At 100, Brisbane Centenarian William Harris Reflects on a Life of Service and Fresh Starts

William Harris of Eatons Hill turned 100 this year and has just been inducted into the Carinity 100 Club, a recognition programme for centenarians that began in 2014. He served in the Royal Marines during World War II, spent 60 years as an engineer and has called Brisbane home for half a century.



William was born in Croydon, England in 1926, left school at 13 and enlisted in the Royal Marines as a teenager. He served for almost three years, including in Asia in the closing stages of the war, and carries the kind of quiet, matter-of-fact memory of that period that speaks to someone who lived it rather than studied it.

“The war in Europe was finished, and millions of troops were going home,” he said. “We got as far as India when they decided to send some of us, a signal company, to Ceylon, now known as Sri Lanka.”

A life that kept moving

After the war, William returned to Croydon and built a 60-year career as an engineer. He married his wife Stephanie and the couple moved to New Zealand in the 1950s, spending two decades across Christchurch and Auckland before making the decision to come to Australia. The reason, as William tells it, was straightforward.

William Harris
Photo Credit: Supplied

“I used to employ an Australian and he used to say how marvellous Brisbane was, so we packed up and came here,” he said.

They arrived about 50 years ago, settled first in a caravan park at Aspley, then a flat in Nundah, before William bought a house. He has been a Queenslander ever since.

William and Stephanie were married for 66 years. He is now surrounded by two daughters, three grandchildren, four great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren. Walking one of his granddaughters down the aisle at her wedding is, he says, one of the highlights of his life.

He only took up golf at 60 — and played until he was 90

Sport has been a constant thread across William’s life, through cycling, lawn bowls and a golf career that began unusually late and lasted unusually long.

“I never held a golf club until I was 60, and that was only in the sands that were near the beach,” he said. “I’ve enjoyed my retired life.”

He played golf until the age of 90, a 30-year run that began on a beach and ended nine decades deep into a life well used.

Photo Credit: Supplied

These days, William keeps himself sharp with his smartphone and iPad, embracing technology that many people half his age find challenging. He also maintains strong opinions about food: potatoes, white beans and tomatoes are welcome at his table. Carrots, lettuce and green vegetables are not.

A club with some remarkable company

The Carinity 100 Club was established in 2014, with Harry Loader as its first inductee. In March 2026, Brisbane resident June Whiting became the 100th member of the club, making William among its most recently welcomed members.

Carinity Home Care‘s Vanessa Lisle presented William with his induction recognition.

Photo Credit: Supplied

William appreciates the support he receives through Carinity Home Care as a Carinity Clean service user, which provides in-home cleaning and domestic assistance to help older Australians stay independent in their own homes.

Carinity has been delivering community services as an outreach of Queensland Baptists since 1949, supporting older Australians in their homes and in residential aged care communities across Queensland, alongside work with families, young people and people with disability.

For more information about Carinity’s services, click here or call 1300 112 640.



Published 8-May-2026

Strathpine’s Dr Terry Named Australian Young Dentist of the Year at National Awards

Dr Yi Pu, locally known as Dr Terry, has won Australian Young Dentist of the Year at the 2025 Australian Dentistry Awards, strengthening his reputation as one of the country’s rising leaders in oral health. The founder of Platypus Dental in Strathpine, he is a familiar face to thousands of patients across Brisbane’s north, with his practice also named a national finalist for New Practice of the Year at the same ceremony.



The awards were presented at a gala ceremony at Melbourne Town Hall on 9 December 2025, drawing nominees and finalists from across the country in the inaugural year of the Australian Dentistry Awards. For the Strathpine community, the national recognition confirms what many patients have known for some time: the practice at 5/32 Dixon Street is doing something measurably different from the dental industry around it, and the profession has now taken formal notice.

A Deliberate Departure from the Corporate Path

Dr Terry graduated from the University of Queensland in 2015 and launched Platypus Dental in Strathpine, building it from scratch at a time when the received wisdom in dental education was that independent practice ownership was a diminishing proposition. The rapid corporatisation of the Australian dental industry across the 2010s had concentrated market share in large group practices, and many graduates were advised to seek employment within those structures rather than invest in building something of their own.

Dr Terry chose a different path. He built Platypus Dental around a model centred on transparency, longer consultations, ethical procurement and team culture, believing that patients who encounter that approach become the most reliable source of growth any practice can have. The practice has grown from zero to more than 2,000 patients and runs consistently fully booked weeks in advance, a result that reflects sustained community trust rather than marketing spend.

That philosophy extends to how Dr Terry approaches the economics of running a practice. When health professional support staff wage increases came into effect in January 2026 under the Health and Allied Services award, Platypus Dental responded by absorbing the additional cost rather than passing it on to patients, committing to hold treatment fees steady until at least June 2027. Dr Terry reduced his own income to make the commitment workable, describing it as a straightforward expression of where Platypus Dental places its priorities.

What the Award Recognises

The Australian Young Dentist of the Year award, presented by Australasian Dentist magazine, recognises practitioners who combine clinical excellence with a broader positive impact on their profession and community. The New Practice of the Year finalist recognition sits alongside it as an acknowledgement that Platypus Dental has not simply delivered strong individual outcomes but built an organisation that operates with genuine coherence between its stated values and its daily practice.

Platypus Dental holds accreditation from the Quality Innovation Performance framework, carries membership of the Australian Society of Implant Dentistry and the International Congress of Oral Implantologists, and operates as a Guided Biofilm Therapy certified clinic. It uses Australian-made dental materials wherever possible and supports local suppliers. Dr Terry is currently completing a Master of Business Administration at the University of Melbourne alongside his clinical work, deepening his leadership capability as the practice grows.

Platypus Dental, founded by Dr Terry
Photo Credit: Google Maps

For Dr Terry, the recognition matters because of what it signals about the model itself: that a purpose-driven, independently owned practice built on transparency and ethical care can compete at a national level against well-resourced competitors, and that the communities that support that kind of practice are making the right call.

Serving Brisbane’s North

Platypus Dental serves patients from Strathpine, Albany Creek, Petrie, Brendale, Lawnton, Warner and across Brisbane’s northern corridor. The practice offers general dentistry, dental implants, All-on-X full mouth reconstruction, clear aligners, wisdom tooth extraction, Airflow dental spa treatments, teeth whitening and sedation. It accepts all health funds and holds preferred provider status with a number of major funds.

Bookings can be made at platypusdental.com.au or by calling (07) 3881 2887. The practice operates Monday to Friday with extended hours and is located at 5/32 Dixon Street, Strathpine.



Published 1-March-2026.

From Rescue to Recovery: A Kitten’s Journey in Eatons Hill

A kitten rescued after being found trapped in industrial glue has recovered and found a permanent home following weeks of treatment and rehabilitation at a veterinary practice in Eatons Hill.



A Critical Rescue

The kitten, later named Titan, was discovered clinging to the edge of a vat of industrial glue at Clontarf, just north of Brisbane. Only weeks old at the time, he was rushed to Eatons Hill Veterinary Surgery in a fragile condition, with glue heavily embedded in his fur and visible damage to his skin.

Veterinary staff immediately began treatment, sedating and carefully shaving him to remove the adhesive. As the glue was cleared, raw and irritated skin was revealed underneath, requiring fluids, antibiotics and close monitoring during the early stages of recovery.

Slow Healing and Growing Strength

In the days that followed, updates from the practice confirmed that Titan’s condition was gradually improving. His skin began to heal, though peeling and discomfort were expected as the remaining glue residue worked its way out. Full recovery was expected to take several weeks, including time for his fur to regrow.

As his health stabilised, the kitten’s progress drew strong public interest, with many people following his recovery and offering messages of support.

Finding the Right Home

On 18 November, the practice opened applications for Titan’s adoption. Due to the level of interest, the process was managed through a formal application system to ensure a suitable long-term placement.

By 23 November, the clinic confirmed that Titan had been matched with a family and would soon leave the surgery to begin life in a permanent home.

Eatons Hill kitten rescue
Photo Credit: Eatons Hill Veterinary Surgery/Facebook

Settling Into Family Life

In early December, the practice shared that Titan had settled in with the Hamilton family and was adjusting well. Updates indicated he was becoming more confident and active, with his personality emerging as his recovery continued.

Veterinary staff noted that while his physical healing was ongoing, his progress at home reflected a positive outcome following his early trauma.

A Reminder of Ongoing Rescue Efforts



While Titan’s story captured wide attention, the Eatons Hill practice continues to care for hundreds of rescue animals each year. His recovery highlights the outcomes that can follow sustained veterinary care, careful rehabilitation and responsible adoption.

Published 29-Dec-2025

Four-Year-Old Junior Impresses at Wantima’s Cameron Smith Classic

At just four years old, Corbin Boyce is emerging as a junior golf talent to watch, winning his age division at the Cameron Smith Junior Classic at Wantima Country Club after already making club history as the youngest-ever C Grade Junior Club Champion.



Corbin Boyce, a Wantima Country Club junior who still has a year of kindy ahead of him, recently stepped onto one of the biggest junior golf stages in Queensland when he competed in the Cameron Smith Junior Classic. He did so as the youngest player in the field, lining up against children mostly aged eight and above in a tournament that attracted more than 200 junior golfers.

Despite his age, Corbin showed no nerves — just enthusiasm, confidence and a clear love for the game.

Photo Credit: Supplied

A Special Moment at Wantima

The Cameron Smith Junior Classic holds special significance at Wantima Country Club, where Smith himself learned the game before rising to international success. For Corbin, the experience became even more memorable when he met Smith shortly before tee-off.

“Corbin got to meet Cameron right before his tee time,” his father, Chris Boyce, said in a Q & A with Brisbane Suburbs Online News. “Cam even watched him play for a little bit. Like all the kids, Corbin absolutely loves Cameron Smith, so that was a huge moment for him.”

While results mattered far less than participation, Corbin played strongly for his age, earning praise from club members and organisers alike. Chris said the family was proud to see him compete with confidence against much older players.

“He played extremely well, and we were super proud of him,” he said.

Photo Credit: Supplied

A Champion Before School Starts

Corbin’s appearance at the Classic followed another remarkable achievement just weeks earlier, one that surprised even long-time members at Wantima.

Before most kids can tie their shoelaces and as the youngest competitor in the Club’s history, Corbin has become the C Grade Junior Club Champion. The championship was played over two weekends, with a combined score deciding the winner.

“Corbin has now won a club championship before me,” Chris joked. “I’ve been playing for 10 years, and I’ve never won one. The guys at the golf club think that’s hilarious.”

The win added Corbin’s name to a list typically dominated by much older juniors and reinforced the sense that something special is unfolding, albeit without any pressure being placed on the young golfer.

Photo Credit: Supplied

A Love for Golf From the Very Beginning

Corbin’s introduction to golf came early — extraordinarily early.

“I put a golf club in his hands when he was nine months old,” Chris said. “He just started hitting balls, and then he was hooked.”

Golf soon became a regular part of family life. Chris plays pennant golf at Wantima, as does his twin brother, while Corbin’s older brother Colby and baby brother Coda often join practice sessions in the backyard.

“We play in our yard a lot, but also just out on the course with me,” Chris said. “I even bought a golf buggy so I could take the boys out more often for practice.”

Between work, family time and weekend rounds, Corbin usually gets out for practice once during the week and again after Saturday golf, playing a few holes whenever possible.

Photo Credit: Supplied

Smashing Drives and Chasing Ducks

For Corbin, golf remains fun above all else, and that’s exactly how his family wants it.

“He loves smashing his driver,” Chris said. “He can hit it about 80 metres. He also loves chasing ducks around the course.”

Asked about his strengths, Chris laughs. “Probably chasing ducks… then hitting his driver.”

Corbin’s favourite golfer is Cameron Smith, and like many young players, he enjoys copying what he sees from the professionals while still being very much a four-year-old at heart.

A Supportive Club Environment

A key figure in Corbin’s development has been Ken McKay, Wantima’s junior coordinator, who Chris credits with encouraging them to enter competitions and supporting Corbin’s journey.

“Ken encouraged me to put Corbin into these events,” Chris said. “We honestly wouldn’t be where we are without him.”

McKay spearheaded the Cameron Smith Junior Classic and reflects Wantima’s strong commitment to junior development, a commitment that continues to attract families from across the region.

Keeping Perspective

Despite the growing attention around Corbin’s achievements, Chris is careful to keep expectations grounded.

“I love watching him develop such a passion for the sport,” he said. “As long as he’s happy, I’m happy. It’s not too serious, and that’s the best thing so far.”

Corbin is still in kindy, still loves all sports, and still spends most of his time playing with his brothers. His goals for golf remain simple.

“He wants to be better than his dad,” Chris said with a smile. “And he’s not far off.”



Whether Corbin’s future leads him down the same path as Cam Smith,who maintains a strong connection to Wantima as his junior club and often supports junior events there, remains to be seen. For now, Corbin is already achieving something just as important: enjoying the game, supported by family, club and community, on the same fairways that has seen many far older than him, succeed.

Follow his progress and achievements in the world of golf via Instagram.

Published 16-Dec-2025

Strathpine Clinic Offers Lifeline for Elders with Culturally Safe Ageing Care

A new health clinic in Strathpine is helping Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Elders stay healthier for longer, with access to specialist ageing care that puts cultural respect at its centre.



Culturally Safe Health Services Come to the Northside

The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Healthy Ageing Clinic (HAC) now runs weekly in Strathpine and Caboolture, alternating Tuesdays from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. It is a partnership between Metro North Health and MATSICHS, supported by the Queensland Dementia and Frailty Network.

Strathpine’s clinic helps close long-standing health gaps for older Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people by offering specialist geriatric care in a trusted, culturally safe setting.

The clinic supports Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 50 and over, as well as their immediate family members, promoting community and family wellbeing.

A Focus on Ageing, Frailty and Dementia

The clinic helps Elders manage ageing-related health issues with assessments for memory, mobility, fall risks, and medication use.

Dementia care is a key focus, along with support for age-related frailty and disability. Geriatric specialists deliver care in a culturally safe setting where patients feel respected and understood.

Community-Led and Clinically Backed

Metro North Health, through its Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Leadership Team, has played a guiding role in setting up the clinics. Their work with MATSICHS ensures services are not only clinically sound but also embedded in community values and trust.

While many mainstream services fail to reach older Indigenous patients in ways that feel safe or welcoming, this model aims to change that. Staff at the clinic work closely with patients to offer care that reflects both medical needs and cultural identity.

How to Access the Clinic

To attend the clinic, patients need a GP referral to Metro North’s Geriatric Service. It runs Tuesdays, alternating between MATSICHS Caboolture and Strathpine.



The Strathpine site is located at 496–498 Gympie Road, and the Caboolture site is at 5 James Street. For those seeking more information, the Caboolture Satellite Hospital can be contacted on (07) 3049 9755.

Published 6-May-2025