A note on Structure


rd of May, 1817: Payment to Quartermaster McDonald



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3rd of May, 1817: Payment to Quartermaster McDonald


The payment to Quartermaster McDonald was probably for materials used by the various expeditions rather than for any expeditions led by him.
Quarter-Master M'Donald, of the 46th Regt, the amount of Necessaries, ordered to be issued as Donations from Government, to detachments of said Corps employed in pursuit of the hostile Native Tribes’280

5th of October, 1818: Land grant to Ralph Turnbull as a reward for chasing the natives


In James Meehan’s Surveyor’s Notebooks 114 and 145 there is a record for “60 acres for Ralph Turnbull and 40 acres as a reward for chasing the Natives when hostile”. William Stubbs received a land grant “as a reward for chasing the Natives when hostile”.281
From the records it is possible to assert that in 1816 Governor Macquarie authorised through the military and magistery a number of well organised punitive expeditions involving soldiers, settlers and Aboriginal guides that aimed to clear the Nepean Hawkesbury Valley of hostile Aboriginal people. The similarity of Cox’s memorandum of the 19th of July and Macquarie’s proclamation of the 20th of July show the close relationship of free settlers and the Governor. The fact that Magistrate William Cox was not only a prominent property owner who had suffered from Aboriginal attacks, but also the commander of the Windsor garrison, further reinforced the link between property and the law.
Various combinations of soldiers, settlers and Aboriginal guides ranged across the Nepean Hawkesbury Valley from Wright’s Bringelly farm, across to the Mulgoa farms of John Blaxland and William Cox and downstream to the Hawkesbury, the Colo and McDonald Rivers. A significant difference between the military expeditions in the first half of the year and the expeditions under martial law was that of command. There were no commissioned officers in the field under martial law and Magistrate Cox commanded all the parties in the field under martial law in the Hawkesbury and probably well up the Nepean. Serjeant Broadfoot was the highest ranking soldier in the field. He was highly competent. He had already led one expedition in May in the districts of May and Cooke. Under martial law he was in the field from approximately July to November.
Cox’s memorandum and Macquarie’s proclamation both followed a policy of divide and conquer. Aboriginal people were not allowed on farms unless they helped in the capture of the ten hostiles. It was a policy that was open to abuse.
The official records were curiously coy about the numbers killed. Officially only four Aboriginal people were killed. Payments and land grants were invariably made for the “pursuit of the hostile natives”, not for killing them. However, it was likely that the authorities were pleased with the results. William Cox received one payment of “£76.10.7.” On the 8th of February 1817, he received another payment of “£179 – 8 – 1”. Serjeant Broadfoot received a reward ofFifteen Pounds Sterling”, on the 16th of December 1816. On the 8th of February 1817 “Serjeant Broadfoot, received another £15 - 0 – 0”. William Stubbs and Ralph Turnbull both received land grants on the river. Constable McLaughlin received his across the Richmond Road from Colebee and Creek Jemmy. I am not sure where McFadden received his.
The historical record strongly suggests that more than four warriors were killed under martial law in 1816. In 1805 there were several hundred Aboriginal warriors under arms. A handful of casualties were reported in despatches under martial law in 1805. There were approximately a dozen Aboriginal warriors under arms in 1816. Officially only four Aboriginal people were killed under martial law in 1816 and even that number did not make its way to England. Under martial law in 1824 on the other side of the Blue Mountains, during the drought there were no officially reported Aboriginal casualties.
The troubles on the other side of the Blue Mountains in 1824 throw light on the reporting of the events of 1816. On the 7th of June 1824, Elizabeth Macarthur wrote from Parramatta to her friend Eliza Kingdon in England regarding the troubles near Bathurst. “Last week we received some very some very alarming accounts from the settlement at Bathurst. The natives had barbarously put to death, a number of stockmen in the service of individuals settled in that neighbourhood – plundered the huts – set fire to them – killed numbers of sheep and cattle – spreading terror and devastation around. A young gentleman a proprietor at Bathurst called here on Saturday last. He had come from thence with several others to solicit the Governor for aid and assistance. He said he had seen the bodies of seven white men brought into the settlement in the morning he set off. I know not what measures will be resorted to, in order to check these barbarities, which upon the whole are a far more aggressive nature than any that have before taken place. Heretofore when guilty of these outrages the natives have not been checked by lenient measures, on the contrary emboldened by success they have proceeded to commit further atrocities, until at length it has been found necessary to send a military force to terrify them into submission and to prevent further acts of barbarity. It is now many years since so alarming a circumstance has taken place. Twice we have had our own stations molested, each time, two lives were taken, the huts plundered, and set fire to. This happened when Mr. Macarthur was in England. The military were obliged to interfere, to prevent the further effusion of innocent blood.”282 Mrs. Macarthur’s letter referenced killings in 1805 and 1816 that resulted in military intervention.
The “young gentleman” after visiting the Macarthurs probably went to William Cox. There is a written record of a meeting chaired by William Cox “of the stockholders of New South Wales held at the Sydney Hotel of on Thursday the 3rd. June 1824”. On behalf of the Memorialists Cox wrote to Governor Brisbane praying that “your Excellency will be pleased to afford them that prompt and effective assistance – which your memorialists feel confident they have only to solicit to obtain”.283 Cox’s confidence may well have been based on past experience.
Another meeting, at which Saxe Bannister was present, took place on the 16th of July 1824. Saxe Bannister wrote “Mr. – considered the present case at Bathurst to be one of open war, to which the black natives were urged by a desire of plunder only; and impossible to be duly checked without a very large military force being sent thither, with orders to act in one extended line at once, and advancing over the whole country, so as to sweep and destroy the natives before them.”284 While Saxe Bannister did not identify the gentleman as William Cox, the military action proposed by “Mr. –“ was consistent with that undertaken under Cox’s leadership in late 1816.
In July 1824 Lancelot Threlkeld was told by a magistrate, that “a gentleman (Mr Cox) of large property”285 at a public meeting in Bathurst stated: “The best thing that can be done is shoot all the blacks and manure the ground with their carcasses. That is all they are fit for! It is also recommended that all the women and children be shot. That is the most certain way of getting rid of this most pestilent race.”286
On the 6th of August 1824, William Cox appeared as a defence witness in the trial of five men charged with the manslaughter of three Aboriginal women, on the other side of the Blue Mountains. 287 Governor Macquarie’s proclamation of the 4th of May 1816 was used in defence of the men. William Cox as a defence witness described how “In his situation as Magistrate, a military guard had been placed at his disposal. Parties went out in 1816 with the Magistrate at their head; and they always came to a Magistrate, except the soldiers under Captain Shaw, who received their instructions from Government; and the settlers did never attack the black natives alone without a Magistrate.288 There have been no depredations, by the natives, on this side the mountains, since the promulgation of that Regulation in 1816.”289 While I do not doubt Cox’s word, I have been unable to find any record of settlers acting independently of soldiers. One must assume that no records were kept of such parties.
In response to a request from Magistrate Scott, George Bowman (1795-1878) provided an account of the events of 1816. George was almost certainly an eyewitness to the events and may well have been involved in them. His account includes the oft quoted sentence: “The military did not attempt to take the Blacks and make prisoners of them but shot all they fell in with and received great praise from the Governor for so doing.”
Lancelot Threlkeld was enroute to the South Seas Islands as a missionary when he arrived in Sydney on 11th May 1817. He was invited to Dr. Arndell’s Cattai estate where he met Sarah, Arndell’s fourth daughter and who was to become Threlkeld’s second wife in 1824. It would have been in this visit that he was told of the killings of late 1816. Threlkeld left Sydney for the South Seas in September 1817. He returned in August 1824 after the death of his first wife. In this account reported in The Colonist, 27th October 1838 he recalled:
When he came to this place about twenty-two years ago, he was astonished to hear a man boasting how many blacks he had killed upon his land. One instance he remembered, which struck him as marked with peculiar cruelty. A native was taken by a party of whites, and made to ascend a tree with a rope round his neck; this he was directed to fasten to one of the limbs of the tree; when he had done so, he was fired at again and again; he was wounded and clung to the tree. A volley was then fired at him, he let go his hold, and was left suspended as a terror to others. Was it surprising, he asked, when they were tortured by such acts of cruelty, if they became apt scholars? If the natives did wrong, let them be punished; let them be punished on Christian principles; let not the innocent be punished for the guilty.”290
In the same issue the Reverend Dunmore Lang291 who held the “first communion service in Australia at Ebenezer, in accordance with Presbyterian forms” in 1814 was quoted as saying “The records of the colony – he meant those ascribed by the recording angel – contains many a history, dark, dismal and appalling. He had been shown places on the Hawkesbury, where the “commando” system had been carried on, and the natives literally hunted down and shot.”292
Writing twenty years after the event, William Romaine Govett (1807-1848), who came to New South Wales as a surveyor in 1828, also recorded the combination of soldiers, settlers and Aboriginal guides in crushing resistance. His account is consistent with the parties operating under martial law in the second part of 1816. Govett's account was interesting for its simplistic and inaccurate reduction of relations to a muscular trial of strength. “Throughout the county of Cumberland in 1816, and more lately at Bathurst, the most dreadful excesses were committed by them till hunted down by bodies of soldiers and settlers with the aid of other natives. Many, very many lives might have been saved had timely and efficient means been adopted; for it has been observed that the various tribes of savages have always one time or other essayed a trial of strength with the whites, and, when once fairly satisfied of their inferior power, live ever afterwards in perfect harmony with them.”293
Similar arguments were found in a Memorial presented to Governor Gipps. The memorial had been signed by eighty-two “pioneers of civilization”, including Sir John Jamison, John Blaxland, Stuart Donaldson, W. H. Dutton, Thomas Icely, John Easles, Robert Lethbridge, William Sims Bell, Thomas Walker, H James McFarlane, William Hovell, Hamilton Hume, and Philip Gidley King. The Memorial was written in the context of the 1838 drought and the Myall Creek massacre and sought government intervention against Aboriginal people who were resisting expansion. The significance of the Memorial lay in its reference to acts of former Governments.” Almost certainly the memorialists were referring to the imposition of martial law in 1805, 1816 and 1824.294
Sydney, 8th June 1838

Your Memorialists are of opinion that these untutored savages not comprehending or appreciating the motives which actuate us attribute forbearance on our part solely to impotence or fear, and are thus rendered only more bold and sanguinary. This opinion founded on past experience will receive ample confirmation on reference to the history of this Colony and the acts of former Governments. It is undeniable that no district of the Colony has been settled without in the first instance suffering from the outrages of the Natives, and that these outrages continued, until put an end to be coercive measures. Conciliation was tried in the first instance but invariably failed in producing any good effect, and coercion was ultimately found unavoidably necessary, which, if earlier adopted would have saved much bloodshed on both sides. It is only when they have become experimentally acquainted with our power and determination to punish their aggressions that they have become orderly, peaceable, and been brought within the reach of civilization.”295


Much later, in the Windsor and Richmond Gazette, 25th October 1890, Edward Charles Prosper Tuckerman, , gave an account of the expedition based on his father’s recollections, in which he said: “Not less than 400 blacks were killed in that expedition”. Given his background his recollections are probably quite sound and not exaggerated. His father was Stephen Tuckerman, a Sackville farmer. His mother was Sarah, daughter of Charles Beasley, also of Sackville.296 Prosper was born in 1833 at Wilberforce. His future wife, Maria Fleming, was born at Wilberforce in 1836. She was the daughter of Joseph Fleming, the older brother of John Henry Fleming, who successfully evaded a murder warrant for his part in the Myall Creek massacre. John Henry and Charlotte Fleming were the god-parents of his four sons.297 His brother Stephen was a Hawkesbury magistrate.
The interviewer was probably John Charles Lucas Fitzpatrick, the founder and editor of the Windsor and Richmond Gazette. It was highly unlikely that Fitzpatrick was shocked by Tuckerman's revelation. In the Windsor and Richmond Gazette, 1st September 1888, the following appeared: “Out in the back country one generally manages to become acquainted with the use of fire-arms; game is abundant, and a good shot can pot any thing from a kangaroo to a nigger”. On 1st June 1889, in the Windsor and Richmond Gazette, also appeared; “Once more the few remaining dusky natives of the colony have had their respective blankets doled out to them. Year by year they are growing beautifully less, and in a very short space of time it will be necessary to chronicle the demise of the last genuine aboriginal of the district.”
It is possible to relate the events described by Mr. Tuckerman to 1816 from a comment elsewhere in the same paper where Mr. Tuckerman recalled “I could show you in the creek by the old homestead the cedar logs rolled there when the land was cleared in Waterloo year 1815, and as sound as the day they were felled”. It was impossible for a company to have been billeted on the Beasley farm. A full strength company at that time was one hundred men. More likely, it was Corporal Milner’s party. The readiness of the soldier to shoot the Aboriginal man in the tree strongly suggests that the soldiers had orders to shoot on sight, which makes Mr. Tuckerman’s estimate that “400 blacks were killed in that expedition” plausible, particularly as it was supported by the corroborating statements of Bowman and Cox. The fact that the Aboriginal man stayed with the family rather than return to the bush strongly suggests that he had no one to return to; that it was no longer possible to survive in the bush, and being Aboriginal was enough to place your life in danger.
The Hawkesbury in Early Days

Speaking to our friend, Smithurst, of the “Mudgee Independent,”298 recently, Mr. P. Tuckerman of Sackville Reach, gave a lot of information which will be found elsewhere. The “Independent” goes on to say: -
Having exhausted local topics somewhat, the conversation drifted towards the Hawkesbury, and the old family home of the Tuckermans.299 The present members of the family are the second generation of colonials – the father having been born in the colony in 1802 – when Captain King was Governor. It seems a long time since Bonaparte was in the height of his power, and Nelson had bombarded Copenhagen and brought away the Danish fleet, but those were the events which occupied the mind of this pioneer colonist of the Hawkesbury and his sons. The grant of land at Sackville Reach was made by Governor Macquarie, and was cleared in the days when the blackfellow was still an element in Australian life, which had to be taken into account. “The Aborigines had grown troublesome in the valley,” said Mr. Charles Tuckerman, and a company of soldiers was sent from Sydney, and quartered in the house of the young lady who was afterwards to be my father’s wife. Not less than 400 blacks were killed in that expedition. One night my father then a lad was out with one of the redcoats, on the lookout for birds or opossums, when his companion exclaimed, “Hello! Here’s game of another sort,” pointing to a blackfellow up a tree. ‘I must bring him down.’ It was only by the use of all his powers of pleading that the lad could get the life of the poor fellow spared, on condition that he was kept in the home paddock until the troops were gone. He became a faithful and useful fellow, and when he died years afterwards, was buried by my father.’300
Certainly no-one protested Tuckerman’s figures.

Maria and the inquest into Nanny Cabbage’s murder


In June 1817 two soldiers of the 46th Regiment, Peter Watson and James Rattray met three Aboriginal girls, Nanny Cabbage, Norry and Currumburn, at Kent Street Sydney and offered them alcohol and money in return for sexual favours. They connected at Cockle Bay. Norry and Currumburn left. Later two or three men heard the screams of Nanny Cabbage and investigated. They found Nanny speechless, she had a stomach wound that nearly severed her leg from her body. The men did nothing and returned to their Kent Street homes. Nanny died during the night. The inquest was conducted by John Lewin. Maria from the Native Institution, assisted as a translator for Norry and Currumburn.301 Maria had been admitted to the Native Institution in 1814 aged about six. In 1817 she would have been about nine years old. The significance of this incidence lies in Maria’s retention and knowledge of at least one and possibly more Aboriginal languages. It suggests that the children in the Native Institution were retaining and enriching their culture, not losing it.

Demise of the Parramatta Native Institution


The following account by the Reverend Walter Lawry of an encounter with Yellomundee on the 29th of October, 1818 is important because:

  • it shows that that traditional Aboriginal life continued;

  • it reveals Aboriginal fear of missionaries taking children away to the Native Institution;

  • reinforces the argument that Yellomundee was the father of Maria; and

  • it was the last contemporary reference to Yellomundee.

While in this district (Portland Head) I availed myself of an opportunity of speaking to a tribe of native blacks. They were preparing for a war with another tribe, making swords of timber, and womaras ( a sort of club), and spears in great number for the combat; discovering this as I rode through the woods, I put my horse up at a settler’s house and walked towards them. As I approached, the women and children ran away; but the king (Yellowmonday), with several men, came to meet me. I enquired why the children were carried off; they replied that many of them had been taken away by men in black clothes, and put to school at Parramatta, and they feared I was come on that errand. After assuring them to the contrary, the King dispatched messengers after the absentees, who presently mustered them on the spot where I was conversing with their Chief.’302


13th April 1819: school examinations


Not only did George Howe report on a child from the Parramatta Native Institution coming first in the school examination in Parramatta but he reflected upon the progress of the children and signalled a change in attitude since the exchange between Philanthropus and A Friend to Civilization in the pages of the Gazette in 1810. Contrary to the general consensus, my personal opinion is that the girl who won first prize was probably not Maria, daughter of Yellomundee.
On Tuesday last an Anniversary School Examination took place at Parramatta, at which the children of the Native Institution were introduced, their numbers not exceeding twenty; those of the schools of the children of Europeans amounting nearly to a hundred. Prizes were prepared for distribution among such of the children as should be found to excel in the early rudiments of education, moral and religious; and it is not less strange than pleasing to remark, in answer to an erroneous opinion which had long prevailed with many, namely, that the Aborigines of this country were insusceptible to any mental improvement which could adapt them to the purposes of civilized association, that a black girl of fourteen years of age, between three and four years in the school, bore away the chief prize, with much satisfaction to their worthy adjudgers and auditors. Other prizes were designated to children of much desert; and it was declared generally that the attention paid to their instruction by their various instructors was entitled to much praise for their zeal in so good a cause, manifested in the improvement of their pupils. At the time His EXCELLENCY GOVERNOR MACQUARIE was pleased to institute and patronize the Institution for the maintenance and instruction of these poor children, it was considered by very few otherwise than as a benign wish to withdraw them from a condition which had no rank in the scale of human nature; but under this benign auspices, aided by the zealous exertions of the Gentlemen appointed to its Committee, we have already the happiness of contemplating in the infant bud the richness of the expanding flower. That they might have been for many years to come reserved for the contempt of the more enlightened world no doubt may be formed; but do not all late accounts inform us that the black natives of Africa are in the exercise of high offices in St Domingo; which they not only conduct with precision, but fill with a degree of urbanity (which may nevertheless be more confined to the reception of strangers than to common habit) and why then should we despair of the poor people being equally redeemable from their state of abjection, which was in itself but natural to persons whose only associates were the animals of the forest?
It is true, that repeated instances in our natives, have occasioned their adapting themselves in youth to European manners, and in the end retreated to the woods to rejoin their kindred: but in this there can be nothing to be wondered at: that state amongst the white population that was assigned to them was possibly little better than the one they had forsaken; the meanest offices of drudgerery (sic) always reflecting upon their minds a picture of debasement, a want of attention to their common wants, of which our very dogs and horses had not to complain.
Such treatment could not be considered a fair trial of their capacities or fixed inclinations. On the contrary, it was sufficient to disgust instead of withdrawing them from habit which at maturer age appeared to themselves to be even less intolerable. In a Gazette ten year ago we recollect ascribing to another cause their voluntary return to original habits.303 Man cannot be happy without society, for nature has enriched him with a mind which unfits him to the state of solitude. A poor native boy in a kitchen was worse than in a state of solitude; for he had constantly, and the more so as he improved in faculty, to lament a debasement which nature alone had stamped upon him. There is an associate which man in every condition finds congenial to his wishes; the smallest bird has its mate; the untamed son of the forest defends his den, and protects his yet inoffensive family of yelping cubs; out of the woods the poor half civilized native had no chance of a mate; no chance of ever sharing in the tender feelings of a parent, which the very crocodile evinces. The doubt of their capacity and fairness of intellect must now wear off; and it will no more be doubted that this our infant Native Institution will prove eventually honorable to its earliest Patronage, and add additional honor to the Country whose benevolent efforts are sounded throughout all parts of the habitable world.’304

Opposition to the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Among the Aborigines


The Reverend Richard Hill, 1782-1836, arrived in 1819 as an assistant to Reverend Cowper. An early indication of his humanitarian leanings was his establishment of the NSW Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Among the Aborigines. Founded in 1698 The Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge was the oldest Anglican mission.
Hill’s proposal for the establishment of the NSW Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Among the Aboriginal people met with strong opposition from what would appear to be an unusual alliance of clergy and landowners on the frontier. The signatures of the clergy on the petition should be seen as an indicator of the internecine relations of the Sydney clergy. The landowners did not want any possibly embarrassing interference in their operations.
The petition to Governor Macquarie was cleverly constructed. It used Macquarie’s Native Institution as an argument against any other enterprise and used the costs of running the school as leverage. The petition was careful to explain that the degraded and very wretched state of the Aboriginal people was a result of land clearances. No mention was made of Macquarie’s Proclamations of 1816. Some of the signatories had been, or would be, involved in a different sort of clearance. Despite the author’s fondness of commas over full stops I have maintained the original grammar, or lack of grammar.

Windsor 24th August 1819



Sir,

We have the honour of addressing your Excellency on the subject of a printed advertisement, under date the 12th instant, and which lately came to our knowledge announcing to the public the establishment of a society for “Promoting Christian knowledge amongst the Aborigines of New South Wales and its dependencies,” signed by his Honor the Lieutenant Governor, the judges and Clergymen of Sydney with your Excellency’s approval affixed thereto. –
From long experience, as Residents in the Interior of this Colony, we deeply face the justice and important necessity of doing something to raise the Natives from the degraded and very wretched state in which they still continue and on reverting to your Excellency’s Rules and Regulations of 1814, in founding and establishing the Native Institution we there perceive that it was founded not only on principles of justice but of humanity to the Natives, who most certainly have been deprived of grat parts of their means of subsistence by our clearing the lands of its timber, by which were cleared the greater part of the animal food etc.
This Institution has exceeded the most sanguine expectations of many of its admirers, as far as it has yet been carried into effect, for it proves that the Native Children are as capable of improvement as children in general. We therefore submit it to your Excellency’s consideration whether or not, had the inhabitants an opportunity of enacting and expressing their opinions on this very important subject, it would not be for the benefit of the original Institution, as every gentleman with whom we have conversed on this subject, would willingly come forward to support and extend, so highly approved and laudable an Institution as the one established by Your Excellency, especially as the children already in the School are arriving at an Age that will yet require such attention and expense to form and make them good and useful members of society.
We have the honour to be, Sir

Your most obedient

humble servants

Jn: Jamison

James Mileham Robt. Cartwright305

Mr:Minchin306 Mr. Cox:

Thos. Moore307 Arch Bell

Walter Lawry308 John Youl309

Chas Throsby

Thomas Carne310 Robert Lowe

Mr. Howe William Lawson

John Wood311

George Cox’312
A month later on the 23rd of September 1819 Governor Macquarie appointed the following ten men to the Committee of the Native Institution:

The Honorable JUSTICE FIELD.



Sir JOHN JAMISON, Knt.

Reverend RICHARD HILL, Assistant Chaplain, Sydney.

Captain H. C. ANTILL, Major of Brigade.

JOHN PIPER, Esquire, Sydney

JOHN HARRIS, Esquire, Sydney

JOHN OXLEY, Esquire, Sydney

FREDERICK GARLING,

Reverend ROBERT CARTWRIGHT, Chaplain

Lieut. ARCHIBALD BELL, R. V. Corps, Richmond.’313
The Reverend Richard Hill was ensconced firmly within the tent and Jamison, Cartwright and Bell, signatories to the petition opposing Hill’s initiative, would keep him firmly in place. The “NSW Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Among the Aborigines” appears to have had a short existence.

Compilation of Parramatta Native Institution Admission List: 1814 to 1820

Names of the Children of the Aborigines received into the Native Institution Parramatta, since its foundation, 10 Jany. 1814314



No.

Date of Admission

Names.

Supposed ages.

State of learning

Tribe

Not now in school

1

28 Dec 1814

Maria315

13

Spells four syllables in the Bible & reads

Richmond




2

" " "

Kitty

12

Reads & writes well

Prospect




3

" " "

Fanny

9

Beginning to read and spell

Cattai Creek




4

" " "

Friday

12

Reads & writes well

Portland Head




5

10 Jany 1815

Billy

12

d0 d0

South Creek




6

6 June 1816

Nalour










Absconded

7

" " "

Doors










d0316

8

12 Augt "

Betty Cox317

15

Reads and writes well

Hawkesbury




9

" " "

Nilbah318

15

Improves in reading and spelling

Cowpastures




10

" " "

Betty Fulton319

16

Reads and writes well

Cowpastures




11

" " "

Tommy

11

Reads and writes well

Hawkesbury




12

" " "

Peter










Absconded

13

" " "

Pendergrass










d0

14

23

Amy

8

Reads and spells well

Botany Bay




15

" " "

Nancy

10

Beginning to read and spell

Botany Bay




16

" " "

Charlotte










Died in Sydney320

17

9 Sep. 1816

John

6

Reads and spells

Cattai Creek




18

28 Decr "

Davis










Absconded

19

" " "

Dicky321

9

Reads and spells well







20

" " "

Judith

13

Reads and writes well

Mulgoa




21

1 Jany 1818

Jenny Mulgaway

7

Reads and spells

Mulgoa




22

" " "

Joe Marlow







Prospect

Absconded

23

17 July 1818

Neddy

6

Reads and spells

Prospect




24

25 Sep "

Wallis

10

Repeats the alphabet

Newcastle




25

15 Jany. 1819

Jemmy

4

d0

Newcastle

D. 1/10/21322

26

1 March "

Henry

4

d0

Kissing Point

D. 26/08/21323

27

20 Decr "

Maria, als Margt.324

11

d0







28

" " "

Nanny










Taken by her father.

29

" " "

Sukey










Died at Parramatta

30

30 May 1820

Joseph

3

d0




D. 22/10/21325

31

" " "

Billy George










Taken by his father.

32

6 June "

Polly326

16

Reads and writes well







33

28 Decr "

Martha327

10

Repeats the alphabet







34

" " "

Peggy

8

d0







35

" " "

Charlotte

10

d0







36

" " "

Caroline

7

d0







37

" " "

Anna

1

d0




(Signed) Richard Hill

Secretary

In the seven months June to December 1816, fifteen children were admitted to the Parramatta Native Institution. Two of the fifteen, Amy and Nancy, came from Botany Bay, Charlotte probably also came from Botany Bay. Four children, Nalour, Doors, Nilbah and Betty Fulton came the Cowpastures and Wallis’ expedition. Peter and Pendergrass may also come from the south. Three, Betty Cox, Tommy and John came from the Hawkesbury. Dicky came from Kissing Point, Judith from Mulgoa and Davis from places unknown.


The demise of the Parramatta Native Institution was due to the complexities of colonial society as much as anything else. Certainly disease-related deaths necessitated a move. In October1821 eight children died or were removed from the Native Institution. Thirteen Maori children died in Marsden’s New Zealand Seminary at Parramatta at the same time.
The governorship officially changed on the 1st December 1821 from Governor Macquarie to Governor Brisbane. The Reverend Samuel Marsden, became chair of the Native Institution Committee a fortnight later on the 14th of December 1821. His enthusiasm for the position may not have been come from his concern for the children, but from religious rivalry. The Reverend Samuel Leigh, the first Wesleyan minister to come to Australia in 1815, petitioned the London Wesleyan Missionary Committee to appoint a missionary to the black natives of New South Wales and the Reverend William Walker was appointed to this position, arriving in April 1821. Walker was impressed by Nurrangingy’s settlement at Bell’s Creek, Rooty Hill and conceived a plan to build an agricultural community around it. A fortnight after Marsden’s appointment the Committee recommended that the Native Institution be shifted out of Parramatta and across from Nurragingy’s land grant on what is now the junction of Richmond Road and Rooty Hill Road North. This idea was originally William Walker’s, but in the process, he was cut out of any involvement. The running of the Institution was now in the hands of the Church Missionary Society. Given Henry Lamb’s previous relations with Aboriginal people, his appointment as supervisor on the 1st of February 1822 of what was now the Bethel Settlement may not have been in the best interests of the children. In 1825 Governor Brisbane closed the Native Institution. The children were moved around to various institutions and the site was reused for a number of years before being sold into private ownership.328
Several reasonably contemporary writings illuminate the failure of the Native Institution.
On the 11th of June 1838, the Reverend William Cowper wrote to Justice Burton, mainly about the Wellington Mission. The following extract is about the Parramatta Native Institution. While written long after the event Cowper’s letter is most telling in its account of how hostility and neglect destroyed “attempts made to ameliorate the condition of the aborigines in New South Wales.”

1814 - 1823


At Parramatta an establishment was commenced for the institution and maintenance of the aborigines' Children. This Institution succeeded as well as could be expected, & indeed beyond the anticipations of many. Several of the Boys and Girls made a fair progress in reading, writing, arithmetic and religious knowledge. The Colonial Secretary, however, did not like the Institution, and he desired measures for its abolition. - about 1822, I think, the Children were all removed from Parramatta to someplace near Prospect, called the " Black Town " - this change was a precursor to the final and complete extinction of the "Native Institution", in 1823, or 1824.
On 31 Janry 1815 an attempt was made to induce a number of the adult Blacks to locate and settle themselves at "Georges Head" there were Huts erected, and small patches of Garden Ground were prepared for them; and our Boat was given to them. A European man was appointed to assist the natives, but this plan was not attended with success. But the European, feeling a little, if any, interest in the welfare of the natives, did not protect the property thus appropriated for them, and in a short period the Huts and Gardens, &c were destroyed, and the boat was lost, and this attempt failed.
About 1820, or 1821 another plan was devised on the half of a different Tribe at Elizabeth Bay, Huts were erected, and some Ground was prepared for their cultivation. But this place was too near to Sydney for while there was none to protect the property, there were many to destroy. - in these attempts to settle and civilize the adult Natives there was no Missionary employed to instruct them, nor any person of rank, intelligence, or influence, or of integrity, to encourage them in their new condition, or to show them by his own example the advantages of Christianity.

William Cowper’329
Robert Campbell was a merchant, land holder and friend of the ecclesiastical community. His letter to Justice Burton, also written in 1838 provided valuable insights into contemporary thought. He repeated contemporary prejudice as though it was true – there is no evidence to sustain his claim that lust was the strongest passion of Aboriginal people.330 He failed to appreciate why the very fine and remarkably docile boy at my sheep Establishment would leave to marry a Aboriginal woman. He failed to appreciate that the unwillingness of Aboriginal people to surrender their lifestyle represented a failure of the settlers to convince Aboriginal people of the superiority of their ways. While his claim of ignorance of any harm done by settlers seems disingenuous, it must be noted that he was a frequent visitor to England and trade was his major occupation. His letter is also important in drawing attention to the impact of venereal disease upon Aboriginal people.

Mr Campbell to Mr Justice Burton on the habits of the blacks



Sydney, 22 June 1838

My dear Sir,

I wish sincerely that it were in my power to afford you "much useful information" on the subject which you have at present under consideration - I regret to be obliged to confess that I have very little indeed to impart of which you are not already in possession.
I do not remember at this moment any attempt on the part of Government to civilize the Aboriginal natives of this country; or to communicate to them the knowledge of the Gospel, previously to the administration of General Macquarie. His predecessors were very kind, personally to the poor creatures - one or two of their chiefs having occasionally dined at Government House- and in this respect our early Governors were imitated by the respectable Inhabitants, as I recollect observing, on my arrival in this Colony, numbers of natives about the dwelling of Mr Commissary Palmer and other Gentlemen. But I think that the first attempt to locate any one of the Tribes in a particular spot and to encourage them to apply themselves to agriculture and fishing with a view to supplying their wants by the produce of their own labour - and at the same time to institute schools for the education of their children - was made during the administration of General Macquarie.
Several children were collected and fed clothed and instructed by a Mr. Hall in a house erected for the purpose by the Governor on the Richmond Road; small portions of land were likewise cleared in the vicinity and huts built thereon, in which a few of the natives were coaxed to reside for a short time. About the same time huts were constructed at Elizabeth Bay and Mrs. Macquarie zealously endeavoured to prevail upon the Port Jackson Tribe to settle there, furnishing their Chief Bongaree with boats to enable them to obtain fish, for which they could always find a market in Sydney. I think that from the Revd. Messrs Cartwright and Cowper you could in all probability collect the most accurate information relative to the details of either plan; and to the apparent causes of the failure in both instances of General Macquarie's scheme for the amelioration of the condition in which he found the Aborigines. The true cause is to be found, perhaps, in their invincible aversion to labour and to abiding in one place more than a few days together. I know that it was the opinion of my late friend, the Revd. Samuel Marsden, that they will neither be converted nor civilized until a Missionary be found possessed of sufficient self denial to live amongst them, adopting their vagrant habits until such time as he shall have acquired their full confidence. It comes within my own knowledge that it is generally impossible to prevent their children, although trained amongst white people, from joining their Tribes on attaining the age of puberty, and their resembling thenceforth their savage Countrymen in all respects would lead us to infer that they had derived no benefit either from our instruction or example. I had a very fine and remarkably docile boy at my sheep Establishment, who could reap, drive oxen, heavy[?] plough as well as a white man. This boy would kneel and repeat the prayers which he heard white men uttering - and remained in my service some years. But when he wished to marry he rejoined his Countrymen, resumed the savage practices which I supposed he had for ever abandoned; and was I have learned, ultimately killed in one of the Conflicts. I ought to have mentioned that Governor Macquarie instituted an Annual Feast to which the tribes resorted from a considerable distance - and on this occasion a number of blankets were usually distributed amongst them.
I believe that any outrage on their part (with the exception of rape which I am told they will attempt whenever a defenceless white woman is thrown in their way - lust being their strongest passion:) committed on Europeans may be ascribed to a thirst for retaliation. It is true that I am not aware of any instance of their having been wantonly injured by the Settlers - but as we wield[?] our possessions their game - on which they depend for subsistence - is destroyed - and our convict servants excite their jealousy by forming connexions with their women.
The present condition of this degraded race is unquestionably most wretched in the vicinity of Sydney , - but throughout the Territory their intercourse with the lower class of Convicts has undoubtedly been extremely prejudicial to them. They have become [LINE OBSCURED] of which aided by the Venereal Disease, has very much reduced their numbers already, in our more settled districts, and it is to be feared, will ere long completely destroy the race.
I remain, my dear Sir, Yours truly,

Rob Campbell

22nd June 1838’331

George Reeves on Lachlan Macquarie


George Reeves, who was not an admirer of Lachlan Macquarie, wrote an insightful account of Macquarie’s final land grants on his departure. Colbee and his brother both received land grants in the middle of what is now Windsor. I have not been able to find in the Historical Records of Australia a record of a grant to Colebee and his brother.332 The relevant document (pages 560-566, HRA, Vol. 10, Library Committee of the Commonwealth Parliament, 1917) deals only with grants over 100 acres.
Before finishing with Lachlan Macquarie, I wish to refer to the scandal of his administration in the matter of grants of land. A. long list in 1821 contains 822 names who received additional grants for grazing lands. The total area alienated amounted to 74,920 acres. The Secretary of State was responsible for a large number of recommendations. Edward Riley received 1500 acres through being a long resident. Hannibal McArthur got 1000 acres through having numerous stock, and James and William Mc Arthur, on their father's recommendation, received 1000 acres each. Charles McArthur, for services rendered, received 800 acres. One person, James Daley, of Windsor, had a grant of 50 acres additional, through having met with misfortune. William Douglass, of Windsor, received an additional grant through a loss by fire. William Cox, Esq., of Richmond, received 10,000 acres, 20 miles on the west side of Bathurst, through having a large increase of stock. Robert Fitz, of Windsor, got 300 acres additional through. having a large family. On the 31st October, 1821, an aboriginal native, named Colebee, of Windsor, whose English name is listed as Edward Hore, had a small area grant of land at the old town; also his brother, John Hore. Both these small pieces of land were bounded by George, Brabyn, and Macquarie streets, and they are still vacant and unoccupied. They are situated at the corner of George and Brabyn streets opposite the Benevolent Society's Home for old Hawkesbury people in bad circumstances. Both Hores (Colebee and his brother) were attached to the police quarters, at Windsor as blacktrackers, and as grooms for the mounted men. In my opinion, for the areas of grants from 100 acres of land downwards, there was ample justification, but not so in the excessively large grants to ex-military officers such as Captain William Cox, the McArthur's and others of that caste. It will be seen that Macquarie, as a soldier, was nothing more nor less than a looter, and despoiler of Indian potentates, relieving them of their wealth in order that he and his friends at the English Court should possess a great wealth of gold and silver ornaments and precious stones. Macquarie, having acquired the habit of dispossessing natives of India, it was quite easy for him as Governor-in-Chief in New South Wales to grant large areas of the best lands in the State to his military favorites.’333

27th of July, 1822: Lachlan Macquarie to Earl Bathurst on his achievements


In regard to recounting his achievements in civilising the “poor Black Natives or Aborigines of the Colony” Macquarie’s despatch was a masterpiece of bureaucratic reporting.
Macquarie cast himself as an enlightened ruler by recycling Banks’ mistaken view that Aboriginal people only lived on the coast. By doing this Macquarie was able to absolve the British government and himself, of any responsibility for taking Aboriginal land in the interior.
His achievements: the Native Institution, the Annual Congress and settling the Aboriginal people were all largely dismantled within a decade.
He made no mention of the military operations that took place in 1816.
20. Considering the poor Black Natives or Aborigines of the Colony entitled to the peculiar protection of the British Government, on account of their being driven from the Sea Coast by our settling thereon, and subsequently occupying their best Hunting Grounds in the Interior, I deemed it an act of justice, as well as of Humanity, to make at least an attempt to ameliorate their condition and to endeavour to civilize them in as far as their wandering habits would admit of.
21. With this view, I called a general meeting or Congress of the Natives inhabiting the Country lying between the Blue Mountains and Port Jackson. This Meeting took place accordingly at the Town of Parramatta on the 28th of December, 1814, when several propositions were made to the Natives in respect to their discontinuing their present wandering predatory habits and becoming regular Settlers.
22. It was also proposed to them to send their Children to School, at a Seminary I intended to establish immediately for that express purpose.
23. Many of the Natives agreed to take Lands and settle permanently on them, and they all seemed highly pleased with the idea of sending their children to school. It was therefore determined to establish and open the Native Institution for Educating and Civilizing the Children of the Aborigines on the 18th of the ensuing Month of January, when several of the Natives promised to bring in their children, which they did; and the Institution was accordingly established on the day above mentioned under the superintendence of Mr. William Shelly, a pious, sober and steady good man, who had come out originally as one of the Church Missionary Society.
24. This Institution has fully answered the purpose for which it was established, it having proved that the children of the Natives have as good and ready an aptitude for learning as those of Europeans, and that they are also susceptible of being completely civilized.
25. I limited the number of children to be received into the Institution to Twenty four, as the expense of maintaining a greater number at one time would be very considerable, one half of whom to be male, and the other female. The progress, these Black Children have made in their Education, has been a subject of astonishment to every one, who has ever visited the Institution. It has also had the good effect of completely conciliating the good will and friendship of all the native tribes to the British Government, and of securing the most friendly and social intercourse with them. Three Girls, educated at the Native Institution, have already been married from thence to Native Youths, who have become Settlers.
26. The Adults, however, are naturally very indolent and averse to labor, and I had consequently great difficulty in prevailing on any of them to become regular Settlers. But determined to persevere in my endeavours to civilize these poor inoffensive Human Beings, I at length prevailed on Five different Tribes to become Settlers, giving them their choice of situations. Three of the Tribes chose to settle on the Shores of Port Jackson in the vicinity of Sydney, on account of the conveniency of fishing, for which purpose I furnished them with Boats and Fishing Tackle. The other two Tribes preferred taking their Farms in the Interior, from the produce of which they now maintain themselves, and appear much pleased with their change of condition; and their good example I hope will in due time reconcile many of the other adult Native Blacks to become Settlers. I appointed the 28th of December of each year for a general Meeting or Congress of all the Natives, which they have regularly attended, upwards of 300 having been present at the last Annual Congress at Parramatta.’334
Curiously, W. C. Wentworth in his 1823 poem Australasia, penned a somewhat similar idea of Aboriginal people retreating before the settlers.
‘… the mournful genius of the plain

Driv’n from his primal solitary reign

Has backward fled, and fix’d his drowsy throne

In untold wilds, to muse and brood alone.’335

1824-25: Drought and conflict


In the drought of 1824-25 there was violence on the Hawkesbury at Putty and the Lower Hawkesbury, confirming my theory that violence tended to be on the edges of settlement.
A Aboriginal warrior known as both Bumblefoot, because of a foot deformity, and Devil Devil attacked and nearly decapitated the convict Jeremiah Buffey, on September 19, 1824, in the Newcastle area. Bumblefoot then appeared to have made his way to the Lower Hawkesbury. Valerie Ross has put together a picture of his activities there.336 In early October he knocked a settler senseless and took his food and clothes. Other Aboriginal people told Richard Woodbury, special constable and local farmer at Laughtondale, that Bumblefoot had a gun. Richard Woodbury captured Bumblefoot and took him by rowboat to Windsor where he was charged with murder. The Sydney Gazette, of the 11th of November 1824 carried a report of the attack. ‘On Saturday, the 30th ult. Devil-Devil, an able-bodied aboriginal native, with a cloven foot, was brought before a Bench of Magistrates at Windsor, by Woodbury, a Portland-head constable, charged with murdering a servant of Mr. Dickson's in the bush, by severing the poor man's head from his body with a tomahawk, while in the while in the act of stooping down to the ground. The sable criminal was remanded for further examination.’337 On the 26th of January 1825 Bumblefoot appeared before the Sydney Courts, on an unstated charge; however, because he could not speak English and a translator was not available he was remanded. On the 23rd of June 1825 he was charged with a violent assault upon Jeremiah Buffey. The outcome of this case is unknown.338 The Reverend Lancelot Threlkeld later wrote that Bumblefoot had spent a considerable time in gaol for this offence. Bumblefoot threatened to kill him because Threlkeld had told him to return to his home, Mangrove, forty miles distant from Newcastle. According to Mr Amos Douglas of Upper Mangrove, he was killed by other Aboriginal people at Bumble Hills, between Mangrove and Yarramalong.339 Bumblefoot’s movements between the Hunter and the Hawkesbury supports my contention that Aboriginal people travelled widely and concealed from settlers their knowledge of surrounding country.340
Valerie Ross recorded that in 1825 Thomas Dillon, a first Branch settler, had to “fly with eight young children in a most distressed state from blacks and bushrangers to the district of Appin”. I have not been able to locate Dillon’s letter in the AONSW.341

Obituary: Keturah Woods


Keturah Woods was born in 24 May 1824. Her father was Thomas Woods and her mother, Sarah Mary, was the eldest daughter of Sarah Stubbs, who as a widow had married James Painter/Paynter in 1806. Keturah claimed that when she was born her parents lived on Clink’s farm, opposite Dillon’s at Wiseman’s Ferry. In 1835 the Wood’s moved downstream from Sally’s Vale and almost opposite Woodbury’s.342 While it is possible that Keturah may have witnessed the events described, they may have dated from the time she was born and entered into her memory as a personal experience.
OBITUARY.

AN EARLY COLONIST.

There passed away recently at her daughter's residence; in Leichhardt, Mrs. Keturah Butterworth, a very old colonist, who was born 81 years ago upon a point of the Hawkesbury known as Klink's Farm, near Wiseman's Ferry. Mrs. Butterworth was the relict of the late James Butterworth, of Balmain, to whom she was married at the Hawkesbury sixty-two years ago. She had been a widow at the time of her death for 23 years, and was the mother of nine children (seven girls and two boys), many grandchildren, and five great grand-grandchildren. She herself was one of a large family, her parents, whose name was Woods, having been among those, who emigrated from England at the beginning of last century. The picturesque Hawkesbury was settled by a sturdy and courageous class, and the first residents did splendid pioneering work, which has been continued by their descendants, in spite of occasional periods of adversity, or even of disasters, such as recurring floods, of which the greatest was the memorable flood of 1867. Mrs. Butterworth had many recollections of such events. Again and again she had seen the heavy rains from the Blue Mountains pour down the Hawkesbury Valley, the waters sweeping before them the haystacks, outbuildings, and roofs, live poultry and pigs, the furniture, and even the cottages of residents, and bearing them swiftly down to the Pacific Ocean. Sometimes the people themselves were drowned, and whole farms were swept out of, existence. Another trouble that the early settlers experienced was from the blacks, who, especially when the male members of a household were absent, were very Aggressive and persistent in their demands, obtaining tobacco, sugar, etc., by terrorising the women and children. Often they went further, bearing and carrying away stock, or even firing crops and houses.
Mrs. Butterworth has frequently told of times when, as a child, she and others barricaded themselves in their house, and watched the natives spearing their pigs and fowls. After her marriage, in 1843, she remained for some years on the Hawkesbury, her husband carrying on farming operations. In 1851, James Butterworth was seized with the gold fever, and he went to the Turon, but not finding the streets of Sofala paved with loose gold, and remembering that his heavy maize crop was ready to be harvested, he soon abandoned the pick and Shovel and dish, and sought prosperity in the surer field of agriculture. At that time as much as £20 was paid for a load of hay, delivered in Sydney, and other produce was realising equally high prices.
After living for some years in Pitt Town, Mrs. Butterworth moved to Box Hill, then to Bathurst, and afterwards to Trunkey. Thirty-three years ago she and her husband settled in Balmain, and she spent the rest of her days in the metropolitan district. Until a year ago, when her sight failed, Mrs. Butterworth retained all her faculties, and her memory for dates, up till the day of her death, November 19 last, is described as wonderful. Her birthday was May 24, coinciding, with that of the late Queen Victoria:’343



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