Charlene Todman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nickname
Charlene Todman
Born1931
Sydney, Australia
Died11 September 2018(2018-09-11) (aged 86–87)
Sydney, Australia
Charlene Meade
Todman, left, with other members of the N.S.W. Society for Crippled Children in 1953.
Personal information
Nickname
Charlene Todman
Born1931
Sydney, Australia
Died11 September 2018(2018-09-11) (aged 86–87)
Sydney, Australia
Medal record
Women's archery
Stoke Mandeville Games
Silver medal – second place1951Women's individual
Women's table tennis
Stoke Mandeville Games
Silver medal – second place1974Women's individual

Charlene Stuart Meade (née Todman; 1931 – 11 September 2018)[1] was an Australian athlete who became the first Australian woman to participate in the Stoke Mandeville Games, the precursor to the Paralympic Games. She finished second amongst women in the archery event, and later competed in the 1959 edition in para-swimming, archery and javelin. At the 1974 games, she won a silver medal in table tennis. Todman later became active in dog sports.

Todman had to use a wheelchair following an accident with a horse when she was fourteen years old. She rehabilitated at the Stoke Mandeville Hospital, and later volunteered with the New South Wales Society for Crippled Children. In 2008, she was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia for her efforts in serving Australia's disability community.

Todman was born in 1931 in Sydney.[2][3][4][5][6][7] Her father was industrialist Charles Ingram Todman (1882-1958), who served as an alderman in Strathfield, and her grandfather was tobacco merchant George Todman (1849-1924). Her mother was Phyllis Stuart Pearce (died 1986).[8][9] Her family was well known for their sporting efforts.

In 1946, when she was 14 and living in Double Bay,[10] she was working with her mother at the Tor Lodge in Bowral during her school holidays when she was thrown from a horse while racing a friend from school. From the local district hospital, Bowral Hospital, she was transported to Lewisham Hospital in Sydney after her parents consulted with friends about the best course of treatment. The accident resulted in her spine being fractured at the T5 level; she was paralyzed from the waist down.[10][11][12][13][14] The hospital had no specialized spinal care treatment center and was run by nuns.[12][13] Her first wheelchair was a wooden cane chair with wheels, and her rehabilitation options were few.[11] After a few months in hospital, Todman returned home. Ascham School, which she attended in 1942 and 1943, was not wheelchair accessible. As a consequence, she changed schools and finished her education at Correspondence School in William Street, East Sydney.[12][15]

Travelling with her mother and a nurse, in August 1950 she went to Stoke Mandeville Hospital in England aboard the Orcades to rehabilitate for fifteen months under the care of Ludwig Guttmann.[16][3][17][12][13] She turned 19 shortly after she arrived in the United Kingdom.[17] Initially, she was to have gone to the Wingfield-Morris Orthopaedic Centre in Oxfordshire after her father met Lord Nuffield, who invited her there. Her x-rays were lost en route and the hospital determined her condition was not suited to the treatment they offered.[12] She returned to Australia in 1951, arriving in Melbourne on 5 December aboard the Orion.[3][18][19] She returned to live in Double Bay.[20] She had acquired a collapsible wheelchair, a Dingwall, in England, and took courses on typing. These skills and tools made her more independent. Todman soon found work at the Blood Bank in York Street.[12][13]

Sports

Later life

References

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