As a pharmacist married to a vet, animal health seemed a natural fit for Mary Holt. So donating to causes which benefited animals became a decades-long practice. / (min cost $ 0 ) or signup to continue reading And as a 25-year resident of beautiful Mt Wilson, the environment also featured strongly in her life and her philanthropy.
Mrs Holt has received a medal in the Order of Australia (OAM) for her service to conservation and the environment. Her involvement with the Australian Conservation Foundation dates back to 1985, when she first became a benefactor. She was also a member of the foundation from that year until 2017.
Other groups to benefit from her generosity include the Australian Wildlife Conservancy and the Australian Museum Foundation. One she is particularly proud of is the Natural History Society of South Australia, better known as Wombats SA, whose volunteers help to preserve habitat for the hairy-nosed wombat. Mrs Holt is patron of the society as well as a benefactor and admits that the wombats are "very cute".
Mrs Holt said she was "a bit overwhelmed" when she heard of her OAM. "Lots of people do great things. Plenty of people have done more than I have.
I just think it's sad for the ones who aren't recognised." She and her husband, John, lived in Lugarno for many years, when it was a bushy suburb on the Georges River. "As a vet, of course he was always involved with animals and nature.
And I've just always loved animals." That love spread abroad after Dr Holt.
