Malcolm Henry Ellis,
CMG
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(21 August 1890 – 18 January 1969) was an Australian journalist, historian, critic, reviewer and staunch anti-communist.
His younger brother
Ulrich Ellis
Ulrich Ruegg Ellis (23 July 1904 – 4 December 1981) was an Australian journalist, political activist, and historian. He was known for his work in developing Canberra, his involvement with the New State Movement, and his behind-the-scenes work ...
was also a journalist and historian.
Ellis won praise during
World War II
World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the World War II by country, vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great power ...
for his column, "The Service Man", which appeared under the pseudonym "Ek Dum". Using radio reports and his knowledge of terrain, he described military campaigns in a realistic manner so that it was assumed he was present.
[ His series of anti-communist tracts, the most famous of which was ''The Red Road'' (1932), was lurid and divisive.
Due to his staunch criticism of the writing of ]Manning Clark
Charles Manning Hope Clark, (3 March 1915 – 23 May 1991) was an Australian historian and the author of the best-known general history of Australia, his six-volume ''A History of Australia'', published between 1962 and 1987. He has been descri ...
, who in Ellis's view was a Communist fellow traveller, he almost subverted the launching of the '' Australian Dictionary of Biography''. "History without facts", his excoriating and now legendary review in the Sydney ''Bulletin
Bulletin or The Bulletin may refer to:
Periodicals (newspapers, magazines, journals)
* Bulletin (online newspaper), a Swedish online newspaper
* ''The Bulletin'' (Australian periodical), an Australian magazine (1880–2008)
** Bulletin Debate ...
'' of the first volume of Clark's ''A History of Australia'', is for many the main legacy of his otherwise extensive works, which include biographies of key early Australian colonial figures, Francis Greenway, John Macarthur and Lachlan Macquarie.[ Andrew Moore (1999) ''History without facts'': M. H. Ellis, ]Manning Clark
Charles Manning Hope Clark, (3 March 1915 – 23 May 1991) was an Australian historian and the author of the best-known general history of Australia, his six-volume ''A History of Australia'', published between 1962 and 1987. He has been descri ...
and the origins of the Australian Dictionary of Biography. Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society
The Royal Australian Historical Society, formerly Australian Historical Society, is a voluntary organisation founded in Sydney, Australia in 1901Helen Doyle, "Royal Australian Historical Society" in Graeme Davison, John Hirst and Stuart Ma ...
, Dec 1999 also at http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb4817/is_2_85/ai_n28745196/. ''Given the extent of Malcolm Ellis's contribution to historical scholarship, it is curious that sometimes he should be more widely remembered for a single book review. This was `History Without Facts', published in The Bulletin
Bulletin or The Bulletin may refer to:
Periodicals (newspapers, magazines, journals)
* Bulletin (online newspaper), a Swedish online newspaper
* ''The Bulletin'' (Australian periodical), an Australian magazine (1880–2008)
** Bulletin Debate, ...
on 22 September 1962. Ellis's response to the first volume of Manning Clark's history of Australia shaped contemporary and subsequent responses to Clark's ambitious project. In less than subtle terms Malcolm Ellis introduced a new pastime to Australian public and intellectual life, that of Manning Clark 'bashing' ''
Awards
* 1942: awarded the S. H. Prior prize by ''The Bulletin
Bulletin or The Bulletin may refer to:
Periodicals (newspapers, magazines, journals)
* Bulletin (online newspaper), a Swedish online newspaper
* ''The Bulletin'' (Australian periodical), an Australian magazine (1880–2008)
** Bulletin Debate, ...
'' for his John Murtagh Macrossan lectures at the University of Queensland on Macquarie
* 1956: appointed Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George
The Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George is a British order of chivalry founded on 28 April 1818 by George IV, Prince of Wales, while he was acting as prince regent for his father, King George III.
It is named in hono ...
(C.M.G.)
* 21 October 1966: honorary doctorate conferred by the University of Newcastle. The vice-chancellor, Professor James Auchmuty
James Johnston Auchmuty, , (29 November 1909 – 15 October 1981) was an Irish born historian and inaugural vice-chancellor of the University of Newcastle, Australia.
Early life
Auchmuty was born in Portadown, County Armagh, Ireland, the elder ...
, praised him for contributing more than any other historian to 'knowledge of our country in the first half century of its existence'[
]
Notes
Sources & external links
1890 births
1969 deaths
Australian biographers
Male biographers
Australian anti-communists
Writers from New South Wales
Australian Companions of the Order of St Michael and St George
20th-century Australian historians
20th-century Australian journalists
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