Background
Strehlow was born in Fredersdorf (today part of Zichow), Uckermark in the Prussian province of Brandenburg.
Strehlow was born in Fredersdorf (today part of Zichow), Uckermark in the Prussian province of Brandenburg.
He was preparing to migrate to the United States of America when he received a call from the Immanuel Synod in South Australia. He was ordained in July 1892 at Light Pass, South Australia. Strehlow began his missionary work among the Dieri Aborigines in the Killalpaninna (Bethesda) Mission on the Cooper Creek in South Australia working for J. G. Reuther.
He learned the Dieri language sufficiently that he was able to assist in finishing the translation of the New Testament in his two years there.
In 1894 the Immanuel Synod bought the abandoned Finke River Mission at Hermannsburg and appointed Strehlow to head the mission there. He led it for 28 years until his death, and is recorded to have only ventured away further than Alice Springs four times.
The first of these was in 1895 to marry his German fiance, Frieda Johanna Henrietta Keysser who had travelled separately to South Australia at Point Pass. They eventually had six children.
Strehlow learnt and documented the languages of the Arrernte and Luritja people, and published together with Moritz von Leonhardi a seven-volume work on their culture.
He also worked to develop a dictionary and to translate Christian hymns and parts of the Bible into the Aranda language. Sickened Strehlow died on his way to the Oodnadatta railway station at Horseshoe Bend near Titjikala. He is commemorated by the Carl Strehlow Memorial Hospital at Hermannsburg and the Strehlow Research Centre in Alice Springs.