Police Reports of Gordon Stott single work   prose  
Issue Details: First known date: 2016... 2016 Police Reports of Gordon Stott
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Banjo Ryan's stories focus on the brutality perpetrated by the policeman Gordon Stott and black tracker Kurnmali. Ryan either witnessed these incidents or heard about them during his time working on Waterloo and Limbunya Stations. The incidents would have occurred in the 1940s when Mounted Constable Gordon Stott was posted to Timber Creek. Unsurprisingly, none of the Timber Creek Police Journals" record such incidents. The journals are difficult to read due to Stott's handwriting, which makes dating Banjo Ryan's individual stories problematic. But it is clear from entries over the years that he spent much time patrolling stations south-west of Timber Creek, including Waterloo, Kildurk, Limbunya and Victoria River Downs. Other sources corroborate these accounts of travel. In 1948 he is recorded as having left his dog Barry with Natalie Simmons, the governess at Victoria River Downs.15 He also travelled to Fitzroy Station just east of Timber Creek regularly. The registration of a rifle is given as the reason Stott visited Waterloo Station in Banjo's first story and indeed, a large part of these patrols involved enforcing the registration of firearms, vehicles and dogs, according to the Timber Creek Police Journals.' (Introduction)

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    y separately published work icon Yijarni : True Stories from Gurindji Country Erika Charola (editor), Felicity Meakins (editor), Canberra : Aboriginal Studies Press , 2016 9469367 2016 selected work prose Indigenous story

    'On 23 August 1966, approximately 200 Gurindji stockmen and their families walked off Wave Hill Station in the Northern Territory, protesting against poor working conditions and the taking of their land by pastoralists. Led by Vincent Lingiari, this land-mark action in 1966 precipitated the equal wages case in the pastoral industry and the establishment of the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976. While it is well known that the Walk Off was driven by the poor treatment of Aboriginal workers, what is less well known is the previous decades of massacres and killings, stolen children and other abuses by early colonists. Told in both English and Gurindji, these compelling and detailed oral accounts of the events that Gurindji elders either witnessed or heard from their parents and grandparents, will ignite the interest of audiences nationally and internationally and challenge revisionist historians who question the extent of frontier battles and the legitimacy of the Stolen Generations. ...' (Source: AIATSIS website)

    Canberra : Aboriginal Studies Press , 2016
    pg. 228-229
Last amended 26 Oct 2017 10:15:13
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