Skip to main content
Start of main content

CDU Art Gallery

“Here to Help"

the over-looked and fascinating supporters of the Gurindji land rights battle, 1966-75
Presenter CDU Art Gallery
Date
Time
to
Contact person
Eileen Lim
T: 8946 6621 E: artgallery@cdu.edu.au
Location CDU Art Gallery, Building Orange 12, ground floor, Casuarina Campus
Open to CDU staff and students, Public

In the 1950s and early 60s, Gurindji leaders planned to walk off Wave Hill Station when support became available.After that support was articulated clearly to Vincent Lingiari by union organiser Nubuluna Dexter Daniels in 1966, they acted quickly. Yet the ten year occupation of Wattie Creek/Daguragu that followed required support of many types. High-profile individuals like Frank Hardy championed the Gurindji cause publicly while a string of live-in supporters were invited to Wattie Creek to assist the strikers with written communications, prospecting, mechanical work, shop-keeping and more. All were skilled and flawed individuals who had their own reasons for supporting the battle for land rights.

In this talk, Charlie Ward will dive deep to tell the little-known stories of two remarkable supporters of the Gurindji: Welfare Officer 'Wild Bill' Jeffrey and ABSCHOL-appointed live-in nurse, Jean Culley, the so-called 'Witch of Wattie Creek'.

Dr Charlie Ward is a historian who has worked in the Territory for twenty years. He lived in the Gurindji community of Kalkaringi in 2004-06, and has interviewed approximately 100 individuals about the history of the Gurindji region. His 2016 book A Handful of Sand: the Gurindji Struggle After the Walk-off is recognised as the definitive work on the Gurindji land rights struggle.

Image, left: Bill Jeffrey, 1968. Jeffrey Family Collection. Right: Jean Edgar, c. 1945. Zakaria Family Collection
Image, left: Bill Jeffrey, 1968. Jeffrey Family Collection. Right: Jean Edgar, c. 1945. Zakaria Family Collection.

Everyone is welcome to attend - no RSVP is required. 

Related Events

  • This is an image of a caught green sawfish
    Casuarina campus

    A talk by Dr Keller Kopf

    Join Dr Keller Kopf, Senior Lecturer in Quantitative Ecology at CDU, as he discusses the unnatural history of freshwater and marine ecosystem change with a focus on fish and fisheries. Learn more about the role of natural history collections, photographs and new technology, such as satellite tracking devices, in supporting fish conservation management

    Seminar/lecture/forum
    Read more about A talk by Dr Keller Kopf
  • Copies of archival materials exhibited at the Wilinggin Shed in July 2022 with portraits in front and prints of rock art copies in the back
    Casuarina campus

    German Ethnographic Expeditions to the Kimberley

    Join us for this People.Policy.Place seminar with visiting academic Associate Professor in Archeology, Martin Porr from the University of WA. He will discuss a collaborative case study of historical materials from German ethnographic expeditions in the Kimberly region in the 1930s and '50s, exploring critical research history anthropo­logical knowledge production significant to the participating Aboriginal partners and the archival institutions in Germany.

    Seminar/lecture/forum
    Read more about German Ethnographic Expeditions to the Kimberley
  • positive duty panel

    Positive Duty: Changing the culture and eliminating discrimination

    Join us for this special panel discussion about positive duty at Darwin Innovation Hub on Tuesday, 21 May. Come along for an insightful dialogue on the implementation of Positive Duty and how it can change organisational culture and identity. Hear from experts, including Australia’s Sex Discrimination Commissioner. 

    Art/exhibition/public program, Seminar/lecture/forum
    Read more about Positive Duty: Changing the culture and eliminating discrimination
Back to top