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Ernestine Hill

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Name
  
Ernestine Hill

Role
  
Journalist

Education
  

Ernestine Hill wwwhistoricnavalfictioncomimagesstoriesimages

Died
  
August 22, 1972, Brisbane, Australia

Books
  
The great Australian loneliness, My love must wait, The Territory, Water into gold, The Sable Night, Kabbarli, The Bible

Ernestine Hill (21 January 1899 — 21 August 1972) was an Australian journalist, travel writer and novelist.

Contents

Ernestine Hill wwwinsidehistorycomauwpcontentuploads20160

Life

Born Mary Ernestine Hemmings in Rockhampton, Queensland, she attended All Hallows' School in Brisbane, and then Stott & Hoare's Business College, Brisbane. On completing her studies, she worked briefly in the public service, and then for Smith's Weekly, Sydney, first as the secretary to the literary editor, J. F. Archibald, and later as a journalist and subeditor.

In 1924 her son Robert was born. Rumoured to be R.C. Packer's son, although never publicly acknowledged. Ernestine assumed the surname Hill. During the 1930's she travelled extensively around Australia, writing as she went, primarily for Associated Newspapers. Hill then worked for the ABC from 1940 from 1944, on the A.B.C. Weekly and as a commissioner.

After resigning from the ABC, she resumed her travels, but published little from her work during this period. She was awarded a Commonwealth Literary Fund fellowship in 1959. However, while this provided her with a small pension, her final years were characterised by financial and health problems. She died in Brisbane in 1972.

Writing career

The majority of her writing, which comprised books as well as articles for newspapers and such journals as Walkabout, resulted from her wide travels across Australia. They recorded her adventures and focus on the Australian landscape. She could also be controversial. For example, her reporting of a gold strike at the Granites in the Northern Territory in 1931 contributed to financial ruin for some and was branded irresponsible.

She is best known for The Territory. However, her only novel, My Love Must Wait, a fictionalised biography of sailor and navigator Matthew Flinders, sold well overseas as well as in Australia. During the 1930's she formed a friendship with Daisy Bates and later claimed to be mostly responsible for Daisy Bates' The Passing of the Aborigines, although this is a contentious issue. AustLit: The Australian Literature Resource claims that Bates eventually confirmed that Hill did ghost-write the book.

Non-fiction

  • The Great Australian Loneliness (London: 1937; Australia:1940)
  • Water into Gold (1937)
  • Australia: Land of Contrasts (1943)
  • Flying Doctor Calling (1947)
  • The Territory (1951)
  • Kabbarli: A Personal Memoir of Daisy Bates (1973)
  • Fiction

  • My Love Must Wait (1941)
  • Radio plays

  • Santa Clause of Christmas Creek in Australian Radio Plays (1946)
  • References

    Ernestine Hill Wikipedia