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David Unaipon

David Ngunaitponi (28 September 1872 – 7 February 1967), known as David Unaipon, was an Aboriginal Australian man[2] of the Ngarrindjeri people. He was a preacher, inventor and author. Unaipon's contribution to Australian society helped to break many Aboriginal Australian stereotypes, and he is featured on the Australian $50 note in commemoration of his work. He was the son of preacher and writer James Unaipon.

David Ngunaitponi
David Unaipon (Anglicisation)
Unaipon in the late 1920s
Born
David Ngunaitponi

(1872-09-28)28 September 1872
Died7 February 1967(1967-02-07) (aged 94)
NationalityAboriginal Australian (Portaulun)[1]
EducationRaukkan mission school
SpouseKatherine Carter (née Sumner)
Parents
David Unaipon in 1938

Biography

Born at the Point McLeay Mission on the banks of Lake Alexandrina in the Coorong region of South Australia, Unaipon was the fourth of nine children of James and Nymbulda Ngunaitponi, of the Portaulun branch of the Ngarrindjeri people. Unaipon began his education at the age of seven at the Point McLeay Mission School and soon became known for his intelligence, with the former secretary of the Aborigines' Friends' Association stating in 1887: "I only wish the majority of white boys were as bright, intelligent, well-instructed and well-mannered, as the little fellow I am now taking charge of."[2]

Unaipon left school at 13 to work as a servant for C.B. Young in Adelaide where Young actively encouraged Unaipon's interest in literature, philosophy, science and music. In 1890, he returned to Point McLeay where he apprenticed to a bootmaker and was appointed the mission organist.[3] In the late 1890s he travelled to Adelaide but found that his colour was a bar to employment in his trade and instead took a job as storeman for an Adelaide bootmaker before returning to work as book-keeper in the Point McLeay store.

On 4 January 1902 he married Katherine Carter (née Sumner), a Tangane woman.[4] He was later employed by the Aborigines' Friends' Association as a deputationer, in which role he travelled and preached widely in seeking support for the Point McLeay Mission.[5] Unaipon retired from preaching in 1959 but continued working on his inventions into the 1960s.[4]

Inventor

Unaipon spent five years trying to create a perpetual motion machine. In the course of his work he developed a number of devices.[6] He was still attempting to design such a device in his seventy-ninth year.[7]

Unaipon took out provisional patents for 19 inventions but was unable to afford to get any of his inventions fully patented, according to some sources. Muecke and Shoemaker say that between "1910 and 1944 he made ten ... applications for inventions as varied as an anti-gravitational device, a multi-radial wheel and a sheep-shearing handpiece".[8][9] Provisional patent 15,624 which he ratified in 1910, is for an "Improved mechanical motion device"[10] that converted rotary motion which "is applied, as for instance by an Eccentric",[11] into tangential reciprocating movement, an example application given being sheep shears. The invention, the basis of modern mechanical sheep shears, was introduced without Unaipon receiving any financial return and, apart from a 1910 newspaper report acknowledging him as the inventor, he received no contemporary credit.[6]

Other inventions included a centrifugal motor and a mechanical propulsion device. He was also known as the Australian Leonardo da Vinci for his mechanical ideas, which included pre World War I drawings for a helicopter design based on the principle of the boomerang and his research into the polarisation of light; he also spent much of his life attempting to achieve perpetual motion.[12]

Writer and lecturer

Unaipon was obsessed with correct English and in speaking tended to use classical English rather than that in common usage. His written language followed the style of John Milton and John Bunyan.[5]

Unaipon was the first Aboriginal author to be published after he was commissioned in the early 1920s by the University of Adelaide to assemble a book on Aboriginal legends. From 1924 onwards he also wrote numerous articles for the Sydney Daily Telegraph. He published three short booklets of Aboriginal stories in 1927, 1928 and 1929. In this time he wrote on topics covering everything from perpetual motion and helicopter flight to Aboriginal legends and campaigns for Aboriginal rights.[13]

Unaipon was inquisitively religious, believing in an equivalence of traditional Aboriginal and Christian spirituality. His employment with the Aborigines' Friends' Association collecting subscription money allowed him to travel widely. The travel brought him into contact with many intelligent people sympathetic with the cause of Aboriginal rights, and gave him the opportunity to lecture on Aboriginal culture and rights. He was much in demand as a public speaker.

Many times he was refused accommodation due to his race. He said "...in Christ Jesus colour and racial distinctions disappear..." and that this thought helped him at such times.[14]

Unaipon was the first Aboriginal writer to publish in English,[15] the author of numerous articles in newspapers and magazines, including the Sydney Daily Telegraph, retelling traditional stories and arguing for the rights of Aboriginal people.

Five of Unaipon's traditional stories were published in 1929 as Native Legends, under his own name and with his picture on the cover.[16]

Some of Unaipon's traditional Aboriginal stories were published in a 1930 book, Myths and Legends of the Australian Aboriginals, under the name of anthropologist William Ramsay Smith.[9] They have been republished in their original form, under the author's name, as Legendary Tales of the Australian Aborigines.[17]

Further work

He was a recognised authority on ballistics.[6]

Unaipon was also involved in political issues surrounding Aboriginal affairs and was a keen supporter of Aboriginal self-determination, including working as a researcher and witness for the Bleakley Enquiry into Aboriginal Welfare and lobbied the Australian Government to take over responsibility for Aboriginals from its constituent states. He proposed to the government of South Australia to replace the office of Chief Protector of Aborigines with a responsible board and was arrested for attempting to provide a separate territory for Aboriginals in central and northern Australia.

In 1936, he was reported to be the first Aboriginal to attend a levée, when he attended the South Australian centenary levée in Adelaide, an event that made international news.[18]

Unaipon's stance on Aboriginal issues put him into conflict with other Aboriginal leaders, including William Cooper of the Australian Aborigines' League, and Unaipon publicly criticised the League's "Day of Mourning" held on the 150th anniversary of the arrival of the First Fleet, arguing that the protest would only harm Australia's reputation abroad and would cement a negative public opinion of Aboriginals.[19]

Award

Unaipon was awarded a Coronation medal in 1953 at the age of 81 celebrating the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II and received the FAW Patricia Weickhardt Award for Aboriginal writers in 1985 after his death.

Personal life

Unaipon was a very influential man during his era, but was often refused accommodation because of his race.[13]

Later life

Unaipon returned to his birthplace in his old age, where he worked on inventions and attempted to reveal the secret of perpetual motion. A member of the Portaulun (Waruwaldi) people.[1]

Death

Unaipon died in the Tailem Bend Hospital on 7 February 1967 and was buried in the Raukkan (formerly Point McLeay) Mission Cemetery.[4] He was survived by a son.

Legacy and tributes

Fifty-dollar note

 
An Australian $50 note featuring David Unaipon's image.
The background features the Raukkan mission and Unaipon's mechanical shearer.

Allan "Chirpy" Campbell, reported to be a great-nephew of David Unaipon, failed in an attempt to negotiate a settlement with the Reserve Bank of Australia for using an image of Unaipon on the Australian $50 note without the permission of the family. Campbell's argument was that the woman (who had since died) originally consulted by the Reserve Bank was not related to Mr Unaipon.[26] Campbell was seeking A$30 million in compensation, plus ten years legal fees, plus a number of non-monetary items. The request for compensation was turned down. Campbell later claimed compensation from eBay, which used images of the Australian notes in an advertising campaign.

Works

  • Unaipon, David. Legendary Tales of the Australian Aborigines. Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-84905-9.
  • Volume 1 Manuscript of Legendary Tales of Australian Aborigines' by David Unaipon, 1924–1925, acquired with the Publishing Archive of Angus & Robertson in 1933 by the State Library of New South Wales
  • Volume 2 Typescript of Legendary Tales of Australian Aborigines' by David Unaipon, 1924–1925, acquired with the Publishing Archive of Angus & Robertson in 1933 by the State Library of New South Wales
  • 8. Unaipon, David, 1925–1927, Volume 85 Item 2: Angus & Robertson correspondence files from Lilian Irene Turner to Arthur Styles Vallack, 1896–1931, acquired with the Publishing Archive of Angus & Robertson in 1933 by the State Library of New South Wales
  • Aboriginal legends (Hungarrda) by David Unaipon, 1924–1925, published by Adelaide: S.n, State Library of New South Wales, 398.20994/41
  • Unaipon, David (2 August 1924). "ABORIGINALS: Their Traditions and Customs - Where Did They Come From?". The Daily Telegraph. No. 13, 932. New South Wales, Australia: National Library of Australia. p. 13. Retrieved 16 April 2021 – via Trove.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The only primary source for the name Nymbulda is George Taplin. The Yaraldi genealogy compiled by Ronald Berndt names her as Nymberindjeri with Nymbulda being her father's first wife, and there was also another of that name married to another relative. It cannot be ruled out that she was known by both names. Aboriginal tradition required that after a death, the deceased person's name could no longer be used and those with the same name would take a new name (Berndt, Berndt & Stanton 1993, pp. 515–516)

Citations

Sources

  • Attwood, Bain; Marcus, Andrew (2004). Thinking Black: William Cooper and the Australian Aborigines League. Aboriginal Studies Press. ISBN 978-0-855-75459-4.
  • "Australian Aboriginal at Leveé". The Times. London. 24 June 1936. p. 15.
  • Berndt, Ronald Murray; Berndt, Catherine Helen; Stanton, John E. (1993). A World that was: The Yaraldi of the Murray River and the Lakes, South Australia. University of British Columbia UBC Press. ISBN 978-0-774-80478-3.
  • . University of South Australia. Archived from the original on 7 March 2009.
  • "David Unaipon Lecture 2018: Aboriginalising Australian Centres of Power". Political Studies Association (PSA). 28 November 2018. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  • . History Trust of South Australia. Archived from the original on 13 March 2011.
  • "FAW Patricia Weickhardt Award to an Aboriginal Writer". AustLit. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  • Gale, Mary-Anne (1997). Dhanum Djorra'wuy Dhawu: A history of writing in Aboriginal languages. Aboriginal Research Institute, University of South Australia. ISBN 978-0-868-03182-8.
  • Grossman, Michèle (2013). Entangled Subjects: Indigenous/Australian Cross-Cultures of Talk, Text, and Modernity. Rodopi. ISBN 978-9-401-20913-7.
  • Harris, John (2004). . Evangelical History Association of Australia. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 – via webjournals.
  • Hosking, Susan (1995). "David Unaipon-His Story". In Butterss, Philip (ed.). Southwords: Essays on South Australian Writing. Wakefield Press. pp. 85–100. ISBN 978-1-862-54354-6.
  • "Improved mechanical motion device (application number 1909015624)". Australian Government – IP Australia. 1909.
  • Jenkin, Graham (1979). Conquest of the Ngarrindjeri. Rigby. ISBN 978-0-727-01112-1.
  • Jones, Philip (1990). "Unaipon, David (1872 - 1967)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Melbourne University Press. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 13 January 2009 – via National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  • "The man on our $50, David Unaipon, was born on this day". Australian Geographic. 28 September 2014. Retrieved 11 November 2014.
  • Miller, Benjamin (2005). "Confusing Epistemologies: Whiteness, Mimicry and Assimilation in David Unaipon's 'Confusion of Tongue'" (PDF). Altitude: An e-journal of emerging humanities work. 6: 1–13.
  • "On the shore of a strange land: David Unaipon". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 7 March 2009. Retrieved 26 February 2009.
  • "Rookie writer Amy Barker joins literati". The Australian. Retrieved 16 October 2009.[dead link]
  • Statham, Larine (27 November 2008). . news.com.au. AAP. Archived from the original on 27 May 2009. Retrieved 28 November 2008..
  • Tindale, Norman Barnett (1974). "Portaulun (SA)". Aboriginal Tribes of Australia: Their Terrain, Environmental Controls, Distribution, Limits, and Proper Names. Australian National University Press. ISBN 978-0-708-10741-6.
  • . ACT Planning and Land Authority. Archived from the original on 15 March 2011. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  • Unaipon, David; Muecke, Stephen; Shoemaker, Adam (2001). "Repatriating the Story". In Muecke, Stephen; Shoemaker, Adam (eds.). Legendary Tales of the Australian Aborigines. Melbourne University Press. ISBN 978-0-522-84905-9.
  • Whitehorn, Zane (March–May 2010). "The legacy of David Unaipon". Indigenous Newslines. p. 16.

External links

david, unaipon, david, ngunaitponi, september, 1872, february, 1967, known, aboriginal, australian, ngarrindjeri, people, preacher, inventor, author, unaipon, contribution, australian, society, helped, break, many, aboriginal, australian, stereotypes, featured. David Ngunaitponi 28 September 1872 7 February 1967 known as David Unaipon was an Aboriginal Australian man 2 of the Ngarrindjeri people He was a preacher inventor and author Unaipon s contribution to Australian society helped to break many Aboriginal Australian stereotypes and he is featured on the Australian 50 note in commemoration of his work He was the son of preacher and writer James Unaipon David NgunaitponiDavid Unaipon Anglicisation Unaipon in the late 1920sBornDavid Ngunaitponi 1872 09 28 28 September 1872Point McLeay Mission South Australia British EmpireDied7 February 1967 1967 02 07 aged 94 Tailem Bend South Australia AustraliaNationalityAboriginal Australian Portaulun 1 EducationRaukkan mission schoolSpouseKatherine Carter nee Sumner ParentsNymbulda a mother James Ngunaitponi father David Unaipon in 1938 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Inventor 1 2 Writer and lecturer 2 Further work 3 Award 4 Personal life 5 Later life 6 Death 7 Legacy and tributes 7 1 Fifty dollar note 8 Works 9 See also 10 Notes 10 1 Citations 11 Sources 12 External linksBiographyBorn at the Point McLeay Mission on the banks of Lake Alexandrina in the Coorong region of South Australia Unaipon was the fourth of nine children of James and Nymbulda Ngunaitponi of the Portaulun branch of the Ngarrindjeri people Unaipon began his education at the age of seven at the Point McLeay Mission School and soon became known for his intelligence with the former secretary of the Aborigines Friends Association stating in 1887 I only wish the majority of white boys were as bright intelligent well instructed and well mannered as the little fellow I am now taking charge of 2 Unaipon left school at 13 to work as a servant for C B Young in Adelaide where Young actively encouraged Unaipon s interest in literature philosophy science and music In 1890 he returned to Point McLeay where he apprenticed to a bootmaker and was appointed the mission organist 3 In the late 1890s he travelled to Adelaide but found that his colour was a bar to employment in his trade and instead took a job as storeman for an Adelaide bootmaker before returning to work as book keeper in the Point McLeay store On 4 January 1902 he married Katherine Carter nee Sumner a Tangane woman 4 He was later employed by the Aborigines Friends Association as a deputationer in which role he travelled and preached widely in seeking support for the Point McLeay Mission 5 Unaipon retired from preaching in 1959 but continued working on his inventions into the 1960s 4 Inventor Unaipon spent five years trying to create a perpetual motion machine In the course of his work he developed a number of devices 6 He was still attempting to design such a device in his seventy ninth year 7 Unaipon took out provisional patents for 19 inventions but was unable to afford to get any of his inventions fully patented according to some sources Muecke and Shoemaker say that between 1910 and 1944 he made ten applications for inventions as varied as an anti gravitational device a multi radial wheel and a sheep shearing handpiece 8 9 Provisional patent 15 624 which he ratified in 1910 is for an Improved mechanical motion device 10 that converted rotary motion which is applied as for instance by an Eccentric 11 into tangential reciprocating movement an example application given being sheep shears The invention the basis of modern mechanical sheep shears was introduced without Unaipon receiving any financial return and apart from a 1910 newspaper report acknowledging him as the inventor he received no contemporary credit 6 Other inventions included a centrifugal motor and a mechanical propulsion device He was also known as the Australian Leonardo da Vinci for his mechanical ideas which included pre World War I drawings for a helicopter design based on the principle of the boomerang and his research into the polarisation of light he also spent much of his life attempting to achieve perpetual motion 12 Writer and lecturer Unaipon was obsessed with correct English and in speaking tended to use classical English rather than that in common usage His written language followed the style of John Milton and John Bunyan 5 Unaipon was the first Aboriginal author to be published after he was commissioned in the early 1920s by the University of Adelaide to assemble a book on Aboriginal legends From 1924 onwards he also wrote numerous articles for the Sydney Daily Telegraph He published three short booklets of Aboriginal stories in 1927 1928 and 1929 In this time he wrote on topics covering everything from perpetual motion and helicopter flight to Aboriginal legends and campaigns for Aboriginal rights 13 Unaipon was inquisitively religious believing in an equivalence of traditional Aboriginal and Christian spirituality His employment with the Aborigines Friends Association collecting subscription money allowed him to travel widely The travel brought him into contact with many intelligent people sympathetic with the cause of Aboriginal rights and gave him the opportunity to lecture on Aboriginal culture and rights He was much in demand as a public speaker Many times he was refused accommodation due to his race He said in Christ Jesus colour and racial distinctions disappear and that this thought helped him at such times 14 Unaipon was the first Aboriginal writer to publish in English 15 the author of numerous articles in newspapers and magazines including the Sydney Daily Telegraph retelling traditional stories and arguing for the rights of Aboriginal people Five of Unaipon s traditional stories were published in 1929 as Native Legends under his own name and with his picture on the cover 16 Some of Unaipon s traditional Aboriginal stories were published in a 1930 book Myths and Legends of the Australian Aboriginals under the name of anthropologist William Ramsay Smith 9 They have been republished in their original form under the author s name as Legendary Tales of the Australian Aborigines 17 Further workHe was a recognised authority on ballistics 6 Unaipon was also involved in political issues surrounding Aboriginal affairs and was a keen supporter of Aboriginal self determination including working as a researcher and witness for the Bleakley Enquiry into Aboriginal Welfare and lobbied the Australian Government to take over responsibility for Aboriginals from its constituent states He proposed to the government of South Australia to replace the office of Chief Protector of Aborigines with a responsible board and was arrested for attempting to provide a separate territory for Aboriginals in central and northern Australia In 1936 he was reported to be the first Aboriginal to attend a levee when he attended the South Australian centenary levee in Adelaide an event that made international news 18 Unaipon s stance on Aboriginal issues put him into conflict with other Aboriginal leaders including William Cooper of the Australian Aborigines League and Unaipon publicly criticised the League s Day of Mourning held on the 150th anniversary of the arrival of the First Fleet arguing that the protest would only harm Australia s reputation abroad and would cement a negative public opinion of Aboriginals 19 AwardUnaipon was awarded a Coronation medal in 1953 at the age of 81 celebrating the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II and received the FAW Patricia Weickhardt Award for Aboriginal writers in 1985 after his death Personal lifeUnaipon was a very influential man during his era but was often refused accommodation because of his race 13 Later lifeUnaipon returned to his birthplace in his old age where he worked on inventions and attempted to reveal the secret of perpetual motion A member of the Portaulun Waruwaldi people 1 DeathUnaipon died in the Tailem Bend Hospital on 7 February 1967 and was buried in the Raukkan formerly Point McLeay Mission Cemetery 4 He was survived by a son Legacy and tributesAn interpretive dance based on Unaipon s life Unaipon was performed by the Bangarra Dance Theatre 20 The David Unaipon Literary Award established in 1988 is an annual award presented for the best of writing of the year by unpublished Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors 21 13 The David Unaipon College of Indigenous Education And Research at the University of South Australia is named after him 22 Unaipon Avenue in the Canberra suburb of Ngunnawal is named after him 23 In 1985 he was posthumously awarded the Fellowship of Australian Writers FAW Patricia Weickhardt Award to an Aboriginal Writer 24 The annual Unaipon lecture in Adelaide was established in 1988 23 4 25 Also in 1988 the national David Unaipon Award for Aboriginal Writers was established 4 Fifty dollar note An Australian 50 note featuring David Unaipon s image The background features the Raukkan mission and Unaipon s mechanical shearer Allan Chirpy Campbell reported to be a great nephew of David Unaipon failed in an attempt to negotiate a settlement with the Reserve Bank of Australia for using an image of Unaipon on the Australian 50 note without the permission of the family Campbell s argument was that the woman who had since died originally consulted by the Reserve Bank was not related to Mr Unaipon 26 Campbell was seeking A 30 million in compensation plus ten years legal fees plus a number of non monetary items The request for compensation was turned down Campbell later claimed compensation from eBay which used images of the Australian notes in an advertising campaign WorksUnaipon David Legendary Tales of the Australian Aborigines Melbourne University Press ISBN 0 522 84905 9 Volume 1 Manuscript of Legendary Tales of Australian Aborigines by David Unaipon 1924 1925 acquired with the Publishing Archive of Angus amp Robertson in 1933 by the State Library of New South Wales Volume 2 Typescript of Legendary Tales of Australian Aborigines by David Unaipon 1924 1925 acquired with the Publishing Archive of Angus amp Robertson in 1933 by the State Library of New South Wales 8 Unaipon David 1925 1927 Volume 85 Item 2 Angus amp Robertson correspondence files from Lilian Irene Turner to Arthur Styles Vallack 1896 1931 acquired with the Publishing Archive of Angus amp Robertson in 1933 by the State Library of New South Wales Aboriginal legends Hungarrda by David Unaipon 1924 1925 published by Adelaide S n State Library of New South Wales 398 20994 41 Unaipon David 2 August 1924 ABORIGINALS Their Traditions and Customs Where Did They Come From The Daily Telegraph No 13 932 New South Wales Australia National Library of Australia p 13 Retrieved 16 April 2021 via Trove See alsoJames Unaipon Raukkan South AustraliaNotes The only primary source for the name Nymbulda is George Taplin The Yaraldi genealogy compiled by Ronald Berndt names her as Nymberindjeri with Nymbulda being her father s first wife and there was also another of that name married to another relative It cannot be ruled out that she was known by both names Aboriginal tradition required that after a death the deceased person s name could no longer be used and those with the same name would take a new name Berndt Berndt amp Stanton 1993 pp 515 516 Citations a b Tindale 1974 p 217 a b Jenkin 1979 p 185 HToSA a b c d e AuDB 1990 a b Harris 2004 a b c Jenkin 1979 pp 234 236 Hosking 1995 p 89 Unaipon Muecke amp Shoemaker 2001 p xvi a b Miller 2005 p AusPat 1909 Aus Pat 15624 ABC 2009 a b c Australian Geographic 2014 Hosking 1995 p Gale 1997 p 41 Hosking 1995 p 94 Unaipon Muecke amp Shoemaker 2001 The Times 1936 p 15 Attwood amp Marcus 2004 pp 86 88 Whitehorn 2010 p 16 The Australian David Unaipon College a b Unaipon Avenue AustLit PSA 2018 Statham 2008 SourcesAttwood Bain Marcus Andrew 2004 Thinking Black William Cooper and the Australian Aborigines League Aboriginal Studies Press ISBN 978 0 855 75459 4 Australian Aboriginal at Levee The Times London 24 June 1936 p 15 Berndt Ronald Murray Berndt Catherine Helen Stanton John E 1993 A World that was The Yaraldi of the Murray River and the Lakes South Australia University of British Columbia UBC Press ISBN 978 0 774 80478 3 The David Unaipon College of Indigenous Education and Research University of South Australia Archived from the original on 7 March 2009 David Unaipon Lecture 2018 Aboriginalising Australian Centres of Power Political Studies Association PSA 28 November 2018 Retrieved 13 February 2020 David Unaipon Preacher Inventor Musician amp Writer History Trust of South Australia Archived from the original on 13 March 2011 FAW Patricia Weickhardt Award to an Aboriginal Writer AustLit Retrieved 13 February 2020 Gale Mary Anne 1997 Dhanum Djorra wuy Dhawu A history of writing in Aboriginal languages Aboriginal Research Institute University of South Australia ISBN 978 0 868 03182 8 Grossman Michele 2013 Entangled Subjects Indigenous Australian Cross Cultures of Talk Text and Modernity Rodopi ISBN 978 9 401 20913 7 Harris John 2004 Unaipon David 1872 1967 Evangelical History Association of Australia Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 via webjournals Hosking Susan 1995 David Unaipon His Story In Butterss Philip ed Southwords Essays on South Australian Writing Wakefield Press pp 85 100 ISBN 978 1 862 54354 6 Improved mechanical motion device application number 1909015624 Australian Government IP Australia 1909 Jenkin Graham 1979 Conquest of the Ngarrindjeri Rigby ISBN 978 0 727 01112 1 Jones Philip 1990 Unaipon David 1872 1967 Australian Dictionary of Biography Melbourne University Press ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 13 January 2009 via National Centre of Biography Australian National University The man on our 50 David Unaipon was born on this day Australian Geographic 28 September 2014 Retrieved 11 November 2014 Miller Benjamin 2005 Confusing Epistemologies Whiteness Mimicry and Assimilation in David Unaipon s Confusion of Tongue PDF Altitude An e journal of emerging humanities work 6 1 13 On the shore of a strange land David Unaipon Australian Broadcasting Corporation 7 March 2009 Retrieved 26 February 2009 Rookie writer Amy Barker joins literati The Australian Retrieved 16 October 2009 dead link Statham Larine 27 November 2008 Family wants compo for 50 note image news com au AAP Archived from the original on 27 May 2009 Retrieved 28 November 2008 Tindale Norman Barnett 1974 Portaulun SA Aboriginal Tribes of Australia Their Terrain Environmental Controls Distribution Limits and Proper Names Australian National University Press ISBN 978 0 708 10741 6 Unaipon Avenue ACT Planning and Land Authority Archived from the original on 15 March 2011 Retrieved 11 November 2010 Unaipon David Muecke Stephen Shoemaker Adam 2001 Repatriating the Story In Muecke Stephen Shoemaker Adam eds Legendary Tales of the Australian Aborigines Melbourne University Press ISBN 978 0 522 84905 9 Whitehorn Zane March May 2010 The legacy of David Unaipon Indigenous Newslines p 16 External linksBiographical notes by Bangarra Dance Theatre choreographer Frances Rings David and James Unaipon at Unaipon School University of South Australia The David Unaipon Award at University of Queensland Press Legendary Tales Digital Art Exhibition David Unaipon online collection State Library of NSW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David Unaipon amp oldid 1115603119, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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