Leslie Arthur Schubert

[6] Schubert completed his education at the Bruce Rock Primary School,[7] leaving at the early age of 14 to assist his father in running of their farm "Rocky View" five kilometres from the town.

In 1932 Schubert accidentally shot himself in the chest with a .22 calibre rifle while shooting birds on his father's farm at Bruce Rock.

Upon release from the camp Schubert married Dorothy Joan Sloan from a pioneering family in East Rockingham and took up crown land at various locations in the South West of Western Australia, developing significant wheat and sheep farms.

[1] He and his family moved to sheep station Pardoo in the Pilbara in March 1963[3] having sold his agricultural interests at Gnowangerup[6] to Sir Eric Smart.

[10] The first an Autobiography "Wiping Out the Tracks," in three Volumes followed by social commentary on indigenous Australia stockmen in 2 books: "Kimberley Dreams and Realities" and "A Century of Freddie Cox" His last work was a romantic novel "Leila," a fictionalised version of the life of a pastoralist's wife.