Frank Harry (aka Havelock Race) ASHTON

ASHTON, Frank Harry (aka Havelock Race)

Service Number: 5851
Enlisted: 13 October 1915, Sydney, NSW
Last Rank: Gunner
Last Unit: 1st Field Artillery Brigade
Born: Melbourne, Vic., 19 December 1895
Home Town: Woollahra, Woollahra, New South Wales
Schooling: Private Schooling Melbourne, St John's Parochial School Darlinghurst
Occupation: Journalist
Died: At Home, Newmarket, Suffolk, England, 6 June 1971, aged 75 years, cause of death not yet discovered
Cemetery: Not yet discovered
Memorials: Canberra Sun Newspapers Limited Roll of Honour
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World War 1 Service

13 Oct 1915: Enlisted AIF WW1, Gunner, 5851, 1st Field Artillery Brigade, Sydney, NSW
9 Nov 1915: Involvement Gunner, 5851, 1st Field Artillery Brigade, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '3' embarkation_place: Melbourne embarkation_ship: HMAT Wandilla embarkation_ship_number: A62 public_note: ''
9 Nov 1915: Embarked Gunner, 5851, 1st Field Artillery Brigade, HMAT Wandilla, Melbourne

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Biography contributed by Faithe Jones

Son of Mrs Harriet Race Ashton, 'St Aubyns', Russell Street, Woollahra, New South Wales

$17,210
estate
LONDON, Friday
(AAP).'- Mr Havelock Race Ashton, editor of the Sydney Sun from 1942 to 1953, who died on June 6, aged 75, left £8,031 ($17,210) net. Probate has been granted to his widow and to Barclays Bank.

Havelock Race Ashton (1895-1971), newspaper editor, was born on 19 December 1895 at South Yarra, Melbourne, son of Havelock McBlann Ashton, an artist from England, and his Tasmanian-born wife Hariette Race, née Allison, late Fletcher. Young Ashton was educated at private schools in Melbourne and, after the family moved to Sydney, at St John's Parochial School, Darlinghurst. Early in 1915 he gained a cadetship on the Sun, an afternoon broadsheet, and was to work for Sun Newspapers Ltd and its successor, Associated Newspapers Ltd, until 1953.

As 'Frank Harry' Ashton, he enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force on 13 October 1915 and embarked for Egypt in November. By March 1916 he was in France, fighting with the 1st Australian Field Artillery Brigade; he was gassed at Ypres, and promoted corporal in October 1918. Known as 'Frank' in the army and throughout his newspaper career, he rejoined the Sun after being discharged on 26 August 1919.

In 1920 Ashton was in London, working with the Sun-Herald Cable Service. He returned to Sydney in 1923 with an English wife, Phyllis Florence, née Clark, whom he had married on 10 June 1922 at the Bexleyheath parish church, Kent; they were to remain childless. From 1928 he was successively cable-editor, chief sub-editor and news-editor of the Sun until he succeeded T. C. Dunbabin in 1934 as editor of the barely profitable and rabidly anti-Labor Telegraph, a morning paper. Under the steadier, more placid Ashton, the Telegraph gave a balanced view of politics, choosing to play down the 1935 State election campaign in preference to stories on the jubilee celebrations for King George V. Ashton won back many Labor readers. On the paper's sale to Consolidated Press Ltd in 1936, he returned to the Sun as associate editor; he became editor in 1942.

His reputation as 'the last of the gentleman editors' had been established while he was with the Telegraph. Through Ashton's direction, the Sun projected a sense of sober responsibility and public duty in contrast to its tabloid competitor, Ezra Norton's brash Daily Mirror, launched in 1941. Although sales of the Mirror overtook the Sun, Ashton maintained his views that the Sun should be a family newspaper, a vehicle of record as well as of entertainment, and that accuracy was as important as meeting a deadline. At staff farewells or presentations, he usually took the opportunity to reinforce this philosophy with a courtesy and integrity that were widely respected. Practising what he preached, he was involved in community affairs, notably as a member of the war orphans' appeal committee of the Legacy Club of Sydney. Such causes could depend on useful paragraphs in the Sun, alongside the tearful appeals from small boys whose puppies had strayed. Ashton never failed to raise his hat when he passed the Cenotaph in Martin Place.

Ill health, aggravated by his war service, forced him to take several months leave in 1950 and early retirement late in 1953. In August that year Associated Newspapers had been bought by John Fairfax & Sons Ltd, but, to the distress of many journalists and readers, Ashton's type of afternoon newspaper had gone for ever. A member of the Australasian Pioneers' and Journalists' clubs, he lived quietly with his wife at Leura in the Blue Mountains. At Phyllis's prompting, they returned to England in 1958. Frank corresponded with former colleagues and clearly missed old friends. Survived by his wife, he died on 6 June 1971 in his home at Newmarket, Suffolk, and was cremated.

https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/ashton-havelock-race-9393 (adb.anu.edu.au)

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