Lorna McDonald (historian)


Lorna Lorraine McDonald OAM, was an Australian historian and author.

Early life

McDonald was born at Portland, Victoria in 1916 and attended school at Mount Gambier, South Australia.
She married Hugh Fraser McDonald, a Presbyterian minister, at the Presbyterian Church in Drik Drik, Victoria in 1938. They had three sons Donald, Roger and Gavin, all born and educated in NSW. McDonald and her husband moved to Rockhampton, Queensland in 1963.

Professional career

Academic achievements

Once McDonald moved to Rockhampton, she began studying externally, completing degrees from the University of Queensland.
In 1975, McDonald gained a master's degree after publishing a thesis on land settlement in the Port Curtis and Leichhardt districts of Queensland. Ten years later, McDonald received a PhD for her thesis on the history of the Central Queensland cattle industry.
In 2000, McDonald was awarded Doctor of Letters from Central Queensland University.

Writing

In 1981, McDonald released the first of more than twenty books which are all related to the history of Central Queensland with the first publication entitled Rockhampton: A history of city & district which explored in detail the history of the region.
Her 2011 publication, Treasures in a Tea Tin was based on her discovery of an old tea tin that contained a collection of old letters, postcards, photos and artworks that were written to Joan Archer while she was away in England. McDonald found the tea tin in the 1990s while she was doing unrelated research about the Archer brothers.
After celebrating her 100th birthday in 2016, McDonald relaunched The Moving Mind: The life of Henry Arthur Kellow a biography of Rockhampton Grammar School principal Henry Kellow, originally published in 1981. At the relaunch of the book, McDonald admitted she wasn't interested in writing another book, but was reading books about geology and biology as she liked to read things about subjects that she had not yet studied.

Criticism of Q150 shortlist

In 2009, McDonald openly questioned why various landmarks in Central Queensland had failed to be shortlisted for the "Queensland's Top 150 Icons" list, compiled as part of the Q150 sesquicentenary celebrations, after the Queensland Government invited the public to nominate their favourite Queensland landmarks for the list. McDonald said she was surprised that the Fitzroy River, Customs House and the Mount Morgan Mine didn't manage to secure a place amongst the other 300 landmarks that were shortlisted for the final Top 150 list.

Author

Editor

Oral projects

Lorna McDonald Collection

In 2013, McDonald donated 22 boxes to the Fryer Library at the University of Queensland, consisting of her collection of diaries, research notes, photographs and personal papers which she had accumulated during her research between 1963 and 2013.

Awards

In 1995, McDonald was awarded an Order of Australia medal.
In 2007, McDonald was presented with the Royal Historical Society of Queensland's John Douglas Kerr Medal of Distinction.

Death

McDonald died on 25 June 2017. Rockhampton mayor Margaret Strelow said that the city's councillors were very saddened at hearing the news of McDonald's death, and said the contribution she had made in both preserving and recording the history of Central Queensland will leave a legacy of which McDonald's family should be proud.