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Hilarie Lindsay Hilarie Lindsay i(A7462 works by) (birth name: Hilarie Dyson)
Also writes as: Lindsay Dyson
Born: Established: 1922 Sydney, New South Wales, ;
Gender: Female
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BiographyHistory

Hilarie Lindsay was born into a theatrical family. As a child, she danced with the Mosman Musical Society, and she later wrote and directed a revue in the local church hall. During World War II she worked as a telegraphist at the General Post Office. Lindsay joined her husband's toy manufacturing company in 1946 and served as president of the Australian Toy Manufacturers' Association. She became the first female divisional president of the Chamber of Manufactures. During this time she did some writing but it was in 1966 that she began to write seriously and in 1966 and 1967 she won the Grenfell Henry Lawson Prize for Prose with her short stories. She won the First Rotary International Poetry Award in 1975.

Lindsay wrote a number of books on games and toy-making in the 1970s. Her You're on Your Own - the Teenage Survival Kit was written when her own son was leaving home, and she also published a number of other household management and recipe books.

In 1974 she organised a playwrights' workshop on behalf of the Society of Women Writers (SWW) and started to write The Withered Tree. In that year she was awarded an MBE for Services to Literature.

Lindsay has been active in several literary organisations and has also written books on writing. She was New South Wales State President of the Fellowship of Australian Writers (FAW) for many years, editing the 50th anniversary edition of their publication Ink (1977), and was editor or co-editor of their annual anthologies 1993-1995. She was also President of the SWW, New South Wales branch, 1970-1973 . The FAW, New South Wales, awards annual Hilarie Lindsay Awards for writing for school children, and in 1981 the SWW instituted the Hilarie Lindsay Award for achievement of a woman writer.

Most Referenced Works

Personal Awards

2006 Order of Australia Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) For service to Australian literature as an author and through a range of professional organisations in support of emerging writers.
1974 recipient The Order of the British Empire Member of the British Empire
1967 winner (as Hilary Dyson) Grenfell Henry Lawson Festival of Arts Awards Award for Short Story

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon The Washerwoman's Dream : The Extraordinary Life of Winifred Steger 1882-1981 Roseville : Simon and Schuster Australia , 2002 Z969242 2002 single work biography

'The epic true story of the indomitable Winifred Steger and her extraordinary life in 19th century outback Australia.

'Winifred Steger travelled to Australia with her father in the 1880s when he took up a land grant in north Queensland. The grant proved to be worthless, and faced with poverty, endless backbreaking work and isolation, Winifred's father spiralled into depression and alcoholism.

'Left to fend for herself, Winifred battled insurmountable odds to maintain her dignity and sanity, finding solace in writing to ease her hardship. Fleeing an abusive marriage also meant the heartbreak of abandoning her four children – but then miraculously she found love with an Indian trader, Ali. Together with their children, they moved to outback Australia where they ran a camel line. A new phase began in Winifred's life, taking her to places she had only ever dreamed of.

'The Washerwoman's Dream is the story of a remarkable woman with a tenacious spirit, and is now an enduring Australian classic. Pieced together by Hilarie Lindsay from Winifred’s memoirs, short stories, letters and unpublished novels, this is an account of the amazing life of a forgotten Australian writer.' (Publication summary)

2003 special mention SWW Book Awards Non Fiction

Known archival holdings

Albinski 127
University of Queensland University of Queensland Library Fryer Library (QLD)
Last amended 23 Jan 2008 09:09:01
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