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Geoffrey Piers Henry Dutton AO (1922 - 1998)

Geoffrey Piers Henry Dutton AO
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Husband of — married 1944 (to 1983) [location unknown]
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Died at age 76 [location unknown]
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Contents

Biography

Officer of the Order of Australia in 1976.
Visit : AO

Geoffrey Dutton's obituary[1]

Geoffrey Dutton was one of the most prolific, versatile and talented writers in the literary history of Australia.

His contribution to Australian letters was probably unrivalled in his generation - a remarkable output of nine collections of poetry, eight novels (three for children), and critical studies, biographies of Australian writers and explorers as well as of the American poet, Walt Whitman, travel books and works of art appreciation: over 40 publications in all including, in 1994, a disarmingly frank autobiography, Out in the Open.

As well he wrote hundreds of essays, articles and reviews for literary journals and newspapers: he was a superb critic, penetrating and incisive in his judgements. He was a formidable force as a literary catalyst, founding some of his country's best-known literary journals, as an editor for Penguin Australia and later co-founder, with Max Harris, of the publisher, Sun Books.

He was an enthusiastic advocate of government funding of the arts and mainly responsible for the establishment of the now internationally famous Adelaide Festival of the Arts. He was awarded the high distinction of Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in 1976.

Dutton was born in 1922 into a patrician and pioneering South Australian family whose English forebears had founded the state's first sheep stud farm in 1838 - a magnificent property named "Anlaby" to the north of Adelaide. He was educated at the Geelong Grammar School and the University of Adelaide, where he read English under J.I.M. Stewart (of later "Michael Innes" fame). He interrupted his studies to enlist with the RAAF, where he became a flying instructor.

After the Second World War, Dutton, like his father and brother before him, entered Magdalen College, Oxford. He was unimpressed with post-war Britain, of which he later wrote: "the climate was vile, the dinginess and overcrowding depressing and, worst of all, despite hopes raised by the comradeship of war, the class system was entrenched as strongly as it had ever been". But he greatly enjoyed his three years at Oxford, where a college contemporary was Kenneth Tynan and his tutors J.A.W. Bennett, whom he greatly admired, and C.S. Lewis, whom he did not. "He was like a jolly thick-lipped, red-faced butcher, only that he was not really jolly. You felt with Lewis that if you dropped dead as you went out through the door after the tutorial he would not notice."

After Oxford he toured Europe and returned to Adelaide where, before embarking on a full-time writing career, he lectured in English for a few years at the university. There was an elegance in Dutton's writing that matched his personality. An entertaining conversationalist and raconteur, he had a wide circle of friends including leading local and overseas writers and artists such as Sidney Nolan and Arthur Boyd. For over 20 years he was an intimate of the Nobel prizewinning novelist Patrick White, notorious for his abrupt termination of friendships. Dutton suffered the same fate when White took exception to something Dutton had written about his work in a local journal. "I've had enough of Duttonry," he wrote tersely.

Happier was Dutton's friendship with the Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko, whom he arranged to visit the Adelaide Festival in 1966 and again for a visit in 1973 when Dutton took the poet on an outback trip. "He had an enormous capacity for drink," Dutton recalled, "and he developed a taste for Australian champagne." Dutton had many of Yevtushenko's poems translated and published and they corresponded for many years.

Another visiting poet whose company Dutton enjoyed was Laurie Lee. The similarity of their poetry was a bond between them - lyrical themes of love and an appreciation of the countryside. "Laurie had a crumpled look and an amiable manner and obviously enjoyed the opportunity to get away from the cities. He thought the lyric was still alive and well in Australia because we were all close to the country even if we lived in the city - there was something of the bush in or near every Australian city."

A period in the United States in 1963 as a visiting professor of English at Kansas State University and the American experience led Dutton ardently to embrace the cause of republicanism. On his return he wrote and lectured forthrightly that Australia would not achieve its potential unless it became a republic, enraging a then largely pro-monarch establishment. Nevertheless Dutton attracted a considerable following and in 1990 became an influential member of the Australian Republican Movement, comprising many leading citizens urging the creation of an Australian republic by 2001.

Dutton married twice: in 1944 the well-known enamellist Ninette Trott, by whom he had two sons and a daughter, and in 1985 the writer Robin Lucas.

Geoffrey Dutton's tall, slim figure with his mop of grey hair and his quizzical and always benign expression was usually discernible in any gathering of writers at festivals, seminars and the like. His zest for life, his friendly personality, his enthusiasm for writing and his readiness to offer help and advice to young writers, will be remembered by all who knew him.

Geoffrey Piers Henry Dutton, writer: born Anlaby, South Australia 2 August 1922; AO 1976; married 1944 Ninette Trott (two sons, one daughter; marriage dissolved 1985), 1985 Robin Lucas; died Canberra 17 September 1998

People – LifeTree

Geoffrey Dutton contributed six Profiles to the Australian Dictionary of Biography
Edward John Eyre (1815 - 1901) explorer and governor

Biographical Timeline

2 Aug 1922: Born in Kapunda, South Australia, to Henry Hampden Dutton and Emily Martin[2], reference 102A/35.[3][4] Religion: Church of England[4][5][6][7][8]

Education: Adelaide University[4]

24 May 1941: Enlisted in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF)[4]

1 Sep 1943: Promoted to Pilot Officer[4]

3 Feb 1944: Engaged to Ninette Trott, eldest daughter of Dr. and Mrs Leonard W. Trott of Gilberton[9]

1 Mar 1944: Promoted to Flying Officer[4]

1 Sep 1945: Promoted to Flight Lieutenant[4]

24-25 Feb 1942: Tried on five charges at RAAF station Point Cook: one of negligence in flying outside prescribed area; four of conduct to the prejudice of good order. Found guilty of the first, second, third, fourth and fifth charges.[4]

1944: Married Ninette Trott, daughter of Dr and Mrs Leonard Trott of Gilberton, at Christ Church North Adelaide, South Australia[1][10][11][12]

23 Sep 1944: Flt-Lt. Geoffrey Dutton RAAF, and Mrs. Dutton (formerly Ninette Trott) started their married life in a flat at Parkes, NSW. Later be was moved to Victoria, and at present they are at Hotel Windsor, in Melbourne. On October 3 they will move into a flat in East Melbourne.[13]

10 Mar 1945: Reduced to the ranks and forfeited 42 days pay.[4]

30 Jun 1945: Discharged from the RAAF[4]

Studied at Magdalen College, Oxford[1]

7 Feb 1950: Residence: London, England; occupation: writer[14]

1950: Published Dutton G. 1950. The Mortal and the Marble. Loondon: Chapman and Hall.[15]

30 Oct 1950: Birth of a daughter[16]

1956: Published Dutton G. 1956. Africa in Black and White. London: Chapman and Hall[15]

1958: Published Antipodes in Shoes. Sydney: Edwards and Shaw.[15]

1962: Published Dutton G. 1962. Flowers and Fury: Poems. Melbourne: EW Cheshire.[15]

1963: Visiting professor of English at Kansas State University[1]

1966: Published Dutton: Australia and the Monarchy: a Symposium. Melbourne: Sun Books.[15]

1967: Published Dutton G. 1967. TheHero as Murderer: the Life of Edward John Eyre, Australian Explorer and Governor of Jamaica 1815-1901. Sydney: Collins; Melbourne: Cheshire.[15]

1967: Published Dutton G (Ed.) 1967. Modern Australian Writing. London: Collins.[15]

1967: Published Poems Soft and Loud. Melbourne: Cheshire.[15]

1970: Published Dutton G. 1970. Tamara. London: Collins.[15]

1972: Published Dutton G. 1972. New Poems to 1972. Adelaide: Australian Letters 1972[15]

1976: Awarded Officer of the Order of Australia in the Queen's Birthday Honours List for his services to the Arts[17][1]

1976: Published Dutton. 1976. Queen Emma of the South Seas: a Novel. South Melbourne: McMillan.[15]

1977: Published A Body of Words. Sydney: EDwards and Shaw.[15]

1980: Published Dutton G. 1980. The Wedge-Tailed Eagle: Stories. South Melbourne: McMillian.[15]

1985: Divorced Ninette Trott[1]

1985: Married Robin Lucas[1]

1994: Published Dutton G. 1994. Out in the open: an autobiography. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press.[1]

17 Sep 1998: Died in Canberra[1][18]

Research Notes

  • William Hampden Dutton [19](1805–1849), pastoralist of Anlaby Station and miner at Kapunda, was a brother, as was pastoralist and parliamentarian Frederick Hansborough Dutton (1812–1890).
  • Note: William Dutton (1811–1878), sometimes referred to as "William Pelham Dutton", ship's captain, whaler and pioneer of Portland, Victoria, was not closely related. Author Geoffrey Dutton, great-grandson of W. H. Dutton, warned against this confusion in his article on F. S. Dutton in the Australian Dictionary of Biography.[1] For his relationship to other people prominent in the history of South Australia see separate article.[20]

Searches

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 The Independent: Obituary: Geoffrey Dutton
  2. Trove: The Register (Adelaide, SA : 1901 - 1929) 5 Aug 1922 p8
  3. Genealogy SA
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 National Archives of Australia: Record of Service
  5. Trove: Kapunda Herald (SA : 1878 - 1951) 4 Aug 1922 p2
  6. Trove: The Register (Adelaide, SA : 1901 - 1929) 5 Aug 1922 p8
  7. Trove: Chronicle (Adelaide, SA : 1895 - 1954) 12 Aug 1922 p31
  8. Trove: Observer (Adelaide, SA : 1905 - 1931) 12 Aug 1922 p27
  9. Trove: The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954) 3 Feb 1944 p3
  10. Trove: The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954) 29 Jul 1944 p5
  11. Trove: News (Adelaide, SA : 1923 - 1954) 31 Jul 1944 p5
  12. Trove: News (Adelaide, SA : 1923 - 1954) 8 Aug 1945 p7
  13. Trove: The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954) 23 Sep 1944 p3
  14. Trove: The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954) 7 Feb 1950 p7
  15. 15.00 15.01 15.02 15.03 15.04 15.05 15.06 15.07 15.08 15.09 15.10 15.11 15.12 State Library Victoria [1]
  16. The West Australian Mon 30 Oct 1950 p29
  17. IMDb: Geoffrey Dutton: Biography
  18. My Heritage: Australian Death Notices
  19. Dutton family
  20. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Dutton
  • Dutton G. 1994. Out in the open: an autobiography. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press




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'30 Oct 1950: Birth of a daughter[16]'

Any idea where this comes from?

The citation is to The West Australian Mon 30 Oct 1950 p29: https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/page/3778661

However, that page doesn't have a reference to the birth.

posted by Sam Dutton

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Categories: Australia, Authors | Officers of the Order of Australia