top of page

Stories & Recollections

Public·4 members

Piers Kelly
Piers Kelly

Two message sticks collected by Ion Idriess

Sydney Rare Book Auctions sold a message stick from the Kimberley that was given to Ion Idriess in about 1930.

I have no idea whether the object has ended up in a public institution or a private collection.

Here it is: https://amsd.clld.org/contributions/IDRIESS1930#4/-16.62/125.74

In the same Lot there were a number of headbands for sale, traditionally worn by messengers and apparently made by Tracker Bull. A message stick from Tracker Bull is referred to in this lot but not photographed or listed for sale: https://amsd.clld.org/contributions/amsd_01121


Does anyone know who collected these items?


ree

29 Views

Walter Murdoch Letters to Idriess 1946

I recently obtained a couple of letters from Walter Murdoch to Idriess from a SRB Auction, which I will reproduce here. Not everyone would be familiar with Murdoch, so here are some details: Professor Sir Walter Murdoch, 1874 to 1970, was born in Scotland. He became an English lecturer at the University of Melbourne (from which he had graduated) and then the inaugural Professor of English at the newly founded University of Western Australia in 1912. But he also found time to write essays and articles for various publications and newspapers, such as the Argus in Melbourne (where he had been a journalist) and The West Australian. He was the great uncle of media tycoon, Rupert Murdoch. He was much admired and lauded, not only in academia, but by the general public. Murdoch University in Perth (established 1974 - one hundred years after Murdoch's birth) - and my alma mater…

ree

10 Views

Idriess: Flynn, A.I.M., a map and a plane

I mentioned in a previous post - Flynn of the Inland 2nd Edition, June 07 2024 - that I had found an early AIM (Australian Inland Mission) pamphlet stuffed in the front of that second edition, so I thought I'd reproduce it here. This is the front cover of the little bi-folded pamphlet.


ree

Of interest here is the photo of an early plane of the A.I.M. Aerial Medical Service, forerunner of the RFDS, a DH 50 with call sign ending in R. I made some comments about this in another post - Letter from John Flynn to Idriess 1936 (May 27, 2024), noting that our $20 RFDS plane has its call sign ending in E - whereas Wikipedia, a NAA letter and this plane all end in R. The accompanying note with this photo suggests this may have been the first plane (used in the "Experimental Year"). On a personal…


ree

4 Views

Flynn of the Inland 2nd Edition

I have in my collection a couple of second editions and a first edition of Flynn of the Inland - all sans Dust Jackets (and a 22nd edition 1942. Actually I have a 1956 Memorial Edition and a 1990 Australian Classics edition with Dust Jackets as well). It is a second edition of Flynn that I find most interesting. For one thing it contained some early A.I.M. material - a little pamphlet - inserted into its pages, about which I may do another post. But this copy also provided some provenance: the name and address of its owner.

Some collectors like their copies to be unmarked - "cleanskins" I call them. Generally, the more "as new" a copy is, the more valuable it is. Others like an Idriess signature - because an Idriess autograph can also add value. But I like copies that give more provenance. In the case of…


ree

ree

13 Views
siggins
Jun 09, 2024

At the back of this Aileen Forsyth Flynn 2nd Ed, on the Halstead Printing Company Ltd Arnold Place Sydney page are glued 8 old Australian stamps (probably by Aileen). These are an Anzac Commemoration 2d 1935, a 2d King George V Silver Jubilee 1935, a couple of Captain John Macarthur Merino Sheep Centenary 2d stamps 1934 and a Centenary of Victoria 2d 1934. There is a also a 2d Kingsford Smith's World Flights - first issue 19th March 1931 - a year before the publication of Flynn.

But two of the stamps were issued in 1932 - the 1/- Lyrebird - which was issued 15th Feb. 1932, and a 1932 Sydney Harbour Bridge 2d - issued to mark the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge [19th March] - but actually sold from 14th March. Interesting that Flynn of the Inland first edition was 10 March 1932, the second edition was 16 March 1932 and the Harbour Bridge opened 19th March. Apparently, the Harbour Bridge opening was a deadline Idriess was working towards for Flynn as noted in Eley, Ion Idriess, p.143 - in a letter from Flynn to Rev. J C Milliken of the A.I.M. Whether Idriess attended the opening of the Bridge Eley doesn't say: but she does note (p.144) that "Idriess found the incident very amusing," when Captain de Groot cut the ribbon ahead of Premier Jack Lang!

We often forget that 1932 was the height of the Great Depression and that in 1932 the unemployment rate peaked at 32%! Yet this was Idriess' most productive year as far as books published went: as well as Flynn, Idriess also had published The Desert Column - 15 April - and Men of the Jungle - in September. Or that postage stamps at this time were only 2d - now of course $1.50 - not that we post many letters these days.

Members

bottom of page