of the AAL The Victorian Aborigines Advancement League (VAAL) was established in March 1957, The new League drew from two already existing organisations, the
Australian Aborigines League, established in 1934 and the Save the Aborigines Committee, established as a response to the
Warburton Ranges controversy in 1956–7. Founding president of the League was
Gordon Bryant, with
Doris Blackburn as deputy president,
Stan Davey as secretary and
Douglas Nicholls as Field Officer. A national
umbrella organisation, the
Federal Council for Aboriginal Advancement (later FCAATSI) was founded in February 1958 in
Adelaide, South Australia, but the
Aborigines Advancement League of South Australia (AALSA) finally disaffiliated in 1966, because it thought the federal organisation was too centred on
Victoria. (Davey also became secretary of
FCAATSI, before moving to
Western Australia. Early activities included lobbying for a referendum to change the
Australian constitution to allow the
Federal government to legislate on Aboriginal affairs, and an establishing a legal defence fund for
Albert Namatjira, after he was charged with supplying liquor to an Aboriginal ward. In 1968, the AAL, led by
Bruce McGuinness and
Bob Maza, invited Caribbean activist
Roosevelt Brown to give a talk on
Black Power in Melbourne, causing a media frenzy. The AAL was influenced by the ideas of
Malcolm X and
Stokely Carmichael. The
Australian Black Power movement had emerged in
Redfern in Sydney,
Fitzroy, Melbourne, and
South Brisbane, following the "
Freedom Ride" led by
Charles Perkins in 1965, but this visit brought the term to wider attention. Salaried director
Elizabeth Maud Hoffman, who served From 1975 to 1983, was the organisations longest-serving director. The organisation changed its name for some time from in 2020 until January 2025 to Aboriginal Advancement League. ==Headquarters==