| Both sides previous revision Previous revision Next revision | Previous revision |
| pastoral_life [2017/11/18 16:13] – [Rocky Creek] judith | pastoral_life [2025/11/18 17:12] (current) – [Hawkwood] judith |
|---|
| \\ | \\ |
| ==== Dalwood ==== | ==== Dalwood ==== |
| The first thing TLM-P needed was to gain colonial experience, a form of internship to learn the ways of the colony. He did so on a property Dalwood, near Maitland in the [[wp>Hunter_Region|Hunter Valley]], north of Sydney.(({http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/murray-prior-thomas-lodge-4282|Australian Dictionary of Biography}})) Dalwood House (pictured) {{ http://www.dalwood.org.au/assets/images/dalwood-house.jpg?300}} is now a National Trust Property, but located within the Wyndham Estate Winery - as at 2016, it was not open to the public.(({{ http://www.dalwood.org.au/dalwood-house.html}}))\\ | The first thing TLM-P needed was to gain colonial experience, a form of internship to learn the ways of the colony. He did so on a property Dalwood, near Maitland in the [[wp>Hunter_Region|Hunter Valley]], north of Sydney.(({{http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/murray-prior-thomas-lodge-4282|Australian Dictionary of Biography}})) Dalwood House (pictured) {{ http://www.dalwood.org.au/assets/images/dalwood-house.jpg?300}} is now a National Trust Property, but located within the Wyndham Estate Winery - as at 2016, it was not open to the public.(({{ http://www.dalwood.org.au/dalwood-house.html}}))\\ |
| \\ | \\ |
| How and why did he end up at Dalwood? The likely reason is his school network. Dalwood was owned by George Wyndham and his wife Margaret. Her father, John Jay, after business losses during the Napoleonic Wars, had 'conducted a school for English boys in Brussels'.(({{http://www.dalwood.org.au/founders.html}})) Was this the one associated with the Rev Drury that TLM-P had attended, or another one? It seems likely that it was this connection that resulted in him going to Dalwood. TLM-P was lucky as George Wyndham was generally admired: 'Respected for his leniency to his assigned labour in the early days and himself a hard worker in the field, George Wyndham considered himself mainly a farmer and pastoralist. He was highly respected within both the local and wider community.'(({{http://www.dalwood.org.au/founders.html}})) George Wyndham kept a diary from 1830-40, and Wyndham family letters have also survived, but these have not yet been checked for any contain a reference to TLM-P.((D. E. Wilkinson, Extracts from Dinton-Dalwood Letters 1827-53 , 2nd Edition. Sydney. Privately printed, 1964; G. Wyndham, Diary from 1830-1840. Mitchell Library.)) TLM-P was also lucky in encountering George in the 1840s and not Wadham Wyndham, who 40 years later in a frenzy of religious mania, slaughtered his entire family.((//The Bulletin//, 19 September 1887.))\\ | How and why did he end up at Dalwood? The likely reason is his school network. Dalwood was owned by George Wyndham and his wife Margaret. Her father, John Jay, after business losses during the Napoleonic Wars, had 'conducted a school for English boys in Brussels'.(({{http://www.dalwood.org.au/founders.html}})) Was this the one associated with the Rev Drury that TLM-P had attended, or another one? It seems likely that it was this connection that resulted in him going to Dalwood. TLM-P was lucky as George Wyndham was generally admired: 'Respected for his leniency to his assigned labour in the early days and himself a hard worker in the field, George Wyndham considered himself mainly a farmer and pastoralist. He was highly respected within both the local and wider community.'(({{http://www.dalwood.org.au/founders.html}})) George Wyndham kept a diary from 1830-40, and Wyndham family letters have also survived, but these have not yet been checked for any contain a reference to TLM-P.((D. E. Wilkinson, Extracts from Dinton-Dalwood Letters 1827-53 , 2nd Edition. Sydney. Privately printed, 1964; G. Wyndham, Diary from 1830-1840. Mitchell Library.)) TLM-P was also lucky in encountering George in the 1840s and not Wadham Wyndham, who 40 years later in a frenzy of religious mania, slaughtered his entire family.((//The Bulletin//, 19 September 1887.))\\ |
| ==== Hawkwood ==== | ==== Hawkwood ==== |
| In 1854, TLM-P bought Hawkwood on the Auburn River in the Burnett district (north of what is now called the Sunshine Coast) and ran sheep on it. He bought his young wife and family to Hawkwood at a time of bitter war between the white settlers and the Aboriginal people who had lived there for some 50,000 years. A flashpoint occurred in 1857, in what is now known as the [[wp>Hornet_Bank_massacre|Hornet Bank massacre]].((See also, Gordon Reid, A Nest of Hornets.)) This was the murder of eleven of the Fraser family and staff who lived on Hornet Bank station; the women were also raped. The murders were by Jiman (or Iman), the local Aboriginal tribe, reputedly in retaliation not just for the seizure of their land, but also for killing and rape of their people by Frasers and other men.\\ | In 1854, TLM-P bought Hawkwood on the Auburn River in the Burnett district (north of what is now called the Sunshine Coast) and ran sheep on it. He bought his young wife and family to Hawkwood at a time of bitter war between the white settlers and the Aboriginal people who had lived there for some 50,000 years. A flashpoint occurred in 1857, in what is now known as the [[wp>Hornet_Bank_massacre|Hornet Bank massacre]].((See also, Gordon Reid, A Nest of Hornets.)) This was the murder of eleven of the Fraser family and staff who lived on Hornet Bank station; the women were also raped. The murders were by Jiman (or Iman), the local Aboriginal tribe, reputedly in retaliation not just for the seizure of their land, but also for killing and rape of their people by Frasers and other men.\\ |
| In his memoir of this time, TLM-P stated that he believed that the Hornet Bank murders were part of an Aboriginal conspiracy to exterminate the whites. He was clearly prepared for armed conflict when, he claimed, there was a gathering of Aboriginal people some six weeks after the Hornet Bank tragedy. Hawkwood employed three unnamed Aboriginal men and one woman (from the coast, not from local tribes), a Welshman gaining colonial experience Earnest Davies; Sydney Ling, a German doctor, and' one or two others'. They had 'plenty of arms and ammunition'.((Reid, a Nest of Hornets, p.134)) In his memoir, he states that he and some others decided on a preemptive strike against the local Aboriginal people. Leaving shearing to others, a vigilante troop of 13 or 14 people, including TLM-P and two of his Aboriginal employees) set off. He claimed that the Aborigines in the party wanted to kill women and children as well, but he prevented that by stating he would withdraw the Hawkwood group if he saw any woman or child hurt. Davies, in his reminiscences, states that they killed as many men as they could and retrieved items hat had belonged to the Frasers. They also appeared to continue on their deadly rampage, killing aboriginal employees of Redbank station.((Reid, a Nest of Hornets, pp.136-39)) According to TLM-P ((memoir, p.37), 'The war was kept up for 18 months, during which there were continually one or two parties out, and gradually a good many of the ringleaders were accounted for.[killed] ... These 18 months of warfare were an anxious time for us. Business often took me then a good deal from the | \\ |
| station. When I came home I used to canter pretty sharply to the top of the ridge from which the place was visible with my heart in my mouth, for there was always the fear that all hands might have been massacred.'((memoir, p.41))\\ | In his memoir of this time, TLM-P stated that he believed that the Hornet Bank murders were part of an Aboriginal conspiracy to exterminate the whites. He was clearly prepared for armed conflict when, he claimed, there was a gathering of Aboriginal people some six weeks after the Hornet Bank tragedy. Hawkwood employed three unnamed Aboriginal men and one woman (from the coast, not from local tribes), a Welshman gaining colonial experience Earnest Davies; Sydney Ling, a German doctor, and' one or two others'. They had 'plenty of arms and ammunition'.((Reid, a Nest of Hornets, p.134)) In his memoir, he states that he and some others decided on a preemptive strike against the local Aboriginal people. Leaving shearing to others, a vigilante troop of 13 or 14 people, including TLM-P and two of his Aboriginal employees) set off. He claimed that the Aborigines in the party wanted to kill women and children as well, but he prevented that by stating he would withdraw the Hawkwood group if he saw any woman or child hurt. Davies, in his reminiscences, states that they killed as many men as they could and retrieved items hat had belonged to the Frasers. They also appeared to continue on their deadly rampage, killing aboriginal employees of Redbank station.((Reid, a Nest of Hornets, pp.136-39)) According to TLM-P ((memoir, p.37), 'The war was kept up for 18 months, during which there were continually one or two parties out, and gradually a good many of the ringleaders were accounted for.[killed] ... These 18 months of warfare were an anxious time for us. Business often took me then a good deal from the station. When I came home I used to canter pretty sharply to the top of the ridge from which the place was visible with my heart in my mouth, for there was always the fear that all hands might have been massacred.'((memoir, p.41))\\ |
| TLM-P and his troop,returned to their properties after the Redbank murders((memoir, p.41)) These murders in all are now thought to have a toll of around 300 Aboriginal people. TLM-P was also one of four magistrates who wrote to the Colonial Secretary demanding harsher penalties for Aboriginal resistance((Reid, A Nest of Hornets, pp.117-18.)) In his memoirs he also considered it reasonable that William Fraser, who had survived the Hornet Bank massacre of his family, embarked on a lifetime of indiscriminate killing of Aboriginal people. William Fraser became a folk hero among whites; he is also noted in the Wikipedia entry as 'one of the greatest mass murderers in Australian history'. He subsequently died of old age without facing prosecution or his murders.\\ | \\ |
| Information about the Hornet Bank massacre has been complicated not only by an unwillingness to acknowledge that it was a result of a war between white and black for the possession of land, but also by the unreliable recollections of Rosa Praed. As Reid (pp.iv,77) comments, Rosa in her memoirs((//Australian Life: Black and White//, London, 1885 and //My Australian Girlhood//, London, 1904)), was an unreliable witness, much more a novelist than an accurate witness.\\ | TLM-P and his troop returned to their properties after the Redbank murders((memoir, p.41)) These murders in all are now thought to have a toll of around 300 Aboriginal people. TLM-P was also one of four magistrates who wrote to the Colonial Secretary demanding harsher penalties for Aboriginal resistance((Reid, A Nest of Hornets, pp.117-18.)) In his memoirs he also considered it reasonable that William Fraser, who had survived the Hornet Bank massacre of his family, embarked on a lifetime of indiscriminate killing of Aboriginal people. William Fraser became a folk hero among whites; he is also noted in the Wikipedia entry as 'one of the greatest mass murderers in Australian history'. He subsequently died of old age without facing prosecution or his murders.\\ |
| | \\ |
| | Information about the Hornet Bank massacre has been complicated not only by an unwillingness to acknowledge that it was a result of a war for the possession of land, but also by the unreliable recollections of Rosa Praed. As Reid (pp.iv,77) comments, Rosa in her memoirs((//Australian Life: Black and White//, London, 1885 and //My Australian Girlhood//, London, 1904)), was an unreliable witness. The problem was not so much Rosa, but that modern readers rarely appreciate that mixing memoir and fiction "was not considered a fault in Victorian Life-writing - however annoying to the historian." (Megan Brown and Lucy Sussex, //Outrageous Fortunes:The Adventures of Mary Fortune, Crime-writer, and Her Criminal Son George//, La Trobe University Press, 2025, p.33). That is, Rosa had a novelist's imagination and needed her memoirs to sell. She did not write them as documentary evidence for future historians. \\ |
| | \\ |
| TLM-P sold Hawkwood a year after the Hornet Bank massacre. The cause was an outbreak of scab among his sheep: he was apparently popular with his neighbours as they are said to have gifted him some 900 sheep to help replenish his flock.((Reid, A Nest of Hornets, pp.214-15.))\\ | TLM-P sold Hawkwood a year after the Hornet Bank massacre. The cause was an outbreak of scab among his sheep: he was apparently popular with his neighbours as they are said to have gifted him some 900 sheep to help replenish his flock.((Reid, A Nest of Hornets, pp.214-15.))\\ |
| (to do: Clarke, Patricia. Turning fact into fiction: the 1857 Hornet Bank massacre, M A R G I N: life & letters in early Australia.) | (to do: Clarke, Patricia. Turning fact into fiction: the 1857 Hornet Bank massacre, M A R G I N: life & letters in early Australia.) |