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Warrowen massacre

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Warrowen Massacre (Brighton)


Site of Warrowen Massacre, Landcox Park Brighton VIC
One of the largest recorded massacres of Indigenous Australian's in Victoria, Australia
Site of Warrowen Massacre, Hurlingham Park Brighton VIC


In 1834, just one year before the founding of Melbourne, the horrific Warrowen massacre occurred. The Yowwengerre clan of the Boongerong, were camped and asleep when early one morning a group of Kurnai people from Gippsland surprised them at dawn and slaughtered 77 men, women and children. Warrowen, meaning place of sorrow, is located near where Brighton now stands [modern day Landcox Park & Hurlingham Park, East Brighton].


The historian Marie Fels, came across the old handwritten record of this massacre. [1] It had been written by William Thomas, the Aboriginal Protector, in 1836 who recorded, "[the] blacks remember the awful affair at Warrowen (place of sorrow) near where Brighton now stands, where in 1834 nearly a quarter of the Western Port blacks were massacred by the Gippsland blacks who stole up on them before dawn of day."[2]

Other sources confirm the massacre. For example, Marie Fels writes : “In 1844, a party of five Europeans including Robinson George Augustus Robinson, Sergeant Windredge of the Native Police, George Henry Haydon, another policeman named Keef plus six Native Police including Munmunginna, were pushing into Gippsland in an attempt to open up a road for commerce. As they struggled through the country inland from Cape Liptrap, Robinson recorded that it belonged to the Yowwengerre section of the Boongerong, now extinct, extirpated by the Boro Boro Willum or Gippsland blacks...This tribe once powerful are defunct and the country in consequence is unburnt having no native inhabitants. This is the reason why the country is so scrubby. The natives of Gippsland visit the inlet at Pubin.borro and other inlets in the snowing season. There must have been an awful massacre of these natives.” [3]

“In addition, Thomas gives further detail of this massacre in his description of an incised tree: ‘[They have] no monuments whatever further than devices on trees where any great calamity have befallen them. On a large gum tree in Brighton, on the estate of Mr McMillan was a host of blacks lying as dead carved on the trunk for a yard or two up. The spot was called Woorroowen or incessant weeping. Near this spot in the year 1833 or 4, the Gippsland blacks stole at night upon the Western Port or Coast tribe and killed 60 or 70 of them." [4]

“An early pioneers’ history of Brighton states that the Aborigines told early settlers tales of a tradition which they had of a great tribal fight in the vicinity of Landcox Park, in which ‘large numbers’ were killed. In the early days, settlers found bones and evidences of camp fires having been numerous at the place pointed out as the scene of the fight.[5] Another pioneer’s account mentions ploughing up bones by the earliest settler at Hurlingham Park. [6] These two parks are practically contiguous in East Brighton, in the triangle between the Nepean Highway, Hawthorn Road and North Road. Before being renamed separately by Europeans, they would have been the same place or space.

See also


References

  1. ^ Blainey, Geoffrey (2015). The Story of Australia's People. The Rise and fall of Ancient Australia. Viking. p. 114.
  2. ^ Thomas, William (1849). Thomas Half yearly Report. unit 11,1850/55,PROV: VPRS 10.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  3. ^ Fels, Marie (2011). 'I Succeeded Once':The Aboriginal Protectorate on the Mornington Peninsula. ANU E-Press. p. 255.
  4. ^ Fels, Marie (2011). 'I Succeeded Once':The Aboriginal Protectorate on the Mornington Peninsula. ANU E-Press. p. 256.
  5. ^ Cooper, John B. The History of Brighton 1842-1925. Brighton City Library.
  6. ^ Cheeseman. Cheeseman Family Papers. Brighton Historical Society.