David Unaipon (born David Ngunaitponi; 28 September 1872 – 7 February 1967) was an indigenous Australianpreacher, inventor, writer and activist. He was a member of the Ngarrindjeri nation.[1] He was born at Point McLeay, a Lutheranmission located on the mouth of the Murray River southeast of Adelaide. He preached widely throughout South Australia, often travelling on foot. He became the first Aboriginal Australian to publish a written work in English.
Unaipon's portrait is featured on the Australian $50 bank note in commemoration.
He Had a quote: "As a full-blooded member of my race I think I may claim to be the first - but I hope, not the last - to produce an enduring record of our customs, beliefs and imaginings."
Early life
David Unaipon was born on 28 September 1872, at the Point McLeay mission in the Coorong region of South Australia. His father was James Ngunaitponi and his mother's name was probably Nymbulda.[2] James and Nymbulda had nine children, and David was the fourth. He began his education at the age of seven at the Point McLeay Mission School and quickly became known for his intelligence.[1] Unaipon left school at 13 to work as a servant for C. B. Young in Adelaide, where Young encouraged Unaipon's interest in literature, philosophy, science and music. In 1890, he returned to Point Mcleay, where he worked as an apprenticebootmaker. He was also chosen as the mission's organist.[3] In the late 1890s, he travelled again to Adelaide to find work. He discovered, however, that his skin colour stopped him getting work in bootmaking and instead took a job as a bootmaker's storeman.
After returning to Point McLeay, Unaipon worked as a book-keeper in the local store. On 4 January 1902, he married Katherine Carter (née Sumner), a Ngarrindjeri woman of the Tangane tribe.[4]
Work
Inventions
Unaipon took out provisional patents for 19 inventions, but he could not afford to get any of his inventions fully patented. His most successful invention was a shearing machine (provisional patent 15 624) that converted curvilineal motions into the straight-line movement that is the basis of modern mechanical shears. Unaipon never received any money from it, however. Apart from a newspaper report in 1910 acknowledging him as the inventor, he received no credit.[1]
Unaipon became well-known as an inventor, and a recognised authority on ballistics.[1] Other inventions of his included a centrifugalmotor, a multi-radial wheel and a mechanical propulsion tool. He drew many of his ideas for mechanical inventions, including a helicopter design based on the principle of the boomerang. He also spent a large amount of time trying to achieve perpetual motion.[5]
His travels brought him into contact with many people sympathetic with the cause of Aboriginal rights. Although Unaipon was much in demand as a public speaker, he was also often refused accommodation and hospitality due to his race. He gradually became well-known in public life as a spokesman for Aboriginal Australians. Between 1928 and 1929, he helped as a researcher and witness for the Bleakley Inquiry into Aboriginal welfare. In 1934, he lobbied the federal government to take over responsibility for Aborigines from its constituent states.[7]
Unaipon retired from preaching in 1959 but continued working on his inventions into the 1960s.[4]
Writing
Unaipon was the first Australian Aboriginal to publish a written work in English.[8] He wrote many articles in newspapers and magazines, including The Daily Telegraph, in which he retold traditional Dreaming stories and argued for the rights of Aboriginal people. Some of Unaipon's traditional stories were published in book in 1930, called Myths and Legends of the Australian Aboriginals. It was published under the name of anthropologist William Ramsay Smith.[9] They were republished in their original form in 2006, under the author's name, as Legendary Tales of the Australian Aborigines.[10]
Unaipon was obsessed with correct English. When speaking, he tended to use classical English rather than using the common style of his time. His written language followed the style of John Milton and John Bunyan.[6]
Later life and death
Unaipon returned to his Point Mcleay in his old age. He worked more on his inventions and tried to find the secret of perpetual motion. He died in the Tailem Bend Hospital on 7 February 1967, and was buried in the Raukkan (formerly Point McLeay) Mission Cemetery.[4] David was the last full-blooded member of the Waruwaldi tribe.[11][12]
Several things are named after him in commemoration:
David Unaipon Literary Award, an award presented each year for the best writing by unpublished Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors.[15]
References
↑ 1.01.11.21.3Graham Jenkin (1985) [1979]. Conquest of the Ngarrindjeri: the story of the Lower Murray lakes tribes. Rigby. pp. 185, 234–236. ISBN0-7270-1112-X.
↑Ronald M. Berndt, Catherine Helen Berndt, John E. Stanton (1993). A world that was: the Yaraldi of the Murray River and the lakes, South Australia. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. pp. 515–516. ISBN0-7748-0478-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) 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 can not be ruled out that she was known by both names. Ngarrindjeri custom requires 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.
↑ 6.06.1John Harris (2004). "Unaipon, David (1872–1967)". Webjournals. Evangelical History Association of Australia, Southern Cross College. Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2013-05-06.
↑M. Gale (1997). Dhanum Djorra'wuy Dhawu: A history of writing in Aboriginal languages. Underdale, South Australia: Aboriginal Research Institute. p. 41. ISBN0-86803-182-8.