The Newcastle-Hunter Studies Symposium

Newcastlehunterstudiestitle

NEWCASTLE / HUNTER STUDIES SYMPOSIUM

Presented by the Humanities Research Institute, University of Newcastle
in partnership with Newcastle Art Gallery


The Newcastle Hunter Studies Symposium

Friday 3 May 2013
10.00am – 4.30pm
Newcastle Art Gallery
Free

About the Symposium
Scholarship on Newcastle and the Hunter Valley, New South Wales, has the potential to illuminate national and transnational themes in historical and contemporary research, as well as to deepen the city’s and the region’s understanding of itself.

This symposium brings together, for the first time, members of the present generation of humanities and social sciences researchers focusing on Newcastle and the Hunter. This event is part of a broader project to collect past and present scholarship on the city and the region. It showcases the breadth and depth of studies being undertaken; it introduces this work to the community; and it is an occasion to discuss how future studies of the city and the region might proceed.

Welcome


Papers

Mark Dunn – Aboriginal Guides in the Hunter Valley

Dr Lisa Ford and Dr David Roberts – Newcastle and the Transformation of Penal Practice in the Colony of New South Wales

Dr David Murray – Words for the Heat of Deeds: Creative non fiction and the writing of cultural history

Helen English – Music, Power and Public Space: a Case Study in Newcastle, NSW

Gaye Sheather – Local Sites and Sounds:  A History of live mainstream music in licensed venues Newcastle, NSW, during Australia’s Oz Rock Era (1970s and 80s)

Dr Keri Glastonbury – Rough and Tumblr: Blogging Newcastle

Panel Discussion -  The Place of Newcastle and the Hunter in History
Chair: Dr Julie McIntyre

Speakers:

Professor Erik Eklund, Monash University

Dr Nancy Cushing, University of Newcastle

Dr Julie McIntyre, University of Newcastle

Gionni Di Gravio, University of Newcastle

Images from the Day

TREASURES OF NEWCASTLE FROM THE MACQUARIE ERA
2 March – 5 May 2013
A State Library of NSW and Newcastle Art Gallery partnership exhibition
Sponsored by Noble Resources International Australia

Treasures of Newcastle from the Macquarie era (2 March – 5 May 2013) provides an exceptional opportunity for the Newcastle/Hunter Studies Symposium. The exhibition, featuring the Macquarie Collector’s Chest and works by colonial artists Joseph Lycett, Edward Close and Richard Browne, was drawn from the significant collections of Newcastle Art Gallery and the State Library of NSW, and is the most important collection of historic and artistic material related to this city ever to be assembled.

Awaba or Lake Macquarie in 1841

Heritage Map of Lake Macquarie or Awaba with geological locations

Heritage Map of Lake Macquarie or Awaba with geological locations (NSW Department of Trade and Investment)

This gem of a chart of Awaba or Lake Macquarie was located in the DIGS database this morning by our colleague Mr Russell Rigby.

It is an historical chart or map of Lake Macquarie with geological locations marked including Aboriginal place names. The database says that the outline was sketched by W. Procter from his examination in August 1841 and base printed by W. Baker Lithographer, King Street Sydney. Extensive notes were possibly made by the Reverend W. B. Clarke regarding rock outcrops and the location of fossils.

Of particular note is the fossil forest that is referred to by the Reverend Lancelot Threlkeld as Kurra-Kurran. For further information on this petrified forest please consult the following resource “Fossil Pine Forest, Lake Macquarie: Compiled by Michael Organ, with assistance from John Byrnes” (14 April 2009) Available online here: http://www.uow.edu.au/~morgan/forest.htm

On Michael Organ’s page is a link to a online resource by Mr John Byrnes which leads to a dead link. We have retrieved the original document from the Internet Archive, and can be accessed here:

“Kurrur Kurran ~ Seeking all aspects connected with A Fossil Forest at Fennell Bay (NW corner of Lake Macquarie)” by John Byrnes (4.7MB PDF File)

Heritage Map of Lake Macquarie or Awaba with geological locations

Heritage Map of Lake Macquarie or Awaba with geological locations (Courtesy of NSW Department of Trade and Investment)

The place names and annotations recorded on the chart include:

AWABA (an extra ‘a’ is included in ink) or LAKE MACQUARIE

THE OCEAN

“Broughton’s Point” (Now Bolton’s Point)

‘Fossil trees’ are marked in ink further along towards what is now Fennel’s Bay. On the inset map this is marked in ink as “Kurran Kurran” and the Toronto-Coal Point peninsula marked “Tirabeenba”

“Ebenezer Colliery” and “Wharf” at modern day Coal Point.

The possible site of Reverend Threlkeld’s Mission House is also illustrated with a drawing of a house at modern day Toronto.

In ink are the words “Tree Fossil Beds” on the southern coastline and the words “Tir abeenba” over the peninsula of what is now modern Coal Point and Carey Bay. Compare this name for the peninsula  with another recorded by Henry Dangar in 1828 as “Derahbamtbah” See: http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/2787133

“Erraring Bay”

“Wangee Wangee” (Wangi Wangi)

“Pulbah I[slan]d” and inside the island is printed “Burregorons I[slan]d” – is this a reference to Burigon, one time Chief of the Newcastle Tribe circa 1820?

“Point Woolstoncroft”

“Point Morrissett”

“Moon I[slan]d” is marked further down to the south of Catherine Hill Bay. Russell Rigby adds “there are several references in the 19th century to Moon Island as an area south of Catherine Hill Bay (hence Moonee Beach and Moonee Colliery) – now Flat Rocks?”

Further up coast is marked in ink “Wabung Head” at the southern end of Catherine Hill Bay

In pen adjacent to coastline is marked “Sand dunes Conglomerate Shales & Lignite Beds with trap dykes & faults”

Adjacent to present day Catherine Hill Bay is marked in illegible pen “Punibbo(?) Rozinba(?)”

“Coolocoolo” in ink near present day Caves Beach

Along present day Swansea is marked in ink “Fossil Tree Beds” & “Reefs”

Where Moon Island is today is marked in ink as “Nirritin I[slan]d” and below “Grits & Sand & Stones”

“Reid’s Mistake” (“Victoria Bay” in ink is marked)

“Shoal Point”

“Neck(?)” near modern day Black Ned’s Bay

“Keep Clear Point”

“Pelican Island”, in ink is marked close by “Mud Island”

“Canoe Point” and nearby in ink is marked “Kahiba” (close to “Kahibah” in Dangar’s 1828 Map see: http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/2787133 )

“Fishing Point”

“Red Head”

In pen is marked “Coal Series(?)”

“Moderately elevated” is marked in pen along the coastline

In pen along coastline towards Red Head is marked “Sandy Dunes and Beach of blown? sand & shells”

“Three Hammocks”

“Flat Point”

The pen annotation on the side of the map – “The serious gale of April 1842 completely altered the entrance into the Lake WBC[?]“

Pen annotation near scale bar “incorrect scale”

Pen annotation top right corner (near Redhead) “33 [degrees] S”

There are also very faint & indecipherable pencil annotations in margin of map – we will need to see original to adequately decipher those.

There is also a square pencil grid drawn on map – was this done for reproduction at different size/scale?

1841 Awaaba Map overlay in Google Earth

1841 Awaaba Map overlay in Google Earth

KUR-RUR-KUR-RÁN  (Threlkeld 1834) “Forest of Petrified Trees”

Kur-rur-kur-rán (Kurrurkurrán) – The name of a place, in which there is, almost, a forest of petrifactions of wood, of various sizes extremely well defined. Situated in a bay at the N. W. extremity of Lake Macquarie. The tradition of the Aborigines is, that formerly it was one large rock which fell from the heavens and killed a number of blacks, which were assembled where it descended, they being collected together in that spot by command of an immense Guana, which came down from heaven for that purpose. In consequence of his anger at their having killed lice by roasting them in the fire, those who had killed the vermin by cracking, were previously speared to death by him with a long reed from Heaven! At that remote period the moon was a man named Pón-to-bung (Póntobung) , hence the moon is called he to the present day; and the sun being formerly a woman, retains the feminine pronoun she:. When the Guana saw all the men were killed by the fall of the stone, he ascended up into heaven, where he is supposed now to remain.
- Threlkeld, L. E. (Lancelot Edward), 1788-1859. An Australian grammar : comprehending the principles and natural rules of the language, as spoken by the Aborigines in the vicinity of Hunter’s River, Lake Macquarie, &c. New South Wales. Sydney : Printed by Stephens and Stokes, 1834. (p. 85)

Kurra Kurrarn is Blackalls Bay at the north-western extremity of the Lake, and is known as a site of water-covered pertrified forest. Large numbers of petrified wood pieces have been removed from the shallow waters and used to form front fences at homes in Blackalls Park.

According to the Awabakal legend, as told by Threlkeld, a huge rock fell from the shy and killed a number of natives assembled there by the command of an immense iguana, who had descended from the heavens to call these natives together. This reptilian spirit (a rare mention of reptile life in this form) was angry because natives had killed lice by roasting them on a fire. (These were probably a type of sea lice that occasionally invade Lake Macquarie). The iguana had previously dealt with natives who had killed lice by cracking them. This the iguana did by spearing them to death with a long reed from heaven.
- Percy Haslam Papers A5410(i) leave 4

Gionni Di Gravio
University Archivist and Chair of the Coal River Working Party

Historic Return of Newcastle Treasures for Exhibition

Invitation to Celebrating the Early History of Newcastle Event

On Friday 26th October 2012 a public announcement was made by Dr Alex Byrne of the NSW State Library, relating to the exciting news that the artistic treasures of early Newcastle would make their historic return to the City for the first time in over 195 years.

The forthcoming “Treasures of Newcastle from the Macquarie Era Exhibition”, scheduled for 2 March to 5 May 2013, will see the return of the Macquarie Collector’s Chest, Wallis Album and Edward Charles Close Panorama, among many other artistic and historic treasures created in Newcastle almost two centuries ago.

The treasures are of immense significance to the people of Newcastle and the Hunter Region, and also of national and international significance in terms of the cultural evolution of the Australian people.

The Exhibition is being made possible through the collaboration of the Newcastle Region Art Gallery and The State Library of NSW with the generous support of Noble Resources. We are delighted with all the people that have made this happen. We applaud their efforts.

The video above was recorded by Gionni Di Gravio at the Event, which was held at the Fort Scratchley Historic Site Centre, and features the following speakers:

Mr Shane Frost – Managing Director – Awabakal Descendants Traditional Owners Aboriginal Corporation

Dr Alex Byrne – NSW State Librarian and Chief Executive

Mr Ron Ramsay – Director Newcastle Art Gallery

Cr Jeff McCloy – Lord Mayor of Newcastle

Click to examine higher resolution image of this view from The Wallis Album (reproduced for Event Invitation)

Illustration of a John Dory from the Wallis Album.

John Skinner Prout in Newcastle and the Hunter

Near Newcastle on the Hunter, New South Wales by John Skinner Prout (circa 1841)

The engraving above entitled “Near Newcastle on the Hunter, New South Wales” is from an original work by John Skinner Prout (1805-1876) and engraved by S. Bradshaw. It was reproduced facing page 126 in Volume 2 of Australia by Edwin Carton Booth, F R. C. I. Illustrated with Drawings by Skinner Prout, N. Chevalier, &c. &c. London: Virtue and Company Limited, (1873-1876).

It is an engraving from an original painting by held in an Album of drawings and watercolour sketches in the Mitchell Library State Library of New South Wales Call Number PXD 75. The Album is entitled [Sketches in New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania and Norfolk Island, ca. 1841-1847] by John Skinner Prout. Direct Link: http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=456951

Thanks to Ann Hardy who located and photographed this painting in the State Library of New South Wales.

Item 6. Near Newcastle on the Hunter River by John Skinner Prout.
Photographed by Ann Hardy. Courtesy of the State Library of New South Wales

Item 6. Near Newcastle on the Hunter River by John Skinner Prout. (Courtesy of the State Library of New South Wales)
From the Album is entitled [Sketches in New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania and Norfolk Island, ca. 1841-1847] Call Number PXD 75.
View Album information and selected scans here: http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=456951

At a recent meeting of the Government Domain committee, Ann Hardy noted that the hand coloured engraving of this same scene held in the Newcastle Art Gallery and photographed by Bruce Turnbull for the researchers at the University of Newcastle’s Coal River Working Party (see the image here http://www.flickr.com/photos/uon/4070494440/ ) could not be dated to 1874, as the windmill could be seen. The windmill was originally built in 1820, decommissioned by 1847 and replaced with the Obelisk in 1850 that stands on the site to this day.

Therefore the original scene must originate from before 1850. We have digitised the section from the original book including the text and the plates. They can be accessed on our Flickr site here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/uon/sets/72157630614192448/

Through our Coal River Facebook Page Professor Nancy Cushing added that:

John Skinner Prout came to New South Wales with his family in 1840 and left again in 1848. His “Near Newcastle on the Hunter, N.S.W.” was made during that time and later published in volume seven of Australia Illustrated by Edwin Booth (London, 1873 – 76). It would seem that the date of publication by Booth has been taken as the date of creation. See Garry Darby, “Skinner Prout in Australia, 1840 – 1848″, Art and Australia 25, 1 (Spring 1987). An interesting comparison is with Conrad Martens, “From Burwood Near Newcastle”, which is dated 1841.

Thanks to the Design Art and Australia entry on John Skinner Prout (http://www.daao.org.au/bio/john-skinner-prout/) we were able to narrow this period down to the years 1840-1844, which was the period he was resident in Sydney New South Wales.

 

We have also found reference to him among the letters of Ludwig Leichhardt. Writing from Newcastle Leichhardt recommended John Skinner Prout (as “Mr Proud” or “Mr. Proudt”) as an art teacher for John Murphy, a plasterer living in Castlereagh Street Sydney. His letter is dated 11 October 184(2). He writes another in December 1842 checking up on how the lessons are going. Leichhardt was based in Newcastle from September 1842 – c.April 1843, so it is possible that they may have met during September 1842 or earlier.

 

Comparing the image above with the pencil drawing by Conrad Martens held in the Mitchell Library and dated the 11th May 1841, we can see that the scenes are almost identical except for the Aboriginal people inserted into the work. Martens records the location as being “Shepherds Hill From Burwood near Newcastle”.

Item 87 From Burwood near Newcastle, 11th May 1841, Shepherds Hill
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album: http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

The next engraving in the book is that of Harpers Hill, compare it with that of Conrad Marten’s dated 7th May 1841:

“Harpers Hill, Hunter River” by John Skinner Prout

Item 46. Harpurs [i.e. Harpers] Hill, 7th May 1841
from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album: http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

“Port Stephens” by John Skinner Prout

 Item 69 Tahlee, Port Stephens 21st April 1841 from Sketches in Australia, 1835-1865 by Conrad Martens (1801-1878)
View Album: http://acms.sl.nsw.gov.au/item/itemDetailPaged.aspx?itemID=457268#

As we can see the images were drawn from the same locations. Prout adds details such as sheep, kangaroos, but the locations are essentially the same. So we can be confident that the Newcastle, Harpers Hill and Port Stephens scenes were those taken on the spot in the 1840s, and later engraved for publication in the 1870s. Whether both Prout and Martens were companions on these excursions is also open to further discussion.

Gionni Di Gravio
University of Newcastle (Australia)

National Nomination for Newcastle 2012

A map of the area showing the two Precincts and the Convict Lumber Yard for National Heritage Listing

National Nomination – Coal River & Government Domain 2012
By Ann Hardy and Gionni Di Gravio
 (1.1MB PDF File)

The following cover letter with copy of the National Nomination for Newcastle 2012 was sent to:

Sharon Grierson MP,  Federal Member for Newcastle

Tim Owen MP, State Member for Newcastle

Cr. John Tate, Lord Mayor of Newcastle

 

‘Coal River (Mulubinba) and Government Domain’ National nomination for the Commonwealth Heritage List

 

We are writing to inform you that the ‘Coal River (Mulubinba) and Government Domain’ National nomination for the Commonwealth Heritage List was submitted by the University of Newcastle’s Coal River Working Party in February 2012 to the Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts.

We believe that the ‘Coal River (Mulubinba) and Government Domain’ is deserving of official National recognition because it was the site of Australia’s first discoveries of coal (1791 and 1796), the first export (1799), and first return (1801).

It has therefore played an important and unique role in launching the Nation’s economy, which has forged the economic, political and social evolution of Australia. It is truly a ‘Birthplace’ site in terms of how human collaborations in these early years created a distinctive social and political process that helped establish a more democratic society in Australia. This evolution from the harsh days of convict labour to a more civil society and the beginnings of private enterprise led to improved living and working conditions in Australia.

The nomination contains two Precincts: the Coal River Precinct (encompassing Nobbys, Macquarie Pier and Fort Scratchley) and Newcastle Government Domain (encompassing the James Fletcher Hospital site, Obelisk and King Edward Park). Also included is the Convict Lumber Yard, which lies in close proximity to both Precincts. These sites are indicative of the European formation of the settlement and its governance as a shared heritage.

Coal River (Mulubinba) and Government Domain is of outstanding National heritage significance because it is a place of ‘living history’, where Aboriginal and Colonial lifestyle is mirrored in the landscape. These two cultures reflect the early Aboriginal and European association with the place and their use of the land and how these cultures came together to tell a unique story. In Aboriginal Dreaming Nobbys (Whibayganba) was place of an imprisoned kangaroo, as was Newcastle (Mulubinba) a place for the incarceration of convicts. Newcastle was also the site of the first thorough and methodical study an Aboriginal language in the country, conducted by the Reverend Lancelot Threlkeld with Biraban in 1824. Their work is still used to this day by linguists in the reconstruction of Aboriginal Languages across the Region.

Newcastle is the site of the earliest profitable coalmines in the Southern Hemisphere. According to the 1930 Royal Commission into the Coal Industry (p.50):

‘The discovery of good quality coal dates from the earliest period of white settlement in Australia… During early exploration of the coastal belt outcrops of coal were found near Newcastle in 1796 and at Coal Cliff, near Wollongong in the following year. The importance of the discovery was not overlooked at the time, although there was no knowledge then of the immense extent of these coal beds, which have been by far the most productive of all that have been discovered in Australia and have exercised a powerful influence upon the development of New South Wales.’

Coal Cliff proved unworkable, yet Newcastle (Coal River) proved to be the site of the first export of coal shipped to Bengal in 1799:

‘We have also some hopes that coal with which the country abounds will be of much Colonial advantage. A ship lately returned to Bengal loaded with coals, and it gave no small satisfaction to every person interested in the prosperity of the colony to see this first export of it; and I am hopeful from these advantages that New South Wales, however contemptible it may at present appear in the list of our colonies, may yet become an acquisition of value to the mother country.
- 1799, September 8.’ (Mr John Thomson to Captain Schanck, H.R.N.S.W., Vol. III, pp. 716 – 718)

Coal River was also the site of the first return (or profit) made in the fledgling colony of New South Wales, (2 pounds, 5 shillings) and was recorded by Governor King in a letter to Sir Joseph Banks in August 1801

‘The first cargo of coals brought from the Coal River in a Government vessel I exchanged with the master of the Cornwallis, who goes to Bengal from hence for iron, which he gave at 30 per cent. Profit for our coals at two pounds five shillings per chaldron. I believe this is the first return ever made from New South Wales.’ (Governor King to Sir Joseph Banks (Banks Papers.), H.R.N.S.W., Vol.IV, p. 359).

Newcastle on a cultural level was also the site of the first full length autobiography ever written in Australia, by James Hardy Vaux (1782 – c.1841) and his Vocabulary of the Flash Language the first dictionary ever compiled in Australia around the years 1811-1814, probably on the site of the Convict Lumber Yard. Newcastle’s artisans also created the Macquarie Chest, the most significant cultural artefact of the Colonial period.

We believe that Commonwealth Heritage recognition for Newcastle and the Hunter Region is long overdue. This is our third attempt at striving for National recognition for our city and region’s role in the making of this prosperous Nation.

Your support for this National nomination is crucial and greatly appreciated.

Yours sincerely,

Gionni Di Gravio
University Archivist
Chair – Coal River Working Party
Cultural Collections
Level 2 Auchmuty Library
University of Newcastle
Callaghan NSW 2308
Australia

National Trust Innovation and Invention in the Hunter Forum 2012

From Aboriginal ingenuity to cutting edge scientific research, the Hunter Region (Australia) has been and continues to be a leader in creativity and inventiveness.

This Forum was a celebration of the people and institutions which have helped and continue to help shape the region.

The Event was held in the Newcastle Town Hall on the 19th April 2012, and organised by the Hunter Regional Committee of the National Trust of Australia.
Speakers included:

- Dr Bernie Curran, Executive Officer, University of Newcastle Foundation, who facilitated the event

- Mr Bill Jordan, Fellow of the Institution of Engineers (Australia) on Newcastle’s engineering and industrial history of innovation and adaptation.

- Dr Betty Capper, former nurse, now historian, on the period of innovation and change at Royal Newcastle Hospital in the  McCaffrey era  of the 1950s and 60s

- Professor Emeritus John Hamilton, OBE, former Dean of the Faulty of Science and Health at University of Newcastle on recent innovation and future directions in medical science in the Hunter.

-  Dr. Philip Pollard architect and former planner at the University of Newcastle on innovative buildings and landscaping on the University campus

- Mr Peter Stevens – spoke on Scoping Useful Principles.

Government Farm c1810 Archaeological site visit

On the 29th August 2009 members of the University of Newcastle’s Coal River Working Party were invited to inspect the archaeological dig being undertaken on the site of the former Palais Royale (now KFC) site in Newcastle West.

This is the second visit to to the site to speak with archaeologist Matthew Kelly (AHMS) who was overseeing the investigation of the colonial history of the site. The previous day was spent with archaeologist Alan Williams inspecting the Aboriginal heritage finds.

Lycett painting of Newcastle circa 1817 showing former Palais site at far right. Courtesy of Newcastle Art Gallery (Photograph by Bruce Turnbull)

An early representation of the site can be found on this painting by Joseph Lycett, held in the Newcastle Gallery entitled “Newcastle, New South Wales, looking towards Prospect Hill.” circa 1816-1817. It appears as a small white dot at the right edge of the painting.
In the video topics discussed were:
1. the high research value of high resolution historic images being placed online by the University in the form of the Ralph Snowball images,
2. the discussion of ‘Trench 4′ the site of the Commandant’s Cottage circa 1810 on the site of the Government Farm,
3. McLellan Hellyer and Co. Ironmongers store destroyed by fire in 1890 see Image here
4. Aboriginal site, hearths and ancient dune system approximate dating (at the time of filming) to the Holocene 10,000 years and younger,
5. Dangar’s Meat Preserving Works 1848-c1854,
6. Demolition work undertaken on the former Palais Royale and subsequent damage to the site.

We are very interested in learning more of the colonial heritage of the site that involves the clearing of the land in the 1790s, the establishment of the Government Cottage and farm (c.1810), Henry Dangar’s Meat Preserving Works 1848-c1854, the Elite Skating Rink, McLellan Hellyer & Co., leading up to the Palais Royale.

Despite requests we are yet to see the second report of the archaeological dig encompassing the colonial history from this important site in Newcastle.

Gionni Di Gravio
Chair, CRWP

For more info:

Click here for the first report on Aboriginal Heritage of the site (11.4MB PDF)

Click here for a video presentation by Alan Williams (AHMS) 30th September 2011

Highlights from the 2011 Hunter Heritage Network Seminar

On the 30th September 2011 the NSW Minister for Heritage and the Environment, The Hon. Robyn Parker MP addressed the Hunter Heritage Network Seminar at the University of Newcastle (Australia).

The Minister was welcomed by Deputy Vice Chancellor Kevin McConkey and Mr Greg Anderson, Manager University Libraries.

The Minister for Heritage Robyn Parker addressed the Network about her vision for heritage. In particular, Minister Parker is concerned about the current protections for Aboriginal heritage and has initiated the current review process in seeking to address this.

The Network welcomed the Minster’s commitment to improving heritage legislation and will be making a submission to the review of Aboriginal protections and the Environmental Planning and Assessment reforms.

The Minister was presented with a framed historic poster of the Duckenfield farms area, where she lives. The plan is part of the University’s Cultural Collections treasures and can be seen in high resolution here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/uon/5907232177/

For more info: http://hunterheritagenetwork.org/

On the same day, Mr Alan Williams (AHMS) addressed the Hunter Heritage Network Seminar at the University of Newcastle (Australia), and spoke about his work on the archaeological dig at the former Palais Royale/now KFC site in Newcastle West (Australia).

For more information and copy of the final report on the Aboriginal heritage of the site: http://coalriver.wordpress.com/2011/05/20/aboriginal-archaeological-report-for-former-palais-site-released/

Aborigines of the Hunter Region Kit

Aborigines of the Hunter Region Kit


Aborigines of the Hunter Region [Kit]
was a resource kit created for teachers and compiled in the 1980s for the Department of Education.

It consisted of 7 booklets, 10 prints with questions, 45 slides (most in colour), notes to the audio visual materials and a sound cassette which included Perc Haslam speaking about the language of the local Aboriginal people.

The ultimate objective, therefore was to inculcate the children of the Hunter Region, and that encompasses many ethnic groups, with a respect for and an understanding of a race of Australian people.

The scholars responsible for the preparation of this work were:

Perc Haslam – Visiting Scholar (Aboriginal Studies) Newcastle University.
John Heath – Education Officer Aboriginal Grants. Member of the Awabakal Co-operative.
Bob Jakes – Raymond Terrace High School
Bryce James – Science Consultant, Hunter Region
Bill Needham – Science Teacher, Cessnock High School
Boris Sokoloff – Primary Teacher, Cardiff  North Primary School. Curriculum Perspective  Consultan t. (1983 – 1984 ) Hunter Region.
Helen Vaile – Social Studies Lecturer, Newcastle Colleae of Advanced Education
John West – Primary Teacher, CessnocK Primary School

Thanks to Melanie Patfield who digitised the Aborigines of the Hunter Region Kit for the University of Newcastle in November 2010.

Aborigines of the Hunter Region Booklet 1. Introduction ; Contents; Subject index ; Bibliography –Booklet 2. Australian prehistory, Aboriginal history — Booklet 3. Traditional Aboriginal society : economic and material culture –Booklet 4. Traditional Aboriginal society : social aspects — Booklet 5. Black and white contact –Booklet 6. Contemporary Aboriginal society — Booklet 7. Teaching strategies [7MB PDF]

Audio visual materials notes for teachers [664 KB PDF]

Prints. [Photographic study, traditional life] [25.3 MB PDF]

Slides. [Material culture ; Foods ; Ceremonial art sites, ceremonies and legends] [27.4 MB PDF]

Cassette, Side 1. Aboriginal language (33 min.) [10.3 MB MP3]

Cassette, Side 2. Contemporary Aboriginal Music [8.8 MB MP3]

Cassette, Side 2. Traditional Aboriginal Music [5.4 MB MP3]