Brief History of the FAW in WA
The impetus for the formation of a West Australian Section of
the Fellowship of Australian Writers came from a dinner held in
June 1938 to welcome the American critic Hartley Grattan to Perth.
None of the eleven writers present knew all the other ten and
so the oldest writer there, Jesse Hammond, urged that a group
be formed. The aim of the group was to support Western Australian
writers and at the same time to promote Australian literature
and its creators. At the first meeting in October 1938 John K.
Ewers was elected as Foundation President. Early members included
Henrietta Drake-Brockman, Mary Durack Miller and her sister Elizabeth,
Molly Skinner, Professor Walter Murdoch and Gavin Casey.

Back: H. Drake-Brockman, Jesse
Hammond, Walter Murdoch, J.K Ewers, E.W (Bill) Irwin, W.C. Thomas,
Gavin Casey.
Front: Mary Durack, Annie Mark, C. Hartley Grattan, Ethel Davies,
Katherine Susannah Pritchard.
Early activities included monthly meetings with guest speakers
on a wide range of topics of interest to writers, Round Table
workshops to discuss members’ writings and public reading
of works by Western Australian writers. The Fellowship was soon
involved in entertaining writers from overseas and interstate,
as well as meetings of community organisations such as the Good
Neighbour Council and Adult Education, in planning literary activities
for the annual Festivals of Perth and organising Children’s
Book Weeks. Members lobbied to improve conditions for Australian
writers in fields as diverse as the policies of the Australian
Broadcasting Commission, censorship, newspaper syndication, the
establishment of children’s libraries, the Commonwealth
Literary Fund and literary pensions as well as Public and Educational
Lending Rights payments to writers. The FAWWA played a major role
in the formation of the Australian Society of Authors, the Children’s
Book Council and, in the 1970s, the rescue of the Greenmount home
of writer Katharine Susannah Prichard, and the formation of the
KSP Foundation and Writers Centre.
In 1949 the FAWWA gained a headquarters of its own when Samuel
Furphy, son of author Joseph Furphy, known as the Father of the
Australian Novel, bequeathed to the FAWWA the wooden cottage built
by his father in 1908. The author of Such Is Life lived there
until his death in 1912. In September 1949 it was officially opened
as Tom Collins House.
From the early 70s the FAWWA established regional branches in
Albany, Geraldton, Kalgoorlie and the Hills Region. For the following
twenty years they organised annual country tours of schools by
writers with the aim of ensuring that every school student had
contact with at least two writers during his or her education.
During the 90s these tours were funded by Healthways and covered
the Great Southern, the South-West, the Pilbara, Wheatbelt and
the Goldfields.
In the late 1980s the FAWWA began to receive funding from the
Department for the Arts (ArtsWA) and employed an Administrative
Officer.
Heritage
buildings - Tom Collins House & Mattie Furphy House
Life
members gallery
FAW
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