Albert Facey

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Albert Barnett Facey (born August 31, 1894 in Maidstone, Victoria; died February 1982) is an Australian writer, whose main work was his autobiography A Fortunate Life, now considered a classic in Australian literature.

His father died on the Goldfields of Western Australia in 1896 of typhoid fever and Albert's mother left her children to the care of their grandmother shortly afterwards. In 1899 he moved from Victoria to Western Australia with his grandmother and three of his six older siblings. Most of his childhood was spent in the Wickepin area.

He started working on farms at the age of eight and had little education and therefore could not read or write. As a child he taught himself to read and write. By the age of 14 he was an experienced bushman, and at 18 a professional boxer. He was badly injured at Gallipoli in August 1915 during the First World War, in which two of his brothers were killed. While recuperating he met his future wife Evelyn Gibson and they were married in Bunbury in August 1916. The Faceys lived in East Perth before returning to Wickepin six years later with their children, where they lived until 1934. The couple had seven children - the eldest, Barney, was killed during the Second World War - and twenty-eight grandchildren.

As he got older Facey began making notes on his life and, at the urging of his wife and children, eventually had the notes printed into a book. It was published just nine months before his death in February 1982.[1]

His home in Wickepin is a tourist attraction today, while a government building on Forrest Place in the state capital, Perth, is named in his honour and is home to Perth's main travel bureau and visitor centre. A public library in Mundaring, a street in Maidstone and a hotel in Narrogin also bear his name. The manuscripts of A Fortunate Life are housed in the Scholars' Centre in the University of Western Australia Library.

[edit] References

  • Facey, A. B. (1988) A Fortunate Life. (illustrations by Robert Juniper). Ringwood, Victoria. Penguin. ISBN 0140108696. Previously published: (1981) Fremantle, W.A. Fremantle Arts Centre Press.


[edit] Further reading

  • Findlay. Len "A Son's Fortunate life with no regrets" The West Australian 11 June 2007 p.71 regarding death of Joseph Lindsay Facey - 5th of 7 children of Albert.


Persondata
NAME Facey, Albert
ALTERNATIVE NAMES A. B. Facey
SHORT DESCRIPTION Western Australian pastoral worker well know for autobiography A Fortunate Life
DATE OF BIRTH 1894
PLACE OF BIRTH Victoria, Australia
DATE OF DEATH 1982
PLACE OF DEATH Western Australia, Australia