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Caroline
Lilian Archer (1922-1978), executive officer of OPAL, was born at
Cherbourg Aboriginal Reserve, an illegitimate daughter of Lilian
Brown (later Fogarty) and a white father. Her grandparents, whose
tribal territory has been variously described as around Charters
Towers and near Charleville, had been brought to the reserve by
police after refusing to allow the family to be split up: the police
had intended the men to work on one property and the others on another.
Caroline attended the school on the reserve which followed the special
syllabus for Queensland Aboriginal schools, with the emphasis on
manual training and a content equivalent to fourth grade in the
State's primary schools.
She suffered from malnutrition as a child and her health remained
poor. A childhood accident left her with a limp. At fourteen she
was sent into domestic service at 'Whetstone' station, near Inglewood,
where she was treated kindly and paid normal wages, not the lesser
amount prescribed for Aboriginal servants. Her employer encouraged
her to continue her education. She moved to Brisbane, working first
in a private home and then at the Canberra Hotel (1935-49), where
she learnt how to operate the switchboard. In 1950 she was employed
as a PMG switchboard operator.
On 29 December 1951 she married Frederick Archer, a photographer.
They had two daughters and a son. As the children grew older Caroline
planned a craft centre for Aboriginal art. In the shop which she
opened to sell Aboriginal art she was able to give some training
to Aboriginal women wishing to become shop assistants and typists.
When asked in 1972 to run the Miss OPAL quest, Caroline agreed.
OPAL (the One People of Australia League) had been formed in 1962
as a multi-racial organisation, to promote goodwill between white
people and Aborigines, and to work towards a common culture. The
Miss Opal quest had initially been popular, with the winner entering
the Warana festival quest, but interest had fallen away. In reviving
the quest Mrs Archer demonstrated her considerable organisational
skills. She was coopted to the OPAL board and appointed executive
officer. She was nominated for election to the National Aboriginal
Consultative Committee but failed to win election.
Though in the words of OPAL's objective she was committed to the
'development of a common culture', Caroline spent much of her time
imparting a knowledge of Aboriginal culture to children all over
Queensland and also in Canberra. The Queensland Department of Education
allowed her to visit schools and she greatly enjoyed this work.
She always began, she said, by asking the children to consider how
a people who could survive in the bush must have had some way of
passing on the knowledge.
As State president of OPAL she travelled interstate to federal conferences
and to lobby politicians. She died at Narrrabri on her way back
to Brisbane on 8 September 1978. She seems to have been rather ambivalent
about Aboriginal autonomy. She was proud of her cultural heritage
and gave generously of her time so others could share the pride,
but she said of the Aboriginal Consultative Committee that there
was danger of apartheid in a black parliament.
Heather Radi
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