Career
Hegarty is well known for her non-fiction novels that document her personal history as one of the Stolen Generation. Her first book,, is based on her experiences in the Cherbourg Aboriginal Mission where she lived until the age of 14. Hegarty and her mother, Ruby, were initially housed together in the dormitories at the Cherbourg Aboriginal Mission.
When Hegarty was 4 years old they were separated, when Ruby was sent away to work.
They only had intermittent contact from that time onwards. At the settlement Hegarty formed strong friendships with the other girls in the dormitories.
They were constantly supervised, punished and whipped for minor misdemeanours. The girls in the dormatory stayed together for support and for protection.
There was no natural justice, just strict discipline and punishment.
She states: In 1943, Hegarty was sent away from the Cherbourg settlement to work as a domestic servant. Travelling to her new job, at the age of 14, she travelled alone for the first time in her life. She did not know the people she was travelling to work for and she felt very isolated and vulnerable.
In the 1960s after accessing her records from Cherbourg, when she found that many of the letters she had written to her friends at the mission had not been delivered, Hegerty organised a reunion of the girls she grew up with at Cherbourg.
Ruth married Joe Hegarty, whom she had known since childhood, and has a family of eight children. Foreign more than 30 years Hegarty has volunteered on community projects in the areas of youth and aged services.
In 1998 she was awarded the Premier"s Award for Queensland Seniors Year for her services to the community.