Photographers reveal iconic picture of Gough Whitlam and Vincent Lingiari was posed on Wave Hill Stroll-Off anniversary

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In August 1975, a person known as HC “Nugget” Coombs and then-prime minister Gough Whitlam sat at the back of a airplane.

WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are suggested that this text accommodates names and pictures of Indigenous individuals who have died, used with the permission of household.

They have been deciding on what symbolic gesture the prime minister was about to carry out, because the eyes of the nation turned to a tiny neighborhood within the Northern Territory.

Before the airplane skidded to a halt on the finish of the dinky runway, a plan had been hatched.

The gesture?

A handful of sand.

Gurindji strikers at Wattie Creek. (Supplied: Brian Manning)

The Gurindji strikers at Wattie Creek led by Vincent Lingiari in 1967. (Supplied: Brian Manning)

Nine years earlier on August 23, 1966, Gurindji, Mudburra and Warlpiri stockmen, home servants and their households walked off Wave Hill Station.

They have been led by Vincent Lingiari, Gurindji land rights pioneer, protesting the appalling pay and dwelling situations of the station.

The walk-off forged a nationwide highlight on Daguragu, recognized then as Wattie Creek, and proved to be a catalyst for the Aboriginal land rights motion.

An Aboriginal man in a blue button up shirt leaning against a big rock with a plaque on it. Photo is dated.

The rock pulled out of the bush has turn into a monument of historical past.  (Supplied)

Richard Preece, a public servant of the newly-established Aboriginal Affairs Department (DAA), was dwelling in the neighborhood when he was instructed the prime minister was coming to city.

He’d been instructed to discover a spot for a commemorative plaque to sit down earlier than the media circus touched down.

He rapidly hailed Gurindji stockman Pincher Nyumiarri, who knew what to do.

“He said, ‘No worries, go get the backhoe’,” Mr Preece tells the ABC.

The pair hurriedly jumped on a ride-on digger and drove into the center of the bush, till Mr Nyumiarri pointed to an enormous rock and instructed him to dig it up.

“We picked it up and took it across to the middle of the community and planted it [there],” Mr Preece stated.

“Certainly something I wouldn’t have done but Pincher was adamant, and he seemed to have authority to do it.”

Black and white photo of 3 Aboriginal stockmen, one smiling at camera, all in wide-brim hats.

Many folks have been overjoyed and excited as Gough Whitlam handed Gurindji land again.  (Supplied: Penny Tweedie)

The iconic snap

After making his mark on the Sydney Morning Herald as Australia’s first Aboriginal press photographer, Mervyn Bishop was snapping pics for the DAA. 

Touching down in Daguragu in 1975, Mr Bishop was met with a blue sky and purple sand underfoot.

“It was a beautiful day, a lot of people were dressed up, smartly turned out, people milling about,” he remembers. 

An Aboriginal man performing a cultural dance, paint on skin, red bandana on head. Crowd of photographers watching.

Yarralin dancers celebrated the event.  (Supplied: Darrell Lewis)

Dated photo, long row of fold-out tables, with cloth, topped with plates and spread of food on dirt ground.

A barbecue unfold was trucked into Daguragu a day earlier than the prime minister arrived. (Supplied: Darrell Lewis)

Crowds of station staff in Akubras had gathered in the dusty neighborhood, whereas a truckload of apples, oranges, cookies, ketchup and lager had been shipped in and laid out for a barbecue.

Neighbouring Yarralin performers commemorated the day, dancing in a circle of purple mud. 

A group of Aboriginal people performing cultural dances, with crowd of photographers and journalists watching.

Crowds in the neighborhood watched the performances.  (Supplied: Darrell Lewis)

A group of Aboriginal people performing with clap sticks and didgeridoos in remote appearing town.

People got here from surrounding outstations to be part of the historic day.  (Supplied: Darrell Lewis )

Prime Minister Gough Whitlam and Vincent Lingiari walked by the crowds, facet by facet.

In the shade of a shelter, Gough Whitlam signed a deed to portion off Gurindji homelands.

A white man in a grey suit walking alongside an Indigenous man in a blue button up shirt, with crowd behind them. Dated picture

Gough Whitlam and Vincent Lingiari walked by Daguragu collectively. (Supplied: Darrell Lewis)

A man talking at a podium some distance away, white crowd of camera operators filming in front.

Gough Whitlam was the primary prime minister to vow Aboriginal land rights laws.  (Supplied: Darrell Lewis)

He bent down and poured sand into Vincent Lingiari’s hand.

“Vincent Lingiari, I solemnly hand to you these deeds as proof, in Australian law, that these lands belong to the Gurindji people,” he stated.

But that wasn’t the second Mr Bishop’s famed {photograph} was captured. 

A white man pours sand into the palm of an Aboriginal man.

Then-prime minister Gough Whitlam pouring sand into the palm of Gurindji chief Vincent Lingiari in August 1975. (AGNSW: Mervyn Bishop)

Mr Bishop had felt the facility within the gesture, however thought it was too poorly lit within the shade.

“I approached Mr Whitlam and said, ‘Mr Whitlam could we go outside and redo that picture again?’ 

“He says, ‘Oh, very properly’.

“Got him standing on the spot [and] Uncle Vincent wanting splendid, dressed up neatly together with his deeds and stuff in a single hand.

Mr Whitlam bent down and picked up some purple soil, we did the image once more.

Fellow photographer Robert Wesley-Smith snapped the first take of the famous exchange as well.

Mr Wesley-Smith said HC “Nugget” Coombs, the primary chair of the Office of Aboriginal Affairs, hadn’t deliberate previous the handful of sand.

An old photo of a white man pouring sand into the palm of an Aboriginal man.

The first time the well-known change occurred it was too poorly lit for photographers capturing the second.  (Supplied: Rob Wesley-Smith)

“The humorous factor was they did not have a plan for what Vincent was going to do with that handful of filth and Vincent did not know what to do with it,” he stated.

“So he walked round for a bit, and I believe he surreptitiously dropped it behind his again.”

Mr Wesley-Smith additionally captured lesser-known pictures of the prime minister and Mr Lingiari sharing a drink.

An older Aboriginal man takes a sip from a champagne bottle as a white man looks on smiling.

Vincent Lingiari took a small sip of champagne upon providing. (Supplied: Rob Wesley-Smith)

“When the handful of sand had completed, I stepped ahead with my bottle of champagne and provided it to Whitlam, and he was about to boost it,” he stated.

“In truth he obtained it midway up his huge body to drink, and abruptly he thrust it to Vincent Lingiari to have the primary sip.

He stated Mr Lingiari by no means drank beer and took a small, tentative sip, earlier than handing it again to the prime minister. 

“Gough stood there up tall, bottle above his head, pouring into his copious gullet,”

he stated.

An older white man chugging champagne out of the bottle as an Aboriginal man looks on.

Gough Whitlam swigged from a bottle of champagne to mark the event. (Supplied: Rob Wesley-Smith)

“I said, ‘Fair go Gough, you’ll drink the bloody lot!’ and he, without looking down, said, ‘Keep your hair down Wesley’.”

The guests had left by round 4pm, leaving the tiny neighborhood buzzing with pleasure after 9 years of strike motion.


This web page was created programmatically, to learn the article in its unique location you may go to the hyperlink bellow:
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-08-24/story-behind-iconic-gough-whitlam-vincent-lingiari-photo-nt/105655230
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