First
Car for Disabled Diggers (Gus Keown) 9
August 1949 The Tumut and Adelong Times |
The first double amputee above the
knee in New South Wales, if not in Australia, to try out the device
which enables a legless man to drive a motor car with full
efficiency is Gus Keown, of the 36th Battn., A.I.F., a native of Tumut who suffered the loss
of both legs above the knee in the fighting at Passchendaele
in November, 1917. Gus is in partnership with Jim
Kennedy, also a limbless Digger, in a kiosk business in Martin Place. Gus
took delivery of his first car, specially adapted for a legless man to
drive, in January, 1924. He covered 50,000 miles in this car
before he turned it in, and about the same distance in each of the six
cars which followed. He is now driving his eighth car, purchased in
1947. Driving by a legless man is made possible
by a simple, safe and serviceable variation of the foot control, which
mainly consists in transferring the clutch control to the driver's shoulders
when in the sitting position, and the necessary pressure easily operates the
clutch. The brake and throttle controls are
worked with the left hand, while the steering is done with the right. The
shoulder pressure can be exerted at will. So well contrived is this patented device
that the action becomes as automatic as foot control, and quite as easy. Perhaps no other Digger was more grievously
wounded than Gus, and, a few years ago, he had to undergo an operation
in Prince of Wales Hospital for the removal of an eye, which was pitted
with shrapnel, and its state was affecting the sight of the other
eye. A stout fellow, Gus, whose life is a
story of the victory of mind over matter. |