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Magnetic Island , off Townsville. Aeronautical Correspondent Abra photo. |
(Island. Queensland. Abra.)
The above unique illustrated publication, found at the Mundingburra monthly market in Townsville ,Queensland, deals with Canadian Indians and includes coverage of the Indian residential schools to which many of the young were removed in what was described as a bid to "kill the indian in the child."
Produced in l977 by the Muswachees Cultural College ,Hobbema, Alberta,in assocation with the University of Calgary Outreach, the publication marked a milestone in the history of the Plains Cree People.
It was produced in the Native language as well as English and includes mention of the schools , some related photographs and mention of the Klondike goldrush.
In 2008 , Canadian Prime Minister, Stephen Harper , in parliament, apologised for the treatment of children in the residential schools ,describing it as a sad chapter in the country's history .
He said that for more than a century , these schools had separated 150,000 Aboriginal children from their families and communities Two primary objectives of the residential schools system were to remove and isolate children from the influence of their homes, families, traditions and cultures, and to assimilate them into the dominant culture.
These objectives were based on the assumption Aboriginal cultures and spiritual beliefs were inferior and unequal. Indeed, some sought, as it was infamously said, "to kill the Indian in the child". Today, he continued, it was recognized that this policy of assimilation was wrong, had caused great harm, and had no place in the country.
One hundred and thirty-two federally-supported schools were located in every province and territory, except Newfoundland, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island.
Most schools were operated as "joint ventures" with Anglican, Catholic, Presbyterian or United Churches. The Government of Canada built an educational system in which very young children were often forcibly removed from their homes, often taken far from their communities. Many were inadequately fed, clothed and housed.
All were deprived of the care and nurturing of their parents, grandparents and communities. First Nations, Inuit and Métis languages and cultural practices were prohibited in these schools. Tragically, some of these children died while attending residential schools and others never returned home.
To speed the transition at Maskwacis, Cree children were taken from their parents and sent to Ermineskin Indian Residential School, run by the Catholic Church. Traditional forms of governance were replaced by an elected band council system on each reserve, with the federal government having the power to depose “unco-operative” elected leaders. Cultural practices such as the sun dance were outlawed and a pass system was established so that First Nations people needed permission from an Indian agent to leave the reserve.
In 1915 a delegation from Hobbema travelled to Ottawa to ask for changes to the Indian Act. They wanted “equal freedom with the white man” and protection for their tradition of collective land ownership. The government, they said, “should cease to treat them like children.”
They also brought a cheque for $1200 to donate to Canada’s First World War effort. But little changed. The Indian Act would not be extensively revised until 1951, to allow for the practice of traditional ceremonies, abolish the pass system and allow First Nations to organize and hire legal counsel.
First Nations in Canada did not get the right to vote until l960.
In moving towards healing, reconciliation and resolution of the sad legacy of schools , implementation of the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement began on September 19, 2007.
A cornerstone of the Settlement Agreement was the Indian Residential Schools Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
Hobbema was named after a Dutch painter .
At the bottom of the front cover of the publication is a hard to read name , Jessie Florence ?, October 1977.
(Canada. Apology. Schools.)
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King's photograph, the gallery states, served to identify the subject as Kunkardi and renamed White's sculpture.
It was donated to the gallery in l924 by the prominent Italian artist A. Dattilo-Rubbo ( l870-l955) ,who established an art school in Sydney in 1898 which ran for 43 years and influenced many up and coming artists.
Recently Little Darwin ran a post about a June l926 copy of the London art magazine ,Old Master Drawings, for students and collectors , found in Townsville , which had once been in the A. Dattilo- Rubbo art school in Sydney . The following stamped name of the school appeared on many of its pages, presumably to prevent students from cutting or ripping them out.
The son of a journeyman shipwright ,James White is variously described as having been born in Liverpool, England, and Edinburgh ,Scotland. Apprenticed to a plasterer , it appears he studied plaster modelling in South Kensington , London , and made anatomical models for London hospitals.
While he was an assistant to the Scottish sculptor John Rhind, he executed a bas-relief of the surgeon John Hunter for Edinburgh University .
About 1884 White came to Sydney and with the support of Sir Joseph Banks, the so called father of the Australia federation , became the busiest sculptor in the nation .
He did works cast in plaster or bronze and carved in marble. Involved in the monument to Governor Arthur Phillip in Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens , he also produced the statuette of a bushranger, large statues of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert .
In 1902 his group -In Defence of the Flag- resulted in him becoming the first sculptor to be awarded the Wynne Prize. The enlarged cast-bronze version was sent to Perth as a war memorial the next year.
His numerous commissions included one from Adelaide for a carved marble statue in l904 of the Scottish explorer John McDouall Stuart who made the first crossing of Australia from the south through the Centre to the north and return .
White produced a repousse copper figure-Commerce-for the Royal Exchange Building , Sydney . A founding member of the National Guild of Applied Arts and Crafts, he had moved to Melbourne by 1906.
(Sculptor. Aboriginal.Italian.)
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Hotel lobby. |
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National Changing House , part of the banking system, on The Bund. |
Pigs , dogs, sharks,snakes , hangings , China and natives were some of the many subjects covered in Australia's first newspaper ,the Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser , which was launched in 1803 and ran until 1842.
One terrible story, run in full in the above entertaining 2003 book , recently acquired by Little Darwin , told how a newborne baby was eaten to death by a pig in the penal colony.
And the television show Who Do You Think You Are recently revealed that an ancestor of Australian comedian and presenter of the popular ABC Hard Quiz,Tom Gleeson, who was transported for stealing a watch got a run in the colonial press for shooting dead two bushrangers .
The editor of the Sydney Gazette was George Howe who had worked on newspapers including the London Times . Sentenced to death for shoplifting , his sentence was commuted to transportation to NSW .
Governor King made Howe the government printer and editor of the Sydney Gazette, the first edition printed in a Government House room .The paper consisted of two or four pages.
LIttle Darwin recently ran a post about a bound volume containing the first eight issues-May to December 1821- of Australia’s first periodical, The Australian Magazine, being offered for $45,000 by Douglas Stewart Fine Books, Melbourne.
It was edited by Reverend Ralph Mansfield and printed by Robert Howe ,George Howe's son. It went out of circulation in September 22, 1822 after 14 issues.
The first issue of the Australian Magazine was published on May 1,1821,10 days before George Howe's death. Having already succeeded his father as Government Printer, Robert also became editor, printer and publisher of the Gazette,which he had formerly helped his father to publish.
George Howe (1759-l821) , also printed the first book in Australia in l802 , the New South Wales General Standing Order.
( Australia. Publishing . History.)
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Author, artist, publisher Glenville Pike at property near Mareeba. |
The photographic collection of the late Glenville Pike in the Cairns Historical Society runs to some 582 images, covering the early days of North Australia. This blogger recently examined each and every one of the photographs.
By Peter Simon
Subjects covered in the valuable collection include early aviation, shipping , mining towns , Thursday Island , Cooktown , Palm Island , Mount Mulligan , tobacco farming , Aboriginal studies such as the "King of Cairns" and the "Queen of Port Douglas ."
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Japanese flag flying in Darwin procession for local men going off to fight in the first world war, a rare Pike photograph. |
In 1861 Frederick Walker led a team from Rockhampton to the Gulf in a vain search for the missing explorers. William Landsborough,see above, led a joint Victorian and Queensland government search party which set out from Brisbane on August 1861 aboard the SS Firefly and headed for the Gulf, the vessel wrecked on Cape York . Two years earlier, Landsborough had gone searching for missing German naturalist and explorer ,Ludwig Leichhardt .
A person who took a great interest in and wrote about the disappearance of Leichhardt was the late Glenville Pike.
An early article about Pike , who started the North Australian Monthly magazine and encouraged many people to write their memoirs ,some of which he helped get published , will be rerun soon in Little Darwin .
( Explorers. Missing. Tree.)