Sort of a place like home
An edition of Sort of a place like home (1993)
remembering the Moore River Native Settlement
By Susan Maushart
Publish Date
2003
Publisher
Fremantle Arts Centre Press
Language
eng
Pages
360
Description:
"Set amongst the low scrub of the Mogumber sand plain north of Perth, the Moore River Native Settlement was, for thirty years, 'sort of a place like home' for thousands of Aboriginal people. Alternately sanctuary, work camp, orphanage, prison and rural idyll, the settlement was part of a bold social experiment by the Chief Protector of Aborigines A. O. Neville, the aim of which was nothing less than the total eradication of a race and a culture." "Making extensive and imaginative use of oral resources and hitherto unseen documents, Sort of a Place Like Home paints a vivid and intimate picture of the life experience of Moore River inmates, while documenting the appalling bureaucratic incompetence, official indifference and occasional outright brutality that made Moore River notorious. While being a chapter of history many whites would rather forget, the Moore River years are vividly remembered by the Aborigines whose lives were irrevocably changed by the institution."--P. [1].
subjects: History, Government relations, Institutional care, Moore River Native Settlement (W.A.), Aboriginal Australian Children, Social conditions, Child welfare, Children, Aboriginal Australian, Aboriginal Australians, Australian indigenous studies, Biography, Local history, Children, australia, Children, institutional care, Children, social conditions, Child welfare, australia, Aboriginal australians, government relations
Places: Australia, Moore River (W.A.)