Mary Durack
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Mary Durack | |
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Born | 20 February 1913 Adelaide, Australia |
Died | 16 December 1994 (aged 81) |
Occupation | author, historian |
Mary Durack, (20 February 1913 – 16 December 1994) was an Australian author and historian. She is the author of Kings in Grass Castles and Keep Him My Country.
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[edit] Childhood
Durack, born in Adelaide, South Australia, lived her childhood on remote "Argyle" and "Ivanhoe" cattle stations in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. The Durack family were pioneers in the settlement of the area by Europeans. The story of her family's history, beginning with the mid-19th century migration from Ireland, is presented by Durack in Kings in Grass Castles and its sequel Sons in the Saddle.
[edit] Writing
In 1935 the sisters, Mary and Elizabeth Durack, were to publish their first collaboration. The text in All About: The Story of a Black Community on Argyle Station was supplied by Mary and the illustrations were by Elizabeth. The collaboration was to produce a number of children's books: Chunuma in 1936; Son of Djaro and the Way of the Whirlwind in 1940–1941;The Magic Trumpet in 1946 and To Ride a Fine Horse (1963).
Durack wrote under the name "Virgilia" for The West Australian during 1937–38, a column for women and children in rural areas.
In 1950 she wrote the novel Keep Him My Country. Other important works include the saga of the Durack family, Kings in Grass Castles (1959) and its sequel, Sons in the Saddle; and a play, Swan River Saga: Life of Early Pioneer Eliza Shaw (1976). A biography, To Be Heirs Forever, also used Eliza Shaw as a subject. Durack also continued to write children's literature, most notably the story of the Nyungar man, Yagan, which was published in 1964 as The Courteous Savage: Yagan of the Bibbulmun. [1], and Tjakamarra: Boy between two worlds.
Other works by Mary Durack included a two–act play, Ship of Dreams; an Australian Settler (1968);[2] The Rock and the Sand (1969) is a history of missionaries in the state; The Aborigines in Australian Literature (1978) is part of the non-fiction component of her work, a subject often forming the basis of many of her works of fiction.
[edit] Personal life
On 2 December 1938 she married the aviator, Captain Horrie Miller, OBE, who died in 1980. They had six children including one daughter Robin Miller who became a famous aviator and nurse and became known as "The Sugarbird Lady" after her work fighting polio.
Her sister was artist and writer Elizabeth Durack and her father was noted Kimberley pioneer Michael Patrick Durack (1865 - 1950)[3].
Durack was appointed an Dame Commander of the British Empire, for her services to literature on 31 December 1977.
[edit] Notes and reference
- ^ Later published as simply Yagan of the Bibbulmun
- ^ Published in Australia as A Pastoral Immigrant
- ^ Durack, Michael Patrick (1865 - 1950)
[edit] Further reading...
- Adelaide, Debra (1988). Australian Women Writers, p.57-58 - biography and a full bibliography of publications
- Wilde, W H; Hooton, Joy and Andrews, Barry [1985] (1994). The Oxford companion to Australian Literature, 2nd, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 245. ISBN 0 19 553381 X.
Persondata | |
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NAME | Durack, Mary |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Twentieth century Australian novelist and historian |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | |
DATE OF BIRTH | 20 February 1913 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Adelaide, South Australia, Australia |
DATE OF DEATH | 16 December 1994 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Australia |