Neil Truscott Explained

Neil Truscott
Birth Date:14 January 1923
Birth Place:Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia
Death Place:Canberra, Australia
Occupation:Public servant, diplomat
Nationality:Australian

Horace Neil Truscott (14 January 192323 January 2011) was an Australian public servant and diplomat.

Born in Warrnambool, Victoria on 14 January 1923, Neil Truscott moved to Perth when he was 8. He studied at Wesley College, then at a university for a year (law), before enlisting in the Royal Australian Navy for two years. He was accepted into the Department of External Affairs during World War II, one of 12 accepted into the diplomatic service from 1600 applicants.

His early diplomatic posts were in Washington, Singapore, Jakarta and Bonn. From February 1966 to 1970, Truscott was Australian Consul-General in San Francisco.[1] In the role, Truscott attended several functions each week, often at universities in the Bay Area, and fielded many questions about the White Australia policy which had by that time been abolished.

In 1970, he was posted to Beirut, Lebanon, as ambassador, being also accredited to Syria, Jordan, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia. He left 1973 to various roles in Canberra, before in 1975-1977 being head of the Foreign Affairs office in Melbourne, Victoria.

In 1977, he moved to Baghdad as the first Australian resident ambassador to Iraq.[2] Ahead of the move, he studied Arabic at the Australian National University.[3] He was appointed Australian Ambassador to Syria, Jordan and Lebanon in September 1978.[4]

Truscott was made a Member of the Order of Australia in the 2002 Queen's Birthday Honours, for service through a range of community and social welfare organisations in Canberra, and to international relations through the Australian Diplomatic Service and the Australasian Middle East Studies Association.[5]

Truscott died in Canberra on 23 January 2011.

Notes and References

  1. News: The Truscotts get ready to disperse. 18. 15 January 1969. The Canberra Times.
  2. News: Bagdad post. 28 October 1976. 17. The Canberra Times.
  3. News: An intensive course in Arabic for the holidays. 3 February 1977. 15. The Canberra Times.
  4. News: Envoy to Syria. 27 September 1978. 3. The Canberra Times.
  5. News: Members (AM) in the general division. The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. 10 June 2002. 10 June 2002. https://web.archive.org/web/20020610122232/http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/06/10/1022982813954.html.