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Books > History > Australasian & Pacific history > General
As a journalist, Stewart Cockburn was instinctive and fearless. The
16-year-old copy boy who started at the Adelaide Advertiser in 1938
was to have a career in writing, radio and television that spanned
more than 45 years. Restless ambition took him to post-war London
with Reuters, to Melbourne with the Herald, to Canberra as Press
Secretary to Prime Minister Robert Menzies, and to Washington, DC
as Press Attache at the Australian Embassy. On returning to the
Advertiser, Cockburn's feature-writing won him a Walkley Award and
his opinion columns were ever informative and influential. In 1978
he challenged Premier Don Dunstan's politically charged sacking of
Police Commissioner Harold Salisbury. His tenacious journalism also
prompted the 1983 Royal Commission into the scientifically
questionable murder conviction of Eddie Splatt. His books included
The Salisbury Affair and very fine biographies of South Australia's
long-serving Premier Sir Thomas Playford and, with David Ellyard,
the eminent nuclear scientist Sir Mark Oliphant. In this biography,
Stewart Cockburn's daughter Jennifer draws on his many letters and
journals, bringing to life the father she knew and the changing
times he so closely observed.
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