Shadrach Livingstone James | |
---|---|
Born | Cummeragunja Reserve, Australia | 15 May 1890
Died | 7 August 1956 Geelong, Australia | (aged 66)
Resting place | Mooroopna |
Parent(s) | Thomas Shadrach James Ada Bethel Cooper |
Relatives | Douglas Nicholls (cousin) William Cooper (brother-in-law) |
Shadrach Livingstone James (15 May 1890 – 7 August 1956) was a teacher, unionist and Aboriginal Australian activist.
James was born in 1890, the eldest son of Thomas Shadrach James[1] and Ada Bethel Cooper at the Cummeragunja Aboriginal Reserve in New South Wales. His father was a Mauritian-born teacher and his mother a member of the Yorta Yorta people.[2]
In 1909 James married Maggie Campbell in Echuca. The couple had seven children, three sons and four daughters.[2]
James was educated in the mission school run by his father and eventually became qualified as a teaching assistant. After worked with his father it was assumed that he would be appointed his successor as head teacher; however, the New South Wales government declined to appoint him to the position.[2]
In 1928 James and his family moved to Mooroopna where he worked for Ardmona Fruit Products Co-operative. He was elected as secretary of the local branch of the Food Preservers' Union and was for a time vice-president of the Goulburn district council.[2]
Between 1928[2](or 1933?) and 1955 was honorary secretary of the Australian Aborigines' League, which he helped to establish in Melbourne in 1933, along with his brother-in-law William Cooper and others.[3][a] In this role he was active in lobbying government to improve living conditions for Aboriginal people.[2]
James faced bureaucratic opposition due to his mixed-race heritage.[2]
James died in 1956 of a heart attack in Geelong and was buried in Mooroopna Cemetery.[2]
The playwright Andrea James is his granddaughter.[1]