Paul Coe

Paul Coe
Coe in 1970
Born
Paul Thomas Ernest Coe

(1949-02-04)4 February 1949
Died29 July 2025(2025-07-29) (aged 76)
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Alma materCowra High School
Occupations
  • Activist
  • lawyer
Years active1967–1990s

Paul Thomas Ernest Coe (4 February 1949 – 29 July 2025) was an Aboriginal Australian activist of Aboriginal rights and a former lawyer. He was a Wiradjuri man, born at Erambie Mission in Cowra, New South Wales. Well known for his lifelong advocacy of Aboriginal rights. He studied law at the University of New South Wales (the first Aboriginal person to do so). He was the founding figure in the establishment of the Aboriginal Legal Service in 1970, in Redfern (Sydney), which provides free legal aid and advocacy for Aboriginal people (first in New South Wales and then expanded to all states and territories). He was also a key figure in the establishment of the Aboriginal Medical Service in 1971 (also in Redfern); the Aboriginal Tent Embassy on the lawns of Australian federal parliament house in Canberra in 1972; and the Redfern Aboriginal Children's Services in 1975. He initiated his landmark Coe vs Commonwealth[1] case in the Australian High Court in April 1979, in the which he sought legal recognition of Aboriginal people's never ceded sovereignty of the continent of Australia by the British crown, establishing the major precursor for Eddie Mabo's greatly attenuated High Court case, 13 years later. He became the first Aboriginal person in New South Wales to be admitted as a barrister. In 1988 he represented Aboriginal peoples at the Working Group on Indigenous Populations in Geneva, contributing to the early drafting process that led to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Early life and education

Paul Thomas Ernest Coe[2][3] was born on 4 February 1949 at Erambie Mission, near Cowra in New South Wales, to Leslie John Coe (1929-1980) and Agnes Ann Coe née Wedge (1931-2014). He was the eldest of their five children, siblings were: Isabel (1951-2012), Jenny, Mary (1957-1994) and Les John (1958-2019). He was a proud Wiradjuri man.[4] His grandfather was Paul Joseph Coe (1902–1979),[5] whom he was named after. He came from a strong family of tireless advocacy and fighting for their peoples basic rights, his parents and grandparents and other elders in his community too, were strong in their resitance against the oppressive state policies which governed the lives of Aboriginal people and caused great suffering. His parents in particular were strong guardians and advocates of maintaining their family's Wiradjuri cultural identity, against rampant assimilation practices that were constantly forced upon Aboriginal people throughout the country at the time.

He was the first Aboriginal scholar at Cowra High School to pass the Higher School Certificate and to be elected a prefect, after spending three years at high school on a scholarship provided by a group of women's organisations.[6]

Career

Arriving in Sydney to initially study art and play football. In the wake of the 1967 referendum he was majorly active in the establishment in the 1970s of the Redfern Black Caucus in the inner Sydney suburb of Redfern in the 1970s, working initially with Pearl Gibbs, Charlie Perkins, Oodgeroo Noonuccal and Chicka Dixon, and later joined by Billy Craigie, Isabel Coe, Gary Foley, Gary Williams, Cecil Patten, Bob Maza, Denis Walker, Shirl Smith, Michael Ghillar Anderson, Lyall Munro Jnr, Jenny Munro, Gordon Briscoe, John Newfong, Sam Watson, Roberta Sykes and Kevin Gilbert to name a few, in the fight for basic human rights and justice for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.[7]

He became the first Aboriginal person to study law at the University of New South Wales and was a rugby league player at the time for both the university team and the Redfern All Blacks. His decision to pursue law instead of becoming an art teacher was profoundly driven by the severe injustices and disenfranchisement of his people, aswell many deaths at the hands of police including two of his own uncles in the 1960s. One of his sons Paul Coe Jnr quoted his father as saying "I gave up painting and sculpting because I realised that you cannot paint social, political and economic change."

In April 1970, he spoke as one of the main speakers, before a gathering organised by the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI) gathering at Sydney Town Hall in protest of the celebrations of the bicentennary of Captain Cook's landing in Botany Bay, reminding the audience that they had to demand their rights as people and not beg for them.

In 1970 he led a group of other activists including Isabel Coe, Gary Williams, Gary Foley, Cecil Patten and Tony Coorey (with support from Hal Wootten, then UNSW's Dean of Law) in establishing the Aboriginal Legal Service, the first free legal assistance service in Australia.[7][8] He continued to play an important role in this organisation until the late 1990s.

In 1971, during the tour of the all-white South African Springboks rugby team, widespread demonstrations took place across Australia in opposition to apartheid. As a leading member of the Redfern Black Caucus, he participated in the protests and used the occasion to draw attention to racial inequality within Australia. At one rally, he criticised sections of the anti-apartheid movement for opposing racism abroad while failing to address injustices experienced by Aboriginal people at home.

He played a key role in the establishment of the Aboriginal Medical Service in Redfern in 1971 along with Shirl Smith, Gordon Briscoe, Dulcie Flower, Fred Hollows and many others.

He was also involved heavily in the establishment of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy on the lawn outside Australian Federal Parliament House in Canberra in January 1972 with fellow Aboriginal rights activists from Redfern (including the four men who went down to Canberra to set it up initially: Billy Craigie, Michael Ghillar Anderson, Tony Coorey and Bert Williams). He was personally violently attacked by police in Canberra during the forced takedown of the tent embassy in July of that year, bruises on his back from the assault he carried for life; his unconscious body can be seen in the documentary Ningla_A-Na (1972).

He also played a founding role in the establishment of the Redfern Aboriginal Children's Services in 1975.

On 2 November 1976, while in England, he and fellow Aboriginal activist Cecil Patten rowed ashore at Dover beneath the White Cliffs and planted the Aboriginal flag in a symbolic act “claiming” Britain for Aboriginal people—an intervention intended to spotlight the double standard of terra nullius and assert continuing Aboriginal sovereignty.[9][10][11] In 2022 a plaque designed by his daughter Jasmine Coe was installed on Dover Beach to commemorate the action.[12]

In April 1979, he commenced an unsuccessful action in the High Court of Australia Coe vs The Commonwealth[13], arguing that rights of Aboriginal people as prior inhabitants of Australia before European colonisation should be recognised. While unsuccessful due to judges fears of risking the status quo of the Australian settler state; it paved the way for the Mabo deicison in May 1992 (albeit on a greatly reduced level of Indigenous land sovergeignty rights recognition than Coe had set out to fight for recognition of).

The same year, along with Lyall Munro Jnr and Cecil Patten, he representing the NSW Organisation for Aboriginal Unity, camped outside Parliament House with an Aboriginal bill of rights that they wished to see established by the federal government.[14]

He later advocated internationally, addressing the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Populations (WGIP) in Geneva in August 1988 as chair of the National Aboriginal and Islander Legal Services Secretariat; his statement formed part of the Indigenous interventions that fed into the WGIP’s standard-setting work on what became the Draft Declaration (1993) and, ultimately, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples adopted on 13 September 2007.[15][16][17][18]


Family

He had eight children.

Disbarment

In 1997, following proceedings in the Legal Services Tribunal, Coe's name was removed from the roll of legal practitioners. The Tribunal found that Coe had sworn an affidavit which he knew to be false in a material particular. The affidavit in question was sworn in the course of family law proceedings, to which Coe was a party, and understated his salary by some $80,000.[19]

Coe appealed the decision, but the Supreme Court of New South Wales Court of Appeal upheld the Tribunal's decision.

Both the Tribunal and the Court of Appeal commended Coe's role in advancing the interests of the Aboriginal community; however, the Court considered that Coe was not fit to practise, stating that the Court must be able to trust that barristers appearing before it would act in accordance with the law and would not mislead the Court.[19]

Media reports in 2003 indicated that Coe was subsequently investigated by the Bar Association of NSW for continuing to practise despite being removed from the roll. The outcome of the investigation is unknown.[20]

Death

Coe died in Sydney on 29 July 2025, at the age of 76.[21][22][23]

References

  1. ^ Coe v Commonwealth [1979] HCA 68
  2. ^ "nations" (PDF). United Nations Digital Library. 25 November 1991. p. 17. Retrieved 31 July 2025.
  3. ^ Parrot, Louise Elizabeth (July 2012). "Constitutional and Judicial Recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples: The Migration of Foundational Ideas from Canada to Australia" (PDF). Australian National University (Doctorate thesis). p. 58. Retrieved 31 July 2025.
  4. ^ "Bain Attwood and Terra Nullius". Sunday Profile. ABC Local Radio. 25 July 2004.
  5. ^ Read, Peter (2006). "Paul Joseph Coe (1902–1979)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943. Retrieved 22 August 2025.
  6. ^ "Paul's a Prefect". Dawn. June 1966 – via Kooriweb.
  7. ^ a b Faine, Jon (November 1993). Lawyers in the Alice: aboriginals and whitefellas' law (3 ed.). Sydney: Federation Press. pp. 14–21. ISBN 978-1-86287-115-1.
  8. ^ "Aboriginal Legal Service". Dictionary of Sydney. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  9. ^ "Jasmine and Edith Coe come to Dover to commemorate dad Paul putting up Aboriginal flag in 1976". KentOnline. 17 June 2022. Retrieved 20 August 2025.
  10. ^ "The Aboriginal Flag and the House of Commons". UK Parliament Commons Library (Social Policy Section). Retrieved 20 August 2025.
  11. ^ Howarth, Madison (5 February 2024). "In 1976, two First Nations men claimed England. Their actions proved terra nullius was a lie". SBS/NITV. Retrieved 20 August 2025.
  12. ^ "Dover Plaque". Jasmine Coe. Retrieved 20 August 2025.
  13. ^ Coe v Commonwealth [1979] HCA 68
  14. ^ "Aboriginal rights". Woroni. Vol. 31, no. 11. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 20 August 1979. p. 15. Retrieved 26 November 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
  15. ^ "A New partnership: indigenous peoples and the United Nations system". UNESCO. 1994. Retrieved 20 August 2025. Includes "Paul Coe … statement before the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Peoples, Geneva, August 1988."
  16. ^ "1985/21. Report of the Working Group on Indigenous Populations". UNHCR Refworld. 1985. Retrieved 20 August 2025.
  17. ^ "Report of the Working Group on Indigenous Populations (draft resolution)". UN Digital Library. 1985. Retrieved 20 August 2025.
  18. ^ "United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (A/RES/61/295)". United Nations Documents. 13 September 2007. Retrieved 20 August 2025.
  19. ^ a b Coe v NSW Bar Association [2000] NSWCA 13
  20. ^ Jopson, Debra (10 November 2003). "Struck-off barrister under investigation". SMH.
  21. ^ Barrett Peters, Courtney (30 July 2025). "Prominent Aboriginal rights activist and lawyer dies aged 76". ABC News. Retrieved 30 July 2025.
  22. ^ Torre, Giovanni (30 July 2025). "Revered land rights hero, Paul Coe, remembered as a 'legendary fighter for our people"". National Indigenous Times. Retrieved 30 July 2025.
  23. ^ Gibbons, Jessica (1 August 2025). "'Fearless and uncompromising': Activist who claimed UK for First Nations dies aged 76". Central News UTS. University of Technology Sydney. Retrieved 1 August 2025.