In Tribute to Jim McWilliam

September 1, 2024

The Crawford Fund community was deeply saddened by the passing on 17 August of Dr Jim McWilliam AO, the first Director of the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research, a key figure in the Crawford Fund and an agricultural scientist of rare quality.

Dr Bob Clements AO followed in Jim’s footsteps as CEO of ACIAR, and when he took on the role as CEO of the Crawford Fund he found Jim was already there. With Jim as part of his life for almost 60 years, Bob considered Jim as a role model and friend, and has penned the following:

James Russell McWilliam AO

18-09-1927 – 17-08-2024

Jim McWilliam was the first Director (1982-89) of ACIAR (the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research). He established its enduring culture, internal processes and global reputation. He also served on the Boards of Management of six international agricultural research centres:

  • International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA; 1976-81)
  • International Wheat and Maize Research Center (CIMMYT; 1983-87)
  • International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI; 1984-89)
  • International Center for Research on Agro-Forestry (ICRAF; 1989-94)
  • International Rice Research Institute (IRRI; 1990-95); and
  • Asian Vegetable Research and Development Center (AVRDC, now the World Vegetable Center; 1990-95).

Jim was also a key figure in the Crawford Fund. He made numerous contributions to itstraining programs and served on its Queensland Committee from its inception in 1996 until 2006. This included acting briefly as its Coordinator in 2005/06 when the then Coordinator, John Vercoe, died in office.

With Jim’s death, Australia has lost a transformative leader and a foundational global figure in agricultural research for development. He was, for a generation, a charismatic Australian champion of international agricultural research (IAR). However, in the rush to acknowledge his contribution to IAR, we should remember that first and foremost, he was a scientist of rare quality.

Jim was born in Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia. His parents raised sheep and cattle on a property near Leyburn on Queensland’s Southern Downs. At an early age he was sent as a boarder to Toowoomba Grammar Preparatory School (“Toowoomba Prep”) and later attended Toowoomba Grammar School. He obtained a Queensland Forestry Cadetship to study forestry at the University of Queensland and the Australian Forestry School in Canberra, and graduated with a BSc (For) (Hons) degree and a Diploma in Forestry. In 1951 he became the first geneticist in the Queensland Forest Service. Based at Beerwah, SE Queensland he joined a small tree breeding group working on Pinus and Auricaria species, notably slash pine (P. elliotti).

In early 1953 Jim was awarded a Rotary International Fellowship and a Fulbright Fellowship to study at Duke University, North Carolina, USA where he graduated with a Master’s degree in Forestry (MF) in 1954. He was then still with the Queensland Forestry Service, and at their request he made a trip through British Honduras and the Republic of Honduras to examine the natural stands of Caribbean pine (P. caribaea). Gary Bacon (former CEO of Queensland Forestry) recently noted that Jim’s favourable report resulted in increased plantings of this tropical pine in Queensland, and after crossing with slash pine the F1 hybrid became a favoured plantation species; only slash pine is planted on a larger area in Queensland.

In 1955 Jim obtained a Research Fellowship to attend Yale University where he completed a PhD in 1958. In his years as a production forestry researcher Jim was author or co-author of about a dozen scientific publications on aspects of tree breeding including seed production, pollen physiology and dispersal, and barriers to hybridisation among Pinusspecies. By the time he returned to Australia in 1958 he was already an established scientist.

In 1958 Jim obtained a research scientist position in CSIRO’s Division of Plant Industry in Canberra, and for the next 13 years he worked on the genetics, physiology and breeding of the temperate/Mediterranean grass phalaris (Phalaris aquatica). CSIRO had commenced a breeding program in the late 1950s which it was to maintain for about 50 years. The program quickly grew to half a dozen scientists including four plant breeders and attracted other researchers from within CSIRO and around the world. Jim thrived in this environment of creative energy, contributing about 30 scientific publications and several cultivars. His research was innovative, effective and always relevant to the task. Time was not wasted; when he got an idea, he moved quickly to implement it. He had an ability to design and bring together a number of complementary experiments to address a problem. When his own wide-ranging research skills needed boosting, his charismatic personality enabled him to attract collaborators. People wanted to work with him.

In 1971 Jim became Professor of Agronomy at the University of New England (UNE), Armidale NSW. He remained there for 11 years. He transferred his personal phalaris research to Armidale, and in 1982 his final cultivar Uneta was released. However, the new position enabled him to extend his research to a wide range of crops and farming systems. He introduced the discipline of crop modelling and systems research. He supervised in full or in part 16 postgraduate students. His research with them reflected to a considerable extent their personal interests and the requirements of research funding bodies, but sunflowers (Helianthus annuus) became a common focus and, mostly with students, he published about a dozen papers on aspects of sunflower physiology, growth and yield.

During his years at UNE, Jim became involved in various consultancy roles. Alec Lazenby, who was Vice-Chancellor of UNE at the time, recalls that Jim caught the attention of Sir John Crawford, who approached Jim to undertake a review of agricultural research in South America. When Jim protested that he had already used up his entitlements for leave of absence, Sir John – ever aware of protocol – replied that he had already obtained the Vice-Chancellor’s blessing. Years later, Jim told Alec that he believed Sir John was “testing him out”.

In 1982, when ACIAR was being established Sir John personally oversaw the recruitment of Jim as its first Director. Sir John chaired ACIAR’s first Board of Management. He kept clear of management decisions but urged Jim to move quickly; to get top-quality, well-known Australian scientists involved in the research, establish a favourable image and get some early “runs on the board” in terms of research outcomes. Jim had a large network within the Australian research community, particularly within CSIRO, and he found it easy to attract top-quality researchers to work with ACIAR. He set up the partnership model through which researchers in Australia and developing countries designed the research together and shared the benefits. In a far-sighted move he established an impact assessment capability within ACIAR that tracked the outcomes of the Centre’s research projects. Many of the operational arrangements established by Jim continue to this day, and many of the fields of particular Australian research strength he identified remain in demand. Arthur Blewitt, who was ACIAR’s Centre Secretary for most of Jim’s term as Director and travelled extensively with him remembers his commanding presence. When Jim spoke, people listened.

Jim retired from ACIAR in 1989 and became a consultant in research management in CSIRO. For a year or two he continued to provide input to CGIAR Centre reviews and internal CGIAR processes. From 1991-94 he was Chairman of the Grape and Wine Research and Development Corporation. His membership of the Boards of ICRAF, IRRI and AVRDC continued until the mid-1990s. He established a personal consulting company. His decade of contributions to the Crawford Fund then commenced, particularly through his membership of the Queensland Committee. At the request of ACIAR, in 1997 with two colleagues he reviewed the Crawford Fund’s Master Classes in Biotechnology (11 such Classes, 1992-97, 176 participants) and concluded that the Classes had been successful in helping mid-career professionals in developing countries gain access to modern approaches in biotechnology. The challenge, he wrote, was to “expand the program … to meet the demand”.

Professor Bruce Holloway, who organised the Crawford Fund’s Master Class program from 1993-2004, recalls that Jim made a lasting contribution by negotiating with ACIAR to enlist the support of their Country Managers in publicising the Master Classes and choosing attendees. In 2001 Bruce persuaded Jim to help develop and manage a series of Master Classes on research management. These Master Classes were so successful that in 2005 the key elements were published in a book (Research Management in Agriculture: A Manual for the 21st Century). Jim was a co-author. Years later (2016), a review of the Crawford Fund’s training programs recommended that Master Classes on Research Leadership and Management should be reinstated, and they are now a regular feature of the Fund’s training activities.

Jim received numerous awards. He was a Fellow of the Australian Institute of Agricultural Science (FAIAS) and of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering (FTSE). In 1989 he was made an Officer in the Order of Australia (AO). In 2003 he received the CM Donald Medal – the most prestigious Australian award in agronomy.

– Bob Clements, September 2024

 

The following is the tribute made to Dr McWilliam by Prof Gabrielle Persley AM at his funeral on 10 September.

Tribute to Professor Jim McWilliam AO

It is an honour to be here today to pay my respects to Jim McWilliam.  Firstly, I would like to express my deepest sympathy to Lynn, and to Kathy, Andrew and Joss and their families, and to the extended McWilliam family, for your loss.

Jim was my boss in Canberra for a decade in the 80’s. Then, after Jim completed his time in Canberra, we remained friends for another three decades. Many times, I drove up from Brisbane to have lunch with Jim and Lynn at their home on Alexandra Headland, and we spent many enjoyable hours in spirited discussion.

I was part of Jim’s original team who set up the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) as an organization that supported Australian scientists (such as Dick Drew who is here today), to establish partnerships with scientists in the developing world, to solve problems in food and agriculture, and that made a difference to many people’s lives.

Jim was the perfect person to be the founding Director of ACIAR.  He was both a scientist and a leader. Much has been made of Jim’s transition from an academic at UNE in Armidale to a bureaucrat in Canberra.  He made that transition successfully.  On reflection, one of the reasons for that success was that Jim soon learned the value of the 11th commandment, which says “Forgiveness is easier to obtain than permission”.  We all spent quite a bit of time obtaining forgiveness. But we got the job done.

Another element I recall from those ACIAR days, is how much fun and laughter we had. We knew we had a serious purpose, we all worked hard, but we had a great time doing it as well. This was part of Jim’s genius as a leader. He put a team together who were dedicated to the mission, worked long hours to deliver on it, and who really enjoyed what they were doing, worked well together, and who formed enduring friendships.

And the testament to Jim’s success is that today, 40 plus years later, ACIAR is still going strong in Canberra, under new leadership, and is a flourishing organization, recognised as an important part of Australia’s overseas aid program. 

It is my honour to be here today to pay tribute to Jim, as a scientist – as a father – and as a person.

Thank you, Jim.