Vale Phil Carswell OAM – a true community hero

Vale Phil Carswell OAM – a true community hero
Image: Phil Carswell (centre) and representatives from Australia鈥檚 AIDS Councils at the 1985 AIDS Summit. Photo: Australian Queer Archives Facebook

Written by Stephen A Russell

Phil Carswell was a highly respected, long-term political advocate for the LGBTIQ+ community. His work and dedication over 40 years brought positive influence to politics in Victoria and across Australia, including marriage equality, age of consent laws, and HIV/AIDS education.聽

 

鈥淗e lived an incredible life and our LGBTIQ+ communities owe him a debt of gratitude for his remarkable contribution to our collective health and wellbeing.鈥

 

Legend is a word used far too freely these days, but Thorne Harbour Health President Janet Jukes wasn鈥檛 exaggerating when she said of the late, great Victorian AIDS Council (VAC) co-founder Phil Carswell, 鈥淲e use the label 鈥榣egend鈥 for many people who have played important roles in our community, but it鈥檚 completely true and appropriate of Phil. He lived an incredible life and our LGBTIQ+ communities owe him a debt of gratitude for his remarkable contribution to our collective health and wellbeing.鈥

Fellow former President of the VAC, Dr Adam Carr, a former 17c起草社区 columnist, agrees. He met Carswell at Monash University in 1974 when they were both 20 years old. 鈥淚 was the news editor for the student newspaper Lot鈥檚 Wife and Phil was doing his teacher training,鈥 Carr recalls.

鈥淗e would come in with story ideas and I remember him as this funny, bouncy little guy who talked a lot and had lots of good stuff to say.鈥

One year later, Carswell helped organise the first National Homosexual Conference at Melbourne University and approached Carr about publishing the report he had written. 鈥淗e was going on about gay rights activism on the assumption that all of us in the office were straight,鈥 Carr says.

鈥淎t which point I said, 鈥楶hil, I鈥檓 on your team,鈥 and he was actually one of the first people I came out to.鈥

‘Young Gay and Proud’

After becoming fast friends at Monash, Carswell became an ardent union man, a key figure in the Melbourne Gay Teachers Group which produced the landmark booklet Young Gay and Proud. Carr had dropped out of uni to pursue graphic design and contributed the cover and some interior cartoons.聽

鈥淲e were both in Sydney in 1978 at the National Homosexual Conference at Town Hall, which led to the famous march to Taylor Square where everyone got arrested,鈥 Carr says.聽

He marched, but Carswell stayed behind. 鈥淗e was a very good feminist, and he thought men should take responsibility for childcare, so didn鈥檛 qualify as a 鈥78er, which he was a bit disappointed about.鈥

A leader during the HIV/AIDS crisis

Carswell made a monumental mark on the movement, nonetheless, and was a valiant leader during the devastating peak of the HIV/AIDS crisis. He was a member of ALSO Foundation鈥檚 subcommittee on health tasked with researching what was then known as Gay Related Immune Deficiency (GRID), becoming President of the newly formed VAC in 1985.聽

鈥淧hil was an extraordinary character who carried a very heavy burden of responsibility,鈥 Carr says of those darkest days. 鈥淗aving this leadership position thrust on him, which he hadn鈥檛 asked for, he suddenly found himself trying to lead our community through this dreadful crisis.鈥

Carswell鈥檚 wide social and professional circle across Melbourne and Sydney was both a blessing and a curse. 鈥淢any people he knew were dying, particularly in Sydney, and he kept a list, but he always projected optimism and enthusiasm,鈥 Carr says.聽

Australia鈥檚 response is rightly regarded as being much more constructive and proactive than the UK or US, with Carswell a huge part of that success.

A pioneer for Australian 17c起草社区I health

The first out gay man employed by any state health department in Australia, he was able to bridge the gaps between the community, governments of the day, and the health authorities.聽

鈥淗is real leadership gift was that he was able to work very closely with people of all different political orientations or social backgrounds and get us working together as a team,鈥 Carr says. 鈥淗e was very good at smoothing out conflicts and played a vital role in getting the community to do the things that needed to be done and not succumb to despair.鈥

“If we support each other, we can all get through this”

Carswell could pitch his remarks to the emotional needs of his audience.

鈥淗is leadership style was always 鈥業 know what you鈥檙e feeling and we鈥檙e all feeling this. If we support each other, we can all get through this鈥.鈥

Carr says his friend was always across the details. 鈥淗e was always conscious that time might run out, which was one of the reasons why he was so frantic and a supremely effective worker, as a public servant. He was a policy wonk and always knew what he was talking about, reading enormous amounts.鈥

Awarded the OAM for his work

Carswell moved to Brisbane, continuing the good work in Queensland, and was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia in 2015.

He and Carr would call one another intermittently, but it was the advent of social media that rekindled regular correspondence. During the pandemic, they were regular Zoom buddies.

鈥淚鈥檒l miss him a lot, because he鈥檚 always been there for 50 years and now suddenly he鈥檚 not, and that鈥檚 really very sad,鈥 Carr says.

Carswell penned a book about his life鈥檚 work, which Carr, who published eBook Journalism from the AIDS Years 1982-2003, eagerly awaits reading, because a life well lived by a true legend, a real hero of our communities, should be shared.

2 responses to “Vale Phil Carswell OAM – a true community hero”

  1. Lovely article thanks. Still can鈥檛 believe Phil isn鈥檛 with us anymore.He was such an integral part of our lives 鉂わ笍馃暫馃寛馃檹馃憦

  2. He was a pioneer for gay health and HIV nothing to do with 17c起草社区I plus umbrella. Stop rewriting history! We are gay not Queer.