Ngadlu tampinthi ngadlu Kaurna Miyurna yartangka. Munaintya puru purruna ngadlu-itya. Munaintyanangku yalaka tarrkarriana tuntarri.
We acknowledge we are on Kaurna Miyurna land. The Dreaming is still living. From the past, in the present, into the future, forever.
Ann (Annie) Lock devoted thirty four years of her life to nursing, feeding and clothing Aborigines, as well as spiritual instruction. She was born at Rynie, South Australia, seventh child of English born parents Walter Lock and Ann, nee Stokes. Raised a Methodist, in 1901 young Ann entered Angas College, Adelaide, a Missionary Training Home for Young Ladies. Two years later she joined the interdenominational Australian Aborigines' Mission (United Aborigines' Mission from 1929).
Subsequently Ann was based in Forster, NSW and the AAM's Orphanage in Perth before she founded a mission at Katanning. After two years at Oodnadatta, she departed for Harding Soak, Northern Territory in 1927. A year later she played an important role in bringing the Coniston Massacre to national public attention.
Lock always preferred to work alone as a missionary. In 1937 she resigned from the U.A.M. to marry widower James Johansen, and together they administered to Europeans living on Eyre Peninsula.
Diana Laidlaw AM