Showing 4941 results

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McDowall, Ian Scott, 1922-1945.

  • AU QU
  • Person
  • 1922-1945

Ian Scott McDowall was born on 5 June 1922. He was a public servant, member of the Communist Party, who served in New Guinea during World War Two. He died in an aircraft accident in the New Guinea on 18 September 1945.

Lyle, Garry, 1918-1984

  • AU QU
  • Person
  • 1918-1984

Garnet Walters Lyle was born on 7 October 1918 in Lowood, Queensland. He worked as a teacher before enlisting in the second A.I.F in 1940. Upon discharge from the army he worked as an educational officer for the Workers' Educational Association in Sydney from 1946 to 1948. His first book of verse, 18 Poems was published in late 1940 and his work appears in anthologies through most of the 1940s. He died in 1984.

Tiffin, Mary Ann

  • AU QU
  • Person

Mary Ann Haig was the second daughter of Captain Andrew Haig. She married Charles Tiffin on 1 January 1857 in Hobart. She died on 31 October 1923.

Lyons, A. P. (Arthur Power), 1879-1965

  • AU QU
  • Person
  • 1879-1965

Arthur Power Lyons was born on 30 December 1879. Colonial administrator and amateur anthropologist Arthur Power Lyons was born in Bundaberg in 1879. He became Assistant Resident Magistrate in Papua in 1906, and the Resident Magistrate in the Western Division of Papua and Warden of Gold and Mineral Fields in 1909. From 1930 to 1943, Lyons was Director of Public Works for Papua, and a member of the Papuan Executive and Legislative Council. He was also Chairman of the Building and Petroleum Advisory Boards in Papua during this period. He wrote a number of anthropological reports about the people of Western Papua. He died on 30 December 1961.

Hill, Ernestine, 1899-1972

  • US DLC n 89648977
  • Person
  • 1899-1972

Ernestine Hill was born in 1899 in Rockhampton, Queensland. She was educated at All Hallows School and Stott & Hoare's Business College, Brisbane. After working briefly in the public service she joined the staff of Smith's Weekly, Sydney, in 1919, as secretary to its literary editor J F Archibald. Hill subsequently became sub-editor of the paper and consolidated her career as a journalist during the 1930s when she travelled extensively across Australia writing articles for Associated Newspapers and other publications such as Walkabout. Her articles were widely read and sometimes controversial: her reporting of a gold strike in the Northern Territory in 1931 contributed to financial ruin for some and was branded irresponsible; another, a front page story for the Sunday Sun, 19 June 1932, marked the beginning of a long and sometimes turbulent association with Daisy Bates. Hill's major published works arose out of her travels during this period - The Great Australian Loneliness (1937), Water into Gold (1937), Flying Doctor Calling (1947), The Territory (1951) and Kabbarli, a personal memoir of Daisy Bates, published posthumously in 1973. Her only published novel was the immensely successful My Love Must Wait (1941), based on the life of Matthew Flinders Between 1940 and 1942. Hill was editor of the women's pages of the A.B.C. Weekly and from 1941 to 1944 she was a commissioner of the A.B.C. After her resignation from this position she resumed her travels, working constantly on ideas for future novels, plays, travel and historical books and radio and film scripts. Apart from The Territory (1951) and a few articles none of these were ever published. Hill was awarded a Commonwealth Literary Fund fellowship in 1959, which provided her with a small pension but the last years of her life were dominated by financial hardship and ill-health. She returned to Brisbane in 1970 and died there on 21 August 1972.

Oodgeroo Noonuccal, 1920-1993

  • US DLC n86029295
  • Person
  • 1920-1993

Oodgeroo Noonuccal of the Noonuccal tribe of North Stradbroke Island near Brisbane, was a poet and Aboriginal activist. She was born Kathleen Jean Mary Ruska on 3 November 1920 at Bulimba (then in the Shire of Balmoral and from 1925 a suburb of Brisbane). Her parents were Edward (Ted) Ruska, and Lucy, nee McCullough. She was the second youngest of seven children. Her father was a Noonuccal descendant. Ruska's childhood home was One Mile on North Stradbroke Island on the outskirts of Dunwich. She completed her education at Dunwich State school in 1934, at the age of thirteen, and left home to work in Brisbane. In 1941 she enlisted in the Australian Women's Army Service and was discharged in 1944. She married Bruce Walker, a childhood friend, on 8 May 1943. The couple had one son, but later separated. Kath Walker later worked for Raphael and Phyllis Cilento. In 1953, she had a son with the Cilentos' son, Raphael junior.

Kath Walker was involved in numerous organisations. From 1961 to 1970 she was the Queensland State Secretary of the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders as well as an Executive of the Queensland Aboriginal Advancement League and Secretary of the Queensland State Council for the Advancement of Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders. She was a member of the Aboriginal Arts Board, the Aboriginal Housing Committee, the Australian-American Bicentennial Committee. She was also the Chairperson of the Cultural Committee of the Queensland Multicultural Task Force in 1978 and later the Managing Director of the Noonuccal-Nughie Education and Cultural Centre.

During her lifetime Kath Walker filled several lecturing and artistic positions. These included Adult Education Lecturer; Delegate to the World Council of Churches Consultation on Racism; Guest Lecturer at the University of South Pacific; Official Australian Envoy on a Diplomatic Passport to International Writers' Conference in Malaysia; Senior Advisor to the Australian Aboriginal Contingent to the First World Black Festival of Arts in Nigeria; Guest of the Government of Papua New Guinea for the PNG Festival of Arts; Delegate to the Second World Black Festival of Arts; Lecturer and assistant to Professor P. Edwards, Camp Jungai pre-tertiary Aboriginal students summer camp; Remedial Tutor at the Dunwich State Primary School. She toured the United States on a Fullbright Scholarship and Myers travel grant lecturing on Australian Indigenous culture.

In 1981 Kath Walker launched her new career as a painter and fabric designer. Her first exhibition was in July 1981. In an article by Bruce Dickson, Kath Walker says that "painting has always been her first love [as] it communicates more effectively than the written word".

In protest at the 1988 Australian Bicentenary celebrations, in 1987 Kath Walker changed her name to Oodgeroo of the Noonuccal tribe. In the same year she returned the MBE (awarded in 1970) to the Governor of Queensland.

She died of cancer on 16 September 1993.

Opala, Rosemary, 1923-2008

  • AU QU
  • Person
  • 1923-2008

Rosemary Opala (nee Fielding) was born on 24 January 1923 at Bundaberg, Queensland in 1923. In the 1940s she studied art at the George Street Technical College (later Queensland University of Technology). She trained as a nurse at Brisbane General Hospital during World War II, worked at the Peel Island Lazaret in the late 1940s. At this time she began drawing cartoons about nursing, having abandoned a commercial art course in order 'to do something useful’. Many were published in Trephine (Brisbane). In the late 1950s and early 1960s, she wrote popular magazine fiction and in later years wrote non-fiction, with an emphasis on Queensland and its history. After working at Peel Island in the 1960s, Rosemary and her husband Marian moved to Redland Bay and later to Coochiemudlo Island where they built a house near Main Beach. They never had children. The couple left the island in the late 1960s and Rosemary continued her career as a nurse. She received her diploma in Nursing administration in 1977 and worked at Prince Charles Hospital in Brisbane. Marian Opala died on 12 June 1989. Retiring in 1989 she remained at Victoria Point. She died on 26 January 2008.

Doe, Wally (Wally Lewis)

  • AU QU
  • Person
  • 1907-?

Walter Lewis Doe was born in Kilkenny, Ireland, on 15 November 1907. He migrated to Australia in 1924. In 1930 Wally, as he was known, went to the Mandated Territory of New Guinea to work for Bulolo Gold Dredging. He fought in World War Two with the Royal Australian Air Force (1941 to 1943) and the Australian Army (1943 to 1945) after which he returned to Wau in Papua New Guinea, eventually returning to Australia in 1953. At the time his autobiography, Wandering Wally, was published in 1997, Wally Doe was living in Dalmeny, N.S.W.

Smith, Yvonne, 1951-

  • US DLC n 2017039469
  • Person
  • 1951-

Independent researcher, English teacher, and former school principal. She earned her PhD from the University of Sydney.

de Groen, Frances

  • US DLC n 92106172
  • Person
  • 1949-

Born in 1949 in Sydney, Australia. Academic at the University of Western Sydney, and has published a number of books and articles on Australian writer.

Results 4891 to 4900 of 4941