Latvian Australians

Latvian Australians are Australian citizens of Latvian descent, or persons born in Latvia who reside in Australia. At the 2016 Census, 20,509 residents in Australia reported to have Latvian ancestry.[2]

Latvian Australians
Austrālijas latvieši
Total population
Latvian
3,758 (by birth, 2016 census)[1]
20,509 (by ancestry, 2016 census)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Sydney and Melbourne
Languages
Australian English, Latvian
Religion
Lutheran, Roman Catholic, Orthodox
Related ethnic groups
Lithuanian Australians · Latgalians · Kursenieki · Livonians · Latvians  · Latvian Canadians  · Latvian Americans

Few Latvians arrived in Australia before 1947.[3]

Between 1947 and 1952, 19,700 Latvian refugees arrived in Australia as displaced persons under the supervision of the International Refugee Organisation.[4] The first voyage under Arthur Calwell's Displaced Persons immigration program, that of the General Stuart Heintzelman in 1947,[5] was specially chosen to be all from Baltic nations, all single, many blond and blue-eyed, in order to appeal to the Australian public.[6] Of the 843 immigrants on the Heintzelman, 264 were Latvian.[7]

Sport

Soccer

In 1955, the Melbourne Latvian community established its own Association football (soccer) club that competed in the modern-day Football Victoria state-league system, later folding at the conclusion of the 1959 league season. The club was founded as 'Brunswick' (later renamed as 'Brunswick Latvia'),[8] being named after the relevant inner-northern suburb where many European immigrants settled in Melbourne following the second world war. The club were premiers of the 'Victoria Metropolitan League South', being the southern conference of the modern day Victorian State League 1, which was the fourth state league tier at the time which was achieved in its inaugural season of 1955.[9] The club's highest ladder achievement in its highest level of competition was in 1958 where the club finished eighth in the 'Victorian Metropolitan League Division One North', being the northern conference of the modern-day National Premier Leagues Victoria 2, being the state's second division at the time.[10][11] The club's last season was the following season in 1959,[12] and throughout its existence all of the club's home matches were played on the soccer ovals of Royal Park in the neighboring suburb of Parkville.

Notable Latvian Australians

See also

References

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