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Strathfield Massacre

by Cathy Jones

The ‘Strathfield Massacre’ occurred on Saturday August 17 1991 at Strathfield Plaza and is considered one of Australia’s worst and most violent crimes.  Within a ten minute period, 33 year old Wade Frankum armed with an AK-47 rifle, knife and machete, killed seven people and seriously injured six other people before turning the gun on himself. 

Strathfield Massacre 1991 as reported in the Sun Herald

Strathfield Massacre 1991 as reported in the Sun Herald

Strathfield Plaza is located on Churchill Avenue opposite Strathfield Rail Station and is the largest shopping complex in the Strathfield Town Centre.  The Strathfield Plaza complex opened in 1981 consisting of an office tower, residential tower and single storey shopping centre. In 1991,  Strathfield Plaza shopping centre contained a supermarket, cafes, chemist, newsagency and a number of specialty shops.  There are two ground floor entrances on The Boulevarde and Churchill Avenue and above the shopping centre, two floors of parking. Saturday afternoons at Strathfield Plaza were often busy as many people would meet for lunch or coffee or do their weekly grocery shopping.  Being close to a large railway station, with country services, it was a popular place for people to meet or stop while waiting for transport.       

On Saturday August 17 1991 around 1pm, Wade Frankum arrived at Strathfield Plaza and sat in a café called The Coffee Pot.  He drank a number of cups of coffee until about 3.30pm.  At this time, he rose and without any apparent provocation, pulled a large knife from an duffel bag and repeatedly stabbed fifteen year old Roberta ‘Bo’ Armstrong, who had been sitting with a friend at the Coffee Pot.   Bob Yardy, owner of the cake shop next to the Coffee Pot, said ‘I thought at first he was stabbing a couch but then I turned back and saw this young woman slump forward’.

Frankum then grabbed the semi-automatic rifle, loaded it and began shooting widely at other people in the café including sixty-one year old Joyce Nixon, her daughter Patricia Rowe and grandsons Kevin (14 years) and Nathan (8 years).  Joyce and Patricia died shielding the young boys from Frankum’s gunfire.   

As George Mavis, the owner of the Coffee Pot, emerged from the kitchen, Frankum aimed his gun and killed him. George’s brother James followed from the kitchen to see his brother fall to the floor.

Frankum then turned to other people in the Coffee Pot, Carole Dickinson, her daughter Belinda and Carole’s niece Rachelle Milburn. Frankum shot Rachelle in the head and then shot Carole in the stomach.  She died later that night from her wounds.  As Belinda ran from the cafe screaming, Frankum shot her.  Though she fell after being shot, she survived.

Frankum then left the Coffee Pot and started running through the Plaza wildly firing the gun.  Fifty-three-year-old accountant Robertson Kan Hock Joon was looking at a set of photos when Frankum shot him. Throughout the centre, people were running frantically from the building to escape.   Frankhum then ran towards the outside stairway to the rooftop carpark while shooting at people as he ran.  A volley of shots rang out across Strathfield Square and hit the nearby railway ticket office, a milk bar and the window of a taxi.  

Forty-one-year-old Greg Read , an ex-Navy officer who had served in Vietnam, raced up the stairs at Strathfield Plaza screaming to people to “hit the deck” with Frankum just metres behind him.  Read said “I heard shots when I was in the newsagency and I raced out.  I saw everybody running and a lady screamed ‘Look out.  A man’s gone berserk with a gun’.  The shots started coming towards me.  I could see he was running to get out of the building.  I raced up the stairs while he ran up the ramp.  As I was running he was shooting at everybody indiscriminately.  I was in front of him by about 20 feet (six metres). I could hear all the shots.  They were very loud.  I reached the carpark first and told a couple to hit the deck.  Then, as I warned a woman driving out of the carpark to lie low, she said: ‘It’s too late.  He’s already behind you’.  I turned and he was just a couple of metres away.  I dived under the car and that’s how I got shot in the feet.  Looking over the barrel of his gun, I guess you could say I had eye contact with him”.

Police estimated that Read’s actions saved at least eight people from death or injury. Read was awarded the Star of Courage in October 1992 for acts of conspicuous courage in circumstances of great peril by the Australia’s Governor-General. The Star of Courage is the second highest Australian bravery decoration.

By now, Frankum had reached the top floor of the carpark where he held Catherine Noyce at gunpoint, demanding that she drive him to Enfield, a nearby suburb. Before she could start her car, police began to arrive on the scene.  Flemington constable Darren Stewart was the first police officer to arrive at the scene.  Constable Stewart said ‘I sprinted to a police car and raced to the scene.  When I arrived the guy was still firing.  He was on a car park roof firing shots into crowds, firing up to 100 metres”.  Hearing the approaching sirens, Frankum said “I’m sorry’ to Mrs Noyce and then got out of the car, knelt on the ground, and committed suicide by shooting himself in the head.  Constable Stewart said he heard a single shot ring out.  I raced on to the car park roof and saw the gunman slumped on the ground in a pool of blood, with a bullet wound to the head’. 

Strathfield Massacre Memorial Churchill Avenue Strathfield

Strathfield Massacre Memorial Churchill Avenue Strathfield

 

Frankum’s shooting spree had lasted 10 minutes.  He killed seven people and injured six.  None of his victims appeared to be personally known to him.  No clear motive for the massacre was established, though a search of Frankum’s apartment revealed dozens of violent books and magazines. Victims of the massacre included Roberta Armstrong, Robertson Kan Hock Voon, Patricia Rowe, Carole Dickinson, Joyce Nixon, Rachell Milburn and George Mavis.

The impact of the Strathfield Massacre on the local community was devastating.  Many local residents were working or shopping at Strathfield Plaza or knew someone who was there.  Many people witnessed the murders, hid or fled for their lives on the day, a memory that most have never forgotten.  The businesses in the Strathfield Town Centre, following the incident, suffered a steep decline of income and patronage and many businesses moved out of Strathfield Plaza and the Strathfield Town Centre in the years after. A plaque commemorating the victims of the crime was later erected on Churchill Avenue by Strathfield Council.

References

‘Gregory Christopher Read’, Australian Honours, Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet at www.itsanhonour.gov.au on 29 December 2011. 

‘Hero cried ‘Hit the deck’ to warn’, Sun Herald, p2, August 18 1991.

‘Crazed gunman kills six in rampage’, Sun Herald, p3, August 18 1991

‘Don’t shoot! Please don’t shoot’, Sun Herald, p3, August 18 1991

Author

(c) Cathy Jones 2011. 

Discussion

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