Raymond Gadabu
Raymond Gadabu (25 September 1921 – October 1964)[1][2] was a Nauruan politician who served as Head Chief between 1953 and 1955.
Biography
Gadabu attended Nauru Primary School before moving to Australia to study at Geelong Junior Technical College, the Gordon Institute and Everett's Business College in Melbourne.[3] In 1941 he began work as a ledger clerk at Geelong and Crossy Trading, later becoming a shipping clerk and salesman for the company.[1] He returned to Nauru in 1945 to join the civil service, becoming a welfare officer. The following year he became an accounts clerk, and in 1951 was appointed a clerk in the Nauruan Affairs department.[1]
When democracy was introduced to Nauru in 1951, Gadabu was elected to the first Local Government Council from the Aiwo constituency.[4] Following the death of Head Chief Timothy Detudamo in April 1953, Gadabu was elected as his replacement.[5] In 1954 he was appointed a Nauruan Affairs officer and made a magistrate in the Nauru District Court.[1] Although he was re-elected to the Council in 1955, he was replaced as Head Chief by Hammer DeRoburt.
References
- South Pacific Conference Fourth Session South Pacific Commission
- Death of Ray Gadabu Pacific Islands Monthly, November 1964, p13
- Australian Representation Current Notes on International Affairs, May 1961
- Nancy Viviani (1970) Nauru: Phosphate and Political Progress Australian National University Press, p. 105
- Viviani, p. 106