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John Clemente


John Faust Clemente (1926–2011) was an Italian physician whose career was in Tasmania, Australia, and who, as an alderman, was one of the main figures behind the creation of the Salamanca Market in Hobart in 1972. In his spare time, he collected art and antiques with his wife Ruth and formed a leading collection of Tasmanian postal history.

John Faust Clemente was born in Bari, Italy, in 1926. He graduated in medicine and surgery from the universities of Bari and Padua in 1948. In 1949 he met the Australian, Ruth Greene, at Christchurch College, Oxford, and they married the same year in London. They moved to Brisbane at the end of 1949 where Clemente re-qualified in medicine at the University of Queensland.

After qualifying in Queensland he obtained a post at Launceston General Hospital in Tasmania in 1951 and was subsequently Tasmanian government medical officer in Scottsdale and Cygnet. He moved to Hobart and private practice in 1955 where he bought an Italianate Victorian house on upper Davey Street which he named Coningsby after the novel by Benjamin Disraeli. He had rooms in Macquarie Street. He retired in 1989.

Clemente was an alderman in Hobart from 1968 to 1976 and one of the prime forces behind the creation of the Salamanca Market in 1972. A commemorative plaque exists on the building where the Maldini Café Restaurant is located. Clemente was president of Hobart Juventus, the local association football team.

Clemente and his wife Ruth were keen collectors of antiques and art and made regular buying trips overseas, particularly to London, in the 1950s and 60s as well as buying locally. Ruth was particularly keen on antique tea caddies, fans, and writing boxes. They also acquired a great deal of silver. They brought their acquisitions back to their home and formed a large collection which was sold by Mossgreen Auctions in 2012 for over A$526,000.

Clemente was a stamp collector from childhood, collecting Australian and Italian stamps. In Tasmania as an adult, he travelled the island seeking out caches of forgotten items for his collection of Tasmanian postal history and made detailed studies of postmarks and printing flaws on Tasmanian stamps.


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