Jimmy Clements | |
---|---|
Born | c. 1847 Australia |
Died | 28 August 1927
Queanbeyan,
New South Wales, Australia |
Other names | King Billy, Nangar, Yangar |
Known for | Activist for indigenous land rights |
Jimmy Clements ( c. 1847 – 28 August 1927) was an Aboriginal elder from the Wiradjuri tribe in Australia, and was present at the opening of the Provisional Parliament House in Canberra on 9 May 1927. He explained that he was there to demonstrate his "sovereign rights to the Federal Territory", making this the first recorded instance of Aboriginal protest at the Parliament. [1]
He was also known as "King Billy" [2] and also as Nangar or Yangar. [3]
Clements and another Wiradjuri man, George Noble, had walked for nearly a week over the mountains from Brungle Mission near Gundagai, New South Wales. [4] The two men were the only Indigenous people to attend the first opening of parliament. Clements was initially told to move on by police at the ceremony due to his attire but due to popular support from other members of the crowd he was among prominent citizens who were presented to the Duke and Duchess of York. [2]
Clements died on 28 August 1927, aged 80, in Queanbeyan, New South Wales near Canberra. The newspaper report noted that he was buried in Queanbeyan cemetery "outside consecrated ground". (Indigenous Australians were not buried in consecrated ground at the time.) [5]
Both Mr Rudd and Ms House-Williams referred to an elderly Aborigine who attended the 1927 event with his dogs. On that day, the barefooted, shabbily dressed Jimmy Clements was asked to move on by a policeman. Reports of the day say he stood his ground and was supported by members of the crowd. Mr Rudd referred to a Canberra Times story of the day about the incident which called Mr Clements a member of a fast-vanishing race.
Ngambri elder Matilda House-Williams addressed the crowd after greeting Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and presented him a message stick. She said her reception was far different from that accorded Jimmy Clements - an elderly Aboriginal man - barefoot, dressed in an old suit and accompanied by his dogs, who attended the opening of Parliament House in 1927. "On seeing Mr Clements, a policeman asked him to leave because he wasn't dressed appropriately for the occasion," she said. Mr Clements responded that this was the land of his ancestors.
Jimmy Clements was a Wiradjuri Aboriginal elder. At the age of 80 he walked barefoot with his dog all the way from Tumut to be present at the opening of Parliament House in 1927. He was not allowed into Parliament House because he was not dressed properly. The Police tried to turn him away but the crowd supported his presence at the historic opening. Could this have been Australia's first land rights demonstration? If so what message might it have communicated to Aboriginal people?
Jimmy Clements | |
---|---|
Born | c. 1847 Australia |
Died | 28 August 1927
Queanbeyan,
New South Wales, Australia |
Other names | King Billy, Nangar, Yangar |
Known for | Activist for indigenous land rights |
Jimmy Clements ( c. 1847 – 28 August 1927) was an Aboriginal elder from the Wiradjuri tribe in Australia, and was present at the opening of the Provisional Parliament House in Canberra on 9 May 1927. He explained that he was there to demonstrate his "sovereign rights to the Federal Territory", making this the first recorded instance of Aboriginal protest at the Parliament. [1]
He was also known as "King Billy" [2] and also as Nangar or Yangar. [3]
Clements and another Wiradjuri man, George Noble, had walked for nearly a week over the mountains from Brungle Mission near Gundagai, New South Wales. [4] The two men were the only Indigenous people to attend the first opening of parliament. Clements was initially told to move on by police at the ceremony due to his attire but due to popular support from other members of the crowd he was among prominent citizens who were presented to the Duke and Duchess of York. [2]
Clements died on 28 August 1927, aged 80, in Queanbeyan, New South Wales near Canberra. The newspaper report noted that he was buried in Queanbeyan cemetery "outside consecrated ground". (Indigenous Australians were not buried in consecrated ground at the time.) [5]
Both Mr Rudd and Ms House-Williams referred to an elderly Aborigine who attended the 1927 event with his dogs. On that day, the barefooted, shabbily dressed Jimmy Clements was asked to move on by a policeman. Reports of the day say he stood his ground and was supported by members of the crowd. Mr Rudd referred to a Canberra Times story of the day about the incident which called Mr Clements a member of a fast-vanishing race.
Ngambri elder Matilda House-Williams addressed the crowd after greeting Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and presented him a message stick. She said her reception was far different from that accorded Jimmy Clements - an elderly Aboriginal man - barefoot, dressed in an old suit and accompanied by his dogs, who attended the opening of Parliament House in 1927. "On seeing Mr Clements, a policeman asked him to leave because he wasn't dressed appropriately for the occasion," she said. Mr Clements responded that this was the land of his ancestors.
Jimmy Clements was a Wiradjuri Aboriginal elder. At the age of 80 he walked barefoot with his dog all the way from Tumut to be present at the opening of Parliament House in 1927. He was not allowed into Parliament House because he was not dressed properly. The Police tried to turn him away but the crowd supported his presence at the historic opening. Could this have been Australia's first land rights demonstration? If so what message might it have communicated to Aboriginal people?