D'Arcy Niland was born Darcy Francis Niland on 20 October 1917 in the rural town of
Glen Innes, New South Wales. His father Francis Augustus Niland was a
cooper and
wool classer, and his mother was Barbara Lucy, née Egan. He was the eldest of six children in the Irish-Catholic family. Niland was named by his father after the boxer,
Les Darcy (1895–1917), he changed the form of his first name to D'Arcy as an adult. He attended the Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart school in Glen Innes. In December 1935 he wrote an article, "Lore and Legends of the Christmas Tree", for the same newspaper. The
Great Depression ended this avenue of employment, however, and for some years he travelled the country, finding work in a wide variety of occupations including as a farm labourer, opal miner, circus hand, potato digger, and shearing shed
roustabout. In the late 1930s he returned to Sydney where he worked as a railway porter. During World War II, Niland was rejected for military service due to a heart condition – he worked as a shearer under the
Manpower Directorate. On 11 May 1942 Niland married New Zealand-born journalist and fellow author,
Rosina Ruth Park. Eventually the couple had five children: Anne (born ca. June 1943), Rory, Patrick and twin daughters,
Kilmeny (1950–2009) and
Deborah (1950-present). After their wedding, Niland and Park travelled through the Australian outback – he worked as a shearer and she worked as a cook – before settling in
Surry Hills in 1943, then a tough working-class suburb of Sydney. ==Career==