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Charles
Abel, an Englishman, originally went adventuring to The Kwato Mission which he established was noteworthy in its heyday for its emphasis not only on conversion to Christianity, but equally on education and training in practical skills—boatbuilding, carpentry, sawmilling etc for men, and home economics and childcare etc for women, to promote balanced human development. Unfortunately this was not looked on favourably by the LMS and so a split occurred in 1918 and Abel re-established the mission as an independent self-supporting Association. |
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Charles Abel with traditional landowners of Kwato Island. |
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Life
in Charles
Abel died in 1930, ironically in a car accident back in |
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| Sir Cecil Abel with the soldier he rescued 50 yrs earlier. | ||||||
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| Russell and family, with Olive Lebasi, returing to Kwato after the war. | ||||||
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Early
in the 1960s Cecil Abel moved to |
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After
WW2 leadership at Kwato was taken over by Russell Abel, Cecil’s younger
brother. Before the war Russell had met and proposed to Sheila Porteous in
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| Russell Abel and Sheila Porteous at their wedding on Kwato Island, 1940. | |
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A
few years before independence Chris Abel with wife and two small sons
moved back to Alotau and in 1974 he and several colleagues started
Masurina, a multi-shareholder local development company. Now, 32 years on,
most of Chris and wife Barbara’s 4 children, and their respective
spouses, have an active involvement in the company in one form or another.
The family resides largely at Alotau and includes 8 of 11
grandchildren, and matriarch Sheila, now 93. There
are still strong ties to |
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Sheila with Chris and Barbara Abel and sons, Charles and Owen in Port Moresby, 1971. |
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Sheila Abel, with son Chris, grandson Jeff, great-grandsons Tore and Sioni, and great-granddaughter Jemma, on her 93rd birthday. |
Three generations of the Abel Family resident in Alotau, May 2006. |