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Retta
Long 1878 - 1956 missionary
Retta
Jane Long (1878-1956), missionary, was born in Sydney on 5 April
1878, oldest of three children of Matilda (born Brown) and Matthew
Dixon, masterbuilder. She attended Chippendale Methodist church
and in 1890 was received into membership of the Petersham Baptist
church. Following a Christian Endeavour Society picnic at La Perouse
she began regular Sunday visits and later was resident missionary
to the La Perouse Aboriginal Settlement. From there she made contact
with Aboriginal communities on the north and south coast. In 1905
she resigned from the work at La Perouse and moved to Singleton;
she resumed missionary activities at nearby St Clair.
In August 1905 she established the Aborigines Inland Mission of
Australia as a 'faith' mission: no collection was to be taken up
nor funds solicited. On 11 January 1906 Retta married Leonard William
Long, who was appointed co-director of the Mission. It was inter-denominational;
where there were sufficient converts to form a church its members
were free to adopt 'the form of Church government they considered
most scriptural'. This rule conferred on Aboriginal converts a right
to participate at a level of decision making not then generally
extended to them.
Churches were formed at Singleton and Karuah. The Longs lived at
Singleton until 1910 when mission headquarters moved to Sydney.
Five of seven children born to the marriage survived infancy; William
Arnold, Retta Grace and Egerton Charles became mission workers and
Margaret Olive became her mother's private secretary. In 1907, in
addition to her domestic responsibilities and a large correspondence,
often written in the early hours of the morning, Mrs Long started
the mission's monthly magazine, Our AIM. Leonard organised
meetings in other centres in northern New South Wales and in 1909
they travelled to Queensland to obtain government permission to
extend their work to government-run Aboriginal Reserves in that
State.
Though under attack in 1920-21 the Mission gained strength in the
1920s assisted by the AIM auxiliaries which Mrs Long succeeded in
forming in many Australian cities. Missionaries were resident at
Barambah (later Cherbourg) in 1921 and at Palm Island in 1923 and
the work extended inland and across into Victoria. By the 1930s
the Mission claimed spiritual care of 11,000 Aborigines with 36
full-time 'native workers'. A children's home had been established
in Darwin and congregations formed in all three eastern states.
Leonard Long died in 1928.
In 1938 the Mission opened a Native Workers Training College (later
AIM Bible Training Institute), at 'Pindimar', Port Stephens, which
transferred to Dalwood, near Branxton, and in l945 to 'Minimbah'
House, Singleton. Established in the period when in some country
towns Aboriginal children were excluded from the State's schools,
and few Aboriginal children secured any secondary education, this
provision of further education for mission purposes had wider importance:
many who trained at 'Minimbah House' became leaders in secular Aboriginal
organisations as well as mission workers.
Mrs Long published Providential Channels (1935) and In
the Way of His Steps (1936). She attended the Keswick Convention
in England in 1937. She travelled widely to maintain contact with
members of the Mission, its workers and support groups. In her last
years she suffered from glaucoma. She retired as director in 1953
and died on 18 October 1956. Her favourite hymn, sung at her funeral
service in Central Baptist Church, Sydney, was 'All the way my Saviour
leads me'.
Heather Radi
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