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Thomas Anthony Lewis
OAM
Born1958
Nationality Australia
Occupation(s)Popular Military Historian and Author

Thomas Anthony Lewis, OAM (born 1958) is an Australian author, popular military historian, public speaker, and former naval officer. An author since 1989, Lewis worked as a high school teacher, and served as naval officer for 20 years, seeing active service in Baghdad during the Iraq war, and working in East Timor. In June 2003, Lewis was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia for meritorious service to the Royal Australian Navy, particularly in the promotion of Australian naval history.[1][2]

Career

After reconstituting the Royal Australian Naval College Historical Collection, with which his Order of Australia is largely connected, Lewis was the Director of the Darwin Military Museum from 2009 until April 2014, when he took up full-time research on several World War I and II projects. Amongst these are his role as Lead Historian and Creative Designer for The Borella Ride, the re-enactment of the journey of Albert Borella VC to sign up for military service in 1915.

Lewis was also Lead Historian for The Territory Remembers, a project of the Northern Territory Government to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the first attacks on Australia during the Second World War.

Lewis is the author or co-author of 18 books, all of which are popular works of military history except for one which charts the Tasman Bridge disaster – he was raised largely in Tasmania, although born in London. He was the editor of Headmark, the Journal of the Australian Naval Institute, from 2005 until 2016. His most recent works are: Honour Denied – Teddy Sheean, A Tasmanian Hero (Avonmore Books), launched in Hobart in May 2016 by the Tasmanian Premier; The Empire Strikes South (Avonmore); launched in Darwin on 15 February 2017 by the Administrator of the Northern Territory, and Darwin Bombed! A Young Person's Guide to the Japanese attacks of 19 February 1942. In July 2020 Big Sky Publishing released his Atomic Salvation, a controversial analysis of the 1945 A-bomb attacks on Japan.

From 2013-2020 Lewis was the Chairman of the Order of Australia Association (NT). From 2015-2018 he was the Chairman of the Northern Territory Place Names Committee. In 2018 he was elected an alderman of the City of Palmerston, until August 2021. Lewis has been a high school teacher in Queensland and the Northern Territory.

Academic qualifications

Lewis holds the qualifications of Doctorate of Philosophy in Strategic Studies (Charles Darwin University 2004); Master of Arts in American Science Fiction and Cold War Politics (University of Queensland 1993); Diploma of Education (University of Tasmania 1984); and Bachelor of Arts in English (University of Tasmania 1983).

Books

Forthcoming:

References

  1. ^ "Lieutenant Thomas Anthony Lewis". It's an Honour. Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Talk with Dr. Tom Lewis OAM" (PDF). Northern Territory Library. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2008. Retrieved 12 March 2008.
  3. ^ David M. Stevens. "Japanese submarine operations against Australia 1942–1944". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 12 March 2008.
  4. ^ "Quarterly Newsletter Archived 29 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine" (PDF). The Australian Association for Maritime History, March 2000.
  5. ^ A War at Home Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Lewis, Tom (September–October 2002). "Deterrence, Capacity and Skill Retention" (PDF). Australian Defence Force Journal (156). ISSN 1320-2545. Retrieved 12 March 2008.
  7. ^ Willson, Robert (18 April 2014). "The Darwin raid that changed Australia". The Sydney Morning Herald. Review of Carrier Attack: Darwin 1942 (2013), by Tom Lewis and Peter Ingman. Retrieved 20 February 2021.