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    <name><![CDATA[Humanitarians in the Antipodes: Circular Head to Woolnorth]]></name>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>A visualisation of the investigative tours of British Quakers, James Backhouse and George Washington Walker, who were 'travelling under concern' in the Southern oceans in 1830s. This section relates to the northwest corner of Van Diemen's Land.</p>]]></description>
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      <Data name="recordtype"><![CDATA[Journey]]></Data>
      <Data name="creator"><![CDATA[Penny Edmonds]]></Data>
      <Data name="contact"><![CDATA[penny.edmonds@flinders.edu.au]]></Data>
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      <Data name="temporal_from"><![CDATA[1832-10-29]]></Data>
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      <Data name="created_at"><![CDATA[2024-06-17 15:28:27]]></Data>
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      <name><![CDATA[Proper, an Aboriginal man traveling with W.J. Darling, was described as being of the country near Circular Head']]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[Introduction to Jackey, an Aboriginal woman 'interesting appearance, neatly dressed, and having her hair cut off, according to the common custom'. Jackey, who had had been living with sealers on Stack Island, had a 'mild expression' 'beclouded by sadness'. She spoke seldomly and 'in a low tone'. The sealers 'appeared to treat her kindly, but there was something in their manners that excited suspicion'. Jackey was a country woman of Jumbo, with whom she 'laughed heartily and entered freely into conversation'. Jackey agreed to be relocated to Flinders Island. ]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[At the Circular Head jetty, an Aboriginal woman named Maria was 'rescued' from sealers, along with her baby.]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[Met with George A Robinson & Edward Curr, Superintendent of the Van Diemen's Land Company, whose home, garden and fields in 'almost every other object but the Gum-trees', resembled England.]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[Two ships, Fanny and Charlotte sailed for Woolnorth, 'passed northward of Robbin Island, and of the small islands between it and Three Hummock, or the East Hunter Island, and anchored on the west of Stack Island'. While they 'heard some dogs, but saw no person' on Stack Island, but later learned 'that a native woman was there, who had concealed herself by order of the sealers, notwithstanding she would have been glad to have escaped from them: they subsequently carried her off to Kangaroo Island'.]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[The Charlotte was anchored at Woolnorth Bay in preparation to transport Aboriginal people 'collected by G.A. Robinson, from Barren Island, where he had left them'. ]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[Greeted by Samuel Reeves, Superintendent with the Van Diemen's Land Company and surgeon James Richardson at Woolnorth, where there were 'only a few weather-boarded buildings'.]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[At Cape Grim the 'whole scenery is in harmony with the name of the place'.]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[The 'Wandering Albatross rears is young on Albatross Island, where it sits on its eggs til knocked down by the sealers for the sake of its feathers' which were 'sold for about 9d a pound'. A single bird could yield about a pound of feathers and nearly 1,000 Albotrosses were said to have been killed on this island in 1831, with some of the birds 'stunned, plucked, and cruelly left to linger'.]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[The kelp on Albatross Island was 'of gigantic magnitude' and it was converted by Aboriginal people into vessels for carrying water'. ]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[Mutton fish were 'met with abundantly' and Aboriginal women would dive for them in deep water, 'force them from the rocks by means of a wooden chisel' and bring them up in an oval bag 'suspended round their necks'.]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[At Woolnorth, Backhouse & Walker met with a party of Aboriginal peope who  arrived from Barren Island where they had been 'under the charge of Anthony Cottrell, G. A. Robinson's assistant'. These Aboriginal people 'had been with G. A. Robinson, on the west coast' and an Aboriginal woman was described as 'the sole relick of a tribe that inhabited the western side of the Huon River, on the south coast'. When Backhouse asked her 'what became of the people of her country', she answered 'They all died'. When asked 'what killed them', an 'aged man of the Bruny Island tribe, who is one of their doctors' replied 'The Devil'. When asked how this was managed, the Aboriginal woman 'began to cough violently' to demonstrate 'how they were affected' and she said that the 'rest were all dead', so she had made a raft to cross D'Entrecasteaux Channel to Bruny Island, 'and joined a tribe there'.]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[At Woolnorth, Backhouse & Walker interviewed an Aboriginal man they described as 'an old Doctor' who 'was smeared and streaked with red ochre and grease, with which his beard was also dressed'.]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[While 'sitting by the fire' with Aboriginal women who were 'making the oval bags of open work, used in fishing' Backhouse observed an Aboriginal woman 'looking carefully about among the grass'. She was seeking a needle and 'A. Cottrell, who say by, said, You will see she will find it: you have no idea how keen sighted and persevering they are', and 'after some time she picked up her needle, which was one of English manufacture, and not of large size!']]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[A Aboriginal woman at Woolnorth was 'arranging several stones that were flat, oval, and about two inches wide, and marked in various directions with black and red lines'. These stones 'represented absent friends, and, one larger than the rest, a corpulent woman on Flinders Island, known by the name of Mother Brown'.]]></name>
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      <name><![CDATA[Anthony Cottrel, assistant to George Augustus Robinson, offered information to Backhouse & Walker regarding the family structure, body marking, and burial practices of Aboriginal peoples of Van Diemen's Land]]></name>
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