1800s

1800

Grace Karskens in her book The Colony, writes, ‘In this book the narratives of town-building, rural settlements and environmental responses are encircled by histories of the Aboriginal people of Sydney. Of all the rich and gripping stories of what happened in the Sydney region after 1788, these are the most astonishing and the most poignant. It is time to shake off the idea that Sydney was a ‘white’ city, that Aboriginal people simply faded out of the picture and off the ‘stage of history’; it is simply untrue. The time has come, too, to recognise that Aboriginal people became urban people very quickly.’ … From what we can glimpse, the closest links and associations between Sydney clans and bands seemed to run north-south along the coast, rather than east-west between the coast and inland mountains. Rivers and creeks were the places of densest occupation, while high places were for ceremonial use. Rivers served as both boundaries and corridors. (Karskens, pp. 12, 42)

  • The Rocks, Sydney
  • Bark Canoes

 

Koori people are a visible presence in the central district and remain so until the 1830s, when more begin to join others already having retreated to lesser-known areas around the Harbour. The historian Karskens asks ‘What became of those early intimacies, the deep wonder and admiration for women’s skills, the early officers' gallant gestures, and Phillip’s and Dawes’s attempts to provide a safe haven for Aboriginal women? One by one, the officers sailed away; their actions and words failed to become a template for the future time. Although some high profile women were well known and received by modicum of clear and sympathy, the townsfolk became utterly indifferent to girls like Lainey Cabbage who were afforded some white women privileges, but offered Aboriginal women little protection.’ (Karskens, p. 420)

  • Governor Arthur Phillip
  • William Dawes
  • Visiting Colebee, Port Jackson

                

 

1801

Pemulwuy is declared an outlaw by Governor King. He is probably a member of the Bidgigal people whose country stretches up Georges River and Salt Pan Creek, from Botany Bay towards Prospect. His people are also known as the Woods people.

  • Pemulwuy a resistance warrior, engraving by Sam John Neele

 

Yeranabie and Worogan from the Central region clans, sail on the Lady Nelson. They visit Jervis Bay and Churchill Island in Port Phillip Bay. Vincent Smith notes that this is the only known instance of Aboriginal voyagers who were husband and wife.

Governor King orders that all Koories be ‘driven back from settlers’ habitations by firing on them’ except for Sydney Aborigines and those on Parramatta Road.

1802

The French visitor Pérron learns that the harbour Aborigines have ‘a sort of religious terror of the Blue Mountains: they think them the residence of a kind of evil spirit, to whom they’re represented by a variety of grotesque figures’.

  • Farm Cove Intitiation by Thomas Watling
  • Blue Mountains by Augustus Earle

 

The French explorer Pérron publishes a list containing the names, ages and physical appearance of seventeen men from the Sydney area. Among them in number is ‘Benil-lon’ (Bennelong) who is described as the chief’.

  • Bennelong
  • Bennelong Point

 

1803

Koori people are living in the open or still wild areas around Sydney town, such as the Domain in the east, the Rocks at Darling Harbour in the west, around the Brickfields hunting ground (near the present War Memorial in Hyde Park) to the south and across the water on the north shore around Kirribilli.

  • The Governor's House at Port Jackson, Sydney 1791 by William Bradley
  • Blue Mountains by Augustus Earle
  • Visiting Colebee, Port Jackson

 

1804

James Bath, a Koori orphan from Toongabbie, dies at age 15. For six years prior to this he has been employed by a boatman based in Sydney Cove. He was raised by white foster parents after his Aboriginal parents are shot dead while stealing corn from a field at Toongabbie in the early 1790s. He dies of dysentery. (Sydney Gazette)

  • Natives attacking Shepherds by Samuel Calvert
  • Sydney Cove Port Jackson 1788 by William Bradley

1805

Bennelong takes part in a ritual battle in which Cogie (Gogy) is accused of killing a man. The conflict takes place on the road between Parramatta and Prospect.

  • Farm Cove Intitiation by Thomas Watling

Musquito surrenders to the British with a youth of about eighteen years.

Several Sydney men, some from Botany Bay and some from the Hawkesbury River, are employed in various sealing gangs in Bass Strait.

1806

The explorer D’Urville describes a great gathering of Aboriginal clans assembled near the present central railway for a ritual payback combat over the death of Bennelong’s son Dickie one year earlier. Those taking part include clans from the Hunter River, Emu Plains, Broken Bay and Illawarra. (Vincent Smith p. 83)

  • Corobore' au danse by Charles Alexandre Leseur