Noosa News
Time to honour the heartbroken women left behind

Her eldest son Roy Carne had just turned 22 when in 1943 as a navigator in the Australian 466 squadron he was sent to drop mines on Brest Harbour and never returned.But even when his belongings packed neatly in his suitcase were shipped back to Gympie, my great-grandmother refused to believe his body lay at the bottom of the Atlantic.“He’s suffered amnesia from the crash and will find his way home,” she would say.She kept Roy’s suitcase by her bed, even until her final days in an aged care…
Click here to view the original article.
-
General16 hours ago
Hundreds gather in Gin Gin at vigil for allegedly murdered teen Pheobe Bishop
-
General23 hours ago
Businesses and consumers caught between opposing forces
-
General20 hours ago
AFL round 13 live: North Melbourne vs West Coast, Carlton vs Essendon updates, scores and highlights
-
Noosa News15 hours ago
Pheobe Bishop: Community mourns loss of murdered teenager