published titles
> The Adelie Blizzard - Mawson's lost Newspaper 1913
> Manners and Customs of the Aborigines
> Atlas - Voyage of Discovery to the Southern Lands
> Dissertations (Book V).
> Ernest Giles’s explorations, 1872-76
> Expeditions of discovery into Central Australia and overland from Adelaide to King George’s Sound.
> Explorations in Australia
> Exploring in the ’Seventies and the Construction of the Overland Telegraph Line
> Finding Burke & Wills - Audio Book
> Finding Burke and Wills - soft cover
> Into the Dead Heart
> John McDouall Stuart’s explorations 1858-1862
> John McDouall Stuart’s Second Journey of Exploration
> John McKinlay’s Northern Territory explorations 1866
> Journal of an expedition into the interior of Tropical Australia
> Journal of Explorations in Central Australia
> Journal of Landsborough’s expedition from Carpentaria
> The Journal of Post Captain Nicolas Baudin
> Matthew Flinders Private Journal
> The Native Tribes of South Australia
> The Native Tribes of South Australia - soft cover
> Six months in South Australia by Thomas Horton James
> The South Australian Vintage 1903
> A successful exploration through the interior of Australia, from Melbourne to the Gulf of Carpentaria
> Voyage of Discovery to the Southern Lands book iv
> Voyage of Discovery to the Southern Lands book i to book iii
> Voyage of the Lady Augusta
> Who killed Cockatoo?
> Zoology of New Holland
> For the Love of Books
> Bungaree
> Bibliofile
> For Bookbinders
 
Manners and Customs of the Aborigines

and the State of their Relations with Europeans

Edward John Eyre

Edward John Eyre’s Manners and Customs of the Australian Aborigines and the State of their Relations with Europeans was first published in 1845, less than ten years after the establishment of the colony of South Australia. Eyre’s treatise was republished in 1997 by the Friends, together with Eyre’s Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into Central Australia and Overland from Adelaide to King George’s Sound 1840–1. 


This fascinating and extremely important work has not, until now, been well known or widely available, because of its incorporation into the better known Journals of Expedition and Discovery .. 


This new, very reasonably priced, soft cover edition makes available, to students and members of the public alike, one of the earliest South Australian accounts of interactions between the colonists and the indigenous inhabitants of the country. It recounts, with sensitivity and keen observation, customs and practices, many of which have since been lost.  Eyre worked closely with the Aborigines both on his expeditions and, from 1841 to 1843, while stationed at Moorundie on the River Murray near Blanchetown where he was Resident Magistrate and Protector of Aborigines. 


Eyre’s writing conveys great sympathy for the Aboriginal people, in the upheavals of their lives and the takeover of their country by Europeans. His grave fears for their future, which he expressed clearly and forcefully, can, in the 21st century, be seen as prophetic. Had more colonists shared or heeded Eyre’s views, they might have increased respect for Aborigines among early settlers, and improved treatment of the local indigenous people from earliest settlement throughout ensuing decades. 


This book is an essential source of information for students of Australian history and all who are interested in Aboriginal culture and history. 

RRP.              $40            

Members        $35