The Victorian Community History Awards are held annually to recognise the contributions made by Victorians in the preservation of the State's history, and to recognise excellence in historical research. The effect of the VCHA over the period from 1998 to the present has been the stimulation of community history, the lifting of standards and the fostering of diversity and originality.[1]
The Victorian Community History Awards were established and sponsored in 1997 by Information Victoria. The judges have always been appointed by the Royal Historical Society of Victoria, and among the first were Professor Weston Bate, Professor A. G. L. Shaw, and senior journalist at The Age, John Lahey.[2]
Funding was suspended in 2006 to provide additional funds for the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne. After 2010 Information Victoria Bookshop withdrew support for the program, but after a vigorous campaign by the RHSV for the continuance of the Awards, the Baillieu government accepted a submission from the Public Record Office Victoria (PROV) to continue the program for a further four-year period.[3]
From 2011 the Awards were administered by the RHSV in partnership with PROV.[4]
In 2012, following consultation between the Public Record Office Victoria and the Royal Historical Society of Victoria, award categories were slightly altered and renamed, as below:
Victorian Community History Awards winners, from 2012
2023: Judges' Special Prize - John Cary for Frontier Magistrate: the enigmatic Foster Fyans[5]
2022: Judges' Special Prize - Dr David Rowe for About Corayo: a thematic history of Greater Geelong[6]
2021: Paul Paffen for For the Fallen: The 1921-1922 Melbourne Public Library Mural Competition within the setting of Decorative Painting in Australian Art[7]
2015: Graeme Davison for Lost Relations: fortunes of my family in Australia's Golden Age[13]
2014: Mornington Peninsula Local History Network and Lavender Hill Multimedia for Postcards: Stories from the Mornington Peninsula (DVD)[14]
2013: Judges' Special Prize for Excellence - Rod Charles for A Whirr of Many Wheels. Cycling in Geelong: A chronicle from 1869 to 1980 Volume 1: 1869 to 1914[15]
2012: Judges' Special Prize for Excellence - Lorne Historical Society & Lorne Aireys Inlet P-12 College VCAL Students for Construction of The Great Ocean Road DVD[16]
2021: Lynda Mitchelson-Twigg, representing the Gippsland Lakes Commercial Fishing Community, assisted by Nikki Henningham, Leigh Henningham, Tanya King, Donna Squire and Geoff Stanton for End of an Era: The Last Gippsland Lakes Fishermen[7]
2020: Sandy Jeffs and Margaret Leggatt for Out of the Madhouse: From Asylums to Caring Community?[17]
2023: Flinders District Historical Society for Flinders Cargo Shed: heritage and environs[5]
2022: Dr James Lesh for Report on the place name: Moreland[6]
2021: Sarah Pinto for Places of Reconciliation: Commemorating Indigenous History in the Heart of Melbourne[7]
2020: Benjamin Wilkie for Gariwerd: An Environmental History of the Grampians[17]
2019: Beris Campbell et al. for More Than Just Housing: The South Port Community Housing Group Story 1983–2018[9]
2018: Hans-Wolter von Gruenewaldt and Kay Ball for Art Captured: Hans-Wolter von Gruenewaldt, Prisoner of War Camp 13 Murchison: His Story and His Art[10]
2017: Robyn Lewis for Building Castlemaine: The Red Brick Legacy of H.D. McBean[11]
2016: Judith Buckrich for The Village of Ripponlea[12]
2015: Fiona Poulton and Katherine Sheedy for Boroondara Remembers: stories of World War 1[13]
2014: Margaret Bowman for Cultured Colonists: George Alexander Gilbert and His Family, Settlers in Port Phillip[14]
2013: Coleen Bower for Water Races and Tin Mines of the Toora District: A Short History of the Tin Mines at Granite Bar and Toora[15]
2012: Ken McKimmie for Chewton Then and Now: A series of studies investigating change over time in the former Mount Alexander Goldfield town of Forest Creek later known as Chewton[16]
2023: Willaura Modern Incorporated at Historic Railway Station Gallery in association with Willaura Historical Society for Precious objects: shared memories of our collective past[5]
2022: Helen Petschel, Christine Cook and Matthew Cook for Red Cliffs recollections: a century of soldier settlement 1921-2021[6]
2021: Chinese Australian Family Historians of Victoria for Victorian CEDT Index[7]
2020: Patrick Ferry with Wally Nye for Blood, Toil, Tears & Sweat: Remembering the Pakenham District’s WW2 Service Personnel, 1939–1945[17]
2019: Jill A'Vard and Armin Richter for When Roads Were Tracks: A history of the roads of Monbulk, Kallista, the Patch and Sherbrooke[9]
2018: Elizabeth O’Callaghan for Silent Lives: Women of Warrnambool and District 1840-1910[10]
2017: Collingwood Historical Society for Notable People of Collingwood[11]
2016: Ian D. Clark (historian) for We Are All of One Blood: a History of the Djabwurrung Aboriginal People of Western Victoria, 1836-1901[12]
2015: Gillian and John Francis for Strewth! An insight into local involvement in World War One, 2 volumes[13]
2014: Marguerita Stephens (et al. for Vol 4) for The Journal of William Thomas, Assistant Protector of the Aborigines of Port Phillip & Guardian of the Aborigines of Victoria, 1839-1867, 4 volumes[14]
2013: Kevin O’Reilly for Flyers of Time: Pioneer Aviation in Country Victoria, The First Fifty Years. A Collection[15]
2022: Way Back When and the City of Melton for City of Melton 150th Anniversary online exhibition[6]
2021: Atalanti Dionysus / Atalanti Films for A Miscarriage of Justice[7]
2020: Rachel Fensham and Andrew Fuhrmann for the Digital Studio at University of Melbourne and Digital Heritage Australia for La Mama: The Biggest Little Theatre in Australia[17]
2018: Mallacoota and District Historical Society for Secrets from the Mallacoota Bunker[10]
2017: Ros Stirling and Heritage Films for Joseph Reed and the Making of Marvellous Melbourne[11]
2016: Rural City of Wangaratta for We Remember: honouring the service and sacrifice of local veterans and the Wangaratta community during WW1 (website & DVD)[12]
2015: Port Melbourne Historical and Preservation Society for Postcards from Port: an audiovisual retrospective of Port Melbourne (DVD)[13]
2014: Lilydale & District Historical Society Inc for Gun Alley: the forgotten story of Lilydale's back streets 1880 to today (website)[14]
2023: Gus Berger, Gusto Films for The Lost City of Melbourne[5]
2022: Benjamin Gray for Extinct: artistic impressions of our lost wildlife[6]
2021: Commonplace Productions (Bill Garner and Sue Gore) with Kacey Sinclair, Alice Garner, Pat Furze and the Band Friends of Wendy Cotton for Finding Fanny Finch
2020: Lucy Bracey and Gregory Mackay for Annie’s War: The Story of One Boroondara Family’s Wartime Experience[17]
2018: A collaborative exhibition by the Wangaratta Historical Society, Wangaratta Art Gallery and Museums Australia (Victoria) Roving Curator Program for Wangaratta Stories[10]
2017: Discover Historic Kyneton for Discover Historic Kyneton: A Guide to Discovering Kyneton’s Historic Places and People[11]
2016: Eva de Jong-Duldig and filmmaker David Smith for Duldig Studio Documentaries. Volume 1: 4 documentaries[12]
2015: Meyer Eidelson for Melbourne Dreaming: a guide to important places of the past and present[13]
2014: Friends of La Trobe's Cottage for The garden at la Trobe's Cottage, Kings Domain, Melbourne[14]
2013: Chewton Domain Society for The Monster Meeting, The Great Meeting of Diggers 4 pm, 15 December 1851[15]
2012: Gib Wettenhall for Goldfields Track Walking Guide[16]
2023: Sylvia Morrissey for No mention of the Great Famine: interpreting a gap in Dr John Sington's autobiographical narrative[5]
2022: Adrien McCrory for Policing gender nonconformity in Victoria 1900-1940, in Provenance[6]
2021: Barbara Minchinton for The Rise and Fall of Lady Gillott in Melbourne’s Turn-of-the-Century Society[7]
2020: Ruby Ekkel for "Woman’s Sphere Remodelled: A Spatial History of the Victorian Woman’s Christian Temperance Union 1887–1914" in the Victorian Historical Journal[17]
2018: Nikita Vanderby for "The Happiest Time of My Life": Emotive Visitor Books and Early Mission Tourism to Victoria's Aboriginal Reserves[10]
2017: Miranda Francis for 'One Woman's Crèche is a Bureaucrat's Child-Minding Centre, "The Flat" at Footscray High School 1976-1986' in Provenance Journal.[11]
2016: James Kirby for 'Beyond Failure and Success: the Soldier Settlement on Ercildoune Road' in Provenance Journal[12]
2015: Alistair Thomson for 'Anzac Memories Revisited: trauma, memory and oral history' in Oral History Review, Vol 42 Issue 1, 2015[13]
2011: Michael Collins and others for Our Boys at the Front: The Mornington Peninsula at War 1914-18 from the pages of the Peninsula Post. (Book and DVD)
2010: Yarra Valley Italian Cultural Group for Dreams from a Suitcase ('Sogni Dalla Valigia'): Recollections of Italian Settlers in the Yarra Valley
2009: Christine Grayden, Phillip Island Conservation Society for An Island Worth Conserving: A History of the Phillip Island Conservation Society
2008: Collingwood Historical Society Inc for Collingwood Plaques Project
2007: Andrew Brown-May and Shurlee Swain (eds) for The Encyclopedia of Melbourne
2005: Peter Yule (ed.) and the Carlton Residents Association Inc. for Carlton: A History
2004: Elizabeth Huf for Courage, Patience and Persistence: 150 Years of German Settlement in Western Victoria
2003: Jewish Museum of Australia (in association with Shalom Association) for From Russia with Hope: Australian Jews from Russia 1870-2002 (Exhibition)
2002: South Port Day Links and Port Melbourne Historical Society for Linking Us Together
2001: Sigrid Borke for In and Out of Port. Voices from the Port of Melbourne. An Oral History
2000: City of Whittlesea for Oral History and Poster Exhibition Project
1999: Jan Critchett for Untold Stories - Memories and Lives of Victorian Koories
1998: Linda Barraclough for historical research and community work in Gippsland
2011: Peter Cuffley, Helen McBurney, Geoff Palmer & Janey Runci for Henry Handel Richardson in Maldon.
2010: Karen McIntyre for Lake Bolac Heritage Walk
2009: Wangaratta Regional Tourist Development Inc for Heritage Walk, Wangaratta
2008: Bayside City Council for Bayside Architectural Trail
2007: Ruth Gallant, Footscray Reference Group & Maribyrnong City Council for Footscray Trail: a guided walk through the historic central business district
2005: Margaret Gardner and Val Heffernan, The Hamilton History Centre for Exploring Hamilton Walks
In 2011 Best Exhibit and Best Audio-Visual / Multimedia were combined as a category. See above.
2010: Janine Rizzetti (Heidelberg Historical Society) for An Invitation to the Ball
2009: Port Melbourne Historical and Preservation Society for The Navy in Port Exhibition: A month of celebration for the centenary of the Great White Fleet visit
2008: Robinvale Network House for Migration Memories - Robinvale
2007: Victorian Jazz Archive Inc. for Jazz Spans the Decades – A History of Jazz in Victoria
2005: David Williams for Harvests, Headlands & Halcyon Heritage
2004: Jointly organised by the Warrnambool Art Gallery and the Warrnambool and District Historical Vehicle Club. Curated by Brenda O'Connor for Early Motoring in Warrnambool
2003: Melbourne's Living Museum of the West for A Stone Upon A Stone: A Touring Exhibition about the History and Heritage of Dry Stone Walls
2002: Laharum Hall Committee for Federation Mural: History of Laharum
2001: Golden Dragon Museum, Bendigo for Showing Face
2000: Tatura and District Australia Day 2000 Committee for Tatura Collage Columns
1999: Jan Mitchell for Baywalk Bollards Project
1998: Mr Russell Jack - Bendigo Golden Dragon Museum
^The Victorian Community History Awards, by Carole Woods in Victorian Historical Journal, June 2013, Vol 84 No 1, p 159. Royal Historical Society of Victoria: Melbourne, 2013.
^The Victorian Community History Awards, by Carole Woods in Victorian Historical Journal, June 2013, Vol 84 No 1, p 159. Royal Historical Society of Victoria: Melbourne, 2013.
^The Victorian Community History Awards, by Carole Woods in Victorian Historical Journal, June 2013, Vol 84 No 1, p 159. Royal Historical Society of Victoria: Melbourne, 2013.
^The Victorian Community History Awards, by Carole Woods in Victorian Historical Journal, June 2013, Vol 84 No 1, p 159. Royal Historical Society of Victoria: Melbourne, 2013.