Row by Row

Carol Thompson built a quiet legacy of service on Thursday Island, turning up for her people with steadiness, humility, and a heart for the work. This is her story.

By Tom Hearn

Carol Anne McGrath was born on 3 January 1950 on Thursday Island, into a family where self-sufficiency was not an idea but a necessity, and where cultural identity, faith, and community responsibility were quietly lived rather than spoken about. She is Mualgal of the Siganilgal Tribe, with deep ancestral connections through her great-great-grandmother Iaga, her Moa Island lineage, and the long family line that followed.

Her cultural story carries many crossings. Iaga married Sam Geata, a Niue Islander also known as Bozi Savage. Their daughter Flora, later married a Singaporean man who came through the pearling industry as an indentured worker. From those unions came Jumula Aramina, and from her, Clara Eileen Dubbins, Carol’s mother. Each generation carried culture forward while adapting to changing worlds, holding Island identity alongside the realities of church, labour, and colonial systems.

Carol’s totems reflect the forces that shaped her life. Sigai, the flying fish. Waleku, the frilled neck lizard. Sager, the south-east trade winds. Movement, grounding, and endurance.

Her mother, Claire (Dubbins) McGrath, was first and foremost a housewife and great mum, and when her children grew up and left home, her focus turned heavily into volunteer work and she sold many raffle tickets for QATB in front of IBIS and was recognised for this work.  Before this, she was member of the Anglican Ladies Guild. And worked at both Anglican and Catholic Fetes. She later spent seventeen years as President of the Thursday Island Ladies Bowls Club and became a lifetime member.  Hot dog selling, report writing, chair stacking and floor mopping was all simply part of the community work that she performed whilst with different NGOs.

Carol was the only girl between two brothers. She learned early how to hold her own. She climbed trees, scraped knees, beat boys at marbles, and learned how to be observant without demanding attention. Life was full but ordered. Chores came before play. Firewood was chopped and stacked.  Water was pumped by hand ready for the evening shower.  Before the wet season, her father climbed inside the rainwater tank to scrub it clean. By five to five, children were home. Bath, dinner, washing up, bed by 8.30.

5 Comments
  • Ada Tillett

    January 1, 2026 at 9:00 am Reply

    This is a lovely and fitting tribute to Carol. She was destined to be a leader to our women, families of Thursday Island and Torres Strait Islands. Carol is a strong and independent woman. Thank you for your friendship and your dedication to your work with the Church and community.

  • Harold Bani

    January 1, 2026 at 9:17 am Reply

    Thank you Carol, you mention the ina most Loving way of leaving life, As say doing thing’s and don’t expect any thing back,
    The movement you get in your body joy and happiness.
    Thank you

    Cheers Harold Bani

  • Kyla Kennecy

    January 1, 2026 at 7:04 pm Reply

    Thanks Tom for sharing this lovely tribute to Carol. Such inspiring messages of how to live a full, humble but giving life. Just beautiful!

  • Lola Lyons

    January 3, 2026 at 5:31 pm Reply

    Thoroughly enjoyed Carol’s story… very inspirational and uplifting. To know more about the person you know makes you feel blessed for just having known her. Very special ✨️

  • Lucy Capponi

    January 3, 2026 at 6:53 pm Reply

    What an amazing inspiration.
    Although I had the honour and utmost privilege of meeting Carol and of being in the same room from time to time of this beautiful lady while hearing her story, it saddens me deeply that we did not have the chance to know one another more deeply 🙌🏻

    My son and I will be forever grateful for her remarkable daughter and her family together with grandsons they have truly been rocks for us. While life sometimes robs us of time, they are always in our hearts with endless gratitude and thoughts — a true living reflections of Carol’s calmness, beauty, and selfless nature.

    Thank you for sharing Carol’s story and for touching so many hearts, row by row.

    “Carol ~humble~ loving ~it is true Angels truly do walk among us” 🤍🙌🏻🤍

    Thank you for sharing🫶🏻

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