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Keith Kinnaird Mackellar
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Keith Kinnaird Mackellar was born in 1880 in the harbourside suburb of Point Piper where the Mackellar children had an idyllic and privileged childhood. He was educated at Sydney Grammar School and became a junior officer in the NSW Scottish Rifles at the age of 18. A talented athlete, he was also enrolled as an undergraduate in first year Arts at the University of Sydney in 1899. When the Boer War broke out in South Africa in 1899, Mackellar joined the Mounted Infantry Unit and left Sydney in January 1900. He wrote detailed letters to Dorothea and his family about life in the war, even writing for Sydney Grammar School’s journal The Sydneian. In one article he wrote: ‘Every day there is something – either we occupy a farm and eat its ducks, or we get fired at from under a white flag, or from out an ambulance waggon, by gunners wearing the red cross. The more we see of South Africa the more we appreciate Australia….’ On 11 July 1900, Mackellar was shot in the head during a skirmish and killed. It is said the Boers lured Mackellar and his men to their farm by dressing in the uniforms of the Australian Light Horse. He was buried at a farm nearby, and then in a cemetery in Pretoria. Mackellar’s family didn’t hear of his fate for several days. His death deeply affected his younger sister Dorothea for the rest of her life, and it is believed to have inspired her first published poem, ‘When It Comes’, which she wrote at about the age of 15.
In 1907, the Keith Kinnaird Mackellar ceramic memorial tablet was placed above the inner ward doors of the Victoria and Albert Memorial Pavilions at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, where his father, Dr Charles Mackellar, was the director. The dedicated tablet is now attached to the wall in the Emergency Department of Royal Prince Alfred Hospital.
His family also commissioned a beautiful stained glass window depicting Mackellar as St George the patron saint of soldiers and memorial plaque that you can see on the northern wall of St James church in the city.
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