Roger Bush

Roger Bush OBE (1918–2000) was a British-born Australian Methodist minister and media personality.[1]

Early life

Bush was born in England and his family migrated to Sydney, Australia, the following year. He was the oldest of a family of four and had two brothers and a sister.

Family and BHP

He met his wife, Glenyce, in Norfolk whilst serving with the RAAF during World War II. After the war, they returned to Sydney and had two children, Peter and Lesley. Bush was employed by BHP at Wollongong before being ordained as a minister.

Methodist minister

He became an early talkback radio minister on Connections, a three-hour talkback program he devised and hosted on 2CH.[2] Bush wrote a column for the Sydney Sun newspaper for 12 years. From the opening of the Sydney Opera House in 1973 he was responsible for the Christmas program of celebrations.

Retirement

In 1989, Bush retired to Port Macquarie, New South Wales.

Honours

Publications

  • The Open Line Bedside Book – (Sydney, 1984)
  • The Origins of Christmas: Fact, Fiction and Myth – Reed Publishing (Sydney, 1982)
  • The Origins of Easter: Fact, Fiction and Myth – Reed Publishing (Sydney, 1982)
  • A Bush Christmas – Rigby (Sydney, 1980)
  • All the trees were green – Rigby (Adelaide, 1979)
  • Prayers for Pagans – Hodder & Stoughton (Sydney, 1968)
gollark: School didn't restart here yet, but Boris Johnson is insisting that it's a "moral imperative" that everyone goes back and that it's totally safe for everyone.
gollark: My mother is a doctor, and warned me *against* going into medicine, although I forgot why.
gollark: It seems to just randomly change its mind every decade or so on stuff beyond "you lose weight if you burn more energy than you take in".
gollark: I'm not convinced that nutrition science... knows much.
gollark: Anyone who gets close enough to assassinate him is affected by the reality distortion field.

References

  1. Who's Who in Australia 1988 (Herald & Weekly Times Melb, 1988): Bush, Roger (1918 – )
  2. MUA Events
  3. Port Macquarie News
  4. It's an Honour


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.