Skip to content

Secure Checkout

Website Secured with 256-bit TLS Encryption
Subtotal: $2,450.00
Shipping: $45.00
$0.00
Donation Amount: $0.00
Total: $2,495.00
4 - 6 days
7 - 9 days
1 - 2 days

All fields are required unless marked optional.

Add Shipping Note
  • Visa
  • Mastercard
  • American Express
  • Discover
  • Paypal
  • Apple Pay
  • Google Pay

Verified and Secured. Guaranteed.

Website Secured with 256-bit TLS Encryption
Please select your payment method from the following list:
Click the button to checkout with PayPal.
You will be charged $2,495.00 when completing this purchase.

Cart Totals

Subtotal: $2,450.00
Shipping: $45.00
: $0.00
Donation Amount: $0.00
Total: $2,495.00

You are about to purchase:

No image available

The Booandik Tribe of South Australian Aborigines .... by Smith, [Christina] nee Menzies - AUSTRALIA

7 to 9 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $45.00
Details
$2,450.00
( US$)
Seller: Palinurus Antiquarian Books
Title
The Booandik Tribe of South Australian Aborigines ....
Author
Smith, [Christina] nee Menzies - AUSTRALIA
Seller
Palinurus Antiquarian Books (United States)
Condition
Very good.
Description
Adelaide: E Spiller, 1880. First Edition. Contemporary full green morocco.. Very good.. 8vo, xi, [3], 3 - 139, [1] pp. + 6 full page plates (in text). Christina Smith nee Menzies, (1809-1893) was the first white woman to settle in the district of Rivoli Bay, South Australia, in 1845. She established a home for Aborigines in Mt Gambier in 1865. She was a teacher and missionary known for her support of Aborigines, in particular the Booandik (Buandig or Buandik) people, whose numbers were diminishing due to European aggression, disease, and land depredation. In 1864, under her married name Mrs Smith, she published as a pamphlet Memoir of Wergon, an Australian Aborigine of the Reedy Creek tribe, South Australia, born in 1836; died in 1850. In 1865, she profiled a Booandik woman, known as Mingboaram or Caroline, in a 31-page pamphlet, titled Caroline and her family or The Conversion of Black Bobby. It tells how the woman, who is aware she is dying, asked Mrs Smith to care for her two young children.At the request of the Booandik people, Smith recorded in detail their customs, legends and social relationships, while her son Duncan compiled a Booandik vocabulary. In 1880, under the pen name Mrs James Smith, she wrote The Booandik Tribe of South Australian Aborigines: A Sketch of Their Habits, Customs, Legends and Language. It is an account of their rites of passage, songs and language, with brief biographies of fourteen christian converts. The Australian Dictionary of Biography describes it as ‘an influential ethnography, blending scholarly observation with personal narrative, it was a unique window onto an Aboriginal-settler frontier.’ Smith wrote in the foreword that she lamented the loss of this once large and powerful tribe as a result of cruel practices of the early settlers of the colony and considered it her duty to record Booandik characteristics, customs, habits, language and legends for future historians, antiquarians and philologists. Ferguson #15823.