Various claims have been made about its origin, but it seems that poet,
Mary Gilmore, was encouraged by
Roderic Quinn, and helped by Lucy Cassidy (wife of poet R.J. Cassidy), to hold a meeting of writers, at which a president,
John Le Gay Brereton was elected. It was founded in 1928, and at that time quite a political body, affiliated with the
Australian labour movement as well as international peace organisations. It advocated for fair pay for written work, which continued to be one of its aims for 50 years. By the end of 1932 (a difficult time economically, being the
Great Depression in Australia), there were 290 members; among the ranks were
Miles Franklin,
Dorothea Mackellar, and
Frank Clune. In 1955 a federal council was established, under the title Commonwealth Council of the Fellowships of Australian Writers. Under the Council Constitution, the Council president (chair) rotated between the state FAW presidents every two years, with writer and academic
Tom Inglis Moore being elected the first president in 1956. Early prominent members include: in New South Wales,
Flora Eldershaw,
Marjorie Barnard,
Frank Dalby Davison,
Dymphna Cusack; in Victoria,
Nettie Palmer; and in Western Australia,
Henrietta Drake-Brockman and
Katharine Susannah Prichard. The FAW was, with ex-Prime Minister
Jim Scullin, largely responsible for a trebling of the
Commonwealth Literary Fund's budget in 1939. The organisation grew in the 1970s and 1980s, and in 1985, under president
Hilarie Lindsay, there were nine metropolitan groups, 11 in country areas and a group of "Isolated Writers". A country regional branch was started in
the Riverina in 2010. In 2011 the Fellowship of Writers adopted its new constitution and a new logo. Its activities over the years included the creation and running of events such as Authors' Week (1930s),
Children's Book Week (1940s), and a number of competitions and awards for writers. ==Australian Authors' Week==