
Toni Tapp Coutts (born 7 November 1955) is an Australian author who has written extensively about her experiences growing up in the
Northern Territory of Australia.
Biography
Tapp Coutts was born in
Alice Springs
Alice Springs ( aer, Mparntwe) is the third-largest town in the Northern Territory of Australia. Known as Stuart until 31 August 1933, the name Alice Springs was given by surveyor William Whitfield Mills after Alice, Lady Todd (''née'' Al ...
and grew up on
Killarney Station after moving there when her mother, divorcee
June Clements (née Forscutt) married cattleman
Bill Tapp
Charles William Tapp, best known as Bill Tapp (2 June 1929 – 22 May 1992), was a pioneer and cattleman from Killarney Station in the Northern Territory of Australia.
Early life
Tapp was born in Sydney on 2 June 1929 and grew up in Vaucluse. ...
when she was 9 years old.
She moved there with her mother and her two siblings; Billy and Shing. On the station, they lived in a shack with no electricity or running water, and found conditions very taxing. When Tapp Coutts and her family arrived at the house, it had a hand-painted sign stating 'Cockrag Downs'; she said the meaning of 'cockrag' was "broken down and uncared for".
She said further of it:
Despite the hardships she loved where she grew up and was "happy on the land" with her friends and family. In her books she offers a tender portrait of the many characters who she encountered there and her love of the natural world.
She said that she had an amazing childhood growing up with Aboriginal people, the
Olkolo people, and being able to be part of observing and learning about their way of life.
She says that everyone was family.
In 1974, Tapp Coutts married Shaun Coutts and in the early 1980s, after a short period in
Victoria, they moved to
McArthur River Station, nearby
Borroloola
Borroloola ( local Aboriginal languages: ''Burrulula'') is a town in the Northern Territory of Australia. It is located on the McArthur River, about 50 km upstream from the Gulf of Carpentaria.
Location
Borroloola lies on the traditional c ...
, where Shaun had taken a job.
There, Tapp Coutts became a cook, counsellor, housekeeper, and nurse to many in the region. While there, she created the Heartbreak Bush Ball and started riding
campdraft
Campdrafting is a unique Australian sport involving a horse and rider working cattle. The riding style is Australian stock, somewhat akin to American Western riding and the event is similar to the American stock horse events such as cutting, w ...
in
rodeo
Rodeo () is a competitive equestrian sport that arose out of the working practices of cattle herding in Spain and Mexico, expanding throughout the Americas and to other nations. It was originally based on the skills required of the working va ...
s all over the Northern Territory, becoming one of the NT's top riders.
In 1994, they moved together to
Katherine and, in her time there, she has been a board member of the
NT Writers' Centre and coordinator of the Katherine region of the Writers' group. She is also a member of the Katherine Museum, Katherine Community Markets and has organised and participated in many local festivals and events including the Katherine Flying Fox Festival, the Fringe Festival and the
Barunga Festival.
She also served an elected member of the Katherine Town Council for 25 years (1996–2021) and ran, unsuccessfully, for the
2008 Northern Territory general election
General elections were held in the Northern Territory of Australia on 9 August 2008. Of the 25 seats in the Legislative Assembly, 23 were contested; two safe Labor seats were uncontested. The incumbent centre-left Labor Party (ALP), led by Chie ...
as an Independent.
She is a breast cancer survivor and overcame a major spinal infection in 2013 to 2014. During this time she formed a lobby group to establish a chemotherapy unit and cancer support office in Katherine.
She is also a mother of three.
Selected publications
* Tapp Coutts, Toni (2010). ''Bill Tapp : cattle king : the story about a big man with a big hat and a big heart''. Toni Tapp Coutts, Katherine, N.T.
* Coutts, Toni Tapp (2010). Walking the Wet. In ''Meanjin''. 69 (1), 143–147.
* Tapp Coutts, Toni (2016). ''A sunburnt childhood : growing up in the Territory''. Hachette Australia, Sydney, NSW.
* Tapp Coutts, Toni (2017). ''My Outback Life : The sequel to the bestselling memoir A Sunburnt Childhood'' (Digital original). Hachette Australia, Sydney, New South Wales.
* Tapp Coutts, Toni & Lothian Children's Books (2018). ''My Outback Childhood (younger readers) : Growing up in the Territory'' (Digital original). Hachette Australia, Sydney, New South Wales.
Tapp Coutts also compiled the book Katherine street names in 2003.
Collections
In 2020 and 2021 Tapp Coutts donated a collection of Personal and Community Archives (PCA 7) to
Library & Archives NT: this collection consists of magazine and newspaper clippings, correspondence, personal papers and notes, event notices, ephemera, newsletters, CDs and posters relating to her family and community.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tap Coutts, Toni
1955 births
Writers from the Northern Territory
Living people
Australian women writers