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Three manuscripts: an unpublished manuscript detailing a trip from Perth to the Kimberleys in the 1930s, a copy of 'Across the Nullarbor' with handwritten corrections and annotations, and a manuscript about the Indigenous people of the North Kimberley region, published in the Adelaide Advertiser as 'Stone Age Men in Far North Wilds' on 6 April 1935, both typed and handwritten copies.
Talks about his writing career.
100 pages of unpublished photographs from the Haydon family archives, showing the courage and composure of the Light Horse in this famous Sinai cavalry charge. With text by Trooper Ion Idriess and Lieutenant Guy Haydon, here is a chance to view the Desert battle ground of October and November 1917 as never before. The larrikin spirit, the camaraderie, the horses, alongside vignettes of Beersheba in the immediate days following the cavalry charge.
One hundred years after the charge of the 4th Light Horse Brigade at Beersheba in October 1917... 'The Desert Column is based on the diaries that he kept through out the war. Published in 1932, it is one of Idriess' earliest works. Harry Chauvel noted in the foreword that it was the only book of the campaign that to his knowledge was "viewed entirely from the private soldier's point of view"... Idriess served as a sniper with the 5th Australian Light Horse. Enlisting in 1914, he began his diary "as we crowded the decks off Gallipoli" and he continued writing until returning to Australia... The diaries cover his experience of some of the war's major events from life in the trenches at Gallipoli to the battles at Romani and Beersheba. One of Idriess' strengths as a writer is his ability to place the reader at the scene of the action... The diaries reveal a keenness of observation and a descriptive and pacey style that Idriess would develop further in The Desert Column.' - The Australian War Memorial