• Entry type: Person
  • Entry ID: AWE1167

Mack, Maggy Pinkie

  • Katipelvild
    Karpenny, Pinkie
    Sumner, Pinkie
    Mack, Pinkie
(1867 – 1954)
  • Born 1867, Lower Murray River South Australia Australia
  • Died 1954, Eastwood South Australia Australia
  • Occupation Aboriginal storyteller, Linguist

Summary

Maggy Pinkie Mack (Katipelvild), of Ngarrindjeri descent, was born on the lower Murray River in South Australia, probably around 1867. At the age of 16, she was given in marriage to an up-river man, John Mack (Telwara). She took part in ceremonies and learnt new songs and stories. After he died, she went back to her own country, and her second husband.

Pinkie Mack was a song-woman, and she recorded some of her songs on an Edison wax cylinder. She was nostalgic about the past and her people. After the death of Albert Karloan, she was the only remaining fluent Yaraldi speaker.

In later years, Mack lived in a small cottage near the river and not far from Tailem Bend, where she sometimes sold freshly caught fish to a local shop. Children, grandchildren and various relatives called in to see her on the way to other places.

Published resources

  • Edited Book
    • The Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia : Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history, society and culture, Horton, David, 1994
  • Resource

Related entries


  • Related Concepts
    • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women