Graham Jenkin
Encyclopedia
Graham Jenkin is an Australian poet, historian, composer, and educator.

Graham Jenkin was born in Adelaide and educated at various country schools and at Prince Alfred College
Prince Alfred College
Prince Alfred College is an independent, day and boarding school for boys, located on Dequetteville Terrace, Kent Town, near the centre of Adelaide, South Australia...

, Wattle Park Teachers College, and the University of Adelaide
University of Adelaide
The University of Adelaide is a public university located in Adelaide, South Australia. Established in 1874, it is the third oldest university in Australia...

. He spent two years working as a jackeroo
Jackaroo (trainee)
A Jackaroo is a young man working on a sheep or cattle station, to gain practical experience in the skills needed to become an owner, overseer, manager, etc. The word originated in Queensland, Australia in the Nineteenth Century and is still in use in Australia and New Zealand in the twenty-first...

 on stations in northern South Australia. In 1961, he founded the Tea and Damper Club which was devoted to the preservation of Australian folklore, music and poetry.

From 1963 to 1965, he was Head Teacher of Coober Pedy Primary School.

In 1966, Graham Jenkin was appointed as a lecturer at Wattle Park Teachers College and then its successor institution the University of South Australia
University of South Australia
The University of South Australia is a public university in the Australian state of South Australia. It was formed in 1991 with the merger of the South Australian Institute of Technology and Colleges of Advanced Education. It is the largest university in South Australia, with more than 36,000...

.

In 1968 Graham Jenkin, together with his wife Robyn Jenkin, Tony Strutton and Brenton Tregloan, formed The Overlanders, a group which performed Bush Songs and Bush Ballads. The Overlanders produced records, including Songs of the Breaker (1980) and Songs of the Great Australian Balladists (1978).

In 1996, Graham Jenkin was awarded the title of National Non-Indigenous Person of the Year, by the National Aboriginal and Islander Day Observance Committee (NAIDOC
NAIDOC
NAIDOC is an awareness committee and the name of an Australian week of observance lasting from the first Sunday in July until the following Sunday....

), for services to Aboriginal history.

Works

  • Favourite Australian bush songs, (with Lionel Long), Adelaide, Rigby, 1964.
  • Two years on Bardunyah Station, Adelaide, Pitjantjara, 1967.
  • The famous race for Wombat's lace, Adelaide, Rigby, 1977.
  • Songs of the great Australian Balladists, Adelaide, Rigby, 1978. Second edition published in 1983 by the Education Department of South Australia.
  • Conquest of the Ngarrindjeri, Adelaide, Rigby, 1979. Winner, 1978 SA Biennial Literature Prize Winner, 1979 Wilke Award for Australian non-fiction
  • Songs of the Breaker, Adelaide, Book Agencies, 1980.
  • The head teacher, Adelaide, Education Department of SA, 1980.
  • Convict times, (jointly), Adelaide, Omnibus, 1981.
  • The ballad of the Blue Lake bunyip, Adelaide, Omnibus, 1982
  • Calling me home, Adelaide, SACAE, 1989.
  • The Bardunyah ballads, Sydney, Simtrak, 1992
  • Meralte: the boat, Adelaide, JB Publishing, 2003.
  • The songs from Meralte, Adelaide, JB Publishing, 2003.

External links

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