Item F1576 - The Crowned Kangaroo Press : the inspiration for a press.

Identity area

Reference code

F1576

Title

The Crowned Kangaroo Press : the inspiration for a press.

Date(s)

  • 1973 (Creation)

Level of description

Item

Extent and medium

1 folder.

Context area

Name of creator

(1930-)

Biographical history

Louise Campbell is the daughter of historian Charles Bateson, wife of writer and editor Ronald Campbell (who edited "The Australian Journal" for 25 years), and mother of writer Catherine Bateson (previously known as Helen Campbell). She was Assistant Editor of "The Australian Journal" (1950-1954), then Editor of "The National Gas Bulletin", and ran a literary agency using the pseudonym, Mary Bounty. Campbell represented several British firms in Australia. She went to England in 1955 and for the next five years edited three quarterlies with English County Magazines. She was the owner of Lloyds Bookshop in Brisbane from 1965 to 1985 and Elwood Village Bookshop from 1986 to 1988. She collaborated with Margaret Carnegie in bibliographical work from 1987 to 1990. Campbell collected books on every aspect of gambling and this collection became the foundation of the collection of the Australian Institute of Gambling Research.

Name of creator

Biographical history

Name of creator

(1899-1972)

Biographical history

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.

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Content and structure area

Scope and content

Includes letter to Louise (Campbell) from Ernestine Hill, with an account of the Crowned Kangaroo pub at Bendigo, wishing the Press success.
Also first printing of the colophon, trial proof copy, and a poem: A bead's song, by Peter Annand.

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Language of material

  • English

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Alternative identifier(s)

Alma MMS ID

991008113339703131

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Rules and/or conventions used

Status

Migrated

Level of detail

Dates of creation revision deletion

Migrated from LMS: April 2019, P.A.

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