This man's tracks: Laurie O'Neill and post-war changes in Aboriginal Administration in Western Australia

IF 0.4 Q1 HISTORY Aboriginal History Pub Date : 2015-01-14 DOI:10.22459/AH.38.2015.03
A. Scrimgeour
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Abstract

At the end of August 1951, the local officer for the Western Australian Department of Native Affairs, Laurence (Laurie) O'Neill, drove to the Kalgoorlie cemetery and took his own life. What drove him to do so is not known. What is known is that his brother Jim had been buried there two months earlier after a sudden illness. Certainly O'Neill had had his share of personal tragedy, both his children having died at birth in Halls Creek in the state's north in the mid 1930s. But it may have been the case, too, that he had struggled to adjust to the shifting culture of 'native administration' in Western Australia. When he joined the department in 1941 the skills and experience he brought with him from 12 years as a mounted policeman in the Kimberley made him eminently suited to a role in 'native administration', a Perth newspaper asserting that 'Native Affairs Branch is lucky to have so competent and experienced a representative'. By the end of the decade, however, O'Neill's approach in dealing with Aboriginal people was no longer viewed as appropriate for a Native Affairs officer, and his views were described as being 'diametrically opposed to those of the department'.
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这个人的足迹:劳里·奥尼尔和西澳大利亚土著政府的战后变化
1951年8月底,西澳大利亚土著事务部的当地官员劳伦斯(劳里)奥尼尔(Laurence (Laurie) O'Neill)开车到卡尔古利公墓结束了自己的生命。是什么驱使他这样做的还不清楚。人们所知道的是,他的兄弟吉姆两个月前因突发疾病被安葬在那里。当然,奥尼尔也有他的个人悲剧,他的两个孩子都在20世纪30年代中期出生在该州北部的霍尔斯克里克。但也有可能是他在努力适应西澳大利亚州不断变化的“本土管理”文化。当他1941年加入该部门时,他在金伯利当了12年骑警所带来的技能和经验使他非常适合“土著管理”的角色,珀斯的一家报纸声称“土著事务部门很幸运能有这样一位有能力和经验的代表”。然而,在20世纪90年代末,奥尼尔处理土著居民的方式不再被视为适合土著事务官员的方式,他的观点被描述为“与该部门的观点截然相反”。
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CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
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