| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-09 |
| name | Australian Wars and Resistance |
| description | This is a provisional map of Australian wars and resistance movements from 1788 to the 1930s. It was created using computational 'clustering' methods based primarily on massacres, and checked against historical evidence and secondary sources and some Indigenous knowledge. It was produced in response to a century of demands for recognition of these wars and resistance, from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. The methodology to produce the map was developed after 8 years of consultative research into Colonial Frontier Massacres, during the Historical Frontier Violence ARC grant, which was overseen by an Indigenous steering committee, and which included Aboriginal academics. The methodology has been presented without objection to Indigenous forums and in yarns with no outright objection and with feedback and suggestions that have been responded to and included. This map is meant only as a beginning and to prompt collaborative research, done the right way, into each of these wars and resistance movements. Massacres are only part of the story, and more events will be added over time. We hope also to identify hundreds of named and thousands of unnamed people in these wars. This work is supported by a collective of more than 50 historians and Indigenous people. As we learn more this map may change. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publiccollections/189 |
| copyrightNotice | Ask first. |
| comment | This map links to information that may to contain descriptions of violence and historical racist attitudes. |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-09 |
| name | New England Frontier Wars |
| description | Audio-Visual: Clayton-Dixon, Callum 2019 Indigenous Research NAIDOC Lecture: The New England Frontier Wars University of New England https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKqOIMNvUHs ">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKqOIMNvUHs">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKqOIMNvUHsEvents in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | |
| temporalCoverage | 1841-05-01/1860-06-30 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of New England Frontier Wars |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of New England Frontier Wars |
| name | KML export of New England Frontier Wars |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of New England Frontier Wars |
| name | GeoJSON export of New England Frontier Wars |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of New England Frontier Wars |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-09 |
| name | Southern Queensland War and Resistance |
| description | Alternate Names: ‘Black War of ’43 to ‘55’. Aboriginal people: Yaggara, Kabi Kabi, Jinaburra, Jarowair (Western Wakka Wakka), Gitabel, Kambuwal, Batchulla, Goreng Goreng. Named Aboriginal people: Old Moppy (Mappi), Commandant, Jackey Jackey, Young Moppy (Multuggerah), Mickey Mickey, Uncle Marney, Dundalli, Yilbung (Milbong Jemmy), Eumundi (Ngumundi), Dr (Billy) Barlow, Wanaunaiga, Perkla, Neddy, Moggy Moggy. Colonial Forces: 99th Foot Regiment, 54th Regiment, NSW Border Police, NSW/ Queensland Native Mounted Police, pastoralists Notable Colonists: Dr (Lands Commissioner), Stephen Simpson, Patrick Leslie, Gregory Blaxland, Pegg brothers, Frederick Walker, ‘Cocky’ Rogers, William Balfour, Thomas & Charles Archer, Evan MacKenzie, David McConnel, Boralchou (John/ James Baker), John Eales, Lnt John O’Connell Bligh. Audio/visual: S4E1">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mejyw8HkM0Y">S4E1 - Dundalli - Aboriginal resistance fighter and lawman Battle">https://historyguild.org/battle-of-one-tree-hill-australian-frontier-wars/">Battle of One Tree Hill, Australian Frontier Wars - History Guild The">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S06NEK_jfJU">The Battle of One Tree Hill Narrative: Closure of penal settlement and opening of southern Queensland to pastoral settlement 1839-1842 saw an explosion of squatting. With thousands of sheep, small bands of aspiring colonists headed north along the Brisbane River Valley to Wide Bay, or otherwise east from NSW into the Darling Downs, Lockyer and Ipswich districts. This war began with the festering embers of the Moreton Bay conflict. Unlike the Turrbal and the Quandamooka peoples, the Kabi Kabi never made peace with the settlement. Rather, in the late 1830s, Ngumundi (Eumundi) and Pamby-Pamby – Kabi Kabi headmen - went to great efforts to protect and accommodate runaway convicts. Siding with these runaways against the colony, Ngumundi’s men attacked, killed or otherwise controlled white castaways and any colonists who ventured into their realm. However, by the early 1840s, Ngumundi began making friendlier overtures to the German missionaries. His people’s ancient enmity with the Yaggara/ Turrbal and Bay peoples (Quandamooka/Nunukul, Ngugi) was only rekindled when the Turrbal and Quandamooka became firm friends of the settlers. A second impetus for war came when squatter pastoralists, led by Patrick Leslie, invaded the Darling Downs from NW NSW in 1840, pre-emptively attacking and dispersing camps, whilst other squatters – the McKenzies, Archers and Mcconnels – began penetrating the upper Brisbane Valley. All these settlers brought large flocks into the areas and established huge runs. To meet this threat, the Jarowair and their neighbours began valley-wide fires to burn out livestock and pastoral workers and destroy the pastures. Further solidifying this resistance was the massacre of up to 70 Kabi people at Kilcoy. (poisoned flour having been distributed by Evan MacKenzie’s shepherds after continual raids on flocks). The dreadful deaths were re-enacted at the annual Bunya Nut festivals both on the Blackall Ranges and Bunya Mountains in February 1842. These festivals were a major gathering of tribes from all over southern and central Queensland and northern and western NSW. Meetings (toors) following the festivals resulted in some 14 groups all over the region declaring war against the settlers – creating a vast alliance that stretched from what is now Bundaberg to Tenterfield. In one form or another, this persisted for a decade. To appease the situation, NSW Governor Gipps created the Bunya Bunya Reserve across all of what is now the Sunshine Coast west to the Bunya Mountains – effectively protecting this area from settlement. Five years earlier (1837), a battle between Eulope (the Quandamooka headman) and Old Moppy (a very influential Yaggara elder) fractured the traditional alliances of southern Queensland because Old Moppy was soundly defeated. On this account, he and his people (the inland Yaggara) renounced their traditional Moreton Bay (Quandamooka) allies and sided with the Downs (Jarowair/ Western Wakka Wakka) peoples and other ‘mountain tribes’ (the Jinabura, Gitabel and Kambuwal). Another factor in this decision was that Moppy at first tried to align himself with the colonists – making friends with Ltnt Owen Gorman, the Commander heading the colony. Moppy even assisted Gorman in capturing Mullan and his cohorts (Yugambah – traditional allies of the Yaggara) for their part in the destruction of Staplyton’s expedition in 1840. However, when Old Moppy found Gorman would not assist his neighbours on the Darling Downs (who came to Moppy’s camp to beg Gorman’s help against the excesses of the pastoralists), and when Cocky Rogers, who worked for Leslie, made forays into Old Moppy’s territory – shooting and killing people holding a corroboree on Mt Tabletop (Meewah) – Old Moppy began to rally many groups against the settlers. Ngumundi’s Kabi Kabi and the Batchulla and Goreng Goreng were drawn into this ‘super alliance’ after the Kilcoy massacre, because it mostly killed Kabi Kabi people on Jinabura country. The first major action was a combined Jinabura-Yagara-Kabi offensive involving Old Moppy – some 300-500 warriors - in which MacKenzies’ men were driven off Kilcoy altogether by sieges and repeated raids. What followed was a series of sporadic killings and large-scale removal of flocks, led by each group in its own district from 1842 to 1846, but particularly intense 1842-1844. Old Moppy was killed by Cocky Rogers in 1842. His son Multuggerah (Young Moppy) continued the struggle. For two weeks in 1843 many of the newly formed sheep runs on the Darling Downs, Upper Brisbane and Lockyer Valley were held in siege: the sheep being kept boxed in their corrals and many staff quitting their runs or otherwise being unable to venture out. Multuggerah also closed routes in and out of his region by having warriors harass travellers or otherwise blocking roads with logs. Simultaneously (April 1842), the first forays of settlement in Wide Bay (Kabi Kabi, Batchulla territory) were successfully pushed back, with several would-be settlers killed. Lamenting the siege of their runs, Lockyer and Downs settlers met and decided to send a convoy of three (some say ten) drays manned by 18 of their armed employees, in a bid to reopen the route to the Downs and revive supplies to that area. Multuggerah’s men successfully ambushed and sacked this convoy, trussing saplings along the roadsides and placing logs across roads – halting the drays from advancing. The men manning the drays fled back to Bonifant’s Inn, from which some 25-50 squatters and their employees set out to avenge the attack. This culminated in the Battle of One Tree Hill (Meewah – Mt Tabletop, near Toowoomba) – September 1843. The avengers were lured up Mt Tabletop, where Multuggerah’s men hurled rocks and boulders, defeating the colonists. This Indigenous victory became known as ‘The Battle of One Tree Hill’. It was immortalised in the ballad ‘The Raid of the Aborigines.’ Lands Commissioner – head of police – Stephen Simpson visited the scene with his police but declared the situation too dangerous to take any action. Instead, he returned to Brisbane and from there, assembled several units of 20-30 men at different locations. These were drawn from all over SE Queensland and set out to drive Multuggerah’s warriors off the Lockyer region. In response, Multuggerah, Mickey Mickey and their men retreated to the extensive Rosewood Scrub, from where they successfully launched further raids, sometimes evicting people from their holdings. They began to use Rosewood Scrub as their new base. However, by October 1843, one of the units Simpson assembled eventually penetrated Rosewood Scrub and sacked the main base camp, destroying weapon arsenals and killing some leaders. An inland fort – Helidon, manned by soldiers of the 99th and 54th Regiments - was established by Simpson as a ‘checkpoint’ to watch over and accompany dray conveys to and from the Downs (1843-1846). Multuggerah was himself killed in 1846 after trying to hold Rosewood Station homestead in siege for a few weeks. Others such as Uncle Marney and Jackey Jackey continued activities in the Ipswich and Rosewood area, with the attempted capture of Jackey Jackey at Brisbane leading to an affray. In 1848 the NSW Border Police (ancestral to the Native Mounted Police) were introduced, effectively ‘turning the tide’, although small acts of resistance continued across the Lockyer and Ipswich region into the 1850s and in some cases 1870s. Moreover, by this time, the ‘front’ of conflict was moving north of Brisbane and across Wide Bay due to the expansion of settlement in these regions. Around today’s Pine Rivers and Caboolture districts, Jinabura and Kabi Kabi figures such as Commandant, Yilbung, Mickaloe, Billy Barlow and Dundalli began conducting punitive raids or (in Yilbung’s case) extracting regular ‘rent’ payments of flour from Brisbane’s windmill. There were also raids at Gin Gin (1849) with a follow-up punitive expedition by Gregory Blaxland. This culminated in the massacre of Goreng Goreng people at Paddy’s Island near Bundaberg (1850) and a pitched battle with Kabi Kabi at Widgee Widgee. Wanauniaga, Perika, Charlie, Bungalee, Neddy and others were main figures in the resistance around Wide Bay. In December 1851-January 1852, following continuous attacks and robberies on the hamlet of Maryborough, a pose of some 28 Native Mounted Police led by Commandant Fred Walker invaded K’gari (Fraser Island) as it was the main Batchulla refuge. It is unclear if they achieved much, although the NMP camp was attacked. Oral Batchulla stories tell of a massacre at Indian Head. A few months later, 5 castaways from the Thomas King wreck at Coolum were killed on Kabi Kabi land in an attack led by Moggy Moggy, in reprisal for a purported hanging and perhaps in connection to the Indian Head massacre. The following year, Walker conducted an invasion of the Bunya Bunya Reserve, the southwest of which was already being settled. Walker also had a serious confrontation at Yabba Creek/ Imbil Island 1853-1854. This same period saw a purported massacre at Teewah through a campaign led by Lnt O’Connell Bligh. Dundalli was a particularly notable leader along the southern end of this invasion (Pine Rivers/ Caboolture/ Bribie region), being involved in the demise of several settlers, usually in surprise ambush punitive attacks. Dundalli’s trial and hanging in 1855 became a tense showdown as his supporters gathered in hundreds to protest the proceedings and had called in every man with arms, as well as all the police and army, to surround the gallows. However, Dundalli only demanded his death be avenged on the Turrbal man (Wumbungur) who betrayed him. Billy (‘Dr’) Barlow continued Dundalli’s campaign, trying to halt the settlement of Caboolture, and the Pine Rivers/ Sandgate/ Caboolture region continued to see incidents of settlers evicted from their properties through Indigenous harassment. This culminated in a battle in 1858 of some 300 warriors with the Native Mounted Police towards Dayboro, in which some police were killed or wounded. Soon after this, a Native Mounted Police headquarters was established at Sandgate, under the notorious Lnt Fred Wheeler, effectively putting down further resistance both here and across the Sunshine Coast/ Cooloola area 1861-1865. One of the last notable incidents of the war was the massacre at Murdering creek on the Yandina Run c.1865-1867. This came after spearing of workers and repeated (successful) cattle raids. A dozen local landowners and at least one policeman lured Kabi Kabi people up along the creek, where some 20-50 were systematically shot. Contributor: Ray Kerkhove, 2025 Sources ‘The Blacks – Moreton Bay, Sydney Morning Herald, 27 September 1843, p. 4 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/12418733 ">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/12418733">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/12418733Bartley, Nehemiah, 1896, Australian Pioneers & Reminiscences, Brisbane: Gordon & Gotch. Bloxsome, H. S., 1945, The Early Settlement of the Burnett River District of Queensland. Campbell, J., 1875, The Early Settlement of Queensland, Brisbane: The Bibliographic Society of Queensland. JOL OM 76-72 (McConnel Papers 1844) McConnel, D., ‘Notes on Australian Bush Life.’ JOL OM Box 8923 ‘Kilcoy Homestead Collection’ & ‘Kilcoy Station’ (OM 74-99) Knight, J.J. 1895, In the early days: history and incident of pioneer Queensland: with dictionary of dates in chronological order, Brisbane: Sapsford., Petrie, C. C., 1904, Tom Petrie’s Reminiscences of Early Queensland (Brisbane: Watson & Ferguson. UQFL 89 ‘McConnel family’ Box 2. |
| creator | Ray Kerkhove and Bill Pascoe |
| url | |
| temporalCoverage | 1837/1865 |
| keywords | Event |
| comment | Colonial violence. Linked sources and citations may contain racist language and attitudes of the time. |
| name | CSV export of Southern Queensland War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Southern Queensland War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Southern Queensland War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Southern Queensland War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Southern Queensland War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Southern Queensland War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-09 |
| name | Bowen War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2478 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Bowen War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Bowen War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Bowen War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Bowen War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Bowen War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Bowen War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Bunuba and West Kimberley War and Resistance |
| description | Listen Ross, Joe (Bunuba) Jandamarra, Rebel Films, ICTV https://ictv.com.au/video/3739-jandamarra" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://ictv.com.au/video/3739-jandamarra Ross, Joe (Bunuba) The Jandamarra Story Fancy Films, Vimeo, https://vimeo.com/272681039" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://vimeo.com/272681039 Jandamarra's War Electric Pictures 2011 https://vimeo.com/ondemand/jandamarraswar" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://vimeo.com/ondemand/jandamarraswar Ord, Duncan Jandamarra’s legacy National Museum of Australia, 2017 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxvnXG8gl_0" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxvnXG8gl_0 Spearim, Bo Dr Chris Owen, The Kimberley Frontier, 1882-1905 Frontier War Stories, 2021 https://open.spotify.com/episode/2E2CsnuvPGzQYixYKKzWa1?si=4272495dad29454c" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://open.spotify.com/episode/2E2CsnuvPGzQYixYKKzWa1?si=4272495dad29454c Notes Massacres in this war indicate two main phases, the first in the 1890s, including the Bunuba Resistance and the well known resistance leader Jandamarra, and the second from the mid 1910s to late 1920s. Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | |
| keywords | Event |
| comment | Contains descriptions of colonial violence. Sources may include racist language and attitudes. References to recordings and works of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people does not necessarily mean they support this work - the intention is only to refer people to the right speakers and sources. |
| name | CSV export of Bunuba and West Kimberley War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Bunuba and West Kimberley War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Bunuba and West Kimberley War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Bunuba and West Kimberley War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Bunuba and West Kimberley War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Bunuba and West Kimberley War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Cape York War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2480 |
| keywords | Event |
| comment | Contains descriptions of colonial violence. Historic sources may contain racist attitudes and language. |
| name | CSV export of Cape York War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Cape York War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Cape York War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Cape York War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Cape York War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Cape York War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Central Desert War and Resistance |
| description | Kaytetye and Warumungu people tell the story of the overland telegraph, one of the focal points in this conflict: Satour, Kieran Mpetyane (director) The Truth About the Telegraph Garuwa, 2024 Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2481 |
| keywords | Event |
| comment | Contains descriptions of colonial violence. Historic sources may contain racist attitudes and language. |
| name | CSV export of Central Desert War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Central Desert War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Central Desert War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Central Desert War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Central Desert War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Central Desert War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Central Western Australia War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2482 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Central Western Australia War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Central Western Australia War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Central Western Australia War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Central Western Australia War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Central Western Australia War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Central Western Australia War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Channel Country and Thargomindah |
| description | Events in will be added as research continues as part of the Australian Wars and Resistance work. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2483 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Channel Country and Thargomindah |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Channel Country and Thargomindah |
| name | KML export of Channel Country and Thargomindah |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Channel Country and Thargomindah |
| name | GeoJSON export of Channel Country and Thargomindah |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Channel Country and Thargomindah |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Daly River War |
| description | Of the Daly River Coppermine reprisal massacres, Senior Murrinh-patha man, the late Bill Parry, said: Alright, the whitemen had no wives, no-one to sleep with, they had no women...the whitemen were insistent – they demanded the women, and they took the women off the Aboriginal men... and they slept with those women at the Coppermine...alright, the Malak Malak were pining for their women, they were without their women (Smith, 2024, p 142). Region The Daly River is 220km southwest of Darwin and forms part of the Douglas Daly region. The significant Aboriginal community of Nauiyu (formerly known as the Daly River Mission) is in the region, as are the communities of Peppimenarti, Thamarrurr, Nganmarriyanga and Wadeye. The Daly River, which originates at the junction of the King, Katherine and Flora Rivers, is about 320km long and empties into Anson Bay in the Timor Sea. The Mary River, also in the Top End, is 150km east of Darwin and forms part of Kakadu National Park. It is known for its spectacular wetlands, birdlife and saltwater crocodiles. The Mary, which is about 225km long, is one of eight that form the Northern Territory floodplain system. It has many tributaries and empties into Van Diemen Gulf. Narrative A combination of factors led to this war, including agricultural and mining pursuits as colonists fanned out along the overland telegraph line and pastoral stations were established, but a common factor for many clashes were attacks by Aboriginal men to rescue women who had been abducted and subjected to sexual slavery. The Daly River War included but was not limited to those circumstances of provocation. Earliest indications of trouble brewing were on the goldfields at Yam Creek with reports of tools being pilfered from miners (NTTG, 26 December 1873, p 4). In October 1874 a miner named August Henning was killed by Aboriginal people on the road from the goldfields to Darwin (Reid, 1990, pp 53-54; Kelsey, 1975; 32). In early June 1875, John Lewis and his party were en route to western Arnhem Land to establish the Coburg Cattle Company pastoral lease. They were attacked by Kunwinjku warriors at the East Alligator and killed in the order of 20 people (NTTG, 7 August 1875, p 2; Lewis, 1922, pp 140-143). Violence intensified following the killing of Charles Johnston, head of the Daly Waters Telegraph Station, at Roper Bar on 29 June 1875. Mungarrayi warriors were held responsible. The ensuing reprisal massacre from 24 July at Mount McMinn was carried out by an overlanding party of nine travelling from Queensland to Darwin and led by William Batten and George de Lautour. This was the first of five reprisal massacres. The others were Crescent Lagoon, Harris Lagoon and the Calder Range in August, and Mole Hill in September 1875 (Roberts, 2009, np; Wilson, 2008, pp 221-222; Reid, 1990, pp 66-67; Roberts, 2005, p 140; NTTG, 18 September 1875, p 2). In January 1878, teamster James Ellis was murdered at Granite Crossing, The Shackle. A punitive reprisal party led by Mounted Constable William Stretton shot at least 17 of the suspected warriors near the Daly River. An unknown number of others were shot by a civilian reprisal party, possibly for the same reason or in reprisal for the wounding of two Chinese miners at Yam Creek at about the same time (Evening Journal, 21 January 1878, p 3; NTTG, 26 January 1878, p 2; Reid, 1990, p 70). The war intensified further following an event known as the Daly River Coppermine Massacre on 2 September 1884 in which three miners, John Landers, Henry Hauschildt and Johannes Noltenius were speared as they retreated to their camp at the Mount Hayward Copper Mine. On arrival they discovered their cook, Thomas Schollert, dead. A reprisal operation was carried out by Mounted Constable George Montagu and took in Argument Flat (Evening Journal, 4 June 1885, p 3; Austin, 1992, pp 15-16) and Marrakai Station along the Mary River. Montagu’s report documented 20-30 Aboriginal deaths, but other contemporary reports suggest between 70-150, and modern estimates are higher. Inspector Paul Foelsche also led a reprisal party. A third, civilian, party led by former police officer August Lucanus was split into three groups and armed by the government (Lucanus in Clement & Bridge, 1991, p 16). It was not accompanied by any police and did not account for ammunition used (Markus, 1974; Wilson, 2000, pp 271; Nettelbeck, 2004, p 193; Morris, 2019, pp 33-43; Smith, 2025, pp 29-31). Poison was deployed as a weapon in later years. At Stapleton Siding in 1895, more than 100 Kungarakan people died after eating poisoned damper (McGuinness, 1991, p 8; Murgatroyd, 2001, p 6; Toohey, 1981, p 39). Country / People / Language group / Nation Yam Creek 1873: Wagiman, Mayall, Arigoolia and Jawoyn East Alligator 1875: Kunwinjku Daly Waters 1875: Mungarrayi Daly River 1884: Woolwonga, Malak Malak, Murrinh Patha, Ngan'gikurrunggurr Stapleton Siding 1895: Kungarakan Notable People Named Aboriginal people
Colonists Colonial forces: Miners, South Australia Police, Civilians Police: Corporal George Montagu, Mounted Constable Charles Luck, Mounted Constable Cox, Mounted Constable Allan Macdonald, Mounted Constable Robert Stott (Kimber, 1990, np), Inspector Paul Foelsche, Mounted Constable Summers, Mounted Constable Wilson (see various newspaper reports listed in references) and Constable James Foster Smith (Wilson, 2000, p 83). Miners: Thomas Schollert, John Landers and Johannes Noltenius, Henry Hauschildt, murdered at Mt Hayward Copper Mine for abducting and abusing women. A man named Roberts was with them but apparently survived (Markus, 1974, p 12; Wilson, 2000, p 271; Nettelbeck, 2004, p 21; Morris, 2019, pp 33-43). Other civilians:
Contributor: Robyn Smith, 2026 Recommended Reading/Listening Parsons, JL (Government Resident) Quarterly Report on the Northern Territory, 11 November 1884, Legislative Council of South Australia, Adelaide (see p 13): https://aiatsis.gov.au/sites/default/files/catalogue_resources/58793.pdf ">https://aiatsis.gov.au/sites/default/files/catalogue_resources/58793.pdf">https://aiatsis.gov.au/sites/default/files/catalogue_resources/58793.pdfPurtill J ‘“Forgotten” Woolwonga tribe demand recognition 130 years after “extermination”’ in ABC News, 24 September 2014: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-24/indigenous-woolwonga-demand-recognition-after-extermination/5765212 ">https://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-24/indigenous-woolwonga-demand-recognition-after-extermination/5765212">https://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-24/indigenous-woolwonga-demand-recognition-after-extermination/5765212Smith R ‘The Original Archive: deep diving in Australia’s recorded history’ in Australian Aboriginal Studies, 2025, No 2, pp 28-40. Toohey, Justice B (1981) Aboriginal Land Commissioner’s Report, Finniss River Land Claim, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra. References Austin T (1992) Simply the Survival of the Fittest: Aboriginal Administration in South Australia’s Northern Territory 1863-1910, Historical Society of the Northern Territory, Darwin. pp 15-16. Clement C and Bridge PJ (Eds) (1991) Kimberley Scenes, Hesperian Press, Perth. Daly HW (1887) Digging, Squatting, and Pioneering Life in the Northern Territory of South Australia, Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, London, pp 257-263. Kelsey DE (1975) The Shackle: A Story of the Far North Australian Bush, Lynton Publications, Adelaide. Kimber RG ‘Robert Stott (1858-1928)’ in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol 12, 1990, Australian National University, Canberra. Lewis, J (1922) Fought and Won, WK Thomas & Co, Adelaide. Markus (1974) From the Barrel of a Gun: the oppression of the Aborigines 1860-1900, Victorian Historical Association, Melbourne. McGinness J (1991) Joe McGinness Son of Alyandabu, University of Queensland Press, Brisbane. Morice RJ ‘Aborigines in the Northern Territory’ in Evening Journal, 4 June 1885, p 3. Morris G (2019) Edge of sacred: exploring the life stories of the Nauiyu community. An investigation into trauma and the traditional healing practices of a remote Aboriginal community, PhD thesis, Charles Darwin University. Murgatroyd, Warren (2001) Mt Grace Resources NL Magnesium Mine, Batchelor, NT, Environmental Impact Assessment, Anthropological Component, Initial Report, November 2001, URS Australia Pty Ltd. Nettelbeck A (2004) ‘Writing and remembering frontier conflict: the rule of law in 1880s central Australia’ in Aboriginal History, Vol 28, pp 190-206. Parsons, JL (Government Resident) Quarterly Report on the Northern Territory, 11 November 1884, Legislative Council of South Australia, Adelaide (see p 13): https://aiatsis.gov.au/sites/default/files/catalogue_resources/58793.pdf ">https://aiatsis.gov.au/sites/default/files/catalogue_resources/58793.pdf">https://aiatsis.gov.au/sites/default/files/catalogue_resources/58793.pdfPurtill J ‘“Forgotten” Woolwonga tribe demand recognition 130 years after “extermination”’ in ABC News, 24 September 2014: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-24/indigenous-woolwonga-demand-recognition-after-extermination/5765212 ">https://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-24/indigenous-woolwonga-demand-recognition-after-extermination/5765212">https://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-24/indigenous-woolwonga-demand-recognition-after-extermination/5765212Reid B (2020) Power and Protection: the contest between the Government Residents and the medical Protectors of the Aborigines in South Australia’s Northern Territory, Historical Society of the Northern Territory, Darwin. Roberts T (2005) Frontier Justice: A History of the Gulf Country to 1900, University of Queensland Press, Brisbane. Roberts, T ‘The brutal truth: What happened in the Gulf Country’ in The Monthly. November 2009: https://www.themonthly.com.au/november-2009/essays/brutal-truth ">https://www.themonthly.com.au/november-2009/essays/brutal-truth">https://www.themonthly.com.au/november-2009/essays/brutal-truthSmith R (2024) Licence to Kill: massacre men of Australia’s north, Historical Society of the Northern Territory, Darwin. Smith R ‘The Original Archive: deep diving in Australia’s recorded history’ in Australian Aboriginal Studies, 2025, No 2, pp 28-40. Toohey, Justice B (1981) Aboriginal Land Commissioner’s Report, Finniss River Land Claim, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra. Unattributed ‘Corporal Montagu’s Report’ in North Australian, 8 January 1886, p 2. Unattributed ‘Murder by the Natives’ in Evening Journal, 21 January 1878, p 3. Unattributed ‘Murder by the Natives’ in Evening Journal, 21 January 1878, p 3. Unattributed ‘Reprisals on Blacks in the Northern Territory’ in SA Register, 12 February 1886, p 5. Unattributed ‘The Alleged slaughter of blacks in the Northern Territory’ in The Evening Journal (SA), 12 February 1886, p 3. Unattributed ‘Things and Others’ in North Australian, 27 November 1885, p 2. Unattributed ‘Yam Creek’ in Northern Territory Times and Gazette, 26 December 1873, p 4 Wilson, WR (Bill) (2000) A Force Apart? A history of the Northern Territory police force 1870-1926, PhD thesis, Charles Darwin University. Wott P ‘Black Outrages in the Northern Territory’ in Register, 7 February 1885, p 7. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2484 |
| temporalCoverage | 1873/1895 |
| keywords | Other |
| comment | Colonial violence. Primary sources and links contain racist language and attitudes of the time. |
| name | CSV export of Daly River War |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Daly River War |
| name | KML export of Daly River War |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Daly River War |
| name | GeoJSON export of Daly River War |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Daly River War |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Eumeralla War and Resistance |
| description | Listen Lovett-Gardiner, Iris Chimney Flats Victorian Collections, 2015 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_tK1lRxlcv4&t=147s" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_tK1lRxlcv4&t=147s Notes Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2485 |
| keywords | Event |
| name | CSV export of Eumeralla War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Eumeralla War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Eumeralla War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Eumeralla War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Eumeralla War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Eumeralla War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Eyre Peninsula War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2486 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Eyre Peninsula War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Eyre Peninsula War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Eyre Peninsula War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Eyre Peninsula War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Eyre Peninsula War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Eyre Peninsula War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Flinders Ranges War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2487 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Flinders Ranges War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Flinders Ranges War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Flinders Ranges War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Flinders Ranges War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Flinders Ranges War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Flinders Ranges War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Gomeroi and Wallaroi Resistance |
| description | Events in will be added as research continues as part of the Australian Wars and Resistance work. For a summary of this conflict see: https://www.mehicentre.com/our-stories" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Our Stories on the Mehi Centre website. More than 150,000 words of colonial news reporting on this conflict and resistance are available in Gomeroi and Wallaroi Resistance, Colonial News (1830s–1850s), available as: https://australianwars.net/pub/GomeroiResistanceColonialNews.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">html (read online) https://australianwars.net/pub/GomeroiResistanceColonialNews.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener">pdf (print or read offline) https://australianwars.net/pub/GomeroiResistanceColonialNews.epub" target="_blank" rel="noopener">epub (read in ebook reader) More sources from Government records and police reports, including more details on the early phase of the conflict and Major Nunn's expedition will be added in future. These texts will be used to identify people, places and events in this war. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2488 |
| keywords | Other |
| comment | Historical sources include racist attitudes and language, and descriptions of violence. |
| name | CSV export of Gomeroi and Wallaroi Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Gomeroi and Wallaroi Resistance |
| name | KML export of Gomeroi and Wallaroi Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Gomeroi and Wallaroi Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Gomeroi and Wallaroi Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Gomeroi and Wallaroi Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Gulf Country War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2489 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Gulf Country War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Gulf Country War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Gulf Country War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Gulf Country War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Gulf Country War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Gulf Country War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Gunai Kurnai War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2490 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Gunai Kurnai War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Gunai Kurnai War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Gunai Kurnai War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Gunai Kurnai War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Gunai Kurnai War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Gunai Kurnai War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Hunter Valley and Port Macquarie War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2491 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Hunter Valley and Port Macquarie War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Hunter Valley and Port Macquarie War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Hunter Valley and Port Macquarie War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Hunter Valley and Port Macquarie War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Hunter Valley and Port Macquarie War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Hunter Valley and Port Macquarie War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Inland Rivers War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2492 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Inland Rivers War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Inland Rivers War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Inland Rivers War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Inland Rivers War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Inland Rivers War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Inland Rivers War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Kalkadoon and Selwyn Ranges War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2493 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Kalkadoon and Selwyn Ranges War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Kalkadoon and Selwyn Ranges War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Kalkadoon and Selwyn Ranges War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Kalkadoon and Selwyn Ranges War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Kalkadoon and Selwyn Ranges War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Kalkadoon and Selwyn Ranges War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Kimberley East War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2494 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Kimberley East War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Kimberley East War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Kimberley East War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Kimberley East War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Kimberley East War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Kimberley East War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Lutruwita War and Resistance |
| description | Listen The Black War: Tasmania still torn by its history The Point, NITV, 2018 https://www.facebook.com/reel/10155519202722005" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://www.facebook.com/reel/10155519202722005 Tasmanian Aboriginal resistance warriors still not recognised ABC News, 2025 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4e-5e2gpUXQ" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4e-5e2gpUXQ Spearim, Bo Frontier War Stories - Teangi Brown - Black Wars Frontier War Stories, 2020 https://open.spotify.com/episode/2pXAVh47HWnenavZNuNr7H?si=1b266e524ae048ed" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://open.spotify.com/episode/2pXAVh47HWnenavZNuNr7H?si=1b266e524ae048ed Spearim, Bo Uncle Rodney Dillon Frontier War Stories, 2022 https://open.spotify.com/episode/5m9k8bobucswrfR1n5E6QT?si=257e7ffbe44a4917" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://open.spotify.com/episode/5m9k8bobucswrfR1n5E6QT?si=257e7ffbe44a4917 Notes Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2495 |
| keywords | Other |
| comment | Colonial Violence. Sources may include racist language and attitudes. References to recordings and works of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people does not necessarily mean they support this work - the intention is only to refer people to the right speakers and sources. |
| name | CSV export of Lutruwita War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Lutruwita War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Lutruwita War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Lutruwita War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Lutruwita War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Lutruwita War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Mandandanji War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2496 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Mandandanji War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Mandandanji War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Mandandanji War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Mandandanji War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Mandandanji War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Mandandanji War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Lower Murray War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2498 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Lower Murray War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Lower Murray War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Lower Murray War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Lower Murray War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Lower Murray War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Lower Murray War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Noongar War and Resistance |
| description | Listen Honouring Indigenous cultural hero Yagan, Stuff The British Stole, ABC TV + iview https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3F0x-vliGY" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3F0x-vliGY Notes Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2499 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Noongar War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Noongar War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Noongar War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Noongar War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Noongar War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Noongar War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Northern Downs War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2500 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Northern Downs War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Northern Downs War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Northern Downs War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Northern Downs War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Northern Downs War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Northern Downs War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Pilbara War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2502 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Pilbara War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Pilbara War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Pilbara War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Pilbara War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Pilbara War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Pilbara War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Rockhampton War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2503 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Rockhampton War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Rockhampton War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Rockhampton War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Rockhampton War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Rockhampton War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Rockhampton War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Roper River Wars |
| description | The Roper River in the Northern Territory, commences near Mataranka and flows east for about 400km before emptying into the Gulf of Carpentaria at the Limmen Bight. The town of Mataranka is near the western end of the Roper and Ngukurr (Pronounced 'Nook-a', formerly known as 'Roper River Mission') is its eastern terminus. Mangarrayi people for Calico Creek, Harris Lagoon, Calder Range, Mole Hill, Crescent Lagoon, Elsey Creek, Red Lily Lagoon; Yanyuwa for Limmen Bight; Alawa for Hodgson Downs and Winiki Pocket. Yugul Mangi collectively includes Alawa, Wandarrang, Ritharrngu/Wagilag, Ngandi, Nunggubuyu, Marra, Ngalakgan, Rembarrng and Binbinga peoples (ANU Centre for Indigenous Policy Research). Narrative The Roper River wars began in the early 1870s and endured until the 1940s. There were two catalysts for these wars: the first was associated with surveying and construction of the overland telegraph line; and the second was associated with the westward expansion of pastoralism and droving from Queensland after telegraph stations, which served as supply depots, opened along the line and provided convenient stops for emerging stock routes. The wars included massacres at Calico Creek (1872), Harris Lagoon (1875), Calder Range (1875), Mount McMinn (1875), Mole Hill (1875), Crescent Lagoon (1875), Limmen Bight River (1878), Elsey Creek (1882), Red Lily Lagoon (1882), Hodgson Downs (1903) and Winiki Pocket (1903-04). In respect of the Calder Range reprisals, Inspector Paul Foelsche issued these instructions to Corporal Geoge Montagu: "I cannot give you orders to shoot all natives you come across, but circumstances may occur for which I cannot provide definite instructions". Foelsche wanted to go with them, but it was a large party, he said, with “too many tale-tellers”. He boasted in a letter to a friend, John Lewis, that he had sent Montagu to the Roper to “have a picnic with the natives” (Roberts, 2005, pp 115-124). While punitive expeditions were being organised, an overlanding party to Queensland, led by George De Lautour and William Batten, arrived at Roper Bar on 19 July and found Daer’s note and Johnston's body and immediately set off in search of the Mangarrayi people. They left their own note for the police party dated 24 July 1875 saying they had ‘found natives mustered strongly at Mount McMinn’, that they ‘dispersed them and did their best to avenge Johnston's death’ (telegram from JAG Little cited in NTTG, 18 September 1875, p 2). John Sandefur (1985, p 209) noted that by 1890 the situation began to stabilise after an extremely violent 20 years during which “many Aborigines had been killed” and others retreated into country not yet taken up by colonisers. However: Contributor: Robyn Smith, 2025 Notable People
Sources
|
| creator | Robyn Smith and Bill Pascoe |
| publisher | Australian Wars and Resistance |
| url | |
| temporalCoverage | 1871/1940 |
| copyrightNotice | This information, except for public domain sources, is covered by copyright. Usage and references should respect Indigenous peoples. |
| keywords | Other |
| comment | Includes information about colonial violence. Historical sources include racist language and attitudes and descriptions of violence. |
| name | CSV export of Roper River Wars |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Roper River Wars |
| name | KML export of Roper River Wars |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Roper River Wars |
| name | GeoJSON export of Roper River Wars |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Roper River Wars |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | South Road War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2505 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of South Road War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of South Road War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of South Road War and Resistance |
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| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of South Road War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of South Road War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of South Road War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Sydney War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2506 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Sydney War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Sydney War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Sydney War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Sydney War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Sydney War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Sydney War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Tiwi and Iwaidja War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2507 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Tiwi and Iwaidja War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Tiwi and Iwaidja War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Tiwi and Iwaidja War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Tiwi and Iwaidja War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Tiwi and Iwaidja War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Tiwi and Iwaidja War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Torres Strait War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2508 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Torres Strait War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Torres Strait War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Torres Strait War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Torres Strait War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Torres Strait War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Torres Strait War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Far North Queensland, Cairns War and Resistance |
| description | Aboriginal People: Yidinydji, Buluwanydji, Djabuganydji, Yirrganydji and Barbaram, Ngadanydji and Djiru. Colonial Forces: Queensland Native Mounted Police, some cattlemen and settlers, Constable Hansen; Sub Inspector Ernest Carr Notable Colonists: GE Dalrymple; Sub-Inspector Johnstone; Prof. Rentoul; Sen Constable Whelan (NMP); Inspector John Isley; Sub-Inspector Douglas; Patrick Molloy; John Atherton Audio/visual https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rvYW5eaQZI&t=82s" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Massacre Recollection by the Elders, in the Tully Region (south of Cairns) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQI5ySAAhYg&t=369s" target="_blank" rel="noopener">A Conspiracy of Silence, Qld's frontier killing times - Timothy Bottoms Narrative Queensland came into existence in 1859, but the land-grab began earlier (from the 1840s). Some thirteen years later in 1872 in Far North Queensland a Sydney ship, the Maria, packed with would-be gold miners was wrecked off the coast from Tam O’Shanter Point, near Cardwell. After one of the rafts was attacked by Aborigines and a European killed, a party of Native Police led by Sub-Inspector Johnstone, and some settlers, massacred Djiru people, opposite Dunk Island in retribution. They were following precedence that originated from the 1838 Myall Creek Massacre, where seven whites were hanged for their part in those killings. This influenced Queensland squatters to be quiet about any massacres that they were involved with, and led to the conspiracy of silence that pervaded the frontier. Gold had been found on the Palmer River in 1873 and on the Hodgkinson Goldfields in 1876 and George Elphinstone Dalrymple had been sent to reconnoitre the coastline from Cardwell to Cooktown (1873). From this, miners from the Hodgkinson Goldfield managed to find a shorter route closer to the coast at 80 miles (128 kms) versus Cooktown at 200 miles (320 kms). This heralded the invasion of Indigenous Far North Queensland. Coming on the heels of the miners came settlers who wanted to rear cattle for the goldfields, and others who wanted to farm. The newly created Government of Queensland claimed the land as Crown land. In 1873 Dalrymple’s exploration party landed in Yirrganydji territory opposite Wangal Djunggay (Double Island) where they shot several Yirrganydji. Dalrymple ‘helped’ to settle Bowen and had, as historian Bruce Breslin stated: ‘no intention of avoiding bloodshed … What he said and what he did were often two different things …[he]… showed from the beginning he would arm and alarm the frontier.’ On the southern Atherton Tablelands white settlers in conjunction with the Native Mounted Police began what the first historian for Cairns, JW Collinson, identified as ‘The Skull Pocket, Mulgrave River and Skeleton Creek Battue’. This happened in December 1884 and ended in January 1885. We know that at Skeleton Creek there were at least 16 Bama [Rainforest Aboriginal People] killed but the overall total was said to be sizeable, according to the witness, Jack Kane, who retold the tale to Dr Norman Tindale in 1938. Combined with the separate 1886 massacre at Cockatoo Bora ground in the Goldsborough Valley led by Christy Palmerston and his Ngadjanydji carriers, as Collinson stated, it completely broke up the Yidinydji tribe. This inspired some bully-boy Cairns’ residents to go to Buchans Estate to quell the Yirrganydji, but the melee was short-lived and was over before they arrived. The Djabuganydji experienced four separate killings, starting with Rifle Creek in the 1880s, when an Irish prospector turned pack-horse carrier, Patrick Molloy, worked the Port Douglas-Herberton Road. At one stage he lost eight of his draught horses to the Djabugay, Molloy and a party of Native Mounted Police and some white settlers tracked the Djabugay group to Bunda Bugal (Black Mountain), at the head of Rifle Creek where blacks who showed fight were dispersed. Also in the 1880s, cattlemen, on three occasions on Flaggy Creek, (Black Water Lagoon, Mama’s Camp and Balilee) shot Djabugay for rustling their cattle. Again in the 1880s at Bones Knob (just North of Atherton near Tolga), many Barbaram were forced over cliffs and killed. To the Bama it felt that the Native Mounted Police and settlers were out to exterminate local tribes. Many tribes were reduced to enclaves, refugees in their own country. ‘Depredations’ were sometimes followed by the murder of a white man, which regularly led to a violent European response culminating in a massacre. The massacre at Butcher’s Creek in 1889 seems to have been as a result of one John Clifford being murdered on the Russell River Goldfield. The tribe concerned were the Ngadjanydji, however, the overall effect on the Bama was to drive terror in any rainforest Aborigines left alive. Between 1878 and early 1880s, there were reports from the Native Mounted Police of ‘outrages’ and ‘depredations’ that had been committed by the ‘bad Blacks of the north’. One such report was the ‘dispersal’ at Clohesy River in 1881 by Sub Inspector Ernest Carr (stationed at Baan Bero) where a local village of the Buluwanydji was attacked and ‘dispersed’. Nine years later, John Atherton and party were camped at Groves Creek where a pony was commandeered by local Buluwanydji. Atherton’s party followed up and killed the horse thieves at Speewah. Apparently a second massacre occurred not long afterwards. The dispersal of tribes in the Cairns region was, as it was for the rest of Australia, a disaster for Aboriginal Australians. Any independence or freedom from European dominance was to wait until the late 20th Century. Contributor: Timothy Bottoms Sources T. Bottoms, Bama Bulmba Series, The Tribes of the Wet Tropics; Yidinydji Tribe; Yirrganydji Tribe; Buluwanydji Tribe & Djabuganydji Tribe https://www.cairnshistory.com.au" target="_blank" rel="noopener">www.cairnshistory.com.au |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2509 |
| keywords | Other |
| comment | Colonial violence. Historical sources may include racist language and attitudes. |
| name | CSV export of Far North Queensland, Cairns War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Far North Queensland, Cairns War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Far North Queensland, Cairns War and Resistance |
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| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Far North Queensland, Cairns War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Far North Queensland, Cairns War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Far North Queensland, Cairns War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Central Highlands War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2510 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Central Highlands War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Central Highlands War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Central Highlands War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Central Highlands War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Central Highlands War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Central Highlands War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Victoria River Wars |
| description | The Victoria is the longest river in the Northern Territory and is located southwest of Katherine near the Warlpiri community of Lajamanu, formerly known as Hooker Creek (Lajamanu is a long way north of traditional Warlpiri country, but it is one of the places to which Warlpiri were driven while being pursued during the Coniston reprisal massacres of 1928). ‘The Vic’, as it is known, is about 560 km long, originates at Judbarra, flows into the Timor Sea and is fed by the West Baines, Wickham, Gordon, Armstrong and Camfield Rivers. The small town of Timber Creek is on the Victoria Highway, which runs broadly parallel to the river. Pastoralism was the catalyst for the Victoria River Wars, which commenced when Charles Brown Fisher and his business partner J Maurice Lyons took the first pastoral leases in December 1879. By the end of 1882 Fisher & Lyons had 100,000 square kilometres under lease and named it Victoria River Downs (Main, 1972, np). Nathaniel ‘Nat’ ‘Bluey’ Buchanan established Wave Hill Station in 1882. The same year, his brother William—who had vast pastoral holdings in New South Wales, Queensland and the Northern Territory— took up neighbouring Sturt Creek Station and later went into partnership with Nat. With his son Gordon and Sam Croker, Nat Buchanan pioneered the Murranji Track, which was a 230km stock route from Newcastle Waters to old Top Springs, in 1886 (Smith, 2024, pp 84-87). A police station was established at Gordon Creek in 1894 and in 1898 was relocated to Timber Creek. The Victoria River Wars continued well into the 1900s as stations were established along the river, a bountiful and permanent water source, and the stock route it enabled from Queensland, across the Northern Territory and into the Kimberley region of Western Australia. Native Police were not common in the Northern Territory but were twice formed under the command of Constable William Willshire. Willshire had already killed 19 Aboriginal people (Mulvaney, 1990) before being arrested for murdering Aboriginal people in 1891, and released after a controversial trial that raised questions among colonists over its failure to accept evidence from witnesses (South Australian Register, 7 Aug 1891, p 6). Willshire was posted to the Victoria River region to command Native Police in 1893 where his brutal practices resulted in him being ordered back to Adelaide in 1895 (Mulvaney, 1990, np). While at Victoria River he was held back for a time by a group of 7 Aboriginal warriors, "You no doubt remember the weary, anxious time I spent on the Victoria, when there were seven civilized blacks at large in the ranges with firearms, and not one of them had any love for me, and had I overstepped the limits of prudence on that occasion I would have been shot from behind their hiding places." (Willshire, 1896, p 5) and was involved in the killing of a resistance leader known as 'Newingurry', 'It was a great blow to the blackfellows' prestige when they lost "Newingurry." He was a reserve force within himself, but he suddenly left for that "undiscovered country from whence no traveller returns." Proudly I recall the day when on the Lower Victoria I came full butt on to the murderers of "Joseph Bradshaw's boy"' (Willshire, 1896, p 6). Romantic narratives were attached to the pioneers of the era, however: In their later years…some men lifted a corner of this veil of secrecy to reveal glimpses of the dark past. Donald Swan, a member of Nat Buchanan’s 1882 party, explained the bush code that enshrouded punitive expeditions: The bushman’s code of honour is this way: either stand in with the mob and keep your mouth shut, or refuse to stand in and also keep your mouth shut. In either case you will be respected and no more will be required of you in the matter (Roberts, 2005, p 138; Owen, 2016, p 147). Warriors fought back by spearing stock and raiding stores, and by targeting colonial leaders and the worst colonial offenders. This led to severe reprisal killings of Aboriginal people. The earliest recorded massacre was at Waterloo in 1886, which was a reprisal for the spearing death of ‘Big Johnny’ Durack near Mount Duncan. Lewis (2018, pp 51-52) wrote that the ‘name Waterloo is said to be a reference to the “unrestrained slaughter” of local Aborigines by police’ after Durack’s death. Other reprisals were for:
The wars continued well into the next century. For example, ‘Brigalow Bill’ Ward was killed at Yarralin in 1909. Of this man, Rose recorded Tim Yilgnayarri, who said: And you know that Brigalow? Right. Brigalow was doing wrong. He was shooting all the people. Shoot-i-i-n-n-n-g, get all the sing girls for married. Take them down to his place. Just the young girl, and some of the middle aged, all that girl. Four fellow… Watchin him that waaay, get the towel and soap…Too late. That spear killed him. Bbbbb. Strike him la water. Right. All the boys go back, take the women. And sugar, tea, flour, all the blanket, fly, take the whole lot (Rose, 1991, p 122). Clashes were recorded at Humbert River Station in 1910 and elsewhere in the district well afterwards. A large massacre of Malngin people was recorded at Limbunya Station in 1920 (Charola & Meakins, 2016, pp 70-71); another at Bedford Downs in 1924. Police, without appropriate—or any—supervision, acted in the interests of the pastoralists. Rather than being dismissed for his conduct at Borroloola, Mounted Constable Gordon Cameron Heaslop Stott was posted to Victoria River in 1933. There, he resumed his sadistic practices, as Banjo Ryan recalled in 2015: "'You reckon you can run as fast as a horse?' Gordon Stott the policeman taunted the prisoner. Stott took the chains off one of the prisoner's feet and then the other. Then he got a horse rasp and filed the sole of his foot until it bled" (Charola & Meakins, 2016, p 221). The poisoning deaths of at least five Gurindji people was recorded at Timber Creek in 1936 (Chronicle, 11 June 1936, p 41). This is how Daly Pulkara, a Ngarinman man from Yarralin, recalled the wars, many of which were triggered by the abduction of women for sexual slavery: Pulkara: them bloody whatsa – European come on after that. Banging, banging time now. They reckon lightning somewhere. ‘Ah, that man he get out bushed’. They reckon that lightning. Another bloke drop. Yeah. Bang! ‘Nother bloke. They bin lookin’ at, you know, they bin lookin’ eye. Something wrong. Got a blood come through the nose. ‘Oh might be lightning’. Bang! See? They didn’t catch on for while. They pick up all the woman and European takem away. Eh? Aborign just followem up (Read & Read, 1993, pp 7-8). Contributor: Robyn Smith Notable PeopleJerry, a Ngarinman man who escaped the Waterloo reprisal massacres in 1886 (Moore cited in Lewis, 2021, pp 527-528). Newingurry, a resistance leader mentioned by Willshire, who implied he was killed during the Bradshaw reprisals (Willshire, 1896, p 6). Gurindji (Ngarinman and Bilinara), Wardaman and Karrangpurru warriors (see AIATSIS map). Bradshaw, Joseph ‘Captain Joe’ - cousin of and closely associated with Aeneas Gunn of Elsey Station, he took up Bradshaw Station in 1893. He was later involved with Arafura Station in Arnhem Land, which was owned by the Eastern and African Cold Storage Company from 1903 until 1908 and in which he was a shareholder and the General Manager (Smith, 2024, pp 82-83). Braitling, William Walter ‘Billy’ – a drover for Vesteys, he took up Passchendale Station in 1921 and sold it in 1928 (Smith, 2024, p 83). Buchanan, Nathaniel ‘Nat’ aka ‘Bluey’ – took up Wave Hill Station with his brothers in 1882 and pioneered the Murranji Track with his son Gordon and Sam Croker in 1886 (Smith, 2024, pp 84-87). Cahill, Patrick ‘Paddy’ – buffalo shooter who accompanied Buchanan on several expeditions. Managed Wave Hill, Delamere and Gordon Downs Stations. Crawford, Lindsay – originally employed on the overland telegraph line, appointed Manager of Victoria River Downs 1884-1890. In 1895, he said: …during the last ten years, in fact since the first white man settled here, we have held no communication with the natives at all, except with the rifle. They have never been allowed near this station or the outstations, being too treacherous and warlike (Smith, 2024, p 94). Croker, Samuel Burns ‘Greenhide Sam’ – long-time employee of Nat Buchanan. Shot dead during a card game by Charlie (also spelt Charley) Flannigan on Auvergne Station in 1892 because he refused to partner with a half-caste (Flannigan) or a Chinaman, the station cook. Flannigan hanged for it at Fannie Bay Gaol in 1893 (Smith, 2017, p 11). Eastern & African Cold Storage Co – held Elsey and Hodgson Downs Stations (Powell, 1982, pp 101, 129). Fisher, Charles Brown and Lyons, J Maurice – formed Fisher and Lyons and held extensive pastoral leases in the Victoria River district. Sold to Goldsborough Mort in 1890 (Main, 1972, np). Farquharson, Archie Mosman, Harry Gordon and Hughie (brothers) – owners of Inverway Station, 1896 (Lewis, 2021, pp 231-232). Ledgerwood, James Logan ‘Long Jim’ - Head Stockman of VRD Station in 1895 and was one of the leaders of the punitive expedition known as the Gordon Creek massacre that followed an attack on teamsters Mulligan and Ligar in the same year (Lewis, 2021, p 477). Stott, Cameron Gordon Heaslop ‘Gordon’ – born en route to Cooktown in 1905, Stott was the son of a well-respected police officer who went on to become Commissioner. The younger Stott’s conduct was highly questionable and included grievous bodily harm and ‘deplorable cruelty’ in relation to prisoners (Wilson, 2000, p 130). Watson, Jack ‘the Gulf hero’ – managed Victoria River Station after Crawford: There is a source which credits Watson and the previous VRD manager, Crawford, with making ‘it possible for white men to travel in most parts of the empty north without fear of being murdered to make a myall’s holiday’ (North Queensland Herald, 20-5-1911) (Lewis, 2021, p 16; see also Smith, 2024, pp 112-113). Wye, Oliver Garfield Walter ‘Walter’ - Manager of Bradshaw Station from 1907 until 1910. He was known by Aboriginal people in the district as ‘Old Wallaway’ (Lewis, 2021, p 69). SourcesAustralian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (1996) Map of Indigenous Australia: https://aiatsis.gov.au/explore/map-indigenous-australia ">https://aiatsis.gov.au/explore/map-indigenous-australia">https://aiatsis.gov.au/explore/map-indigenous-australiaCharola E and Meakins F (Eds) (2016) Yijarni: true stories from Gurindji Country, Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra. Lewis D (2021) The Victoria River Doomsday Book, Lewis & National Centre for Biography, Australian National University, Canberra: https://hdl.handle.net/10070/836453 ">https://hdl.handle.net/10070/836453">https://hdl.handle.net/10070/836453Main JM, ‘Charles Brown Fisher (1818-1908)’ in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol 4, 1972, Australian National University, Canberra: https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/fisher-charles-brown-379 ">https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/fisher-charles-brown-379">https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/fisher-charles-brown-379Mulvaney DJ ‘William Henry Willshire (1852-1925)’ in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol 12, 1990, Australian National University, Canberra: https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/willshire-william-henry-9128 ">https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/willshire-william-henry-9128">https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/willshire-william-henry-9128Northern Territory Place Names Register search: https://www.ntlis.nt.gov.au/placenames/ ">https://www.ntlis.nt.gov.au/placenames/">https://www.ntlis.nt.gov.au/placenames/Owen C (2016) Every Mother’s Son is Guilty: policing the Kimberley Frontier of Western Australia 1882-1905, University of Western Australia Publishing, Perth. Powell A (1982) Far country: a short history of the Northern Territory, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne. Read P and Read J (1993) Long Time Olden Time: Aboriginal accounts of Northern Territory history, Institute for Aboriginal Development, Canberra. Roberts T (2005) Frontier Justice: a history of the Gulf country to 1900, University of Queensland Press, Brisbane. Rose DB (1991) Hidden Histories: back stories from Victoria River Downs, Humbert River and Wave Hill Stations, Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra. Ryan et al (2024) Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia 1788-1930, Centre for 21st Century Humanities, University of Newcastle, NSW: https://c21ch.newcastle.edu.au/colonialmassacres/groups.php ">https://c21ch.newcastle.edu.au/colonialmassacres/groups.php">https://c21ch.newcastle.edu.au/colonialmassacres/groups.phpSmith R (2017) Habeas Corpus: deaths at Fannie Bay Gaol 1883-1972, Heritage Branch, Northern Territory Government, Darwin. Smith R (2021) ‘Kill or be killed: the real story of Charlie Flannigan, the first man hanged in the Northern Territory’ in NT Independent, 11 April 2021: https://ntindependent.com.au/kill-or-be-killed-the-real-story-of-charlie-flannigan-the-first-man-hanged-in-the-nt/ ">https://ntindependent.com.au/kill-or-be-killed-the-real-story-of-charlie-flannigan-the-first-man-hanged-in-the-nt/">https://ntindependent.com.au/kill-or-be-killed-the-real-story-of-charlie-flannigan-the-first-man-hanged-in-the-nt/Smith R (2024) Licence to Kill: massacre men of Australia’s North, Historical Society of the Northern Territory, Darwin. South Australian Register August 7, 1891 p 6 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article48241058 ">http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article48241058">http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article48241058Staff Writers, ‘Put poison in food after being speared’ in Chronicle (Adelaide), 11 June 1936, p 41. Willshire, W.H. The Land of the Dawning W.K.Thomas & Co. Adelaide, 1896. Wilson, WR (2000) A force apart?: a history of the Northern Territory Police Force 1870-1926, PhD thesis, Charles Darwin University, Darwin: https://researchers.cdu.edu.au/en/studentTheses/a-force-apart/ ">https://researchers.cdu.edu.au/en/studentTheses/a-force-apart/">https://researchers.cdu.edu.au/en/studentTheses/a-force-apart/ |
| creator | Dr Robyn Smith |
| publisher | Australian Wars and Resistance |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2511 |
| temporalCoverage | 1882/1936 |
| language | EN |
| keywords | Other |
| comment | Colonial violence. Linked sources include racist language and violence. |
| name | CSV export of Victoria River Wars |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Victoria River Wars |
| name | KML export of Victoria River Wars |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Victoria River Wars |
| name | GeoJSON export of Victoria River Wars |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Victoria River Wars |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Yolngu War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2512 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Yolngu War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Yolngu War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Yolngu War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Yolngu War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Yolngu War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Yolngu War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2024-09-22 |
| name | First Wiradjuri War and Resistance |
| description | Alternate Names: The Bathurst War, Windradyne’s War Aboriginal people: Wiradjuri (alt. Wiradyuri), Burra Burra, Gundungurra Named Aboriginal people: Windradyne (Saturday), Aaron (Ering), Blucher, Jingler (Gingler), Simon, Joe, Sunday (Murundah), Diana ‘Mudgee’ Collins, Jackey, Taylor, Charley, Congo-gal, Jimmy Lambert, Peggy Lambert, Scrammy, Cookoogong, Friday, Penneegrah Colonial Forces: 40th Regiment of Foot, colonial militia, armed settlers. Notable Colonists: Major James Morisset, William Lawson, William Cox Listen: The War on Wiradjuri has never ended | The Blak Lens | NITV, Dec 17, 2024 Push for Bathurst to grapple with its brutal past in Wiradyuri-led truth-telling project, 14 Aug 1824 When the War is Over | Ep 5 | ABC Iview | November 2025 | https://iview.abc.net.au/video/AC2415H005S00 ">https://iview.abc.net.au/video/AC2415H005S00">https://iview.abc.net.au/video/AC2415H005S00Narrative: The fightback against the colonists and their tens of thousands of sheep and cattle that were entering Wiradjuri Country was announced by warriors in 1823. They told colonists in no uncertain terms that the Wiradyuri were going to ‘tumble down white man’ – to kill all the white men (Alsop and Booth, 1823: 340). Contributor: Stephen Gapps, 2025 Sources Alsop and Booth, 1823. 'Re cattle killed by Natives', September 1823, Colonial Secretary’s Papers, Main Series of Letters Received, 1788–1826, State Records NSW, NRS 897, 6065, 4/1798, , pp. 340-342 Bannister, S., 1830. Humane Policy: or Justice to the Aborigines of New Settlements etc., Underwood, London Dunn, 1824. 'Inquest into the death of Peter Bray', 1824, SRNSW, NRS 897, 6065, 4/1798, p. 312 Dunn to Palmer, November 1823. SRNSW, NRS 897, 6065, 4/1798, p. 329 'Fidelis', 1824. Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser, 12 August 1824, p. 4 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2183114/494904" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2183114/494904 Gapps, S., 2021. Gudyarra. The first Wiradjuri War of Resistance - The Bathurst War, 1822–1824, NewSouth Press, Sydney 'Honestus', 1824. Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser, 12 August 1824, p. 4 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2183111/494904" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2183111/494904 'Martial Law', 1824. Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser, 19 August 1824, p. 1 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2183147" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2183147 Morisset to Goulburn, 25 June 1824, SRNSW, NRS 897, 6065, 4/1800, p. 73 Ranken Family Letters, 1824-30, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, ML MSS, Doc 1244 The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser, 30 December 1824, p. 2 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2183548 ">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2183548">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2183548Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser, 16 September 1824, p. 2 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/page/494925 ">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/page/494925">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/page/494925'Thomas Miller' 1895-1902, Bathurst and District Historical Society Museum Archives, Folio 10 William Lawson Junior to Nelson Lawson, 14 June 1824, in Beard (ed.) Old Ironbark: Some unpublished correspondence from and to William Lawson etc., The Wentworth Press, Sydney, 1967 |
| creator | Stephen Gapps and Bill Pascoe |
| url | |
| temporalCoverage | 1824-01-01/1824-12-28 |
| language | EN |
| keywords | Event |
| comment | Colonial violence. |
| name | CSV export of First Wiradjuri War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of First Wiradjuri War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of First Wiradjuri War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of First Wiradjuri War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of First Wiradjuri War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of First Wiradjuri War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-05-10 |
| name | Second Wiradjuri and Ngunnawal War and Resistance |
| description | Listen:
Notes: This conflict, in the south of Wiradjuri country came after the well known First Wiradjuri War or 'Bathurst War' to the north. It was part of one of the major phases of the Australian Wars throughout the south east of the continent, from south east Queensland to Victoria, starting in the late 1830s, and through to the 1850s and 60s, as colonists expanded rapidly in all directions from the earlier settlements. This conflict is closely connected to conflict along the overland route or 'south road' (now the Hume Highway) from south Wiradjuri (upper Murrumbidgee) through Yorta Yorta (upper Murray) to Kulin country (Port Philip/Melbourne). It is also closely connected to conflict on the overland route to Adelaide, along the lower Murrumbidgee and lower Murray where many languages are spoken around Tar Ru and Millewa-Mallee. The first report of open violent conflict in this area was of widespreading raiding in 1830 at Yass Plains in Ngunnawal country. This was followed by an extended period of Wiradjuri raids on squatters stations, including killing of shepherds and hut keepers, burning huts and killing and driving away livestock. There were sometimes gatherings of up to 1000 Wiradjuri people, and war bands were about 30 in number focusing on the Rivers and the road connecting Sydney to Melbourne (the Overland). One of the main leaders of this resistance was dubbed 'Buonaparte' by colonists. Similar to 'Blucher' in the First Wiradjuri War, colonists most likely named him after a famous European general, in recognition of his leadership. Another was 'Brian Boru', named after a medieval High King of Ireland - though this may be the same person with two aliases. Colonists at the time referred to this conflict as a 'war', some saying it should be admitted as such by the government. They described losing control of flocks and herds as Wiradjuri took control of livestock using traditional land care and hunting methods. In these vast plains, Wiradjuri warriors appear to have used high points, such as at Wamber Tumber gap, as strategic positions from which to raid. Such positions give unobstructed views over large areas. Buonaparte's group was surrounded and some captured at Wamber Tumber gap by a posse of colonists and a police officer. Some escaped but Buonaparte was recaptured after severely wounding two of his captors. The Border Police, recruited from the military, were active in this period but were overstretched along the Overland and ineffective. The notorious Native Police were established during this period. In 1850 it was reported that the Native Police were recruiting in the Murrumbidgee district, and that they were very effective in swiftly ending armed resistance and bringing 'peace' where ever they went. Also in 1850 colonists relied on Aboriginal labour to replace workers leaving for the gold fields. These reports suggest that by 1850 the period of intense open violence in this conflict had ended, and the colonial government had gained control. Resistance after this would have to take on different forms. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2420 |
| keywords | Other |
| comment | This is a history of colonial violence and reference's include racist attitudes of the time. |
| name | CSV export of Second Wiradjuri and Ngunnawal War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Second Wiradjuri and Ngunnawal War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Second Wiradjuri and Ngunnawal War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Second Wiradjuri and Ngunnawal War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Second Wiradjuri and Ngunnawal War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Second Wiradjuri and Ngunnawal War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-08-11 |
| name | Northern Rivers War and Resistance |
| description | Events in this conflict will be added as Australian Wars and Resistance research continues. |
| url | https://tlcmap.org/publicdatasets/2501 |
| keywords | Other |
| name | CSV export of Northern Rivers War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Northern Rivers War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Northern Rivers War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Northern Rivers War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Northern Rivers War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Northern Rivers War and Resistance |
| type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| datePublished | 2025-12-27 |
| name | Moreton Bay War and Resistance |
| description | Alternate Names: Corn Fields Raids; Battle of Moongalba; Stradbroke Island skirmishes. Aboriginal people: Yaggara (Turrbal), Quandamooka/ Nunukul, Ningy Ningy. Named Aboriginal people: King Billy, Eulope (Black Napoleon/ Boney), Duke of York (Dakki Yakki). Colonial Forces: 17th regiment, 57th regiment, 40th regiment, convict overseers, whalers. Notable Colonists: Captain Patrick Logan, Chief Constable MacIntosh, William Reardon, Andy (convict guard), James Clunie. Audio/visual: Life">https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/lifematters/brisbanes-convict-stories/9911584">Life in Irons: stories of Brisbane's Aboriginal people and convicts - ABC listen Stradbroke">https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/viewer?ll=-27.423947701042223%2C153.4567309&z=12&mid=15tCR3aa4THOWJmb_FWSGlxhSKRA">Stradbroke & Moreton 1832-3 - Google My Maps Narrative: The establishment of military/ penal outposts at Redcliffe (1824) and ‘Moreton Bay Colony’ (Brisbane and Dunwich/ Amity Point - 1825) provoked conflict when soldiers, convict overseers and convicts cleared large areas of forest and rainforest (former resource areas), would not share items, ousted First Nations groups from particular areas, and tried to elicit and kidnap native women. The first skirmish occurred in December 1824 over the theft of an axe when convicts were cutting timber near Yebri Creek (Petrie). This was 16km west of the Redcliffe penal outpost - an area of several base camps, a bora (ceremonial) ground and pockets of rainforest. Some convicts and warriors were killed. Due partly to the poor suitability of Redcliffe for farming, but also on account of this hostility, and probably also the growing presence of Aboriginal visitors arriving for the annual mullet run (fishing festival) at Clontarf (just 4km south of the penal outpost), the decision was made to abandon Redcliffe. The settlement moved to what is now Brisbane CBD in 1825 and established outstations at Amity and Dunwich (1825-1827) – the latter being flagged as the potential permanent site for the penal colony. For a couple of years after this move, the two communities avoided contact with each other, but the ousting of Quandamooka from their Gompie (Dunwich) base camp, and a similar ax-stealing incident, this time involving a Quandamooka warrior-leader, Eulope (Black Napoleon), rekindled hostilities. Eulope was exiled to St Helena Island. He escaped, and over the next five years there were various small raids, skirmishes, executions and punitive expeditions on Stradbroke and Moreton Islands – mostly sparked by the kidnapping and killing of a major elder (Choorong) by William Reardon of the pilot station (Amity Point), after Choorong had opposed the soldiers’ requests for Indigenous women. These skirmishes occurred at Yerrol Point (Dunwich), Adder Rock (Point Lookout), Polka Point (Dunwich) and other sites. A turning point was the soldiers’ massacre of some 40-50 Ngugi and Quandamooka people during a dawn raid on the camp at Reeders Point (Kooringal), Moreton Island. After this, the Ngugi temporarily abandoned the island, and permanent Indigenous residency remained fleeting for a few decades. Meanwhile on the mainland in 1827-1828, the Quandamooka’s allies, the Turrbal and Coorpoorin clans, tried to starve out the colony through repeated raids of up to 80 warriors. These sacked and burned the colony’s corn fields at Kangaroo Point, New Farm, South Brisbane and the northeastern CBD. King Billy, father of Mulbrobin, was the probable leader of these activities. In response, Captain Patrick Logan sent a punitive expedition of 8 (two constables, three soldiers and three convict overseers) to the nearest base camp (probably Woolloongabba) which shot and killed at least one warrior. Subsequently, Logan installed ‘crow minders’ – armed sentries in treehouse guard boxes – to watch over each field and shoot any Indigenous intruders. In at least one case they skinned and stuffed one of the intruders to serve as a scarecrow. However, crow-minders were also speared or killed. Hostilities around the corn fields continued up till 1830. Whites who ventured along the Queensland coast in this area at this time, such as the whaler Joseph Bradley, found themselves harassed and prevented from making landfalls during this time. Bradley was chased down the coast for hundreds of kilometres. Hostilities across Moreton Bay culminated in a key event c.1831-1832: a pitched battle that ended in an Aboriginal victory at Aranarawai Creek just north of Dunwich. The skirmish involved somewhere between 10-20 soldiers and convict overseers, and perhaps 80-150 warriors luring the soldiers into swampland from which the warriors leapt out and hurled weapons. As the soldiers had no success after a whole day (oral accounts say weeks) of fighting, the soldiers ‘made signs of peace’ and were invited by the Quandamooka to a banquet and corroboree. Except for a follow-up raid by soldiers at southern Stradbroke/ Russell Island roughly a year later, the truce effectively ended conflict between the settlers and the Quandamooka and Turrbal. The latter groups henceforth mostly sided with the settlers in upcoming conflicts against other groups (see: Southern Queensland War). They also gained work in fishing, boating, ferrying and assisting at the colony’s pilot stations on the islands. Contributor: Ray Kerkhove Sources ‘Affray with Natives at Moreton Bay,’ The Australian, 25 July 1827, p. 3. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/37072390 ">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/36859622">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/37072390‘Moreton Bay,’ The Australian, 22 December 1838, p. 3 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/36859622 ">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/36859622">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/36859622‘Romance of Real Life in Australia,’ Colonial Times (Hobart), 24 May 1850, p.4 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/8767224 ">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/8767224">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/8767224Bradley, Joseph (Mervyn Cobcroft, ed.), 1988, Adventures of a Native of Australia When Astray from his Ship, the Barque ‘Lynx’ (a Whaler) and his Consequent Cruise in a Boat on the Ocean: A True Narrative, Brisbane: Amphion Press. CSIL 33/678 (Colonial Secretary’s Letters) JOL (John Oxley Library) George Watkins, Notes on the aboriginals of Stradbroke and Moreton Islands (Brisbane: Royal Society of Queensland, 1891) https://collections.slq.qld.gov.au/viewer/IE3539295 ">https://collections.slq.qld.gov.au/viewer/IE3539295">https://collections.slq.qld.gov.au/viewer/IE3539295Knight, J. J., ‘In the Early Days,’ The Brisbane Courier, 11 January 1892, p. 2 https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/3535680 ">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/3535680">https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/3535680Petrie, CC., 1904, Tom Petrie’s Reminiscences of Early Queensland, Brisbane: Watson, Ferguson & Co. https://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks20/2000451h.html ">https://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks20/2000451h.html">https://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks20/2000451h.htmlWelsby, Thomas, 1922, Memories of Amity, Brisbane: Watson, Ferguson & Co. |
| creator | Ray Kerkhove and Bill Pascoe |
| url | |
| temporalCoverage | 1824/1833 |
| language | EN |
| keywords | Event |
| comment | Colonial Violence. Links to sources may contain racist language and attitudes of the time. |
| name | CSV export of Moreton Bay War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | CSV export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | text/csv |
| File | CSV export of Moreton Bay War and Resistance |
| name | KML export of Moreton Bay War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | KML export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml |
| File | KML export of Moreton Bay War and Resistance |
| name | GeoJSON export of Moreton Bay War and Resistance |
|---|---|
| description | GeoJSON export of the layer data |
| encodingFormat | application/geo+json |
| File | GeoJSON export of Moreton Bay War and Resistance |