To book Jim for your event or function, please use the contact form on this page.
To use snail mail:
JIM HAYNES
POST OFFICE BOX 3007
EASTLAKE NSW 2018
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The son of British migrants, Jim was born in Sydney and attended Botany Public School, Sydney Boys’ High School and Sydney Teachers’ College and later gained two masters’ degrees in literature, from the University of New England and the University of Wales in the UK. He sang in a folk trio at Teachers’ College and was a member of various bands while teaching in country towns, in between several periods living in the UK.
While teaching in Inverell, NSW, in the late 1970s, Jim formed the Bandy Bill & Co Bush Band. He re-joined in 1985 after living in the UK and the band recorded two albums and had airplay on the ABC radio show Australia All Over. Jim worked weekend shifts on commercial radio station 2NZ and quit teaching to work full time on Australia All Over in 1988. He had a minor hit with Mow Ya Lawn in 1989, signed his first solo record deal with Festival in 1990 and embarked on a career as an entertainer.
Two songs – Don’t Call Wagga Wagga Wagga and Since Cheryl Went Feral, became hits and crossed over onto the pop charts. He toured his own show and toured with other artists like Slim Dusty, Frank Ifield, Melinda Schneider, Beccy Cole, Greg Champion and Adam Brand.
Having ‘invented’ the country town of Weelabarabak in the 1980s, Jim began writing verse about the town and its characters and events. These poems were self-published as I’ll Have Chips! and a book of short stories, Memories of Weelabarabak, was published by ABC Books. His Aussie Verse column was a feature of the nation’s oldest magazine Australasian Post, until its demise in 2004.
Jim has now written, compiled and edited thirty-five books, specialising in well-researched, factual (but always entertaining) Australian history. He finds the truth behind the many myths and misconceptions that Aussies tend to believe about our past.
Credited with starting ‘bush verse’ morning shows at the Tamworth and Port Fairy Festivals, Jim served on the board of the Country Music Association of Australian for 15 years and helped create the Academy of Country Music.
He has worked on Sydney radio for 25 years and was awarded the Order of Australia Medal in the Australia Day Honour’s List in 2016, ‘for service to the performing arts as an entertainer, author, broadcaster and historian’.
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