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Margaret
Kiddle 1914 - 1958 historian
Margaret
Loch Kiddle (1914-1958), historian, was born in South Yarra, Melbourne,
on 10 September 1914, daughter of Mauna Loa (born Burrett) and John
Beacham Kiddle, solicitor. After a hesitant academic beginning,
she matured to become one of Victoria's most distinguished historians.
The chief influences in her formative years were her family, in
which Scots, Irish and German strains mingled with the assured confidence
of English 'gentlemen farmers'; her social studies mistress at Melbourne
Church of England Girls' Grammar School, Gwenda Lloyd, who awakened
in Kiddle her abiding love of history; and the University of Melbourne's
History Department. There, Ernest Scott and Jessie Webb alerted
her to voices of the past still speaking through their surviving
records. She graduated BA in 1937 and obtained her Diploma of Education
in 1938.
After working in the Prices Commission during the war, Kiddle returned
to the History Department as a tutor and in 1947 gained her MA with
a thesis on Caroline Chisholm which was published in book form in
1950. During these years she published also Moonbeam Stairs (1945),
a beautifully written fantasy; West of Sunset (1949), a first-rate
children's story based on family memory of outback life in pioneering
days; and The Candle (1950), a tiny, charming evocation of
childhood. Her Caroline Chisholm (1950) is not an exciting
book to read. Kiddle was prevented by lack of personal papers from
'writing the book she wanted to write'. To recreate the past vividly
she required the voices of the past. These she unearthed and used
to the full in Men of Yesterday, the story of the western
district of Victoria in the nineteenth century, a major contribution
to Australian historical research and writing. Here the voices are
those not only of the men but also of the women of yesterday, revealed
from their letters and diaries in their loneliness, their frailties,
their determination and their triumphs. This brilliant book displays
Kiddle's meticulous research; her grasp of a broad canvas while
always aware of detail; her power of deft, uncluttered description
- as in accounts of Aborigines, squatters, selectors and 'Marvellous
Melbourne'; her sure use of words, both her own and other people's;
and, not least, her sense of place - of the western district plains,
their Dreamtime and their transformation, the birds and animals,
the homesteads and the silence.
Kiddle began work on Men of Yesterday in 1949. In March 1958
she completed it, only six weeks before she died. Suffering from
a congenital kidney disease, she knew her health was deteriorating
and succeeded in finishing her work only by desperate effort and
dedication. The nine years of its production had included one year
on a fellowship at the Australian National University and a tour
of the United Kingdom with her sister to search for papers and records
of descendants of the original western district settlers. Men
of Yesterday, impressively and lovingly edited by her academic
colleagues, was published in 1961; twenty years later it had sold
over 15,000 copies. She died on 3 May 1958; annually a prize for
the best final Honours essay in history is awarded in her memory
at the University of Melbourne.
Lyndsay Gardiner
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