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Keith Vincent Smith

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Keith Vincent Smith
Born
Keith Vincent Smith

Alma materMacquarie University
Occupation(s)Writer, historian, journalist

Dr Keith Vincent Smith (1939 – November 2022[1]) was an Australian writer, historian and journalist. He has become a notable specialist on early Sydney and Indigenous Australians of the Sydney area, including the lives of the Eora peoples, Bungaree, and Bennelong.

Early life

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Keith Vincent Smith was born in Dee Why, on the Northern Beaches of Sydney.[2]

Journalism

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As a journalist, Keith Smith worked for the Sydney Morning Herald and The Australian and was a correspondent for Australian Associated Press in London, Saigon and Sydney. He was a correspondent covering the Vietnam War.[2][3]

Interest in pre-colonial Sydney

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As a mature student, studying progressively for first, masters, and doctorate degrees at Macquarie University, Smith developed a strong interest in early colonial Sydney and the inhabitants of the area before British colonisation.[4]

Publications

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As author

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  • Sydney City, Smith's Guides, (1988)
  • King Bungaree: A Sydney Aborigine meets the great South Pacific Explorers, 1799–1830, Kangaroo Press, (1992)
  • Bennelong: The coming in of the Eora, Sydney Cove 1788–1792, Kangaroo Press/Simon & Schuster, (2001)
  • Wallumedegal: An Aboriginal history of Ryde, City of Ryde, (2005)
  • MARI NAWI: Aboriginal Odysseys, Rosenberg, (2010)

As contributor

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  • Governor Phillip and a man named Bennelong, Australian Heritage, Volume 1, (2005)
  • Bennelong, Ambassador of the Eora, Australian Heritage, Volume 2, (2006)
  • Bennelong among his people, Aboriginal History, Vol. 33, ANU Press, (2009)
  • The many faces of Bungaree, in Bungaree The First Australian, Mosman Art Gallery, (2013)
  • 15 biographical entries at The Dictionary of Sydney, including on Bennelong and Pemulwuy

TV series

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As senior researcher:

Episode 1, First Australians, Blackfella Films, dir. Rachel Perkins, originally broadcast on SBS in 2009.[4]

References

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  1. ^ "Smith, Keith Vincent | The Dictionary of Sydney". dictionaryofsydney.org. Retrieved 24 February 2025.
  2. ^ a b "King Bungaree – The Allan Cunningham Project".
  3. ^ "Keith Vincent Smith". goodreads.com.
  4. ^ a b "Author – Eora•People".