The recent publication of compilations of archives covering the
Coranderrk settlement of
Healesvile and the indigenous history of the
Yarra Valley by local historian and author Mick
Woiwod will by launched by Professor Joy Murphy
Wandin senior elder of the
Kullin alliance in Victoria on Sunday 29
th April at 2.00 pm. At
Eltham Library
Coranderrk Database
Many books, articles and film documentaries have appeared over the years detailing the story of
Coranderrk, the Aboriginal station established on the
Yarra outside
Healesville in 1863 and unfortunately forced into closure in 1924. With the 150 anniversary of the station’s establishment due in 2013, a great deal of renewed interest is being shown in the station’s many successes and ultimate sad closure.
Coranderrk Database is a collection of Mick
Woiwod’s extensive research collected over many years and now being made available for the first time to budding authors interested in identifying further aspects of this remarkable sequence of events in our Victorian story.
Birrarung Database
For thousands of years,
Wurundjeri people have lived along the
Yarra (or as they know it,
Birrarung, the river of mists), especially set in place for their very own use in the Dreaming by their creative beings.
Nowadays, the
Yarra has lost much of its magic, its indigenous story buried beneath a thin veneer of mainstream living, social infrastructure and privately owned dwellings. Much like a modern
archaeological dig, the
Birrarung Databse is designed to breathe new life into cultural material that a wide range of earlier authors unearthed and interpreted before again imbedding in a multitude of at times difficult to locate literary works.
Each copy of these databases includes a searchable CD made possible by the
wilam naling grant administered by the Public Records Office Victoria. Funding for each hard copy has been made possible by the generosity of Bruce Nixon of
Tarcoola Press.
The databases are being freely distributed to Aboriginal
organisations, Public and secondary school libraries, historical societies and other relevant
organisations in what is now
Wurundjeri Country.
Limited sets will be available for sale to individuals on the day.