This chronology gives an overview of significant events which have happened in Australia from 1788 to 1998, concentrating on the relations between Aboriginal people and the post-1788 immigrants. Some other events are shown in order to give an historical context. Some of these events generated many records whereas other records are the result of legislative changes. Please note that all institutions and legislation are from New South Wales, unless otherwise noted.
Chronology
1915 |
Aborigines Protection Amending Act 1915 (No. 2) gives the Board the right to assume control of an Aboriginal child |
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1918 |
Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 (No. 27) excludes Aboriginal people from being on the electoral roll or voting |
1918 |
Aborigines Protection (Amendment) Act 1918 (No. 7) |
1924 |
Kinchela Boys Home at Kempsey opens |
1924 |
Australian Aboriginal Progressive Association (AAPA) is formed |
1927 |
Australian Aboriginal Progressive Association (AAPA) delivers a petition on Aboriginal concerns to the Premier |
1929 |
Compulsory voting is introduced in New South Wales. Aboriginal people are still excluded from voting under the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 (No. 27). |
1934 |
Australian Aboriginal League (AAL) is formed |
1936 |
Aborigines Protection (Amendment) Act 1936 (No. 32) gives additional wide powers to the Board |
1937 |
Aborigines Progressive Association (APA) is formed |
1937 |
The Legislative Assembly of the Parliament of New South Wales sets up a Select Committee on the Aborigines Protection Board |
1938 |
Sesquicentenary of the arrival of the First Fleet |
1938 |
Day of Mourning and Protest |
1938 |
Committee for Aboriginal Citizens Rights is formed |
1938 |
Australian Abo Call: the voice of the Aborigine, the journal of the Aborigines Progressive Association (APA), is published from April |
1938 |
Public Service Board begins an Inquiry into the Aborigines Protection Board |
1939 |
Beginning of Second World War. An estimated 3000 Aboriginal people and Islanders serve as formally enlisted soldiers, sailors or airmen. Aboriginal children continue to be removed from their families during the period 1939 to 1945, including children whose fathers are overseas at the War. |
1939 | |
1940 |
Aborigines Protection (Amendment) Act 1940 (No. 12) reconstitutes the Aborigines Protection Board as the Aborigines Welfare Board. The Under Secretary of the Colonial Secretary’s Department is now the Chairman. |
1941 |
Commonwealth Government extends child endowment benefits to all Aboriginal people who are not nomadic or supported by the Commonwealth or a State |
1943 |
Aborigines Protection (Amendment) Act 1943 (No. 13) provides for the appointment of two Aboriginal people to the Board |
1948 |
Under the Commonwealth Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 (No. 83) all Aborigines are now British subjects and Australian citizens |
1951 |
Commonwealth Government calls a Native Welfare Conference with the States (Victoria and Tasmania do not attend). The Conference endorses the principle of assimilation. |
1953 |
The Senate of the Commonwealth Parliament sets up a Select Committee on Aboriginal Voting Rights |
1956 |
Aboriginal-Australian Fellowship (AAF) is formed |
1957 |
Meeting organised by the Aboriginal Australian Fellowship at Sydney Town Hall launches campaign for a referendum to change the Australian constitution |
1958 |
Victorian Aboriginal Advancement League (VAAL) is formed |
1958 |
Federal Council for Aboriginal Advancement (FCAA) is formed |
1960 |
Aboriginal-Australian Fellowship (AAF) calls for full citizenship rights |
1962 |
Commonwealth Electoral Act is amended so that all Aboriginal people may vote |
1963 |
Aborigines Protection (Amendment) Act 1963 (No. 7) |
1964 |
Federal Council for Aboriginal Advancement (FCAA) changes its name to the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI) |
1965 |
Commonwealth - State Conference of Aboriginal Affairs Ministers endorses Assimilation Policy as national policy |
1965 |
Freedom Rides throughout northern New South Wales |
1965 |
The Parliament of New South Wales sets up a Joint Select Committee on Aborigines Welfare |
1967 |
Commonwealth Referendum (27 May 1967) passes to change the Australian Constitution to remove the impediment to the Commonwealth Government making special laws with respect to Aboriginal people and to remove the impediments to counting Aboriginal people in the Census. |
1969 |
Aborigines Act 1969 (No. 7) abolishes the Aborigines Welfare Board. All Aboriginal children under the care of the Board now become Wards of the State. |
1969 |
Directorate of Aboriginal Welfare is set up in the Department of Child Welfare and Social Welfare |
1971 |
Aboriginal Flag is designed by Luritja artist Harold Thomas and flown for the first time in Adelaide |
1971 |
Commonwealth Government sets up the Ministry for Environment, Aborigines, and the Arts |
1971 |
Neville Bonner becomes the first Aboriginal Member of the Commonwealth Parliament as a Senator from Queensland |
1972 |
Aboriginal Tent Embassy is set up on the lawns in front of Parliament House in Canberra |
1972 |
New Labor Commonwealth Government sets up the first separate Ministry and Department of Aboriginal Affairs |
1973 |
Aborigines (Amendment) Act 1973 (No. 35) |
1973 |
An Aboriginal-elected National Aboriginal Conference is established to advise the Commonwealth Government on Aboriginal affairs |
1973 |
Commonwealth Government announces the Self Determination Policy for Aboriginal affairs |
1975 |
Commonwealth Government takes over the functions of the New South Wales State Directorate of Aboriginal Welfare |
1975 |
Aboriginal Services Branch is created in the Department of Youth and Community Services |
1975 |
Title to Missions and Reserves in New South Wales is handed over to the Aboriginal Lands Trust |
1976 |
Aboriginal Health Unit of the Department of Health is set up |
1978 |
The Legislative Assembly of the Parliament of New South Wales sets up a Select Committee on Aborigines |
1980 |
Link-Up (NSW) - an Aboriginal organisation formed to reunite and support Aboriginal people removed from their families - is established |
1981 |
Aboriginal Advisory Board to the Housing Commission is established |
1982 |
Ministry of Aboriginal Affairs (New South Wales) is established |
1983 |
Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1983 (No. 42) revokes any dedication or reservation under the Crown Lands Consolidation Act 1913 or the Western Lands Act 1901 pursuant to transfers of land to an Aboriginal Land Council |
1987 |
Commonwealth Government sets up the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody |
1988 |
Bicentenary of the arrival of the First Fleet |
1988 |
Office of Aboriginal Affairs established in the Premier’s Department |
1990 |
Aboriginal Land Rights (Revival of Financial Provision) Act 1990 (No. 32) |
1991 |
Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody reports |
1992 |
“Mabo” decision of the High Court recognises the concept of native title and overturns the doctrine of terra nullius (the notion that Australia was empty and owned by nobody until British settlement) |
1993 |
Ministry of Aboriginal Affairs is re-established. It oversees the Office of Aboriginal Affairs and the NSW Aboriginal Land Council. |
1993 |
Commonwealth Native Title Act 1993 (No. 110) |
1994 |
Native Title (New South Wales) Act 1994 (No. 45) |
1995 |
Office of Aboriginal Affairs is abolished and the Department of Aboriginal Affairs is established |
1995 |
Aboriginal Land Rights Amendment Act 1995 (No. 39) |
1995 |
National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families commences |
1996 |
“Wik” decision of the High Court - leases granted by the Crown do not extinguish Aboriginal land rights |
1997 |
Bringing Them Home: Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families |
1997 |
National Parks and Wildlife Amendment (Aboriginal Ownership) Act 1996 (No. 142) comes into effect, amending the Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1983. It establishes a Register of Aboriginal Owners by the Registrar, Aboriginal Land Rights Act. |