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Amelia Kunoth née Pavey (c. 1880s – 1984) was an Aboriginal Australian woman who developed well-known cattle stations in Central Australia, including Utopia, Bond Springs, Hamilton Downs and .
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Doris Blackwell
, Jenny Brands
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--01-09
, Alice on the Line
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Mrs Kunoth was a true lady of the bush and … Mrs Kunoth was a true lady of the bush and was a resident of Alice Springs since the town was surveyed.
On Utopia Station they talk of her as if she was a saint.
In Alice Springs so many children called her "nana" that her real grand-daughter Mrs Rosalie Kunoth-Monks, when young, would shout jealously: "She's my nana, not yours."out jealously: "She's my nana, not yours."
, Our pretty little half-caste nursegirl, Am … Our pretty little half-caste nursegirl, Amelia, wept for days when she learnt that we were leaving. She begged and implored mother to take her too. Like all aborigines, she had come to love the children she cared for as though they were her own, I thought my heart would break.
Mother was so disturbed by her grief that she talked it over with my father, but both agreed it would be foolish and no kindness to the girl to take her so far from her tribe, with little hope of getting back if she once grew homesick, as she inevitably would.ce grew homesick, as she inevitably would.
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A grand old lady of the bush dies: Amelia Kunoth, daughter of Alice's owner.
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rdfs:comment |
Amelia Kunoth née Pavey (c. 1880s – 1984) was an Aboriginal Australian woman who developed well-known cattle stations in Central Australia, including Utopia, Bond Springs, Hamilton Downs and .
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rdfs:label |
Amelia Kunoth
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