The Life and Legacy of Max and Freda Kanowski: 70 Years, Still In Love

In Brisbane’s western suburbs, where community ties run deep and stories are often measured in generations, a couple have quietly marked an extraordinary milestone built on love, faith and shared life. On a warm December afternoon, family and friends gathered beneath the gentle hum of conversation and laughter to celebrate something increasingly rare: a marriage that has lasted 70 years. At the centre of it all sat Max and Freda Kanowski, side by side, exactly as they had been since the summer of 1955.



For Max and Freda, now residents of Upper Brookfield after many years in Indooroopilly, the celebration was more about people than milestones. Letters of congratulations arrived from the King and Queen of the UK, the Prime Minister and the Governor-General of Australia, and the state Premier — formal acknowledgements of a life lived quietly but well.

Yet it was the presence of children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and lifelong friends that mattered most.

Photo Credit: Supplied

Their platinum wedding anniversary was marked with a lunch at St Peter’s Lutheran College’s P&F Centre, where guests travelled from near and far — including as far as Mount Gambier — to honour a couple whose lives have been deeply woven into the fabric of the western suburbs. Traditional German sausages were served, stories flowed freely, and the room was filled with the easy warmth that comes only from decades of shared history.

Parallel Childhoods, One Shared Path

Their story began long before they met, shaped by parallel childhoods in rural Queensland. Both grew up riding horses to small country schools, their early years marked by the constraints of wartime Australia, when distance and circumstance limited travel and connection. They did not know of each other then, but their lives were already following remarkably similar paths.

It was at St Peter’s Lutheran College, where both boarded, that those paths finally crossed. In a small, close-knit school community, friendship came first. Romance followed slowly, deepening further during their years studying at the University of Queensland in the early 1950s. At times separated, they wrote letters—thoughtful, patient exchanges that reflected a relationship built on mutual respect and shared values.

As Max later joked to family and friends, it eventually became clear to everyone around them that they were, in his words, “a full item.”

A Wedding Close to Family

They were married on 21 December 1955 at Phillip Street Lutheran Church in Toowoomba, chosen for its closeness to extended family on the Darling Downs. It was a hopeful post-war moment, full of promise and practical ambition. Early married life was modest and industrious: Max dug the foundations for their first home himself, sourcing timber through friends, while Freda balanced work and the demands of building a future from the ground up. Their honeymoon was brief — a few days camping near Coffs Harbour — before everyday life resumed.

That everyday life soon became full and lively. Four sons — David, Mark, Anthony and Peter — were raised in Indooroopilly in a household shaped by education, music and faith. Max pursued his academic career, eventually becoming a Professor of Classical Antiquities, while Freda worked as a librarian. Together, they fostered curiosity, discipline and a deep appreciation for learning.

Those values have echoed through generations. Their descendants have gone on to achieve excellence across a range of fields, particularly in health and public service. One grandson currently serves as Australia’s Consul-General in Lae, Papua New Guinea — a point of pride mentioned not for prestige, but as evidence of opportunities nurtured through education and encouragement.

Music, too, has remained central to their lives, alongside long-standing support for St Peter’s Lutheran College and the Indooroopilly Lutheran congregation. These communities were not simply places they attended, but places they helped sustain.

Education, Music and Faith as Cornerstones

Much of this history was recounted during Max’s anniversary speech, delivered with trademark wit, warmth and intellectual flourish. Drawing on his classical background, he likened Freda’s steadfast love to that of Penelope for Odysseus — enduring, faithful and strong across time. He spoke of ancestors who migrated from Germany in the nineteenth century, of chance encounters and near-misses that shaped family lines, and of how lives quietly intertwine across generations.

Yet the heart of his speech belonged to Freda. After 70 years, Max told the room, he would happily do it all again.

Asked afterwards about the secret to a long and happy marriage, the couple offered no grand theory. Love, patience, understanding and trust, they said — practised daily, over a lifetime.

As the afternoon drew to a close, conversations lingered and music drifted through the room. Max and Freda remained seated together, sharing smiles and memories, surrounded by the living legacy of their union. 



The wedding invitation
Photo Credit: Supplied

Published 7-Jan-2025

Kenmore West Kindy Held Art Show for World Sepsis Day and Mia Wilkinson

Kenmore West Kindy held an art show to raise awareness for World Sepsis Day, which was observed on 13 September. It was also an opportunity to gather funds for Mia Wilkinson, a former student, who has ongoing medical needs after losing her limbs due to the illness.



An art gallery was set up a the kindy’s front deck where families nominated a price for the work of their kids. The school also conducted a paint ‘n sip class for the adults. All profits of the sales will go to the Mia Wilkinson Trust and the not-for-profit C&K community kindergarten. 

Photo Credit: Supplied
Sepsis Mia Wilkinson
Photo Credit: Supplied
Sepsis Mia Wilkinson
Photo Credit: Supplied

Mia, Sepsis Survivor

Mia, who now attends an Indooroopilly primary school, lost her arms and legs to sepsis in 2017. Since her challenging journey of recovery, she and her family have been raising awareness about this critical illness.

As a fearless sepsis survivor, Mia hasn’t let her experience stop her from enjoying life to the fullest despite becoming a quadruple amputee. Nearly five years after her critical hospitalisation, Mia is growing up as a healthy and active child who enjoys sports activities and has started learning how to play the trombone. 

Largest Sepsis Study in Aus

Between 2019 and 2020, over 2,000 individuals in Queensland have been maimed or died due to sepsis, a life-threatening infection. This is one of the most common reasons for emergency visits, especially among children, and the Queensland Children’s Hospital has been conducting the country’s largest paediatric sepsis study to find better ways to help the victims. 

The research, led by Associate Professor Luregn Schlapbach, hopes to find a faster way to diagnose the condition to deliver the best treatments and prevent the body’s organs from shutting down as the infection can spread in a matter of hours. 

Mr Schlapbach is looking into the genetics of the body that activates the development of sepsis. A gene expression will help the experts understand the infection better, which could aid in the development of better blood tests.



Unknown to most people, sepsis might start off as typical flu or gastro issue, as in Mia’s case, but it could quickly descend into a deadly condition. If caught early, sepsis is a completely treatable condition thus the results of the sepsis study at the Queensland Children’s Hospital will be very important to the world.

New Schools Planned Between Kenmore and Indooroopilly, Other SEQ Sites

A special school and three new primary schools are set to be built and completed in 2022-2023 in Queensland’s southeast region, including one that will stand between Kenmore and Indooroopilly in the western suburbs.

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced the plans in the Parliament Tuesday, adding that the projects will have an allocated budget of $245 million. 

Ms Palaszczuk has identified the location of the special school in Coomera. The new site should ease off the overwhelming number of children in existing special needs schools in Logan (Beenleigh Special School) and Southport (Southport Special School). 



The new primary schools, on the other hand, have been planned for Greenbank in North Maclean near Logan, the south of Caloundra, and a yet to be determined suburb in Brisbane.

Photo Credit: Grace Grace MP/Facebook
Photo Credit: Grace Grace MP/Facebook

“A new primary school will also be built at a location to be identified in Brisbane’s inner west,” the Premier said. This school, which will have a $65 million budget, is expected to reduce overcrowding at schools in Indooroopilly, Toowong, Kenmore and St. Lucia. 

Education Minister Grace Grace said that there will be an “extensive community consultation process” to determine which Brisbane inner west community will best benefit from having a new school. Preparing Queensland’s education infrastructure will also provide employment opportunities. 

“We are focused on getting people back to work as we unite and recover from the global COVID-19 pandemic, with these projects expected to support more than 870 local jobs,” Ms Grace said. “These projects are building on our record investment in building new schools and expanding existing schools in high growth areas.”



MP for Moggill Dr Christian Rowan welcomed the news with much excitement, having campaigned for a new school in Brisbane’s inner west for years. 

“Our schools have been so severely overcrowded that classrooms are full, pool and library time is limited, before and after-school care services have long waitlists and demountable classrooms are being erected on school ovals, encroaching on students’ play area,” he said. “I’m so excited they’ve listened to the community.”