Fred Maynard was born on 4 July 1879, the third child of William Maynard, an English labourer, and Mary Maynard (née Phillips), an Aboriginal woman of Worimi and French-Mauritian descent.[1] Mary Maynard died during childbirth in 1884, after which Fred and his brother Arthur were taken by a Protestant minister, who forced them to work long days, beat them, and housed them in a stable. However, during this time Maynard learned to read and the minister gave them access to his library.[2][3]
In his early teens, Maynard and his brother escaped the minister and moved to their sister's home in Sydney. From this point, Maynard travelled extensively, working a number of different jobs: photographer, gardener, drover and bullock driver.[citation needed]
Political activism and the AAPA
In 1907, Maynard returned to Sydney, working as a wharf labourer in Woolloomooloo.[2] Here, Maynard was exposed to unionist ideas, joining the Waterside Workers' Federation of Australia,[1] and came into contact with African American and Afro-Caribbeans who brought with them exciting new political ideas, in particular, those of Marcus Garvey, the leader of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.[4][5] He advocated for land rights, citizenship and equal rights for Aboriginal people.[6]
In February 1925, Maynard and Tom Lacey founded the Australian Aboriginal Progressive Association, which advocated for the right of Aboriginal people to determine their own lives.[7] The decision to create this organisation was heavily influenced by Maynard's own experience of being torn from his land and family in his youth.[2] The Association wrote letters to newspapers and the Aboriginal Protection Board, and in 1927 petitioned the NSW Premier, Jack Lang, for the return of Aboriginal land.[7] During this period, Maynard travelled extensively around the NSW North Coast protesting the theft of Indigenous-held land.
The Association spread throughout New South Wales, with 13 active branches.[7] Maynard participated in public debates with public figures in opposition to changes to the administration of Aboriginal reserves.[8] Maynard's vocal and staunch opposition to the Aboriginal Protection Board led to a series of public statements by the Board in an attempt to discredit Maynard, which eventually led to the dissolution of the AAPA.[9]
Later life, death and legacy
On 14 June 1928 Maynard married Minnie Critchley, a 32-year-old Englishwoman, with whom he had four children. He then lived life more privately, working to provide for his family.[1]
He was badly injured by an accident while working on the wharf, causing one of his legs to be broken in six places, and later amputated.[6] On 9 September 1946 Maynard died of diabetes mellitus at the Mental Hospital in Rydalmere, leaving his wife, two sons, and two daughters. He was buried in Rookwood Cemetery.[1]
In addition to his contemporary impact on the efforts of the Aboriginal Protection Board to steal Aboriginal land, Maynard's vocal style of opposition has had a significant influence on successive generations of activists in NSW Indigenous communities.[16]
^ abcMaynard, John (2007). Fight for liberty and freedom: the origins of Australian Aboriginal activism. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press. ISBN9780855755508.
^Maynard, John (2013). "Fred Maynard and Marcus Garvey: Storming the Urban Space". Exploring urban identities and histories(PDF). Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies. pp. 153–159.
^Maynard, John (2009). "'In the interests of our people': the influence of Garveyism on the rise of Australian Aboriginal political activism". Aboriginal History. 29: 1–22. JSTOR24046685.