Wards of the Outer March explained
Wards of the Outer March is a 1932 Australian novel by Kay Glasson Taylor. It was the tale of a convict in colonial New South Wales.[1] [2] [3] [4] The book had been serialised by the Australian Woman's Mirror in 1930 under the pseudonym Daniel Hamline, with illustrations by Percy Lindsay.[5] [6]
Proposed film version
Charles Chauvel bought the film rights.[7]
In the 1950s he and his wife Elsa wrote a film script of the novel for Warwick Pictures. The film was scheduled for filming in August 1956.[8] HOwever it was not made.[9]
External links
Notes and References
- News: GEORGE HAS DONE IT . The Daily Telegraph . 2 . 113 . New South Wales, Australia . 25 June 1932 . 29 March 2024 . 3 . National Library of Australia.
- News: In Those Bad Old Days . . 3409 . Victoria, Australia . 28 January 1933 . 29 March 2024 . 26 (FIRST EDITION) . National Library of Australia.
- News: 14 July 1932 . New Thoughts On Thinking . 29 March 2024 . . Victoria, Australia . 26 . National Library of Australia . 17,212.
- News: AN AUSTRALIAN ROMANCE . . 24095 . Victoria, Australia . 2 July 1932 . 29 March 2024 . 4 . National Library of Australia.
- Hamline . Daniel . 15 April 1930 . Wards of the Outer March . The Australian Woman's Mirror . en . 6 . 21 . 2024-03-30 . Trove.
- Hamline . Daniel . 22 July 1930 . Wards of the Outer March . The Australian Woman's Mirror . en . 6 . 35 . 2024-03-30 . Trove.
- News: AUSTRALIAN PICTURES . Chronicle . 88 . 5036 . South Australia . 27 June 1946 . 29 March 2024 . 25 . National Library of Australia.
- News: Filmmakers headed for Australia. The Age. 22 May 1956. 13.
- Web site: Stuart. Cunningham. Charles Chauvel: The Last Decade. 28 March 2015.