CAREER
TOUCHED MANY BASES
Newspaperman Charles Defieux dies
By JOHN GIBBS
Charles M. Defieux, the Sun maritime columnist who was never a seaman but
managed to do just about everything else in his life, died Monday at age 71.
Mr. Defieux collapsed and died suddenly in his apartment at 1125 West Twelfth.
He was still active as a freelance journalist, lecturer in marine affairs and
writing The Sun column, Of Ships and Men.
His multiple careers embraced the worlds of newspapers, broadcasting and show
businesses, sports, government, the military and history.
With a lifelong interest in the sea, inherited from his father who was a master
mariner on sailing ships, Mr. Defieux was best known in recent years for his
column on shipping news and local marine history. He began the column in 1964 –
40 years after he was named marine editor in an earlier stint with The Sun.
Mr. Defieux sang and danced in vaudeville and radio revues, coached Canada’s
first national football championship team; was a personal assistant to a
federal cabinet minister; was the first mayor of White Rock; and compiled a
massive history listing major events of the world to 1960.
Born in
His newspaper experience totalled more than 35 years, with more than 25 years
at The Sun in a variety of jobs that included columnist, city editor, assistant
news editor, assistant sports editor and various beats, including police
reporter at a time when they carried guns and assisted constables.
He wrote for the Edmonton Journal, the Edmonton Bulletin, San Francisco
Chronicle, the Columbian, Victoria Times, the Province and for two years was
owner and publisher of the weekly Richmond-Marpole Times.
Although under age in the First World War, Mr. Defieux joined the Royal Air
Force for the last two months of the war in 1918. The next year he joined the
U.S. Army, staying for two years, including service in
During the Second World War, he was an officer with the RCAF, working in public
relations and operations intelligence. He was discharged in 1945 as a flight
lieutenant.
Returning to
He continued to combine newspaper and radio work during the 1920s and 1930s in
While in
In 1923 he came to The Sun where he stayed for most of the next 17 years.
In 1924, he coached the first Canadian football championship team, the Ex-King
George men’s team from
In 1940 Mr. Defieux entered the RCAF and in 1945 returned briefly to The Sun as
head of The Sun’s Veteran Bureau, a service helping vets adjust to civilian
life through counselling and help in dealing with government departments.
Later in 1945, he joined the federal department of veterans affairs, a two-year
job that included service as a personal assistant to the then-minister Ian
McKenzie.
During later writing trips abroad, Mr. Defieux wrote reports on business and
finance for the then-prime minister Lester Pearson, and handled China and
Poland relief contributions for the federal government.
Returning from
He also ran the weekly Richmond-Marpole Times for two years before selling it
in 1951, and continued work on the massive volume Years of Man, begun in 1943
and completed in 1961.
The work began as a history of medicine but later branched out to include all
other major historical events with some 17,000 cross-referenced entries. It was
never published.
Mr. Defieux did get a royalty advance on the book and took a world tour writing
newspaper stories. In 1958 he had made a four-month study of the economic
system of the United Kingdom.
His writing career also included freelance work for varied publications, with
fiction and non-fiction writing appearing in Macleans magazine.
In 1957, a resident of White Rock who helped in the fight for incorporation,
Mr. Defieux was appointed the first mayor to get the civic administration
going, but he had to resign six months later for health reasons.
Mr. Defieux had spoken on international trade and affairs for many years
throughout B.C. and in the Northwest U.S. and had been lecturing of
transportation and port management at the B.C. Institute of Technology and the
University of B.C.
As requested in his will Mr. Defieux will be cremated and the ashes spread on
the ocean off the coast of B.C.
A memorial service will be conducted by Canon Stanley Smith at the Seafarers
Club, 1301 Robson, at 2 p.m.Thursday.
Mr. Defieux is survived by his wife Dorothy; two daughters, Doreen Burns, of
Richmond, and Mrs. Adele Marguerite Griffith, of 208-204 Alpha Ave., Burnaby;
four grandchildren; and one brother, O.T. Defieux, of Camas, Oregon.
Vancouver Sun, Oct. 10, 1972, pg. 14.