Upon bringing to a close the narrative
of an Expedition of Discovery in Australia, during
the progress of which an extensive portion of the
previously unknown parts of that continent were explored,
I have thought it might not be uninteresting to introduce
a few pages on the subject of the Aborigines of the
country.
It would afford me much gratification
to see an interest excited on their behalf proportioned
to the claims of a people who have hitherto been misjudged
or misrepresented.
For the last twelve years I have been
personally resident in one or other of the Australian
Colonies, and have always been in frequent intercourse
with the aboriginal tribes that were near, rarely being
without some of them constantly with me as domestics.
To the advantages of private opportunities
of acquiring a knowledge of their character were added,
latterly, the facilities afforded by my holding a
public appointment in South Australia, in the midst
of a district more densely populated by natives than
any in that Colony, where no settler had ventured
to locate, and where, prior to my arrival in October
1841, frightful scenes of bloodshed, rapine, and hostility
between the natives and parties coming overland with
stock, had been of frequent and very recent occurrence.
As Resident Magistrate of the Murray
District, I may almost say, that for the last three
years I have lived with the natives. My duties
have frequently taken me to very great distances up
the Murray or the Darling rivers, when I was generally
accompanied only by a single European, or at most
two, and where, if attacked, there was no possibility
of my receiving any human aid. I have gone almost
alone among hordes of those fierce and blood-thirsty
savages, as they were then considered, and have stood
singly amongst them in the remote and trackless wilds,
when hundreds were congregated around, without ever
receiving the least injury or insult.
In my first visits to the more distant
tribes I found them shy, alarmed, and suspicious,
but soon learning that I had no wish to injure them,
they met me with readiness and confidence. My
wishes became their law; they conceded points to me
that they would not have done to their own people,
and on many occasions cheerfully underwent hunger,
thirst, and fatigue to serve me.
Former habits and prejudices in some
respects gave way to the influence I acquired.
Tribes that never met or heard of one another before
were brought to mingle in friendly intercourse.
Single individuals traversed over immense distances
and through many intervening tribes, which formerly
they never could have attempted to pass, and in accomplishing
this the white man’s name alone was the talisman
that proved their safe-guard and protection.
During the whole of the three years
I was Resident at Moorunde, not a single case of serious
injury or aggression ever took place on the part of
the natives against the Europeans; and a district,
once considered the wildest and most dangerous, was,
when I left it in November 1844, looked upon as one
of the most peaceable and orderly in the province.
Independently of my own personal experience,
on the subject of the Aborigines, I have much pleasure
in acknowledging the obligations I am under to M.
Moorhouse, Esq. Protector of Aborigines in Adelaide,
for his valuable assistance, in comparing and discussing
the results of our respective observations, on matters
connected with the natives, and for the obliging manner
in which he has furnished me with many of his own
important and well-arranged notes on various points
of interest in their history.
By this aid, I am enabled, in the
following pages, to combine my own observations and
experience with those of Mr. Moorhouse, especially
on points connected with the Adelaide Tribes.
In some cases, extracts from Mr. Moorhouse’s
notes, will be copied in his own words, but in most
I found an alteration or rearrangement to be indispensable
to enable me to connect and amplify the subjects:
I wish it to be particularly understood, however,
that with any deductions, inferences, remarks, or
suggestions, that may incidentally be introduced, Mr.
Moorhouse is totally unconnected, that gentleman’s
notes refer exclusively to abstract matters of fact,
relating to the habits, customs, or peculiarities of
the people treated of, and are generally confined
to the Adelaide Tribes.
In the descriptions given in the following
pages, although there may occasionally be introduced,
accounts of the habits, manners, or customs of some
of the tribes inhabiting different parts of Australia
I have visited, yet there are others which are exclusively
peculiar to the natives of South Australia. I
wish it, therefore, to be understood, that unless
mention is made of other tribes, or other parts of
the continent, the details given are intended to apply
to that province generally, and particularly to the
tribes in it, belonging to the districts of Adelaide
and the Murray river.
As far as has yet been ascertained,
the whole of the aboriginal inhabitants of this continent,
scattered as they are over an immense extent of country,
bear so striking a resemblance in physical appearance
and structure to each other; and their general habits,
customs, and pursuits, are also so very similar, though
modified in some respects by local circumstances or
climate, that little doubt can be entertained that
all have originally sprung from the same stock.
The principal points of difference, observable between
various tribes, appear to consist chiefly in some
of their ceremonial observances, and in the variations
of dialect in the language they speak; the latter
are, indeed, frequently so great, that even to a person
thoroughly acquainted with any one dialect, there
is not the slightest clue by which he can understand
what is said by a tribe speaking a different one.
The only account I have yet met with,
which professed to give any particular description
of the Aborigines of New Holland, is that contained
in the able papers upon this subject, by Captain Grey,
in the second volume of his travels. When it
is considered, that the material for that purpose
was collected by the author, during a few months interval
between his two expeditions, which he spent at Swan
River, and a short time subsequently passed at King
George’s Sound, whilst holding the appointment
of Government Resident there; it is perfectly surprising
that the amount of information amassed should be so
great, and so generally correct, on subjects where
so many mistakes are liable to be made, in all first
inquiries, when we are ignorant of the character and
habits of the people of whom information is to be
sought, and unacquainted with the language they speak.
The subject, however, upon a portion
of which Captain Grey so successfully entered, is
very extensive, and one which no single individual,
except by the devotion of a life-time, could hope fully
to discuss. The Continent of Australia is so
vast, and the dialects, customs, and ceremonies of
its inhabitants so varied in detail, though so similar
in general outline and character, that it will require
the lapse of years, and the labours of many individuals,
to detect and exhibit the links which form the chain
of connection in the habits and history of tribes
so remotely separated; and it will be long before any
one can attempt to give to the world a complete and
well-drawn outline of the whole.
It is not therefore to satisfy curiosity,
or to interrupt the course of inquiry, that I enter
upon the present work; I neither profess, nor could
I attempt to give a full or matured account of the
Aborigines of New Holland. Captain Grey’s
descriptions on this subject are limited to the races
of South-western, as mine are principally directed
to those of Southern Australia, with occasionally
some remarks or anecdotes relating to tribes in other
parts of the Continent with whom I have come in contact.
The character of the Australian native
has been so constantly misrepresented and traduced,
that by the world at large he is looked upon as the
lowest and most degraded of the human species, and
is generally considered as ranking but little above
the members of the brute creation. Savages have
always many vices, but I do not think that these are
worse in the New Hollanders, than in many other aboriginal
races. It is said, indeed, that the Australian
is an irreclaimable, unteachable being; that he is
cruel, blood-thirsty, revengeful, and treacherous;
and in support of such assertions, references are
made to the total failure of all missionary and scholastic
efforts hitherto made on his behalf, and to many deeds
of violence or aggression committed by him upon the
settler.
With respect to the first point, I
consider that an intimate knowledge of the peculiar
habits, laws, and traditions, by which this people
are governed, is absolutely necessary, before any
just opinion can be formed as to how far the means
hitherto pursued, have been suitable, or adapted to
counteract the influence of custom and the force of
prejudice. Until this knowledge is attained,
we have no right to brand them as either irreclaimable,
or unteachable. My own impression, after long
experience, and an attentive consideration of the
subject, is, that in the present anomalous state of
our relations with the Aborigines, our measures are
neither comprehensive enough for, nor is our system
sufficiently adapted to, the singular circumstances
they are in, to enable us successfully to contend
with the difficulties and impediments in the way of
their rising in the scale of civilization.
Upon the second point it is also necessary
to make many inquiries before we arrive at our conclusions;
and I have no doubt, if this be done with calmness,
and without prejudice, it will be generally found that
there are many extenuating circumstances which may
be brought to modify our judgment. I am anxious,
if possible, to place a few of these before the public,
in the hope, that by lessening in some degree the unfavourable
opinion heretofore entertained of the Aborigines, they
may be considered for the future as more deserving
our sympathy and benevolence.
Without assuming for the native a
freedom from vice, or in any way attempting to palliate
the many brutalising habits that pollute his character,
I would still contend that, if stained with the excesses
of unrestrained passions, he is still sometimes sensible
to the better emotions of humanity. Many of the
worst traits in his character are the result of necessity,
or the force of custom the better ones are
implanted in him as a part of his nature. With
capabilities for receiving, and an aptness for acquiring
instruction, I believe he has also the capacity for
appreciating the rational enjoyments of life.
Even in his present low and debased
condition, and viewed under every disadvantages, I
do not imagine that his vices would usually be found
greater, or his passions more malignant than those
of a very large proportion of men ordinarily denominated
civilised. On the contrary, I believe were Europeans
placed under the same circumstances, equally wronged,
and equally shut out from redress, they would not exhibit
half the moderation or forbearance that these poor
untutored children of impulse have invariably shewn.
It is true that occasionally many
crimes have been committed by them, and robberies
and murders have too often occurred; but who can tell
what were the provocations which led to, what the
feelings which impelled such deeds? Neither have
they been the only or the first aggressors, nor has
their race escaped unscathed in the contest. Could
blood answer blood, perhaps for every drop of European’s
shed by natives, a torrent of their, by European hands,
would crimson the earth.
“Total number of white people
killed by Aborigines 8 “Total number of Aborigines
killed by white people 43.”
This is only in one district, and
only embraces such cases as came to the knowledge
of Mr. Protector Parker. For particulars vide
Papers on Aborigines of Australian Colonies, printed
for the House of Commons, August 1844, .]
Let us now inquire a little, upon
whose side right and justice are arrayed in palliation
(if any such there can be) of deeds of violence or
aggression on the part of either.
It is an undeniable fact, that wherever
European colonies have been established in Australia,
the native races in that neighbourhood are rapidly
decreasing, and already in some of the elder settlements,
have totally disappeared. It is equally indisputable
that the presence of the white man has been the sole
agent in producing so lamentable an effect; that the
evil is still going on, increased in a ratio proportioned
to the number of new settlements formed, or the rapidity
with which the settlers overrun new districts.
The natural, the inevitable, but the no less melancholy
result must be, that in the course of a few years more,
if nothing be done to check it, the whole of the aboriginal
tribes of Australia will be swept away from the face
of the earth. A people who, by their numbers,
have spread around the whole of this immense continent,
and have probably penetrated into and occupied its
inmost recesses, will become quite extinct, their
name forgotten, their very existence but a record
of history.
It is a popular, but an unfair and
unwarranted assumption, that these consequences are
the result of the natural course of events; that they
are ordained by Providence, unavoidable, and not to
be impeded. Let us at least ascertain how far
they are chargeable upon ourselves.
Without entering upon the abstract
question concerning the right of one race of people
to wrest from another their possessions, simply because
they happen to be more powerful than the original inhabitants,
or because they imagine that they can, by their superior
skill or acquirements, enable the soil to support
a denser population, I think it will be conceded by
every candid and right-thinking mind, that no one can
justly take that which is not his own, without giving
some equivalent in return, or deprive a people of
their ordinary means of support, and not provide them
with any other instead. Yet such is exactly the
position we are in with regard to the inhabitants
of Australia.
Without laying claim to this country
by right of conquest, without pleading even the mockery
of cession, or the cheatery of sale, we have unhesitatingly
entered upon, occupied, and disposed of its lands,
spreading forth a new population over its surface,
and driving before us the original inhabitants.
To sanction this aggression, we have
not, in the abstract, the slightest shadow of either
right or justice we have not even the extenuation
of endeavouring to compensate those we have injured,
or the merit of attempting to mitigate the sufferings
our presence inflicts.
It is often argued, that we merely
have taken what the natives did not require, or were
making no use of; that we have no wish to interfere
with them if they do not interfere with us, but rather
that we are disposed to treat them with kindness and
conciliation, if they are willing to be friends with
us. What, however, are the actual facts of the
case; and what is the position of a tribe of natives,
when their country is first taken possession of by
Europeans.
It is true that they do not cultivate
the ground; but have they, therefore, no interest
in its productions? Does it not supply grass for
the sustenance of the wild animals upon which in a
great measure they are dependent for their subsistence? does
it not afford roots and vegetables to appease their
hunger? water to satisfy their thirst, and
wood to make their fire? or are these necessaries
left to them by the white man when he comes to take
possession of their soil? Alas, it is not so!
all are in turn taken away from the original possessors.
The game of the wilds that the European does not destroy
for his amusement are driven away by his flocks and
herds. The waters are occupied
and enclosed, and access to them in frequently forbidden.
The fields are fenced in, and the natives are no longerat
liberty to dig up roots the white man claims
the timber, and the very firewood itself is occasion
ally denied to them. Do they pass by the habitation
of the intruder, they are probably chased away or
bitten by his dogs, and for this they can get no redress. Have they dogs of their own,
they are unhesitatingly shot or worried because they
are an annoyance to the domestic animals of the Europeans.
Daily and hourly do their wrongs multiply upon them.
The more numerous the white population becomes, and
the more advanced the stage of civilization to which
the settlement progresses, the greater are the hardships
that fall to their lot and the more completely are
they cut off from the privileges of their birthright.
All that they have is in succession taken away from
them their amusements, their enjoyments,
their possessions, their freedom and all
that they receive in return is obloquy, and contempt,
and degradation, and oppression.
“The great question was, were
we to give them no equivalent for that which we had
taken from them? Had we deprived them of nothing?
Was it nothing that they were driven from the lands
where their fathers lived, where they were born and
which were endeared to them by associations equally
strong with the associations of more civilsed people?
He believed that their affections were as warm as the
Europeans.” “Perhaps he obtained
his subsistence by fishing, and occupied a slip of
land on the banks of a river or the margin of a lake.
Was he to be turned off as soon as the land was required,
without any consideration whatever?” “Had
any proper attempt been made for their civilization?
They had not yet had fair play they had
been courted by the missionaries with the Bible on
the one hand, and had at the sametime been driven away
and destroyed by the stock-keepers on the other.
He thought that they might be reclaimed if the proper
course was adopted.” Extracts
from the speech of Sydney
Stephen, Esq., At A meeting on
behalf of the aborigines in
Sydney, October 19, 1838.
I have myself repeatedly seen the
natives driven off private lands in the vicinity of
Adelaide, and their huts burned, even in cold wet weather.
The records of the Police Office will shew that they
have been driven off the Park lands, or those belonging
to Government, or at least that they have been brought
up and punished for cutting wood from the trees there.
What are they to do, when there is not a stick or a
tree within miles of Adelaide that they can legally
take?]
What are they to do under such circumstances,
or how support a life so bereft of its wonted supplies?
Can we wonder that they should still remain the same
low abject and degraded creatures that they are, loitering
about the white man’s house, and cringing, and
pandering to the lowest menial for that food they
can no longer procure for themselves? or that wandering
in misery through a country, now no longer their own,
their lives should be curtailed by want, exposure,
or disease? If, on the other hand, upon the first
appearance of Europeans, the natives become alarmed,
and retire from their presence, they must give up all
the haunts they had been accustomed to frequent, and
must either live in a starving condition, in the back
country, ill supplied with game, and often wanting
water, or they must trespass upon the territory of
another tribe, in a district perhaps little calculated
to support an additional population, even should they
be fortunate enough to escape being forced into one
belonging to an enemy.
Under any circumstances, however,
they have but little respite from inconvenience and
want. The white man rapidly spreads himself over
the country, and without the power of retiring any
further, they are overtaken, and beset by all the
evils from which they had previously fled.
Such are some of the blessings held
out to the savage by civilization, and they are only
some of them. The picture is neither fanciful
nor overdrawn; there is no trait in it that I have
not personally witnessed, or that might not have been
enlarged upon; and there are often other circumstances
of greater injury and aggression, which, if dwelt upon,
would have cast a still darker shade upon the prospects
and condition of the native.
Enough has, however, perhaps been
said to indicate the degree of injury our presence
unavoidably inflicts. I would hope, also, to point
out the justice, as well as the expediency of appropriating
a considerable portion of the money obtained, by the
sales of land, towards alleviating the miseries our
occupation of their country has occasioned to the
original owners.
“That it appears to memorialists
that the interests at once of the natives and the
colonists would be most effectually promoted by the
government reserving suitable portions of land within
the territorial limits of the respective tribes, with
the view of weaning them from their erratic habits,
forming thereon depots for supplying them with provisions
and clothing, under the charge of individuals of exemplary
moral character, taking at the same time an interest
in their welfare, and who would endeavour to instruct
them in agricultural and other useful arts.” Extract
from Memorial of the Settlers of the County of Grant,
in the district of Port Phillip, to His Excellency
Sir G. Gipps, in 1840.]
Surely if we acknowledge the first
principles of justice, or if we admit the slightest
claims of humanity on behalf of these debased, but
harshly treated people, we are bound, in honour and
in equity, to afford them that subsistence which we
have deprived them of the power of providing for themselves.
It may, perhaps, be replied, and at
first it might seem, with some appearance of speciousness,
that all is done that can be done for them, that each
of the Colonial Governments annually devotes a portion
of its revenue to the improvement, instruction, and
maintenance of the natives. So far this is very
praiseworthy, but does it in any degree compensate
for the evil inflicted?
The money usually voted by the councils
of Government, towards defraying expenses incurred
on behalf of the Aborigines of Australia, is but a
very small per centage upon the sums that have been
received for the sales of lands, and is principally
expended in defraying the salaries of protectors,
in supporting schools, providing food or clothing for
one or two head stations, and perhaps supplying a
few blankets once in the year to some of the outstations.
Little is expended in the daily provisioning of the
natives generally, and especially in the more distant
country districts least populated by Europeans, but
most densely occupied by natives, and where the very
thinness of the European inhabitants precludes the
Aborigines from resorting to the same sources to supply
their wants, that are open to them in a town, or more
thickly inhabited district. Such are those afforded
by the charity of individuals, by the rewards received
for performing trifling services of work, by the obtaining
vast quantities of offal, or of broken victuals, which
are always abundant in a country where animal food
is used in excess, and where the heat of the climate
daily renders much of it unfit for consumption in
the family, and by others of a similar nature.
Such resources, however humiliating
and pernicious they are in their effects, are not
open to the tribes living in a district almost exclusively
occupied by the sheep or cattle of the settler, and
where the very numbers of the stock only more completely
drive away the original game upon which the native
had been accustomed to subsist, and hold out a greater
temptation to him to supply his wants from the superabundance
which he sees around him, belonging to those by whom
he has been dispossessed. The following appropriate
remarks are an extract from Report of Aborigines’
Protection Society, of March, 1841, (published in
the South Australian Register, 4th December, 1841.)
“Under that system it is obvious
to every coloured man, even the least intelligent,
that the extending settlements of the Europeans involve
a sentence of banishment, and eventual extermination,
upon his tribe and race. Major Mitchell, in his
travels, refers to this apprehension on the part of
the Aborigines “White man come, Kangaroo
go away” from which as an inevitable
consequence follows “black man famished
away.” If, then, this appears a necessary
result of the unjust, barbarous, unchristian mode
of colonization pursued in New Holland, over-looking
the other incidental, and more pointedly aggravating
provocations, to the coloured man, associated with
that system, how natural, in his case, is an enmity
which occasionally visits some of the usurping race
with death! We call the offence in him murder;
but let the occasion be only examined, and we must
discover that, in so designating it, we are imposing
geographical, or national restrictions, upon the virtue
of patriotism; or that in the mani-festations of that
principle, we make no allowances for the influence
on its features of the relative degradation or elevation
of those among whom it is met.
“Our present colonization system
renders the native and the colonizing races from necessity
belligerents; and there can be no real peace, no real
amity, no mutual security, so long as that system is
not substituted by one reconciling the interest of
both races. Colonists will fall before the spears
and the waddies of incensed Aborigines, and they in
return will be made the victims of ‘summary
justice.’
“In cases of executive difficulty,
the force of popular prejudice will be apt to be too
strong for the best intentioned Governor to withstand
it; Europeans will have sustained injury; the strict
forms of legal justice may be found of difficult application
to a race outcast or degraded, although originally
in a condition fitted to appreciate them, to benefit
by them, and reflect their benefits upon others; impatient
at this difficulty, the delay it may occasion, and
the shelter from ultimate punishment, the temptation
will ever be strong to revert to summary methods of
proceeding; and thus, as in a circle, injustice will
be found to flow reciprocal injury, and from injury
injustice again, in another form. The source
of all these evils, and of all this injustice, is the
unreserved appropriation of native lands, and the denial,
in the first instance of colonization, of equal civil
rights. To the removal of those evils, so far
as they can be removed in the older settlements, to
their prevention in new colonies, the friends of the
Aborigines are invoked to direct their energy; to
be pacified with the attainment of nothing less; for
nothing less will really suffice.”
Can it be deemed surprising that a
rude, uncivilized being, driven from his home, deprived
of all his ordinary means of subsistence, and pressed perhaps by a hostile tribe
from behind, should occasionally be guilty of aggressions
or injuries towards his oppressors? The wonder
rather is, not that these things do sometimes occur,
but that they occur so rarely.
In addition to the many other inconsistencies
in our conduct towards the Aborigines, not the least
extraordinary is that of placing them, on the plea
of protection, under the influence of our laws, and
of making them British subjects. Strange anomaly,
which by the former makes amenable to penalties they
are ignorant of, for crimes which they do not consider
as such, or which they may even have been driven to
commit by our own injustice; and by the latter but
mocks them with an empty sound, since the very laws
under which we profess to place them, by their nature
and construction are inoperative in affording redress
to the injured.
“The late act, declaring them
naturalized as British subjects, has only rendered
them legally amenable to the English criminal law,
and added one more anomaly to all the other enactments
affecting them. This naturalization excludes
them from sitting on a jury, or appearing as witnesses,
and entails a most confused form of judicial proceedings;
all which, taken together, has made of the Aborigines
of Australia a nondescript caste, who, to use their
own phraseology, are ’neither black nor white.’” Strzelecki’s
N. S. Wales.]
If, in addition to the many evils
and disadvantages the natives must necessarily be
subject to from our presence, we take still further
into account the wrongs they are exposed to from the
ill feeling towards them which has sometimes existed
among the settlers, or their servants, on the outskirts
of the country; the annoyances they are harassed by,
even where this feeling does not exist, in being driven
away from their usual haunts and pursuits (and this
is a practice often adopted by the remote grazier
as a mere matter of policy to avoid trouble or the
risk of a collision); we shall find upon the whole
that they have often just causes of offence, and that
there are many circumstances connected with their crimes
which, from the peculiar position they are placed
in, may well require from us some mitigation of the
punishment that would be exacted from Europeans for
the same misdeeds.
Captain Grey has already remarked
the strong prejudice and recklessness of human life
which frequently exist on the part of the settlers
with regard to the natives. Nor has this feeling
been confined to Western Australia alone. In
all the colonies, that I have been in, I have myself
observed that a harsh and unjust tone has occasionally
been adopted in speaking of the Aborigines; and that
where a feeling of prejudice does not exist against
them, there is too often a great indifference manifested
as to their fate. I do not wish it to be understood
that such is always the case; on the contrary, I know
that the better, and right thinking part of the community,
in all the colonies, not only disavow such feelings,
but are most anxious, as far as lies in their power,
to promote the interests and welfare of the natives.
Still, there are always some, in every settlement,
whose passions, prejudices, interests, or fears, obliterate
their sense of right and wrong, and by whom these poor
wanderers of the woods are looked upon as intruders
in their own country, or as vermin that infest the
land, and whose blood may be shed with as little compunction
as that of the wild animals they are compared to.
By those who have heard the dreadful
accounts current in Western Australia, and New South
Wales, of the slaughter formerly committed by military
parties, or by the servants
of the settlers upon the Aborigines, in which it is
stated that men, women, and children have been surprised,
surrounded and shot down indiscriminately, at their
camps at night; or who have heard such deeds, or other
similar ones, justified or boasted of, it will readily
be believed to what an extent the feeling I have alluded
to has occasionally been carried, and to what excesses
it has led.
“That the presence of a protector
in your district, and other means of prevention hitherto
employed, have not succeeded better than they have
done in repressing aggression or retaliation, and have
failed to establish a good understanding between the
natives and the European settlers, is greatly to be
deplored.
“As far as the local government
has power, every practicable extension of these arrangements
shall be made without delay; but, gentlemen, however
harsh, a plain truth must be told, the destruction
of European property, and even the occasional sacrifice
of European life, by the hands of the savage tribes,
among whom you live, if unprovoked and unrevenged,
may justly claim sympathy and pity; but the feeling
of abhorrence which one act of savage retaliation or
cruelty on your part will rouse, must weaken, if not
altogether obliterate every other, in the minds of
most men; and I regret to state, that I have before
me a statement presented in a form which I dare not
discredit, shewing that such acts are perpetrated
among you.
“It reveals a nightly attack
upon a small number of natives, by a party of the
white inhabitants of your district, and the murder
of no fewer than three defenceless aboriginal women
and a child, in their sleeping place; and this at
the very time your memorial was in the act of signature,
and in the immediate vicinity of the station of two
of the parties who have signed it. Will not the
commission of such crimes call down the wrath of God,
and do more to check the prosperity of your district,
and to ruin your prospects, than all the difficulties
and losses under which you labour?” Mr. Sievewright’s
letter gives an account of this infamous transaction.
“Western aboriginal establishment,
THOLOR, 26th February, 1842.
“Sir, I have the
honour to report that on the afternoon of the 24th
instant, two aboriginal natives, named Pwe-bin-gan-nai,
Calangamite, returned to this encampment, which they
had left with their families on the 22nd, and reported
’that late on the previous evening, while they
with their wives, two other females, and two children,
were asleep at a tea-tree scrub, called One-one-derang,
a party of eight white people on horseback surrounded
them, dismounted, and fired upon them with pistols;
that three women and a child had been thus killed,
and the other female so severely wounded as to be
unable to stand or be removed by them;’ they
had saved themselves and the child, named ‘Uni
bicqui-ang,’ by flight, who was brought to this
place upon their shoulders.
“At daybreak yesterday I proceeded
to the spot indicated, and there found the dead bodies
of three women, and a male child about three years
of age; and also found a fourth woman dangerously
wounded by gunshot wounds, and severely scorched on
the limbs by the discharge of fire-arms.
“Having proceeded to the station
of the Messrs. Osbrey and Smith, distant about 700
yards from where the bodies were found, and requested
the presence of those gentlemen as witnesses, I proceeded
to view the bodies, upon which were found the wounds
as set forth in the accompanying report.
“All knowledge of this barbarous
transaction is denied by the proprietors, overseer,
and servants at the home station, so near to which
the bodies were found, nor have I as yet obtained
any information which may lead to the discovery of
the perpetrators of these murders.
“I have, etc.
(Signed) “C. W. Sievewright.”
James Croke, Esq.,
Crown Prosecutor,”
etc. etc. etc.
Description of Gun-shot Wounds upon
the bodies of three Aboriginal Women and One Male
Child found dead, and an Aboriginal Woman found wounded
in a tea-tree scrub, near the Station of Messrs. Osbrey
and Smith, Portland District, upon the 25th of February,
1842, by Assistant-Protector Sievewright.
“N. Recognised by the
assistant-protector as ‘Wooi-goning,’
wife of an Aboriginal native ‘Pui-bui-gannei;’
one gun-shot wound through the chest (a ball), and
right thigh broken by a gun-shot wound (a ball).
“N. Child (male); one
gun-shot wound through the chest (a bullet), left
thigh lacerated by some animal.
“N. Woman big with
child; one gun-shot wound through the chest (a bullet),
left side scorched.
“N. Woman; gun-shot
wound through abdomen (a bullet), by right hip; gun-shot
wound, left arm broken, (a bullet.)
“N. Woman wounded;
gun-shot wound in back (a ball), gun-shot through
right hand (a ball).
“(Signed)
“C. W. Sievewright.”]
“It is impossible, however,
to regard such conflicts without regret and anxiety,
when we recollect how fatal, in too many instances,
our colonial settlements have proved to the natives
of the places where they have been formed.
“It will be your duty to impress
upon the settlers that it is the determination of
the Government to visit any act of injustice or violence
on the natives, with the utmost severity, and that
in no case will those convicted of them, remain unpunished.
Nor will it be sufficient simply to punish the guilty,
but ample compensation must be made to the injured
party, for the wrong received. You will make it
imperative upon the officers of police never to allow
any injustice or insult in regard to the natives to
pass by unnoticed, as being of too trifling a character;
and they should be charged to report to you, with
punctuality, every instance of aggression or misconduct.
Every neglect of this point of duty you will mark
with the highest displeasure.”
Such were the benevolent views entertained
by the Government in England towards the Aborigines
ten years ago, and it might be readily proved from
many despatches of subsequent Secretaries of State
to the different Governors, that such have been their
feelings since, and yet how little has been done in
ten years to give a practical effect to their good
intentions towards the natives.]
Were other evidence necessary to substantiate
this point, it would be only requisite to refer to
the tone in which the natives are so often spoken
of by the Colonial newspapers, to the fact that a large
number of colonists in New South Wales, including
many wealthy landed proprietors and magistrates, petitioned
the Local Government on behalf of a party of convicts,
found guilty on the clearest testimony of having committed
one of the most wholesale, cold-blooded, and atrocious
butcheries of the Aborigines ever recorded, and to the acts of the Colonial
Governments themselves, who have found it necessary,
sometimes, to prohibit fire-arms at out-stations,
and have been compelled to take away the assigned
servants, or withdraw the depasturing licences of
individuals, because they have been guilty of aggression
upon the Aborigines.
“The following conversation
between two gentlemen took place in the military barrack
square, on Tuesday, just after the execution of the
seven murderers of the native blacks, and while General
O’Connell was reviewing the troops of the garrison.
“Country gentleman. So
I find they have hanged these men.
“Town gentleman. They
have.”
“Country gentleman. Ah!
hem, we are going on a safer game now.
“Town gentleman. Safer
game! how do you mean?”
“Country gentleman. Why,
we are poisoning the blacks; which is much
better,
and serve them right too!”
“We vouch for the truth of this
conversation, and for the very words; and will prove
our statement, if public justice should, in our opinion
require it.”
The following letter from His Honour
the Superintendent of Port Philip shews, that even
in 1843, suspicions were entertained in the colony,
that this most horrible and inhuman cruelty towards
the Aborigines had lately been practised there.
“Melbourne, 17th March, 1843.
“Sir, I have
the honour to report, for his Excellency’s information,
that in the month of December last, I received a letter
from the Chief Protector, enclosing a communication
received from Dr. Wotton, the gentleman in charge
of the Aboriginal station at Mount Rouse, stating that
a rumour had reached him that a considerable number
of Aborigines had been poisoned at the station of
Dr. Kilgour, near Port Fairy.
“I delayed communicating this
circumstance at the time, as I expected the Chief
Protector and his assistants would find it practicable
to bring the crime home to the parties accused of
having perpetrated it; but I regret to state, that
every attempt to discover the guilty parties has hitherto
proved ineffectual, and that although there may be
strong grounds of suspicion that such a deed had been
perpetrated, and that certain known parties in this
district were the perpetrators, yet it seems nearly
impossible to obtain any legal proof to bear on either
one point or the other.
“I beg leave to enclose copies
of two communications which I have received from Mr.
Robinson on the subject.
“I have, etc.
“(Signed)
“C. J. Latrobe.”
“The Honourable the Colonial Secretary,
etc. etc. etc.”
Rumours of another similar occurrence
existed in the settlements north of Sydney, about
the same time. To the inquiries made on the subject,
by the Government, the following letters refer.
“Moreton Bay, Zion’s Hill, 14th January
1843.
“Sir, In reply to
your inquiry respecting the grounds on which I made
mention in my journal, kept during a visit to the Bunga
Bunga country, of a considerable number of blacks
having been poisoned in the northern part of this
district, I beg leave to state, that having returned
from Sydney in the month of March 1842, I learnt, first,
by my coadjutor, the Rev. Mr. Epper, that such a rumour
was spreading, of which I have good reason to believe
also his Excellency the Governor was informed during
his stay at Moreton Bay. I learnt, secondly,
by the lay missionaries, Messrs. Nique and Rode,
who returned from an excursion to “Umpie-boang”
in the first week of April, that natives of different
tribes, who were collecting from the north for a fight,
had related the same thing to them as a fact.
Messrs. Nique and Rode have made this statement
also in their diary, which is laid before our committee
in Sydney. I learnt, thirdly, by the runaway Davis,
when collecting words and phrases of the northern
dialect from him, previous to my expedition to the
Bunga Bunga country, that there was not the least
doubt but such a deed had been done, and moreover that
the relatives of the poisoned blacks, being in great
fury, were going to revenge themselves. Davis
considered it, therefore, exceedingly dangerous for
us to proceed to the north, mentioning at the same
time, that two white men had already been killed by
blacks in consequence of poisoning. I ascertained
likewise from him the number, 50 or 60.
“When inquiring of him whether
he had not reported this fact to yourself, he replied,
that both he, himself, and Bracewell, the other runaway,
whom Mr. Petrie had brought back from the Wide Bay,
had done so, and that you had stated it fully in your
report to his Excellency the Governor, respecting
himself and Bracewell.
“4. The natives who had
carried our provisions up to Mr. Archer’s
station, made the same statement to us, as a
reason why they would not accompany us any farther
to the Bunga Bunga country.
“When writing down, therefore,
my journal, I considered it unnecessary to make a
full statement of all that had come to my knowledge
since the month of March, concerning that most horrid
event, or even to relate it as something new, as it
was not only known several months since to the respective
authorities, but also as almost every one at Moreton
Bay supposed that an investigation would take place
without delay.
“I have, etc.
“(signed)
“William Schmidt,
“Missionary.”
“S. Simpson, Esq.,
“Commissioner of Crown Lands,
“Eagle Farm.”
“WOOGAROO, Moreton bay, 6th may,
1843.
“Sir, I have the
honour to report, for the information of his Excellency,
that during my excursion to the Bunga country, I have
taken every opportunity of instituting an inquiry
as to the truth of the alleged poisoning of some Aborigines
at a sheep station in the north of this district.
A report of the kind certainly exists among the two
tribes I fell in with, namely, the Dallambarah and
Coccombraral tribes, but as neither of them were present
at the time, they could give me no circumstantial
information whatever on the subject. The Giggabarah
tribe, the one said to have suffered, I was unable
to meet with. Upon inquiry at the stations to
the north, I could learn nothing further than that
they had been using arsenic very extensively for the
cure of the scab, in which operation sheep are occasionally
destroyed by some of the fluid getting down their throats;
and as the men employed frequently neglect to bury
the carcases, it is very possible that the Aborigines
may have devoured them, particularly the entrails,
which they are very fond of, and that hence some accident
of the kind alluded to may have occurred without their
knowledge.
“I have, etc.
“(signed) S. Simpson,
“Commissioner of Crown Lands.”
“The Honourable E. D. Thomson,
“Colonial Secretary.”
For the sake of humanity I would hope
that such unheard of atrocities cannot really have
existed. That the bare suspicion even of such
crimes should have originated and gained currency
in more than one district of Australia, is of itself
a fearful indication of the feeling among the lowest
classes in the colonies, and of the harrowing deeds
to which that might lead.
Extract from South Australian Register,
10th of July, 1841, after the return of Major O’Halloran
and a party of sixty-eight individuals, sent up the
Murray to try and rescue property stolen by blacks.
“In the mean time we cannot but think that the
disappointment so generally expressed,
because Major O’Halloran has returned ‘without
firing A shot,’ is somewhat unreasonable,
seeing that in his presence the natives did nothing
to warrant an extreme measure,
and that there were no means of identifying either
the robbers of Mr. Inman, or the murderers of Mr.
Langhorne’s servants. It is quite clear
that a legally authorised English force could not
be permitted to fire indiscriminately upon the natives
as some persons think they ought
to have done, or to fire at all, save when attacked,
or under circumstances in which any white subject of
the Queen might be shot at. We know that
many overland parties have not hesitated
to fire at the natives wherever
they appeared; and it is possible that the
tribes now hostilely disposed may have received some
provocation.”
The following extract from a letter
addressed by the Chief Protector of the Port Phillip
district, Mr. Robinson, to his Honour the Superintendent
at Melbourne, shews that officer’s opinion of
the feeling of the lower class of the settlers’
servants, with regard to the Aborigines in Australia
Felix.
“Anterior to my last expedition
I had seen a large portion of this province; I have
now seen nearly the entire, and, in addition, have
made myself thoroughly acquainted with the character
of its inhabitants.
“The settlers are, for the most
part, a highly respectable body of men, many, to my
knowledge, deeply commiserating the condition of the
natives; a few have been engaged in the work of their
amelioration; these, however, are but isolated instances;
the majority are averse to having the natives, and
drive them from their runs.
“Nothing could afford me greater
pleasure than to see a reciprocity of interest established
between the settler and aborigine, and it would delight
me to see the settlers engaged in the great work of
their amelioration; and though on the part of the
settlers, a large majority would readily engage, I
nevertheless feel persuaded that, until a better class
of peasantry be introduced, and a code of judicature
suited to the condition of the natives, its practicability,
as a general principle, is unattainable.
“In the course of my wanderings
through the distant interior, I found it necessary,
in order to arrive at a correct judgment, to observe
the relative character of both classes, i. e. the
European and the Aborigine. The difficulty on
the part of the Aborigine by proper management can
be overcome; but the difficulty on the part of the
depraved white man is of far different character,
and such as to require that either their place should
be supplied by a more honest and industrious peasantry,
or that a more suitable code of judicature be established,
to restrain their nefarious proceedings with reference
to the aboriginal natives.
“I found, on my last expedition,
that a large majority of the white servants employed
at the stock stations in the distant interior were,
for the most part, men of depraved character; and
it was with deep regret that I observed that they
were all armed; and in the estimation of some of these
characters, with whom I conversed, I found that the
life of a native was considered to be of no more value
than that of a wild dog. The settlers complained
generally of the bad character of their men. The
saying is common among them, ‘That the men and
not we are the masters.’ The kind of treatment
evinced towards the aboriginal natives in remote parts
of the interior by this class of persons, may be easily
imagined; but as I shall have occasion more fully
to advert to this topic in the report I am about to
transmit to the Government, I shall defer for the
present offering further observations.
“The bad character of the white
servants is a reason assigned by many settlers for
keeping the natives from their stations. At a
few establishments, viz. Norman M’Leod’s,
Baillie’s, Campbell’s, Lenton’s,
and Urquhart’s, an amicable and friendly relation
has been maintained for several years; the Aborigines
are employed and found useful. I visited these
stations; and the proprietors assured me the natives
had never done them any injury; the natives also spoke
in high terms of these parties. There are other
settlers also who have rendered assistance in improving
the condition of the natives, and to whom I shall advert
in my next report.
“Whether the proprietors of
these establishments devote more attention, or whether
their white servants are of less nefarious character
than others, I am not prepared to say; but the facts
I have stated are incontrovertible, and are sufficient
to shew the reclaimability of the natives, when proper
persons are engaged, and suitable means had recourse
to. I cannot but accede to the proposition, namely,
that of holding out inducements to all who engage
in the amelioration of the aboriginal natives.
Those who have had experience, who have been tried
and found useful, ought to have such inducements held
out to them as would ensure a continuance of their
appointments, the more especially as it has always
been found difficult to obtain suitable persons for
this hazardous and peculiar service.”
The following extract from another
letter, also addressed to his Honour the Superintendent,
shews the opinions and feelings of the writer, a Magistrate
of the Colony, and a Commissioner of Crown Lands, in
the Geelong district.
“In offering my candid opinion,
I submissively beg leave to state, that for the last
three years, on all occasions, I have been a friend
to the natives; but from my general knowledge of their
habits of idleness, extreme cunning, vice, and villany,
that it is out of the power of all exertion that can
be bestowed on them to do good by them; and I further
beg leave to state, that I can plainly see the general
conduct of the native growing worse, and, if possible,
more useless, and daily more daring. One and
all appear to consider that no punishment awaits them.
This idea has latterly been instilled into their minds
with, I should think, considerable pains, and also
that the white men should be punished for the least
offence.
“In reply to the latter part
of your letter, I beg leave to bring to your notice
that, at considerable risk, two years ago, I apprehended
a native for the murder of one of Mr. Learmonth’s
men, near Bunengang. He was committed to Sydney
gaol, and at the expiration of a year he was returned
to Melbourne to be liberated, and is now at large.
In the case of Mr. Thomson’s, that I apprehended
two, and both identified by the men who so fortunately
escaped. It is a difficult thing to apprehend
natives, and with great risk of life on both sides.
On the Grange, and many parts of the country, it would
be impossible to take them; and in my
opinion, the only plan to bring them to a fit
and proper state is to insist on the gentlemen in
the country to protect their property, and to
deal with such useless savages
on the spot.”
Captain Grey bears testimony to similar
feelings and occurrences in Western Australia.
In speaking of capturing some natives, he says, vol.
2. . “It was necessary that I should
proceed with great caution, in order not to alarm
the guilty parties when they saw us approaching, in
which case, I should have had no chance of apprehending
them, and I did not intend to adopt the popular system
of shooting them when they ran away.” And
again, at page 356, he says, “It was better that
I, an impartial person, should see that they were
properly punished for theft, than that the Europeans
should fire indiscriminately upon them, as had lately
been done, in another quarter.”
Even in South Australia, where the
Colonists have generally been more concentrated, and
where it might naturally be supposed there would be
less likelihood of offenders of this kind escaping
detection and punishment, there are not wanting instances
of unnecessary and unprovoked, and sometimes of wanton
injury upon the natives. In almost all cases
of this description, it is quite impracticable from
the inadmissibility of native evidence, or from some
other circumstances, to bring home conviction to the
guilty. On the other hand,
where natives commit offences against Europeans, if
they can be caught, the punishment is certain and
severe. Already since the establishment of South
Australia as a colony, six natives have been tried
and hung, for crimes against Europeans, and many others
have been shot or wounded, by the police and military
in their attempts to capture or prevent their escape.
No European has, however, yet paid the penalties of
the law, for aggressions upon the Aborigines, though
many have deserved to do so. The difficulty consists
in legally bringing home the offence, or in refuting
the absurd stories that are generally made up in justification
of it.
A single instance or two will be sufficient,
in illustration of the impunity which generally attends
these acts of violence. On the 25th January,
1843, the sheep at a station of Mr. Hughes, upon the
Hutt river, had been scattered during the night, and
some of them were missing. It was concluded the
natives had been there, and taken them, as the tracks
of naked feet were said to have been found near the
folds. Upon these grounds two of Mr. Hughes’
men, and one belonging to Mr. Jacobs, another settler
in the neighbourhood, took arms, and went out to search
for the natives. About a mile from the station
they met with one native and his wife, whom they asked
to accompany them back to the station, promising bread
and flour for so doing. They consented to go,
but were then escorted as prisoners, the
two men of Mr. Hughes’ guarding the male native,
and Mr. Jacobs’ servant (a person named Gregory)
the female. Naturally alarmed at the predicament
they were in, the man ran off, pursued by his two
guards, but escaped. The woman took another direction,
pursued by Gregory, who recaptured her, and she was
said to have then seized Gregory’s gun, and
to have struck at him several blows with a heavy stick,
upon which, being afraid that he would be overcome,
he shot her. Mr. Hughes, the owner
of the lost sheep, came up a few moments after the
woman was shot, and heard Gregory’s story concerning
it, but no marks of his receiving any blows were shewn.
On the 23rd of March, he was tried for the offence
of manslaughter; there did not appear the slightest
extenuating circumstances beyond his own story, and
his master giving him a good character, and yet the
jury, without retiring, returned a verdict of Not
Guilty!
At the very next sittings of the Supreme
Court Criminal Sessions, another and somewhat analogous
case appeared. The following remarks were made
by His Honour Judge Cooper, to the Grand Jury respecting
it: “There was also a case of manslaughter
to be tried, and he called their attention to this,
because it did not appear in the Calendar. The
person charged was named Skelton, and as appeared
from the depositions, was in custody of some sheep,
when an alarm of the rushing of the sheep being given,
he looked and saw something climbing over the fence,
and subsequently something crawling along the ground,
upon which he fired off his piece, and hit the object,
which upon examination turned out to be a native.
The night was dark, and the native was brought into
the hut, where he died the next day. He could
not help observing, that cases of this kind were much
more frequent than was creditable to the reputation
of the Colony. Last Sessions a man was tried
and acquitted of the charge of killing a native woman.
That verdict was a very merciful one, but not so merciful,
he trusted, as to countenance the idea that the lives
of the natives are held too cheaply. The only
observation that he would make upon this case was,
that it was one of great suspicion.”
Other cases have occurred in which
some of the circumstances have come under my own notice,
and when Europeans have committed wanton aggressions
on the Aborigines, and have then made up a plausible
story to account for what had taken place, but where,
from obvious circumstances, it was quite impossible
to disprove or rebut their tale, however improbable
it might be. In the Port Phillip District in
1841, Mr. Chief Protector thus writes to the local
Government.
“Already appalling collisions
have happened between the white and aboriginal inhabitants,
and, although instances, it is possible, have transpired
when natives have been the aggressors, yet it will
be found that the largest majority originated with
the Europeans. The lives of aboriginal natives
known to have been destroyed are many, and if the
testimony of natives be admissible, the amount would
be great indeed; but even in cases where the Aborigines
are said to be the aggressors, who can tell what latent
provocation existed for perpetrating it? Of the
numerous cases that could be cited, the following
from a recent journal of an assistant protector, Mr.
Parker, of the Lodden, will suffice to shew the insurmountable
difficulty, I may add the impossibility, of bringing
the guilty parties to justice, for in nine cases,
I may say, out of ten, where natives are concerned,
the only evidence that can be adduced is that of the
Aborigines.
“This evidence is not admissible.
Indeed the want of a code, suited to the Aborigines,
is now so strongly felt, and of such vital importance
to the welfare and existence of the natives, that
I earnestly trust that this important subject may
be brought under the early consideration and notice
of Her Majesty’s Government.
“The following is the extract
from Mr. Parker’s journal referred to: ’On
the 8th of March 1841, I proceeded to the Pyrénées
to investigate the circumstances connected with the
slaughter of several Aborigines, by a Mr. Frances.
On the 9th and 10th I fell in with different parties
of natives. From the last of these I obtained
some distressing statements, as to the slaughter of
the blacks; they gave me the names of seven individuals
shot by Mr. Frances within the last six months.
I found, however, no legal evidence attainable.
The only persons present in the last and most serious
affair with the Aborigines, which took place in December
of last year, were Frances, a person named Downes,
and a stock-keeper in Melbourne. No other admissible
evidence of the death of these poor people can be
obtained than what Frances’s written statement
conveys. In that he reports that he and the person
before named went out in consequence
of seeing the bush on fire,
and fell in suddenly with
some natives, on whom they
fired and killed four. The
natives say six were slain, and their information
on that point is more to be depended on. Owing
to the legal disabilities of the Aborigines, this case
must be added with many others which have passed without
judicial notice. I cannot, however, but wish
that squatting licenses were withheld from persons
who manifest such an utter disregard of human life
as Mr. Frances, even on his own shewing, has done.’
“And in this latter sentiment,
under existing circumstances, I most cordially agree.
In Frances’ case, the perpetrator admits
his having shot four aborigines, and
for aught that is shewn to the contrary, it was an
unprovoked aggression. The natives,
whose testimony Mr. Parker states, can be relied upon,
affirm that six were slain, and these within the brief
period of six months.
“In my last expedition I visited
the country of the ‘Barconedeets,’ the
tribe attacked by Frances; of these I found a few sojourning
with the ‘Portbullucs,’ a people inhabiting
the country near Mount Zero, the northernmost point
of the Grampians. These persons complained greatly
of the treatment they had received, and confirmed
the statement made to the sub-protector by the other
natives. The following are a few of the collisions,
from authentic documents brought under the notice of
this department, that have happened between settlers
and Aborigines, and are respectfully submitted for
the information of the Government.
“Cases. Charles
Wedge and others. Five natives
killed and others wounded at the Grampians.
“Aylward and others. Several
natives killed and others wounded at the Grampians.
In this case Aylward deposed, ’that there must
have been a great many wounded and several killed,
as he saw blood upon the grass, and in the tea-tree
two or three dead bodies.’
“Messrs. WHYTE’S
first collision. William Whyte
deposed that 30 natives were present, and they were
all killed but two, and one of these it is reported
died an hour after of his wounds.
“DARLOT. One native
shot. Two natives shot near Portland Bay by the
servants of the Messrs. Henty.
“Hutton and mounted
police. The written report of this
case states, ’that the party overtook the aborigines
at the junction of the ‘Campaspee;’ they
fired, and it is stated, that to the best of the belief
of the party, five or six were killed.’
In the opinion of the sub-protector a greater number
were slain.
“Messrs. Winter
and others. On this occasion five
natives were killed.
“One black shot by Frances.
“Munroe and police. Two
blacks shot and others wounded.
“The following from Lloyd’s
deposition: ’We fired on them; I have
no doubt some were killed; there were between forty
and fifty natives.’
“By persons unknown. A
native of the Coligan tribe killed by white persons.
“Messrs. Wedge
and others. Three natives killed
and others wounded.
“Names of Taylor and Lloyd are
mentioned as having shot a black at Lake Colac.
“WHYTE’S second collision. ALLAN’S
case. Two natives shot.
“Taylor was overseer of a sheep
station in the Western district, and was notorious
for killing natives. No legal evidence could be
obtained against this nefarious individual. The
last transaction in which he was concerned, was of
so atrocious a nature, that he thought fit to abscond,
and he has not been heard of since. No legal evidence
was attainable in this latter case. There is
no doubt the charges preferred were true, for in the
course of my inquiries on my late expedition, I found
a tribe, a section of the Jarcoorts, totally extinct,
and it was affirmed by the natives that Taylor had
destroyed them. The tribes are rapidly diminishing.
The ‘Coligans,’ once a numerous and powerful
people, inhabiting the fertile region of Lake ‘Colac,’
are now reduced, all ages and sexes, under forty,
and these are still on the decay. The Jarcoorts,
inhabiting the country to the west of the great lake
‘Carangermite,’ once a very numerous and
powerful people, are now reduced to under sixty.
But time would fail, and I fear it would be deemed
too prolix, were I to attempt to particularise in
ever so small a degree, the previous state, condition,
and declension of the original inhabitants of so extensive
a province.”
Upon the same subject, His Honour
the Superintendent of Port Phillip thus writes:
“On this subject, I beg leave
to remark that great impediments evidently do interpose
themselves in the way of instituting proper judicial
inquiry into the causes and consequences of the frequent
acts of collision between the settlers and the aboriginal
natives, and into the conduct of the settlers on such
occasions. I am quite ready to lament with the
Protectors, that numerous as the cases have unfortunately
been in which the lives of the Aborigines have been
taken in this district, in no single
instance has the settler been
brought before the proper tribunal.”
Many similar instances might be adduced
to shew the little chance there is of evidence enough
being procurable, even to cause the aggressor to be
put upon his trial, still less to produce his conviction.
Independently of the instances of
wanton outrage, which sometimes are perpetrated on
the outskirts of the settled districts by the lowest
and most abandoned of our countrymen, there are occasions
also, when equal injuries are inflicted unintentionally,
from inexperience or indiscretion, on the part of
those whose duty it is to protect rather than destroy,
when the innocent have been punished instead of the
guilty, and thus the very
efforts made to preserve peace and good order, have
inadvertently become the means of subverting them.
Several very lamentable instances
of this kind, have occurred in Port Lincoln.
The following is one among others. Soon after
the murder of Messrs. Biddle and Brown, a party of
soldiers was sent over to try and capture the aggressors.
In one of their attempts a native guide was procured
from the Eastern tribe, who promised to conduct them
to where the murderers were. The party consisting
of the military and their officer, the police, a settler,
and the missionary, in all twelve or fourteen persons,
set off towards Coffin’s Bay, following as they
supposed upon the track of the murders. Upon reaching
the coast some natives were seen fishing in the water,
and the party was at once spread out in a kind of
semicircle, among the scrub, to close upon and capture
them; the officer, missionary, and guide, being stationed
near the centre. As the party advanced nearer,
the guide saw that he was mistaken in the group before
him, and that they were not the guilty parties, but
friends. The officer called out not to fire, but
unfortunately from the distance the men were at, and
the scrubby nature of the country, he was not heard
or attended to. A shot was fired, one of the natives
sprung up convulsively in the water, walked on shore
and fell down, exclaiming whilst dying, “me
Kopler, me good man,” and such indeed it proved.
He was one of a friendly tribe, and a particular protege
of the missionary’s, having taken the name of
Kopler from his German servant who was so called.
The other natives at once came forward
to their dying friend, scornfully motioning away his
murderers, fearless alike of the foes around them,
and regardless of their ill-timed attempts to explain
the fatal mistake. Will it be credited, that
at such a scene as this the soldiers were indulging
in coarse remarks, or brutal jests, upon the melancholy
catastrophe; and comparing the last convulsive spring
of the dying man to a salmon leaping in the water.
Yet this I was assured was the case by the Government
Resident at Port Lincoln, from when I received this
account.
Another melancholy and unfortunate
case of the same nature occurred at Port Lincoln,
on the 11th of April, 1844, where a native was shot
by a policeman, for attempting to escape from custody,
when taken in charge on suspicion of being implicated
in robbing a stranded vessel. An investigation
was made into this case by the Commissioner of Police,
when it was stated in the depositions, that attempts
at rescue were made by the other natives. Upon
these grounds, I believe, it was considered that the
policeman was justified in what he did.
The following extract relating to
this subject, is from a letter addressed to a gentleman
in Adelaide, by the Rev. C. Schurmann, one of the
German Missionaries, who has for some years past been
stationed among the Port Lincoln natives, and is intimately
acquainted with their language.
“You will probably recollect,
that some time ago (I think it was in the month of
May) the Adelaide newspapers contained a short notice
of a Port Lincoln native having been shot by the police
in self-defence, and a letter in the ‘Observer,’
mentioned another as being shot by Mr. ,
but as the charitable correspondent added, ’Unfortunately
only in the arm, instead of through the body.’
From these statements one would infer that the parties
concerned in these transactions were without blame,
being perfectly justified the one to protect
his life, and the other his property. However,
since my return to Port Lincoln, I have learned that
both tales run very differently when told according
to truth. I address myself, therefore, to you,
with the true facts of the transactions, as I have
learned them, partly from the settlers themselves,
partly from the natives. My motive for so doing
is to case my own mind, and to gratify the interest
which I know you take in the Aborigines of this country.
“The man shot by the police
was named Padlalta, and was of so mild and inoffensive
a disposition, that he was generally noticed by the
settlers on that very account, several of whom I have
heard say since, it was a pity that some other native
had not been hit in his stead. The same man was
captured last year by Major O’llalloran’s
party, but was set at liberty as soon as I came up
and testified his innocence, for which the poor fellow
kissed my hand near a dozen times.
“The day before he met his death
he was as usual in the town, doing little jobs for
the inhabitants, to get bread or other food. On
the evening when he was killed, he had encamped with
about half a dozen other natives on the northern side
of Happy Valley, a short mile from the town.
The police who were sent by the Government Resident
to see what number of natives were at the camp state,
that while searching the man’s wallet, he seized
hold of one gun, and when the other policeman came
up to wrest it from him, he the native grasped the
other gun too. In the scuffle that ensued, one
of the guns went off, when the other natives who had
fled returned and presented their spears. They
then shot the native who held the gun.
“Now this statement is a very
strange one, when it is considered that the native
was a very spare and weak man, so that either of the
police ought to have been able to keep him at arm’s
length; but to say that he seized both their guns
is beyond all credibility. The natives were sitting
down when the police arrived. How they could
therefore find a wallet upon the murdered man, I cannot
conceive; since the natives never have their wallets
slung, except when moving; and it certainly is not
probable, that the man, in spite of the fright he
is admitted to have been in, should have thought of
taking up his wallet.
“The wallet is said to have
contained some sovereigns, taken from the cutter Kate,
which was wrecked some time previous to this affair,
about forty miles up the coast, and to have been one
of those marked by the police, at a native camp near
the wreck from which the natives had been scared away,
leaving all their things behind. But if the murdered
native had taken the sovereigns, why were they not
then in his wallet, or why was the wallet not examined
the day before when he was in town? I think that there is little doubt that the
police found no wallet at all upon the native, and
that they coined away one of those found at the camp
upon him, with a view to incriminate him.”
“Another native, Charley, who
was present when the said affair took place, tells
me, that the police sneaked upon, and fired at them,
while sitting round the fire;
that he jumped up, and endeavoured to make himself
known, as a friendly native, by saying, “Yarri
(that is the name the natives have given to one of
the police), Yarri, I Charley, I Charley,” but
that the effect produced had been the pointing of
a gun at him, when of course he ran away. That
any of the natives returned, and poised their spears,
he firmly denies; but accounts for the murder, by
supposing that the dead man made resistance, and offered
to spear his assailants. He moreover says, that
Padlalta would not have died in consequence of the
first shot, but that the police fired repeatedly,
which agrees with the settlers, who say they heard
three shots. When the bloody deed had been committed
(a ball had passed right through his body), the cruel
perpetrators ran home, leaving the murdered man helpless.”
“Some time after, a party of
three settlers went to the spot, one of whom he recognized,
and claimed his acquaintance, and perhaps assistance,
by mentioning the party’s Christian name; but,
alas! no good Samaritan was found amongst these three;
they all passed by on the other side, without alleviating
his pain, moistening his parched lips, warming his
shivering limbs, or aiding him in any way whatever.
There he lay a whole cold and long winter night, without
a fire to warm him, or a soul to talk to him.
Next morning he was found still alive, but died on
the way into town, where he was buried in the jail
yard, like a condemned felon.
“What awful and melancholy reflections
crowd upon one’s mind in thinking on this transaction.
But what conclusians must a poor people, whom a Christian
and civilized nation calls savages, arrive at, with
such facts before them.
“The other native, wounded by
Mr. in the arm, was doubtless of the party
who attacked the flock; but it must have been some
hours after that he was shot, for the shepherd had
to come home with the flock to inform him of the occurrence,
and then search and pursuit had to be made, during
which he was overtaken. He is a stupid idiotic
sort of man, so that the natives have not deemed him
worthy of receiving the honours of their ceremonies,
and still call him a boy, or youth, although he is
an oldish man.
“On another occasion, when an
uninhabited hut, with some wheat in it, had been broken
into by some unknown natives, a party went in search
of the offenders. It was night when they came
on a camp, on the opposite side of the lake to where
the hut stands; the natives, acting upon the first
impulse, and warned by frequent examples, ran away,
when two of the party snapped their pieces, but providentially
both guns missed fire. The natives, however,
soon took confidence, and returned, when it was found
that two of the most orderly and useful men would have
been shot if the guns had gone off. The party
took upon themselves to make one of them prisoner,
but of course did not venture to bring him before the
magistrate.
“These facts incontestably prove,
that, notwithstanding the Aborigines are called British
subjects, and in spite of the so-called protection
system, there is no shadow of protection for them,
while they are debarred from the first and most important
of all liberties, namely, that of being heard in a
Court of civil Justice.
“Several instances have occurred
during my residence in this district, in which natives
have been arraigned before the administrators of the
law, although I was morally convinced of their innocence;
in other cases, they have sought redress through me,
for wanton attacks on their person and lives, without
being listened to.
“Only a few weeks ago a native
was very nearly being taken up, on the charge of having
thrown a spear at Mr. Smith’s shepherd, without,
however, any felonious intent, the distance being too
great. This circumstance saved the man, or else
he would, no doubt, have been tried and found guilty
on the shepherd’s evidence, who would not allow
that he could be mistaken in the individual, although
the accused native came boldly into town and court
(a circumstance that has never before occurred since
I have known these natives), although he was an intimate
friend of the shepherd and his wife; and although
all the other natives could prove where he had been
at the time of the attack on the flock, and state who
were the guilty parties.
“For those who have had an opportunity
of observing the Aborigines in their original state,
it is not very difficult to distinguish the guilty
from the innocent, for they are a simple-minded race,
little skilled in the arts of dissimulation.
“It is bad enough that a great
part of the colonists are inimical to the natives;
it is worse that the law, as it stands at present,
does not extend its protection to them; but it is
too bad when the press lends its influence to their
destruction. Such, however, is undoubtedly the
case. When Messrs. Biddle and Brown were murdered,
the newspapers entertained their readers week after
week with the details of the bloody massacre, heaping
a profusion of vile epithets upon the perpetrators.
But of the slaughter by the soldiers, (who killed
no less than four innocent natives, while they captured
not one guilty party), among the tribes who had had
nothing to do with the murders of the treachery
of attacking in the darkness of the night, a tribe
who had the day before been hunting kangaroo with
their informers, when one of the former guides to the
magistrates’ pursuing party was killed amongst
others; of the wanton outrage on the mutilated body
of one of the victims; of these things the
press was as silent as the grave.”
Without attempting to enlarge more
fully upon the subjects entered upon in the preceding
pages, I trust that I have sufficiently shewn that
the character of the Australian natives has been greatly
misrepresented and maligned, that they are not naturally
more irreclaimably vicious, revengeful, or treacherous
than other nations, but on the contrary, that their
position with regard to Europeans, places them under
so many disadvantages, subjects them to so many injuries,
irritates them with so many annoyances, and tempts
them with so many provocations, that it is a matter
of surprise, not that they sometimes are guilty of
crime, but that they commit it so rarely.
If I have in the least degree succeeded
in establishing that such is the case, it must be
evident that it is incumbent upon us not only to make
allowances when pronouncing an opinion on the character
or the crimes of the Aborigines; but what is of far
greater and more vital importance, as far as they
are concerned, to endeavour to revise and improve such
parts of our system and policy towards them as are
defective, and by better adapting these to the peculiar
circumstances of this people, at once place them upon
juster and more equal terms, and thus excite a reasonable
hope that some eventual amelioration may be produced,
both in their moral and physical condition.
I shall now proceed to give an account
of the appearance, habits, mode of life, means of
subsistance, social relations, government, ceremonies,
superstitions, numbers, languages, etc. etc.
of the natives of Australia, so as to afford some
insight into the character and circumstances of this
peculiar race, to exhibit the means hitherto adopted
for, and the progress made in attempting, their civilization,
and to shew the effects produced upon them by a contact
with Europeans.