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Papers

  • AU PMB MS 745
  • Colección
  • 1852 - 1929

Please see PMB 738 for full entry.

Continued from PMB 744 - Volume 6: Correspondence 1880-90 - the correspondents are J. Atkinson, Lillie Cathcart, Rev. Channon, Miss E.T. Crosby, J.D. Davis, Edward Doane, Miss J. Fletcher, John Forks, Luther Gulick, G.C. Heine and Miss Lydia Hemingway.
Volume 7: Correspondence and reports, 1880-90 (letters I-R), from missions stations at Ponape, Truk and Kusaie. Correspondents are Dr Lucy Ingersol, Miss Alice Little, Robert Logan, Mrs Mary Logan, J. Oldham, Miss A.A. Palmer, Edmund Pease, Mrs C. Pease, Mrs Douglas Putnam, Frank Rand and Mrs Carrie Rand.

American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions

Archives documenting missions in Papua New Guinea and West Papua.

  • AU PMB MS 1299
  • Colección
  • 1931-1992

Charles Karius and Ivan Champion crossed from the Sepik to the Fly River in 1928 stimulating students of the non-denominational Melbourne Bible Institute (MBI) to become interested in missionary work in the upper reaches of the Fly River and its tributaries. Their mission was planned under the auspices of the Worldwide Evangelization Crusade (WEC)and received support from Norman Lumsden who was Men’s Superintendent at the MBI and Australasian Secretary of the WEC. In 1931 the WEC Home Committee in London split, forming the Unevangelised Fields Mission. Almost all of the Australian Home Council and missionaries transferred to the UFM.
In early 1932 the directors of Papuan Industries gave the UFM their exhausted plantation at Madiri among the Kiwai people on the Fly River. Three UFM missionaries, Albert Drysdale, Theo Berger and Gordon Rodgers, attempted to establish a mission at Madiri and to resurrect the plantation, but failed due to lack of resources. The plantation was then leased to Mrs Janet Cowling while the UFM retained the bungalow and some other buildings as the Mission HQ. Drysdale extended the mission among Gogodala people, establishing a Mission station in the village of Balimo in February 1934. By 1935 there were four UFM missionaries at the head station of Madiri, three at Balimo, two at Awaba on the Arimia River, and by November another station at Wasua on the Fly River was being prepared.
In the late 1930s the Mission lost personnel and suffered other setbacks, but recovered after 1939 following the appointment of J.T. Storey as General Secretary of the Home Council in Melbourne, L.E. Buck as Chairman, and George Sexton as Field Leader. These three men retained their positions for 30 years, giving stability and direction to the Mission which in 1940 expanded into Gogodala territory and shifted its HQ to Wasua.
The Australian missionaries were evacuated in December 1941, leaving the mission stations in charge of evangelistic converts who consolidated Christianity among the Gogodala people. After the War the UFM established a Bible School and an indigenous pastorate. In 1954 a Gogodala district church council, consisting of senior pastors, was constituted, parallel to the missionaries’ own field council.
In 1947 the Mission purchased a diesel ketch, Marino II, to help establish new mission stations in the upper Fly, Alice and Strickland River areas. In 1949 the UFM established a mission station at Lake Kutubu and from there opened other stations in the Southern Highlands, including Tari which became the HQ of the Church and the Mission. The UFM churches officially constituted a national church, the Evangelical Church of Papua, in July 1966.
The UFM had three autonomous Home Councils. The UFM Governing Council for Australia and New Zealand, based in Melbourne, was responsible for the administration of the work in the fields of Papua and West New Guinea. The Governing Councils of North America and the United Kingdom were jointly responsible for the field work in Africa and Brazil. North America was solely responsible for the fields of Haiti, Dominica and British Guiana, and also assisted in the work in West New Guinea. (UFM, Principles and Practice of the Unevangelized Fields Mission, Australia and New Zealand, Melbourne, UFM, 1962.)

In 1969 UFM, Australia and New Zealand Branch, independently changed its name to the Asia Pacific Christian Mission in order to facilitate extension of its activities in the Asia-Pacific region and went on to establish missions in West Papua (Irian Jaya), Indonesia, and the Philippines.
In 1998 the APCM and Pioneers USA formally merged, to form Pioneers International. APCM's former Director, Doug McConnell became the Pioneers International Director.
Notes above from Ross Weymouth, “The Unevangelised Fields Mission in Papua, 1931-1981”, Journal of Pacific History, 23:2, 1998, pp.175-190.

The UFM archives were arranged by J.R. Story in 1965. Mr Storey notes that, “No minute book dealing with the years 1923 to 1930 is in possession of the U.F.M. As the Mission was then the Worldwide Evangelization Crusade, presumably the minute book was delivered to the W.E.C. at the time of the formation of the U.F.M. The earliest correspondence in the U.F.M. files dates back to 1925 when Messrs Sharpe, Roberts & Symes proceeded to Brazil. The first U.F.M. Minutes are dated 5/9/31.” (1965)
The files were re-arranged for microfilming purposes by the PMB in 2007-2009 and item numbered using prefix ‘APCM’. Cross references to the earlier item numbers are given in the listing.
Reel 1-5: APCM 1-36. U.F.M. Australian Branch Council Minutes, 1931-1965 & APCM Minutes and Agendas.
Reel 6-7: APCM 37-48. UFM P.N.G. Field Council, agenda, minutes and meeting papers, Evangelical Church of Papua, Missionary Affairs Committee, minutes, APCM Irian Jaya Field committee minutes and reports, APCM Philippines Annual Field Conference and Field Committee minutes.
Reel 7-8: APCM 49-55. UFM NSW Council minutes, 1953-1999.
Reel 9: APCM 56-63. UFM/APCM Victorian and Queensland Council minutes and agenda, 1965-1999.
Reel 10: APCM 64-74. APCM Queensland, Western Australia and South Australia Council minutes, 1961-1999.
Reel 11: APCM 75-81. UFM/APCM New Zealand Council minutes, 1950-1997; copies of UFM London & Nth American minutes, 1952-1960.
Reel 12-13: APCM 83-95. UFM histories, 1946-1980.
Reel 13-16: APCM 96-124. UFM correspondence, 1930-1990.
Reel 17-19: APCM 125-138. UFM PNG and NSW circulars, 1958-1992.
Reel 20-24: APCM 139-140. APCM Missionary Prayer Letters, A-Z, 1978-1995.
Reel 24: APCM 141-145. UFM/APCM Annual Reports, 1953-1979, Diaries and reports, 1953-1990.
Reel 24-25: APCM 146-153. UFM /APCM Papua field and station reports, 1945-1988.
Reel 25-27: APCM 154-187. UFM/APCM West New Guinea (Irian Jaya) reports, minutes, press cuttings, prayer letters, etc., 1948-1999.
Reel 28: APCM 188-191. UFM/APCM Missions in Indonesia, minutes, reports and correspondence, 1951-1982.
Reel 28: APCM 192-198. UFM/APCM Ladies’ Auxillary, Victoria and South Australia, minute books, 1961-1988.
Reel 28-29: APCM 202-210. UFM International, copies of minutes, reports and other papers, 1931-1982.
Reel 29-30: APCM 211-212. Evangelical Church of Papua, constitution, minutes, reports and other papers, 1965-1989.
Reel 30: APCM 213-216. Other organisations – Evangelical Alliance of the South Pacific, Christian Broadcasting Service, Melanesian Council of Churches, Sudanese Missionary Fellowship, Woodlands Family Home 1959-1990.
Reel 30: APCM 217-224. Personnel, candidate material, statistics, 1964-1993
Reel 30-31: APCM 225-232. Education – Bokondini School, Awaba High School, Dauli Teachers College, Goroka High School, Tari “A” School, 1972-1989.
Reel 31-32: APCM 233-244. Subject files and sundry papers 1936-1989.
Reel 32-34: APCM 245-254. Documents microfilmed out of sequence and press cuttings.
See Finding aids for details.

Unevangelised Fields Mission / Asia-Pacific Christian Mission

Slides from Niue

  • AU PMB PHOTO 12
  • Colección
  • October 1956

Emeritus Professor R.G. Ward was Professor of Human Geography at the ANU from 1971 to 1998, and Director of the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies from 1980 to 1993.

He was Foundation Professor of Geography at the University of Papua New Guinea from 1967 to 1971. He has taught at University College London, and University of Auckland and is President of the Pacific Science Association. Professor Ward has been conducting research in the Pacific Islands since 1956, and has done fieldwork in Samoa, Fiji, Vanuatu and Papua New Guinea.

His books, as author or editor, include "Land Use and Population in Fiji", "American Activities in the Central Pacific, 1790-1870", "The Settlement of Polynesia: A Computer Simulation", "Man in the Pacific Islands", "South Pacific Agriculture: Choices and Constraints", "Land, Custom and Practice in the South Pacific", and "Samoa: Mapping the Diversity".

Professor Gerard Ward took these pictures when his ship stopped for a day in October 1956 at Niue whilst on his way to undertake field work in Western Samoa.

Professor Ward has commented on the visit: “One of the striking things about Niue was the upraised coral nature of the island. It is very difficult to cultivate and this is evident in the photographs PMB Photo 12_14 – 16. There is broken coral everywhere so parts of the land have very little soil and are unusable. These pictures show this, PMB Photo 12_26. Another feature is the lack of beaches, making access to the sea difficult and opportunities for fishing limited.”

This collection of photographs include streets and boat ramps around Alofi in Niue. The collection also includes images of local dwellings that use burnt lime plaster, village scenes, plantations, fishing techniques and outrigger canoes.

Ward died on 16 January 2023 in Adelaide.

Ward, Ralph Gerard

Papers on Bougainville, New Britain, Sepik and Solomon Islands languages

  • AU PMB MS 1225
  • Colección
  • 1908-1916

Richard Thurnwald was born in Austria in 1869, received formal training in ethnology and related fields, went on a fieldtrip on behalf of the Berlin Museum für Völkerkunde to the Bismarck Archipelago and the Solomon Islands, 1906-1909, returned to New Guinea for a Sepik River expedition, 1913-16, and came back to the New Guinea islands region in the 1930s. He was a great collector of artefacts some of which are held in German museums, others are lost, some possibly incorporated in Australian museum collections. Thurnwald's publications are extensive (c.300 articles and books), but not widely distributed.

Some of Thurnwald’s recordings and photographs, plus Iniet (NG) song texts and tales & 741 Iniet stone figures which he collected, are held in the Museum für Völkerkunde, Berlin. Some of his photographs are held in the Berlin Institute of Ethnology which Thurnwald founded in 1948. Some further Thurnwald papers are held in the Stirling Memorial Library, Berkeley California.

Richard Thurnwald’s widow, Hilda, transferred these papers to Professor Stephen Wurm, Linguistics Department, RSPAS, in about 1963. They were handed over to Don Laycock (the second appointee in the Department, after Wurm) for work on a Buin dictionary. After Dr Laycock's early death the papers were held in the Dept for some years where Lois Carrington, then a Research Assistant in Linguistics, worked on them from time to time. In 1993 the Thurnwald papers were transferred to Tania Laycock, Dr Laycock’s widow, who continues to hold them to date (Feb 2005) but is considering transferring them to the National Library of Australia. A complete list of the papers is available from the Bureau. The documents on the microfilm consist of a typescript of Thurwald’s Buin-German Dictionary, which was to have been published as the second volume of his Forschungen auf den Salomon-Inseln and word lists, comparative word lists, a phrase book and grammatical notes for the Baining, Gazelle, Buin, Alu, Lambutxo, Bambatana, Vellalavella, Panone and Tambatamba languages (spoken in New Britain, Bougainville, the Shortlands and other north Solomon Islands). Also microfilmed are files and word lists for Tjimundo (Lower Sepik) and Banaro/Ramunga (upper Keram River, Sepik District, New Guinea) languages. <b>See Finding aids for details.</b>
Note: Material was copied as found on microfilm reel and delivered in digital in same order. Some pages on reel 1 are not in order, but are clearly numbered at top of page.

Thurnwald, Richard C.

Papua New Guinea research materials: PNG administrative college papers

  • AU PMB MS 1004
  • Colección
  • 1962 - 1982

R.S. Parker was one of 2 Australian mainland members of the Interim Council of the Administrative College of PNG from the Council's inception in May 1962 until its reconstitution in April 1969. The aim of the College was to train indigenous public servants. Professor Parker's papers have been microfilmed as PMB 1004 - 1008.

Labelled files of correspondence, notes, published, 'semi-published' and manuscript material various in form and in production method. File headings are those used by Professor Parker, with notes in brackets supplied by PMB. A file heading sheet precedes each file. Within each file, the order of items is that used by Professor Parker. There is no detailed inventory of file contents.

Reel 1: Introduction by Professor Parker; File list A: Drafts of statute/ordinance-future development; Interim Council personal papers (includes correspondence)
Reel 2: Interim Council Meetings 1964-65; Interim Council Meetings 1966
Reel 3: Interim Council Meetings 1967; Interim Council Meetings 1968
Reel 4: Interim Council Meetings 1969; Sketch plan of buildings; Association with the University (of Papua New Guinea); Recent Reports 1966-1982
Reel 5: File list B: Correspondence general, File 1 of 2 1961-64, File 2 of 2 1965-73
Reel 6: Staff and staffing (includes correspondence, 1964-72); Allen Brown Committee on Higher Education (includes correspondence, 1971).

Parker, Robert Stewart

Miscellaneous research archives

  • AU PMB MS 1118
  • Colección
  • 1948-1984

The Fisheries Division of the Department of Agriculture was established in 1954. The Research and Surveys Branch of the Fisheries Division was formed in 1968 with its headquarters at Kanudi Fisheries Research Station, Port Moresby.

<BR>FRV <I>Fairwind</I> log: fish survey data, 1948-1950. <BR> <I> Scomberomorous commersoni</I> data, Jul 1948-Mar 1950.<BR> Grant West & Ishmael Paiia, Field journal of Gulf District trip, including Lake Tebera, Sep-Oct 1971. <BR> Grant West, fisheries import-export statistics. <BR>Wankowski, tuna catch & CPUE analysis, 1970-1978. <BR> Japan/PNG fishing arrangements, 1978-1979.<BR> Files on the formation of the Forum Fisheries Agency, 1976-79. <BR> Alan Haines, Purari River environment and the Wabo Power Project Feasibility Study, 1975-1978. <BR> FRV <I>Tagula</I>: log of fishing voyages 2/16 to 2/22, 1964-1965. <BR> Prawn survey results, 1960-1964. <BR>Freshwater fisheries files, 1950-1974.<BR> Sepik River fisheries files: selected documents, 1973-1982. <BR> Joseph Glukman, freshwater files: selected documents, 1950-1984.<P><b>See reel list for further details</b>

Papua New Guinea National Fisheries Authority, Research Branch

Research papers on Fiji politics

  • AU PMB MS 1234
  • Colección
  • 1960-1993

Since 1966 Robert Norton’s major area of research has been ethnicity and politics in Fiji. His PhD thesis, Politics, race and society in Fiji, was submitted at Sydney University in 1972. His book, Race and Politics in Fiji, was published by the University of Queensland Press in 1977 and a revised second edition was published in 1990. He was appointed as one of the foundation members of staff in the Department of Anthropology at Macquarie University in 1969. He continued to be a consistent observer and respected commentator on Fiji politics through out his academic career to date, writing many essays and articles on politics in Fiji in scholarly journals and books.

RN/1-14 National Federation Party, 1971-87; RN/15-18 Indian political bodies; RN/19-21 General elections, 1960-87 RN/22-33, Alliance Party, 1965-87; RN/34-44, Fijian political bodies, 1964-85; RN/45-61, Labour Party, 1985-99; RN/62, All National Congress, 1994; RN/ 63-88, Fiji elections, 1963-85; RN/89-91, Constitution, 1965-77; RN/92-100, Economy, 1976-87; RN/101-126, Unions and industrial conflict, 1960-1998; RN/150-168, Sundry, 1960-92; RN/169-200, 1987 elections.
See Finding aids for details.
See also PMB 1228, Robert NORTON: English translations of political speeches in Fiji, 1965-1968. 1 reel. (Available for reference.)

Norton, Robert

Items on Pacific Islands from the minutes and reports of the annual general conferences

  • AU PMB MS 107
  • Colección
  • 1879 - 1964

Items on Pacific Islands from the minutes and reports of the annual general conferences (1879-1964) of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Missionaries and the Church were active in French Polynesia at the time, including Tahiti, Tubuai, and the Tuamotu Islands, as well as being active in the Hawaiian Islands, Samoa and Tonga.

Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints

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