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| In 1770 Captain James Cook
met few Aborigines on the Eastern Australian shoreline. Because
they did not grow crops and because he assumed there were no inland
fishable rivers, he concluded that Australia's interior was empty.
Sir Joseph Banks thought the Aborigines would run away and abandon
their rights to land. They were both wrong, as the Eora
people later proved by ambushing the convicts who were often sent
to work into the bush. |
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On
18 December 1994, the replica of Captain James Cook’s ship Endeavour
arrived in Sydney to celebrate the ‘discovery’ 1770 of the land
in which Aborigines had lived for more than 60, 000 years. Aboriginal
protesters are shown here with a banner attached to the fence of
the Botanical Gardens reading ‘Don’t Forget White Australia has
a Black History.’
(City of Sydney Archives. NSCA CRS 904/1431) |
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The principle of native title in the British
colonies began in 1763 with an imperial proclamation that Native
Americans owned their hunting grounds. It would be another two
centuries before native title would be recognised - to some degree
- in Australia. Governor Arthur Phillip was ordered to open dialogue
with Aborigines and to live in a conciliatory manner, but he had
a personal passion to ‘civilise’ them. He took possession of the
land in the name of King George without reference to previous
ownership, and forged relationships with people like Bennelong
in order to learn about and change the local culture. And while
his dispatches told the British Government that Sydney Aborigines
had a strong attachment to the land, no policy came in reply.
Cook’s Endeavour sailed away, but the
First Fleet landed and thus began two centuries of death, fighting,
attempted genocide and a struggle for survival. The second and
third fleets followed bringing more colonists, convicts and Governors
with good intentions and devastating policies. Within only 20
years of Cook’s first sighting of Sydney, the peaceful way of
life of the local Aboriginal people was to turn into a nightmare
of war, dispossession, displacement, social upheaval and disease.
The First Fleet arrived
in Sydney Harbour under Phillip's command in January 1788. It
consisted of eleven ships, 290 marines, women and children, 717
convicts, supplies of pork and rum, equipment and livestock. Its
arrival brought an end to the occupation of the land by Aboriginal
people as they had traditionally lived. The diaries and journals
of the First Fleeters provide descriptions of the locals as "native",
"primitive",
"barbaric" and even "stupid". There was no recognition that the
cultures and social structures of Aboriginal people in Sydney
were as rich, diverse and complex as other nations around the
world today. Ironically, the first Europeans would rely on Aboriginal
knowledge of the area for their survival at various times, and
the complexity of the Aboriginal languages is often likened to
the complexities of Latin.
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Some of the officials of
the early European settlement, such as Captain Watkin Tench and
Judge Advocate David Collins, took an active interest in Aboriginal
customs and welfare and were aware of the effects of colonisation
and settlement. Collins was the first official to acknowledge
that blacks and whites were locked in a grim struggle for the
land in the colony. There were many violent acts of resistance,
replicated the country over, as Aboriginal
people took a stand against the occupation of their land and the
destruction of their social, religious, legal and communal systems.
Some Aboriginal people soon become afraid of entering Sydney Town
because of the threat of gunshot wounds and death. There had been
many wounded and killed and other encounters known of in the bush
because Aborigines were present wherever farmers went and they
always resisted the taking over of their land.
Traces of Aboriginal habitation can still
be found in shell middens around the harbour, even though many
of these Aboriginal garbage piles were destroyed by the invaders
who burned the shell to create lime for building.
The original customs and lifestyles of the
Aboriginal people were broken down very early in European contact
as colonisers began to fish, fell trees and shoot kangaroos. This
pressure on the natural resources resulted in people starving
during winter and members of tribes took up Governor Phillip’s
offer and moved into town, often sleeping and eating in settlers’
houses.
Aboriginal warriors Bennelong and Coleby were
captured in 1789, although Coleby later escaped. Bennelong succumbed
to the customs of ‘civilisation’, and his band of Camaraigal people
began visiting the town after Governor Phillip was speared in
the shoulder at a whale feast in Manly Cove in May 1790. Phillip
forbade reprisal and negotiations with the locals were made through
Bennelong. He and others attempted to resolve some of the differences
with a people who had totally different world views and were speaking
a difficult language, with most not bothering to learn Aboriginal
languages.
Interestingly, Bennelong's
second wife Barrangaroo was opposed to her husband's conciliatory
efforts with the invaders and the Governor. She was against any
form of negotiation and although encouraged to drink wine and
dress in European garb she refused, being violently chastised
by Bennelong for doing so. When Barangaroo wanted to give birth
at the Governor's House to maintain links with the land, and to
avoid the hospital which she thought of as a place of death, Phillip
denied her the right, persuading Bennelong to take her to the
hospital where she died shortly after giving birth.
Governor Phillip’s tolerance of the local
inhabitants did not last long. Later that year when resistance
fighter Pemulwuy speared a frontier man for killing blacks, Phillip
retaliated by ordering his staff to kill ten 'natives' and capture
two in order to scare the locals into conforming. Fifty soldiers
and two surgeons headed into the bush where their inept bush skills
gave early warning of their presence, and not a single Aborigine
was captured.
A young woman by the name of Patyegarang
became a friend of Lieutenant William Dawes and they taught each
other their first languages. The notebooks where Dawes recorded
the words of her language survive today.
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The initial contact between white and black
Australia was disastrous for Aboriginal people. Smallpox, colds,
flu and measles were fatal ailments to Aboriginal people who had
no resistance to such introduced diseases. Burial ceremonies of
the local Aboriginal people had also been destroyed. Bodies were
found floating in the harbour and lying in rock shelters, because
there were no longer people alive or well enough to carry out
the burial practices, while others had made their way out of the
Sydney region to escape the threat to their own lives.
With the local clans decimated, Aboriginal
people soon became drawn to Sydney from areas as far afield as
the Five Islands area near Port Kembla. They came partly to aid
their brothers and sisters in their fight against invaders and
to protect their rights to land and partly because of the attractions
of the settlement. Arranged marriages also brought Aboriginal
people from other areas to Sydney. The cultural connections between
people of different language groups has been maintained but it
is not often experienced publicly and remains hidden or invisible
within the dominant culture of the City.
Governor Phillip left the colony in 1792 and
when Governor
King arrived in 1800 he initiated the policy that settlers
could fire on any ‘native’ they saw. Phillip and the governors
who followed, Hunter and King, all described their daily life
in journals, but failed to obtain any information about Aboriginal
peoples’ social and religious life. In this way the colonists
failed to understand that although Aborigines didn’t believe in
the white man’s ‘God’, they did have their own ‘Supreme Beings’
with sandstone and rock drawings demonstrating their religious
beliefs.
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The
colonists’ ignorance of Aboriginal beliefs continued throughout
the nineteenth century. In his address to the Geographical Society
of Australasia in 1883, John Mann said of these engravings: "The
so-called rock carvings are merely outline representations of men,
fish, animals, etc… A flat rock near the Association Ground, Sydney
Common, was covered with the representations of kangaroo, opossum,
fish, boomerangs, etc…No mystery whatever may be attached to these
marks. I have seen a young man lying on rock whilst others traced
his outline and then picked out the line with a tomahawk."
(John F Mann, ‘Notes
on the Aborigines of Australia’, Geographical Society of Australasia.
Proceedings 1, 1883-4 Mitchell Library, State Library of New South
Wales.) |

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| The impact of colonisation
lead to a change in the health and well being of Aboriginal people
in much the same way as to any group who have been forcibly removed
from their land and traditional lifestyle. These impacts remain
evident in urban Koori society and culture today. |
The City of Sydney takes no responsibility for errors or omissions or
for
actions based on this information. Copyright© 2001 Sydney City
Council
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