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Redmond Barry Fellowship
Subcategory of Awards Australian Awards
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History

The Redmond Barry 1854 Fellowship was named in honour of Sir Redmond Barry, one of the most influential people in the early history of Victoria. The fellowship has been established to encourage writers and researchers to make use of the collections housed in the State Library of Victoria and the University of Melbourne.

The first Fellowship was awarded in 2004 to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Sir Redmond Barry's laying of the foundation stones for both institutions on 3 July 1854. 

(https://museumsandcollections.unimelb.edu.au/fellowships_and_awards/redmond_barry_fellowship)

Notes

  • 'The Redmond Barry 1854 Fellowship is named in honour of Sir Redmond Barry (1813-1880), a founder of the University of Melbourne and the State Library of Victoria. [...] The Fellowship [is] awarded to scholars and writers to facilitate research and the production of works of literature that utilise the superb collections of the State Library of Victoria and the University of Melbourne. [...] Fellowships are open to scholars and writers from Australia and overseas. The Fellow's project may be in any discipline or area in which the Library and the University have strong collections.'

    The Fellowship was first awarded in 2004 to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Barry's laying of the foundation stones for both the University and the Library on 3 July 1854.

    (Source: The University of Melbourne website, http://www.unimelb.edu.au/community/redmondbarry/)

Latest Winners / Recipients

Year: 2018

recipient Jillian Graham for Beyond the Stave: A Biography of Australian Composer and Arts Activist Margaret Sutherland (1897-1984)

Year: 2017

recipient Luke Keogh for 

Garden state: The Wardian case, Victoria and the global nursery trade.

Year: 2015

recipient Jennifer Clark for Yours faithfully: Writing letters for the Council for Aboriginal Rights, 1952–1961

Year: 2014

recipient Michael Davis for 

The Greg Dening papers: using ethnographic history in writing about Aboriginal/European environmental encounters

Year: 2013

recipient Marguerita Stephens for 

Assistant Protector William Thomas and the Kulin people, 1839–1867: the end of things?

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