentric, though she would have vigorously
denied that she was either of those.
Rena repeatedly
laid claim - irritating some of her siblings in the process - to
being "the oldest member of the family" by virtue of having
been born just three hours ahead of her twin sister, Eelin. She
would also tell anyone who cared to listen that she had a birth
weight of just three pounds (1.4 kilos). It is unlikely that is
so - a baby that small would not have survived back in 1911 -- but
there was no denying her right to be amazed that someone as slight
as herself could have lived so long and so energetically.
Rena grew up with
an innate belief that there was really nothing she couldn't do.
This was not born of arrogance, but a touching mix of enthusiasm
and naivety. This attitude to life had the capacity to generate
admiration, amusement and fury in roughly equal parts.
When John, my
father, died in 1954 aged just 44, it simply never occurred to Rena
that she couldn't run the Charlton Tribune herself and combine this
with her community duties and being the mother of teen and sub-teen
children. Not just that, she went on to launch the Wycheproof News
and to buy the Quambatook Times and Manangatang Courier.
The latter three
newspapers proved to be ill-advised business ventures brought about
by a typical excess of enthusiasm, but the Tribune and its associated
printing business continued to provide her and the family with a
comfortable living until her marriage to Bill Wood in 1960 and the
subsequent sale of the Tribune to Ian and Coral Cameron early the
next year.
Rena had a deeply
embedded belief that anything that could be done by a man could
be done just as easily by a woman. Further, she often felt no need
to waste time on being trained. Sometimes this was okay; sometimes
it wasn't.
Once, after she
had taken over the running of the Tribune, she decided to "help
out" late one night by preparing two pages of the upcoming
issue. That was back in the days of hot metal printing when pages
had to be assembled back to front, so that the printed page came
out in the correct mirror image. Unfortunately, Rena had not realised
this and when the printers turned up the next morning and discovered
her mistake, she swept aside their angry complaints as sour grapes
and nit-picking.
Although Rena
could be a colourful and entertaining writer about her own life,
she never really got to grips with journalism. She had a reporter's
curiosity, but not the instincts to shape a story with the most
interesting aspect in the introduction. Rather, her reports often
resembled committee minutes and would sometimes take the skills
of an old-style Kremlinologist to decode the significance of what
was buried deep in them.
Allied to this
was an amusing and sometimes infuriating habit of never responding
to a direct question with a direct answer. In a letter to me in
London some years ago, she mentioned in passing that that her twin
sister was "recovering well from the accident". I phoned
her immediately. "What accident?" I asked. "Well,"
was her tetchy response, "how was I to know she was standing
behind the car when I put it into reverse?"
Rena was a very
social, public spirited being and took a keen interest in church,
school and other town organisations, including the Country Women's
Association. Her achievement in owning several newspapers was important
to her, but not as important as the pride she had in being a driving
force behind the establishment of Charlton's first Baby Health Centre.
If she were asked to name her greatest achievement during almost
40 years in Charlton, initiating the Baby Health Centre was it.
Rena's boundless
energy and social, writing and organisational skills came into full
play during husband Bill Wood's term as Rotary District Governor.
Instantly, she became his "first lady", social secretary
and speech writer as they toured Australia and countries abroad.
It must be said
that Rena had more than her fair share of religious and social prejudices,
but racism was not one of them. It was not a conscious thing. It
just never occurred to her that she should look down on foreigners.
More than that, she found them, their cultures and their lives endlessly
fascinating and over the years she accumulated many long-term foreign
friends.
In 1982, Rena
and Bill retired to Rosebud where they lived until Bill's death
three years later. She then moved to a unit at Blackburn in Melbourne
and remained there into her early 90s, when her deteriorating physical
abilities and short-term memory problems forced her to move into
residential and nursing homes.
She had been retired
in name only. Rena had more interests than is reasonable to recall.
In her mid-70s, she joined a TAFE woodwork class and many members
of her extended family have her distinctive coffee tables to prove
it. There was also her keen interest in gardening, sewing, knitting
and collecting, to name but a few of her hobbies.
Then there was
her painting. She saw painting both as an outlet for her enormous
energy and as a money earner. She had a natural skill with water
colours, but she never regarded this as real art. Oil paintings
were her thing. Oils were produced - "knocked out" might
be a more accurate term -- by the dozen. And her output became more
and more prolific at the approach of an art exhibition. In truth,
though, most had little artistic merit because of the speed with
which they were produced. But no matter. If they didn't sell, she
cheerfully gave them to her family and friends, still with the price
clearly visible on the back.
Her cooking must
also be mentioned. At the mere hint of a social gathering, Rena
was at the oven producing dozens of delicious sausage rolls from
her special recipe. She also had a magical way with fruit cakes.
The many admirers of her sausage rolls and fruit cakes would often
seek the recipes. Rena would happily provide these, but it is said
- and the story may be apocryphal - that she would always leave
out one or two of the more subtle ingredients to ensure that the
resulting rolls and cakes were never quite as good as hers.
Rena was born
into an austere family that lived through two world wars. "Waste
not, want not," was her philosophy. Nothing was thrown away,
least of all food - even if this meant her enduring the occasional
tummy upset or causing alarm among visiting friends and family.
She was proud of the fact that her weekly rubbish output would not
even fill one supermarket bag. Everything else - and I mean everything
- would be composted or placed in the re-cycling bins. If re-cycling
had been an Olympic event, Rena would have been a gold medallist.
Rena was a keen
contributor to the history of Charlton and her family, but she was
never backward looking and instinctively behaved as though life
would go on forever. During one of my visits to her in Blackburn,
she proudly showed me a row of tree seedlings along the kitchen
window ledge. She had, she announced, taken up a new interest: growing
bonsai. She was then in her late 80s, and it seemed tactless to
point out that bonsai could take 20 years to mature.
Rena was a lifelong
Protestant Christian who rarely missed church on Sunday or began
a meal without saying grace. Religion was a thread throughout her
life, but her beliefs were essentially private. She was not a proselytizer,
and like my father, John, she believed in being a Christian by example.
One of her greatest
joys in her later life came from her many grandchildren and great
grandchildren. She could not always remember their names. But her
face would always light up in their presence, and they were left
in no doubt they were in the company of a warm and encouraging friend.
As Rena progressed
into her 90s and found it more difficult to cope on her own, she
was unfailingly upbeat about her life, regretting few things. When
her short-term memory began to fail, she would occasionally express
disappointment, but would firmly add that she'd enjoyed "a
wonderful life" and was now "ready to go". An
inspiration to all of us.
Rena M. Wood
(formerly Richardson, née Cox). Born August 28, 1911. Died
June 8, 2007. Survived by sons Ian (London) and Jeffrey (Clifton
Springs), daughters Ruth (Melbourne) and Alison (Auckland) and
sisters Bess Carr (Surrey Hills) and Margery Hodgen (Adelaide).
Also 11 grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren.
From the Herald-Sun,
Melbourne, Australia, August 14, 2007:
Rena Wood
Pressing
issues mastered
NEWSPAPER PROPRIETOR
Born: August 28 1911
Died: June 8, 2007
RENA Wood, with
no experience in management, journalism or printing, became the
owner of a small town newspaper more or less by default.
She was 42 and
a mother of four in north central Victoria.
Her husband, John
Richardson, who had bought the Charlton Tribune 10 years earlier,
died in 1954.
Rena had been
trained as a bookkeeper, but she had an awesome determination and
a deeply-rooted belief that there was nothing she couldn't take
on.
She wasn't arrogant
but was driven by a boundless enthusiasm wrapped in naivety.
This sometimes
got her into trouble.
She bought the
Quambatook Times and the Manangatang Courier without a thought over
staffing.
She also began
the Wychproof News, run from Charlton in competition to the Wycheproof
Ensign.
Readers and advertisers
resented the intrusion of Rena, an outsider.
Still, with the
exception of the Courier, which was closed quickly, they survived
modestly while the Chariton Tribune flourished.
In 1960, Rena
married local retired farmer Bill Wood and sold her newspaper interests.
Bill was a prominent
Charlton shire councillor, Rotarian and Freemason.
With typical energy
Rena threw herself into the tasks of Bill's speech writer and social
secretary.
She was in her
element when he was Rotary District Governor.
In 1982, she and
Bill retired to Rosebud. He died three years later.
Rena moved to
Blackburn where she remained into her 90s until she needed residential
care.
She developed
all sorts of hobbies such as gluing together tea trays from thousands
of used matchsticks.
In her mid-70s
she took up woodwork as a TAFE student and produced many fine coffee
tables, among other things.
As an artist she
was talented with water colours, although she never regarded water
colours as real art.
She preferred
oils and produced dozens of paintings.
Some were excellent,
but most suffered from the speed with which they were completed.
If they didn't
sell, she cheerfully gave them away to friends and family.
Long before being
a greenie was fashionable, Rena was a recycler without peer.
She threw nothing
out if it could be eaten, composted or recycled.
Shopping bags
were separated into whites and coloureds. Used envelopes were sorted
into the licked and the self-sealed.
Rena's faith as
a protestant was a lifelong constant.
She rarely missed
church on Sunday and all meals would begin with grace.
Though sometimes
she took issue with ministers about the content of their sermons,
she never tried to impose her views on others.
She was a Christian
by example.
Rena, 95, died
at a Camberwell nursing home of natural causes.
Survivors include
four children, 11 grandchildren, 11 great grandchildren and two
sisters.
Also available:
Eulogy
to Rena by Alison Chamberlain
Rena's
Faith Journey by Jeffrey Richardson
Ode
to Rena by Ruth Richardson
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