With the European missionaries came catechists from the Philippines, some of which married into the local population. Today, many inhabitants of Yule Island have distinct European and Filipino features.[4]
The visit of Australian poet James McAuley to the mission at Yule Island in 1949 made a profound spiritual impression on him and contributed to his conversion to Catholicism.[5]
Susan Karike - designer of the flag of Papua New Guinea
Louis-André Navarre - Missionary of the Sacred Heart and Archbishop, worked on the island and, following his death and burial in Townsville, was exhumed and reburied on the island[9]
References
^Quanchi, Historical Dictionary of the Discovery and Exploration of the Pacific Islands, page 251
Platnick, Norman I.(2007): The world spider catalog, version 8.0. American Museum of Natural History.
Further reading
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yule Island.
Lindley, I. David (2003): Echinoids of the Kairuku Formation (Lower Pliocene), Yule Island, Papua New Guinea: Clypeasteroida. Regularia. Spatangoida. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales124: 125–162.
Lindley, I. David (2004): The Yule Island fauna and the origin of tropical northern Australian echinoid (Echinodermata) faunas. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales125: 97-109.