After playing state league for Adelaide Croatia alongside Charles Perkins and John Moriarty, Briscoe moved to England in 1958 with the hope of playing professional football. He had stints at Barnet and Preston North End (although he did not make a first team appearance), before returning to Australia at the suggestion of his former schoolmate and teammate Perkins.[7][8]
Briscoe's memoir, Racial Folly: A Twentieth-Century Aboriginal Family was published by ANU Press in 2010 as an open access book. It "shows us the history of an Aboriginal family who lived under the race laws, practices and policies of Australia in the twentieth century. It tells the story of a people trapped in ideological folly spawned to solve 'the half-caste problem'"[17]
He also wrote a number of books and reports on Aboriginal health and history, including:
Counting, Health and Identity: A History of Aboriginal Health and Demography in Western Australia and Queensland, 1900-1940[18] published by Aboriginal Studies Press in 2003,
Queensland Aborigines and the Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918-1919[19] published in 1996, which 'Discusses impact of the Spanish Influenza pandemic on Queensland Aborigines who accounted for 30 per cent of the death toll in Queensland'.
Death
Briscoe died on 30 June 2023 at the age of 84.[20][21]
Footnotes
^Although this article says he was the first Indigenous Australian to earn a PhD, other sources show that this is not so. There's Eve Fesl in 1988,[14] and this study says "the earliest record that we could find was the PhD awarded to Dr Bill Jonas in 1980 by the University of Papua New Guinea" and "we estimate that approximately 25 Indigenous people were awarded their doctorate [during the 1980s]" (some at least from overseas universities).
References
^"People - Gordon Briscoe". Collaborating for Indigenous Rights. National Museum of Australia. Archived from the original on 22 July 2008. Retrieved 16 December 2008.
^"$2,000 fee on Perkins waived". The Canberra Times. Vol. 43, no. 12, 392. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 16 August 1969. p. 34. Retrieved 10 June 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
^"SPORTS SHORTS". Woroni. Vol. 22, no. 3. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 25 March 1970. p. 14. Retrieved 10 June 2021 – via National Library of Australia.