Lutheran Missionaries |
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Title : | Lutheran Missionaries |
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Date of creation : | 1866 | ||
Format : | Photograph | ||
Dimensions : | 103 x 159 mm | ||
Contributor : | State Library catalogue | ||
Catalogue record | |||
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Description : |
From the 1840s trained missionaries were sent from Germany to work with Aboriginal Australians, concentrating their work around the south coast. The 1861 Burke and Wills expedition drew the attention of European settlers to the interior of the vast Australian continent, and to its indigenous inhabitants. In 1863 the two Lutheran groups then existing in South Australia agreed to work together to establish a mission in the Cooper's Creek area, with the government making land available for the purpose. After a huge open-air service and commissioning at Tanunda, two newly arrived missionaries, Johannes Gossling and Ernst Homann, with their assistants Hermann Vogelsang and JE Jacob, set off for Kopperamanna. The trip of over 1,000 kilometres took the group three months. This unique photograph was taken as the missionaries left Tanunda. |
Subjects | |
Related names : | Kopperamanna Mission Gossling, Johannes Homann, Ernst Vogelsang, Hermann Heinrich, 1832-1913 Jacob, Johann Ernst, 1835-1907 |
Coverage year : | 1866 |
Place : | Tanunda (S. Aust.); Cooper Creek (Qld. and S. Aust.) |
Region : | Barossa |
Further reading : | Leske, Everard. For faith and freedom: the story of Lutherans and Lutheranism in Australia 1838-1996, Adelaide, S. Aust.: Openbook, 1996 Scrimgeour, Anne. 'Notions of civilisation and the project to "civilise" Aborigines in South Australia in the 1840s', History of education review, Vol. 35, no. 1 (2006) |
Internet links : |