Pearl Mary "Gambanyi" Gibbs (née Brown) (18 July 1901 - 28 April 1983) was an Indigenous Australian activist, and the most prominent female activist within the Aboriginal movement in the early 20th century. Pearl Gibbs was an Australian activist who fought for the rights of Australian Aboriginal people for some 50 years. She was especially skilled in organizing and promoting campaigns for social reform.
Pearl Mary Brown was born in La Perouse, just outside Sydney. Her mother, Mary Margaret Brown, was. Pearl Mary (Gambanyi) Gibbs (1901-1983), Aboriginal leader, was born in 1901 at La Perouse, Sydney, younger daughter of Mary Margaret Brown, who was born in Brewarrina to Maria, an Aboriginal woman of the Ngemba or Muruwari language, and a white station worker, George Brown.
Pearl's father, David Barry, was estranged from the family. Pearl Gibbs passed away on 28 April 1983, aged 81, ending a life of influence inconceivable in its greatness. Her achievements were many and included the ability to bring people from everywhere and every walk of life to fight for the rights of Aboriginal people.
Gibbs, Pearl (1901-1983) Aboriginal activist. Name variations: known as Gambanyi (in Ngiyamba). Born in Australia in 1901; died in 1983; daughter of Maggie Brown and stepdaughter of Dick Murray; attended school at Yass and Cowra; married a man named Gibbs (an English sailor), in the 1920s (separated); children: one daughter and two sons.
Pearl Gibbs was born in Australia in 1901 and spent. Pearl "Gambayani" Gibbs died in 1983 in Dubbo, New South Wales in a country she helped to change for the better. While the fight for justice and equality hasn't finished her legacy won't be forgotten.
Also known as Gambayani, Pearl Gibbs was born in Botany Bay in 1901. She grew up in Brewarrina and Yass in rural New South Wales, attending segregated schools before going into domestic service in Sydney in 1917. It was there that she witnessed the exploitation and injustice which led her to a lifetime campaign for justice.
9. Pearl Gibbs began to work with APA president Jack Patten and secretary William Ferguson, and in 1938 she was involved with organising the Day of Mourning protests, which at the time was the most significant Aboriginal civil rights demonstration in Australia. 10.
In 1937, Pearl Gibbs joined William Ferguson in forming the Aborigines' Progressive Association. Also known as Gambayani, Pearl Gibbs was born in Botany Bay in 1901. She grew up in Brewarrina and Yass in rural New South Wales, attending segregated schools before going into domestic service in Sydney in 1917.
Pearl Gibbs Pearl Gibbs (1901-1983), Aboriginal leader known also as Gambanyi (in Ngiyamba), was a daughter of Maggie Brown and stepdaughter of Dick Murray, both from Brewarrina. Pearl grew up round Yass (where her mother worked as a domestic servant) and later in the Brewarrina area.