Re: Ian G Cooper (1941-2024)
  transitconsult

 Ian was instrumental in the setting up of the ACT branch of
the Chartered Institute of Transport.  He and I worked together a
fair bit, though my work was microscopic compared to Ian's.  He was
unmarried at the time that I knew him.  A loyal friend and a good
companion.  Rest in peace!!
Please give my condolences to his wife.
Regards
Dudley Horscroft

----- Original Message -----
From:tramsdownunder@...
To:
Cc:
Sent:Sun, 5 May 2024 12:45:03 +1000
Subject:[TramsDownUnder] Ian G Cooper (1941-2024)

 

Whilst overseas last week, I was saddened to hear of the death of Ian
Cooper of Hobart – a great mate of mine since 1967 and a highly
respect tram historian. He was 83.

Ian died after a long illness. He was born and raised in Hobart and
was trained as a statistician. Ian enjoyed a long career in public
administration and later in the bus industry. Like many of his era, he
spent some time early in his career working in the United Kingdom. In
the late 1960s he moved from Hobart to Canberra where he spent many
years in senior roles in the planning area of the ACTION bus service.
He later moved on to private bus management.

Ian was instrumental in the saving of Hobart tram 141 and through the
years wrote several titles on trams and trolleybuses in Tasmania. He
was also a regular contributor to various trams and general transport
journals and publications.

Ian married late in life and after retirement moved back to his
hometown Hobart where he had planned to research further areas of
local transport history but his efforts were cut short by the onset of
a debilitating illness. In his married life, Ian was known as Tim but
almost everyone in the transport fraternity continued to know him as
Ian or sometimes among his closer buddies by his middle name, Gollan.

 

I first met Ian while exploring the Tasmanian trolleybus systems in
1967. He was groomsman at my wedding in 1975 and we remained close
friends through the following decades. We spent a day on the trams in
Melbourne in 2016 and it was clear his health wasn’t the best. Ian
spent his last years in an aged care facility on Hobart’s eastern
shore. I visited him there in 2021. Ian was very sick and couldn’t
recognise me. Sadly, I knew that would be the last time our paths
would cross.

Paul Nicholson

 

 

 

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Groups "TramsDownUnder" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it,
send an email totramsdownunder+unsubscribe@... [1].
To view this discussion on the web visit
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tramsdownunder/023f01da9e96%243b225640%24b16702c0%24%40bigpond.com
[2].