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Hunter Living Histories Annual Report 2024

Hunter Living Histories Annual Report 2024
Hunter Living Histories Annual Report 2024

UNIVERSITY OF NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
HUNTER LIVING HISTORIES
ANNUAL REPORT 2024

To be delivered at the Hunter Living Histories Showcase 2 December 2024


Who We Are & What We Do


The Hunter Living Histories is one of the University of Newcastle’s flagship community engagement organisations that connects our alumni, academics, students & professional staff with researchers and people across the communities that we serve.

Begun 21 years years ago in 2003 as the Coal River Working Party, the University’s Department of History’s response to Doug Lithgow, Chair of the Parks and Playgrounds Movement. Doug requested academic scrutiny and research into the birthplace of Newcastle as a City. It has now evolved to encompass the entire regional footprint that the University serves its communities of the Hunter and Central Coast Regions.

Every month we gather to foster and encourage collaboration and research within the University’s regional archives and primary source records, rare books and special collections (private libraries) of the Hunter & Central Coast Regions that are safeguarded (for current research & future generations)  in the Auchmuty Library’s Special Collections.

It is our honour to serve this University and its communities.


Thanks to Our Volunteers


Thank you to the following GLAMx Lab Volunteers, without which some of the achievements in this annual report would not be possible. They are:

They have donated a total number of 3225 volunteer hours during 2024. A value to the University of Newcastle of $215,660.27.

Thanks for all the support during this year. In addition to our inhouse volunteers, we are greatly appreciative of the career ready placement students, staff and community supporters (Barry Nancarrow, Steve Legge, Jan Welsman, Steve Bates, Mary Boddy, Andrew Mercado) who have helped make our histories come alive.


AT A GLANCE


 


Despite Australia Saying “No” to “The Voice” We Continue to Listen to the Voices of Aboriginal First Nations Peoples

Hunter Living Histories Posts by Aboriginal/First Nations People & Descendants


Yallarwah Place 25th Anniversary Event – 20 February 2024

 

Yallarwah Place 25th Anniversary Gathering in Grounds of John Hunter Hospital (20 February 2024)

 

Yallarwah Place 25th Anniversary Cake (20 February 2024)

More on Yallarwah Place: https://hunterlivinghistories.com/category/aboriginal-history-and-culture/yallarwah-place/

Hunter Living Histories March 2024 Showcase

Remembering Lost Lives & Legacies: W. S. Procter and the 1841 Procter Chart

The Art of Shield Making: A Mangrove Masterpiece

The Fettler by Dr Greg Blyton. Biography of Uncle Bill Smith.

 

Hunter Living Histories October 2024 Showcase

Biraban – A Warrior, Not A Servant.

Where is John Fraser’s Lost 1882 Journal?

Cultural Mapping Project

 


Empowering Aboriginal First Nations Researchers


The Stan Masterson Collection

 

NSW Archaeology Forum – Murrook Culture Centre – 18 October 2024

What Ever Happened to Margaret and Ned’s Land at Lake Macquarie?

“At 6 Possession Was Taken of this Country”: The Origin of “Terra Nullius” in Lieutenant Cook’s Original Words

 


Re-Imagining our Places & Spaces


The Housing Crisis – Planning and “Public Housing” 

The July 2024 Showcase focused on a discussion to understand how public/affordable housing once worked, why it went belly up, and what we need to do to get it back on track.

Our presenters were:

Hunter Living Histories – July 2024 Showcase – Public Housing & Planning

Mapping helps us to re-imagine our places and spaces.

Hunter Living Histories September Showcase – Mapping The Regions

The Future of Our Past

Hunter Living Histories – August 2024 Showcase – Thematic History

The Relocation of the University Print Thesis Collection

UON60: A Brief Journey Through the Print Thesis Collection

My favourite comment:

Comment by Rita Hitching on the UON Thesis Collection post (2024)

 

 


Enhancing the Experiences of Students


 

Academic Division Excellence Collaboration Award 2024 ‘Highly Commended’ for ‘50 Years Fifty Stories project’ with University of Newcastle colleagues Dr Ann Hardy and Deborah Mulambya a Career Ready Placement Student at the library’s GLAMx Lab.

 

50 Years of Open Foundation: Enabling People & Pathways to University – Share Your Story

Issy Crebert photographed with the Artec 3D digitisation station in GLAMx Lab.

 

The Rewind Exhibition Team (L-R) Dr Kathirine Sentas, Rhys Burke, Dr Ann Hardy and Davina Pellatt
Jan Welsman with NBN camera (Courtesy NBN Archive) and Jan during her visit to the Rewind Exhibition in 2024

 

Rewind: A Hunter Region NBN Television Retrospective Exhibition

Bethany Mooney in the GLAMx Lab

Unrolled: The Hunter’s Forgotten Maps Exhibition Launch

Kimika and Makayla in the GLAMx Lab

 

#AskA??? – Insights from Our Podcast Interviews

Remembering the Sygna Storm: 50 Years Later

UON60: University Student Posters 1970s-1990s – The Archaeology of Social Media

 


Empowering Researchers


75th Anniversary School of Education – Newcastle (Australia)

https://livinghistories.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/116617

 

UON60 University Student Posters

Thanks to Volunteer Kim Dempsey and GLAMx Co-ordinator Dr Ann Hardy who uploaded the digital scans of the University student posters to the Living Histories Data Platform. Posters digitised on Contex Plan Scanner by Gionni Di Gravio in August 2024.

UON60: University Student Posters 1970s-1990s – The Archaeology of Social Media

Conferring of Degrees Videos

Conferring of Degrees Graduations – Newcastle University College to University of Newcastle (Australia) 1953-2013 and Beyond

STORIES OF OUR TOWN 2024

Tony, Amir and Glenn after the filming of the first interviews for the new Stories of Our Town film.

Stories of Our Town UON Creatives Shout-out In Australian Parliamentary Hansard

The Ralph Snowball Stories of Our Town Film Begins!

Shipwrecked Newcastle (2024) – Stories of Our Town Film Release

Do the Shipwrecks on Jeffreys’ 1816 Survey of Hunter’s River Still Exist?

Whibayganba: The Story of Nobbys Headland Film

Val Blackett: Kindness, Valour and Humour – Stories of Our Town Series 2 Launches ANZAC Day 2024

Newcastle & The Hunter Captured in Watercolours by H. Grant Lloyd, 1878-1879

Shipwrecks of the Hunter A comprehensive survey compiled by Norm Barney (1994)

Chips Rafferty, Jack Jones and the Dream of a Permanent Australian Picture Industry.

The Earliest Work of Fiction Set in Newcastle, Hunter’s River Involving Relations Between Settlers and Aboriginal People, 1830.

 


Promoting Academic Research


Material Culture and Exchange at the Australian Agricultural Company Settlement, Port Stephens 1826-1833

Presents, crafts, art, and collecting in the extended Rusden family by Dr Paula Jane Byrne

Announcing the 2024 University Library Creative in Residence – Dr Carl Caulfield

The Reformation of Joseph Lycett by Dr Carl Caulfield: Free Workshop Performance

Creative in Residence 2024

Celebrating the Centenary of the 1924 Overseas Tour of the BHP Newcastle Steel Works Band

Researcher Presentations to Hunter Living Histories Showcases

 

Community Presentations and Lectures

 


Local National & International Presentations and Publications


 

Dr Ann Hardy with fellow presenters

International & National Presentations & Paper by Dr Ann Hardy

The Store Oral History Project – NOW ONLINE

 

What Is “Modernity” for the 50,000 Year Lived Experience of Newcastle Mulubinba (Australia)?

Why Archaeology, the scientific method, and archival professional practice are important in supporting Aboriginal First Nations Peoples’ Quest for Recognition and Sovereignty

Clergy Abused Network (CAN) Newcastle Hunter Manning – October 2024 Meeting

What Can Gordon Ramsay Teach Us About GLAM?


Vale


The Brick Collector

And in Don’s words from 2019:

Letter from Don Wilson to John Di Gravio 11 December 2019
  • Mavis Ebbott – 22/01/1928—30/11/2024 Former President, Newcastle & Hunter District Historical Society
    https://www.pettigrew.com.au/ebbott-mavis

    Mavis Ebbott, Vera Deacon and Robyn Single (Newcastle and Hunter District Historical Society) at the Vera Deacon Regional History Fund Event, 24 August 2017.

  • Josephine “Josie” Stephanie Stevenson
  • Vittorio Di Gravio (My dad)

 

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Dr Ann Hardy and Davina Pellat (when Ann’s away) for the organising and co-ordination of the Hybrid Hunter Living Histories Showcases, and all the wonderful volunteers, career ready placements, academic researchers, students and staff and community supporters that help make this all happen. The range and breath of the work achieved this year speaks for itself, and it’s a honour to assist in all these activities that make a difference in the lives of our people and places.

Accolades from the Vice Chancellor at Start and End the Year 2024

Email from VC 23rd January 2024

 

Email from the VC 21 November 2024

2024 A Year of Uncertainty

2024 has been a year of uncertainty, anxiety and distress for many people at home and across the world.

The Light of Hope (1933) by Alphonse Mucha (Courtesy Mucha Foundation)

People are concerned with the erosion of the rule of law; greed, misinformation, injustice and inequality on the rise, and humanity fracturing across political, religious and economic ideological divisions. Wars are escalating on many fronts with new and more depraved AI infused weaponry to wage them.

Cost of Living Crisis

Some finding it difficult to make ends meet, in a cost of living crisis, unable to afford a home, or to rent one, facing homelessness, while others not feeling anything at all as they are financially secure and safe.

Climate Crisis?

With all that on the plate, it seems that we, as a society, appear unable to face the climate emergency of a warming planet. Some debate it is even happening. Mass extinction, and contamination and destruction of the environment for profit, we can’t seem to agree on facts.

This is a time of great potentialities, but also great nightmares.

 

Spring Awakens The Earth by Alphonse Mucha (Courtesy Mucha Museum)

There is always hope.

In spite of all these challenges, we do find hope through the inspirational work of the University’s scholars, students and communities.

This work is, for us, like a candle in the darkness.

Through the agency of this University and its Hunter & Central Coast regional collaborators, we are guided through the histories and ancestral voices.

They provide inspiration to creative leadership in the arts and sciences to lead the world to find new alternatives towards a better world for future generations.

Through this work, dealing with the historical records, our staff students and communities continue to accomplish things, as they follow the abiding mottoes of two of our founding institutions; the University of Newcastle &  Newcastle Teachers’ College:

 

I Look Ahead, Towards a Better World

 

Best Wishes,

Gionni Di Gravio OAM
University Archivist & Chair, Hunter Living Histories

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