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George Ivan Smith

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George Ivan Smith

George Ivan Smith AO (11 July 1915 – 21 November 1995) was an Australian radio and war correspondent, movie director, diplomat, poet and writer. He was born 11 July 1915 George Charles Ivan Smith in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. He is the first son of George Franklin Smith, a New South Wales prison governor, and May Sullivan.

In 1935 he married Madeleine LaBarte Oakes (1909–1966) of Maryborough, Queensland: children George Ivan Smith 1937 deceased, Antony Ivan Smith (Ivansmith) (1939–2008) and Sharon Morreale 1940. In 1944 he married Mary Stephanie Douglass; stepchildren Penelope Gilliatt, a writer (1932–1993), Angela Conner (1935), a sculptor, and an adopted daughter Edda Mwakeselo Ivan-Smith 1960, author and Social Development Consultant. Ivan Smith died in 1995 in Stroud, Gloucestershire.

Ivan Smith is his full last name and not hyphenated, though often he is categorized under the last name Smith.

After education at Bathurst, New South Wales and then Goulburn High School where his father George Franklin Smith was prison governor at the Goulburn Gaol. After graduation Ivan Smith began work as a cub newspaper journalist for the Sydney Truth.

In 1937 he joined the Australian Broadcasting Commission and managed 2WL a radio station in Wollongong. Later Michael Pate who began his famous career in 1938, when he joined Ivan Smith writing and broadcasting a program called Youth Speaks for ABC Radio.

In 1939 became he talk's editor and a founding member of the new overseas short wave broadcasting service, "Australia Calling" (1939–1941) later named Radio Australia. In 1941 Ivan Smith was seconded to the BBC Overseas Service in London, England where he became director of the Pacific Service and organised overseas coverage of the Second Front. In 1945 he joined the J. Arthur Rank Organisation, where he worked as producer, editor and director of This Modern Age with Sergei Nolbano, a documentary series of films for J. Arthur Rank (1945–1947).

Ivan Smith joined the United Nations in 1947 and went to New York as Senior Director of External Affairs to establish the organisation's first international radio programmes for the United Nations Information Services, then at Lake Success, New York (1947–1949). In 1949 he came to Britain as first director of the London United Nations Information Centre, remaining there until 1958. During that time he was closely associated with Dr. Ralph Bunche and the UN Secretary-General Trygve Lie in developing the 1949 Armistice Agreements that ended the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.

After Trygve Lie's resignation in 1952, he acted frequently as spokesman for Dag Hammarskjöld, who had become secretary-general in 1953. He accompanied him on many missions, including his visit to the Middle East following the Suez Crisis on 1956–57. After which he co-ordinated salvage operations with American salvage companies of the sunken ships that blocked the Suez Canal.

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