Ceen, Albert Ceen
Family name |
Ceen |
Birth date |
1903 |
Death date |
1976 |
Given name(s) |
Albert Ceen |
Gender |
Male |
Country of birth |
Italy |
Representative picture | |
Alternate name(s) / title(s) |
Achille Marius Coen |
Place of birth |
Rome |
Country of death |
Italy |
Full biographical data |
Albert Ceen (formerly Achille Menotti Marius Coen) was a Italian Jewish refugee who fled Fascist religious persecution in Italy on the eve of World War II. In March 1939 together with his wife Flavia and two sons Guy and Allan he settled in Melbourne temporarily. He was a businessman, joined the Australian subsidiary of an Argentinian agricultural company with whom he had been employed in Italy. As a non-interned alien, Albert was eligible for compulsory national service under the National Security regulations. Classified by the Army as a friendly and refugee enemy alien, Albert was eligible to enlist in the Army’s Employment Companies. He served in the 6th Australian Employment Company at Tocumwal, N.S.W., from May 1942 to Aug. 1943. Promoted to the rank of Corporal, Albert’s duties changed from heavy labouring jobs to book-keeping. A talented artist, he sketched fellow refugee recruits, and depicted camp life and Company activities. He illustrated and compiled issues of The Hook, the unit’s wall magazine which was pinned to the camp noticeboard, and designed sets for the Company’s dramatic performances staged in the town. Naturalised in 1944, he left a year later to take up an executive position with his pre-war employer in New York. Albert and his family were reunited in October 1946. [Edited from https://archival.sl.nsw.gov.au/Details/archive/110094674] |
Related Person |