Joseph Aloysius CarrodusCBE (3 September 1885 – 8 April 1961) was a senior Australian public servant.
Early life and career
Joseph Carrodus was born on 3 September 1885 in Richmond, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.[1] He studied at St. Patrick's College in East Melbourne and then the University of Melbourne.[2]
During World War I, he enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force in February 1916, departing from Melbourne on the ship HMAT A34 Persic in June 1916 to fight in France as an infantry captain.[3] He returned to Australia on 27 May 1919,[4] joining the Department of Home and Territories as a clerk.[2]
On 14 March 1923, Carrodus married Mabel Florence Maud, and the pair settled in Canberra in 1927.[1]
Later life and career
Carrodus was Acting Administrator of the Northern Territory from April to October 1934, and while there stated that the "effort to breed out colour is a commendable one", regarding inter-war proposals to "breed out the colour" of Aboriginal Australians of mixed descent.[5] When he returned to Canberra from the role in the Northern Territory, he prepared a report recommending the Administrator of the Northern Territory and other branch heads make periodic visits to the Northern Territory inland in the dry season, writing Darwin is not the Territory, it gives no indication of the conditions prevailing inland."[6]