Freedom Riders Ann Curthoys and Brian Aarons reflect on NSW Ride 50 years on

Fifty years ago, from February 12 to 26, 1965, Charles Perkins led a group of students, including us, from the University of Sydney on a freedom ride.

We travelled by bus to protest against racial discrimination against Aboriginal people in New South Wales country towns such as Walgett, Moree, Bowraville and Kempsey.

Although we had done our best to prepare, the non-Aboriginal students were shocked by what we found: desperately poor living conditions on fringe settlements, missions on which white managers controlled every aspect of Aboriginal people's lives, white people convinced of their racial superiority, and exclusion of Aboriginal people from the basic amenities of a country town.

So, we protested against the exclusion of Aboriginal people from RSL clubs in Walgett, swimming pools in Moree and Kempsey, and picture theatres in Bowraville.

The angry reaction of the white townsfolk to our protests made it clear to a broad Australian public that racial discrimination was alive and well, and led to some serious soul-searching in urban and rural NSW.

There were intense debates not only over the racial discrimination we exposed, but also over the truly dire situation of most Aboriginal people in gaining access to decent housing, health, and education.

The Freedom Ride was an important catalyst for some substantial changes in Aboriginal affairs over the next 10 years or so.

Significantly, it brought Charles Perkins to prominence as a passionate and articulate Aboriginal leader who was not afraid to tell white Australians just how disastrous their racism was for the lives and opportunities of his people.

As former freedom riders, we have been astounded at the huge interest in this anniversary - in the towns, in the university and in the media.

Today, a bus with current university students, university representatives, and original freedom riders is en route from the University of Sydney to Dubbo, Walgett, Moree, Bowraville, and Kempsey.

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Freedom Riders Ann Curthoys and Brian Aarons reflect on NSW Ride 50 years on

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Freedom Ride organiser Charles Perkins 'powerful because he was moderate', says veteran journalist

Charles Perkins, who led the Freedom Ride in New South Wales 50 years ago this week, was a powerful and often uncompromising personality who became the first Aboriginal person to not only complete tertiary education, but to head a Federal Government department.

But his determination to work with the system, not just criticise it from the outside, led veteran journalist Gerald Stone, who covered the first Australian Freedom Ride in 1965, to remember him as "powerful because he was moderate".

Sydney University student Perkins organised the 1965 Australian Freedom Ride, modelled on the Freedom Rides against segregation in America's deep south.

The bus trip was designed to show how much discrimination Aboriginal people in Australian country towns were still encountering.

Stone told the ABC's PM program that Perkins and his fellow riders on the bus trip were very open, allowing people to question their motives and actions along the way.

"You could be very resentful about what was happening," said Stone.

"It would have been so easy [for Perkins] to have become radicalised and make provocative statements, but he wanted to try and win the mainstream of Australian people."

One way of doing that was via media coverage.

Stone, who at the time had recently arrived from America, was working for Sydney afternoon tabloid Daily Mirror at the time.

One of the biggest stories he broke was about segregation at a local swimming pool in the town of Moree.

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Freedom Ride organiser Charles Perkins 'powerful because he was moderate', says veteran journalist

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