Mistake Creek massacre | |
---|---|
Part of Australian frontier conflicts | |
Location | Mistake Creek, East Kimberley, Western Australia |
Coordinates | 16°55′37″S128°14′31″E / 16.927°S 128.242°E [1] |
Date | 28 March 1915 |
Target | Gija people |
Attack type | Mass shooting |
Weapons |
|
Deaths | 8-32 [2] |
Perpetrators | Michael Ratigan and two of his Aboriginal employees [1] |
No. of participants | 3 attackers and up to 35 Gija people |
Motive |
|
Accused | Michael Rhatigan and Nipper |
Convicted | None |
Verdict |
|
Convictions | None |
Charges | Murder |
The Mistake Creek massacre was a massacre of Indigenous Australians that took place in Western Australia in 1915.
On 28 March 1915, [3] between 8 [2] [4] and 32 [5] Gija people were shot and killed, and their bodies burned, at Mistake Creek in the East Kimberley. [3] Exactly who was responsible and why the massacre occurred have remained uncertain, [6] but the perpetrators are believed to have been an ex-policeman and telegraph linesman from Warmun (then known as Turkey Creek) called Michael [2] "Mick" Rhatigan and two of his Indigenous employees, Jim Wynne and Nipper. [3] [4] [6] [7] Rhatigan had been involved in earlier massacres of Aboriginal people during his time as a police constable, including one in 1895 where around 20 people were killed. [6]
According to Gija oral history, the motive was the mistaken belief that one of Rhatigan's milking cows had been killed and eaten by members of the camp that was attacked. The oral history accounts state that Rhatigan was directly involved in the massacre, with Wynne and Nipper assisting. There is some suggestion that Wynne, who was not Gija himself, had encouraged the massacre in some way, possibly due to a dispute over a woman. [8] [9] The Gija oral history seems to have been derived from accounts given by survivors of the massacre. [5]
Rhatigan and Nipper were arrested. [10] Wynne was shot dead by police whilst trying to escape after he was seen near one of the bodies. [11] A coroner's inquest held at Turkey Creek acquitted Rhatigan of any wrongdoing, while Nipper was ordered to face trial for the murder of eight people. Wynne's death was ruled a "justifiable homicide", and the constable who shot Wynne was commended by the jury for his "promptness" in shooting him as he was allegedly "a most dangerous character". [10] Nipper was found not guilty and was released, and later worked at the police stables in Perth. [5]
Rhatigan remained a telegraph linesman at Turkey Creek until his death in 1920. [8] [12] His son, John Rhatigan, became a long-serving Labor politician in the Western Australian Legislative Assembly. [9]
In 2001 controversy arose following a visit by the Governor General, William Deane, to the site of the massacre. According to columnist Miranda Devine, reporting on historian Keith Windschuttle's version of events, Deane personally apologised for the events at Mistake Creek and for other frontier killings by white people, mentioning Rhatigan and his employees had committed the massacre over the mistaken belief that a cow had been stolen. [13] Windschuttle asserted that there were no Europeans involved in the massacre, and that it was a drastic escalation of a dispute over a woman. He stated that Wynne and Nipper were the only ones involved, starting a debate on the actual details of the massacre. [14] [7]
Windschuttle's account was vigorously rebutted by WA historian Cathie Clement, who also said the Windschuttle's reporting of Deane's visit was factually incorrect, and that he did not actually make an apology at all, citing the original sources of that story. She also stated that Windschuttle's version of the reporting of events passed down in oral history and related by Patrick O'Brien was incorrect, and had been corrected by O'Brien. [12]
Later research has shown that the oral and visual histories are significant, and today they are given more weight than they were in the past, when they were often dismissed in favour of colonial representations of history. [7]
Gija people from Warmun (Turkey Creek) community have depicted the massacre in their artworks. [15]
A painting by well-known Aboriginal artist Queenie McKenzie depicting the massacre was bought by the National Museum of Australia in 2005, but was not put on display as it was claimed to depict an "event which never occurred". Ian McLean, University of Melbourne's Hugh Ramsay chair of Australian Art History, said that this was a political decision, made in the era of the "history wars". In July 2020 it was put on display as part of a new exhibition titled Talking Blak to History at the Museum. [7] [5]
Gija, also spelt Gidja and Kija, alternatively known as the Lungga, refers to Aboriginal Australians from the East Kimberley area of Western Australia, about 200 km south of Kununurra. In the late 19th century pastoralists were fiercely resisted by Gija people, many of whom now live around localities such as Halls Creek and Warmun.
Queenie McKenzie (Nakarra) (formerly Oakes, or Mingmarriya) (c. 1915 – 16 November 1998) was an Aboriginal Australian artist. She was born on Old Texas Station, on the western bank of the Ord River in the East Kimberley.
Halls Creek is a town situated in the east Kimberley region of Western Australia. It is located between the towns of Fitzroy Crossing and Turkey Creek (Warmun) on the Great Northern Highway. It is the only sizable town for 600 km on the Highway.
Henry Reynolds is an Australian historian whose primary work has focused on the frontier conflict between European settlers in Australia and Indigenous Australians. He was the first academic historian to advocate for Indigenous land rights, becoming known with his first major work, The Other Side of the Frontier (1981).
The history wars is a term used in Australia to describe the public debate about the interpretation of the history of the European colonisation of Australia and the development of contemporary Australian society, particularly with regard to their impact on Aboriginal Australian and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The term "history wars" emerged in the late 1990s during the term of the Howard government, and despite efforts by some of Howard's successors, the debate is ongoing, notably reignited in 2016 and 2020.
Kija is an Australian Aboriginal language today spoken by about 200 people, most of whom live in the region from Halls Creek to Kununurra and west to Lansdowne and Tableland Stations in Western Australia. It is a member of the Jarragan language family, a non-Pama-Nyungan family in the East Kimberleys. The Argyle Diamond Mine, on the south western corner of Lake Argyle is on the borders of Gija and Miriwoong country. The Purnululu Bungle Bungle National Park is mostly in Gija country.
The Shire of Halls Creek is one of the four local government areas in the Kimberley region of northern Western Australia, covering an area of 143,030 square kilometres (55,224 sq mi), most of which is sparsely populated. The Shire's seat of government is the town of Halls Creek. Many Aboriginal communities are located within the shire.
Freddy Timms was an Australian indigenous artist from the Kimberley region.
The Convincing Ground Massacre was a massacre of the Indigenous Gunditjmara people Kilcarer gundidj clan by British settler whalers based at Portland Bay in South-Eastern Australia. It was part of the wider Eumeralla Wars between the British colonisers and Gunditjmara. Tensions between the two groups had been building since the establishment of the town as a whaling station some five years previously, however, around 1833 or 1834, a dispute over a beached whale caused events to escalate.
Corindi Beach, pronounced Cor-in-"dye" although Cor-in-"dee" is widely used recently, historically also known as Pipeclay Beach until a name change in 1954, Corinda until a forced change to be provided postal service to avoid confusion or by Red Bank as Corindi River was formerly known, is a beach and small seaside farming town located on the Mid North Coast of New South Wales, Australia. The village is situated 33 kilometres (21 mi) north of Coffs Harbour and 50 kilometres (31 mi) south of Grafton. The original village of Corindi is slightly north along the Pacific Highway at Post Office Lane and Casson Close. Corindi means "grey" in local indigenous language referring to the pipeclay on the beach.
Shirley Purdie is a contemporary Indigenous Australian artist, notable for winning the 2007 Blake Prize for Religious Art. She is a painter at Warmun Community, in Western Australia's Kimberley region.
Warmun Community and Warmun are a township and locality in the Kimberley region of Western Australia, located on the Great Northern Highway, 3,000 kilometres (1,900 mi) northeast of Perth, Western Australia. The closest populated town is Halls Creek, about 160 km (99 mi) to the south. It is about 200 km (120 mi) south of Kununurra. Turkey Creek is a small creek that runs through the community.
Gija Jumulu is a boab tree which was transported 3,200 kilometres (2,000 mi) from Telegraph Creek, near Warmun in the Kimberley region of Western Australia to Kings Park in Perth. This was the longest land journey of a similar sized tree in history.
Bedford Downs, or Bedford Downs Station, is a pastoral lease that operates as a cattle station in Western Australia.
Lena Nyadbi is a contemporary Indigenous Australian artist from the Warmun Community in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. Her works include Dayiwul Lirlmim, details of which were painted on the roof of the Musée du quai Branly in Paris. The resulting installation can only be seen from the air, including the Eiffel Tower and Google Earth.
Cryna is a rural locality in the Scenic Rim Region, Queensland, Australia. In the 2016 census, Cryna had a population of 113 people.
John Joseph Rhatigan was an Australian politician who was a Labor Party member of the Legislative Assembly of Western Australia from 1953 to 1968, representing the seat of Kimberley.
Newmarket Hotel is a heritage-listed former hotel in Hamilton Hill, Western Australia.
Mabel Juli is a contemporary artist from the East Kimberley in Western Australia.