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Atherton, QLD: A Town With Rural Charm

The town of Atherton, QLD, is located on the Kennedy Highway, 80 km southwest of Cairns. 

Sitting on the side of Halloran's Hill, an extinct volcano, Atherton is a country town surrounded by lush rainforests, and pristine National Parks, on the Atherton Tableland. Lake Eacham and Lake Barrine are the larger crater lakes in the district.

The Mbabaram People (Bar Burrum)

The Atherton tablelands are part of the traditional territory of the Mbarabam people, one of six tribes speaking the Djirrbalngan language in the area.

Norman Tindale and Joseph Birdsell carried out fieldwork in 1938-1939 on the Atherton Tablelands and noted the presence of a "people of relatively small stature and crisp curly hair". The researchers also claimed that these clans "inhabit an area of dense rain jungle and highland plateau in the wettest area of North Queensland". It is likely that the shorter stature was due to differences in nutrition in this group, with nuts, tubers and fruits being consumed more than proteins.

Interestingly, Carl Lumholtz, a Norwegian explorer and ethnographer, in his 1889 book, claimed Aboriginal people of the upper Herbert River were mostly "... slender and tolerably well built, though on the average small. Their height varied greatly". 
An Aboriginal man standing in front of a Kapok rainforest tree. He has body cicatrices [scarring] on his stomach, is wearing kangaroo bone nose ornament, shell pendant, a white cockatoo feathered headdress (including Jil-nga natilus shell forehead band) and has a leaf placed as a pubic covering. State Library of Queensland
The Mbabaram language appeared to differ from other surrounding Aboriginal languages. Linguist, R.M.W Dixon found that "all the languages but Mbabaram fit perfectly well into the pattern of Australian linguistics" and even Mbabaram was only "a little eccentric phonetically and phonologically".


Yidiny is also a traditional language within areas of the Cairns Region and Tablelands Region. Tindale claimed that the Djabugay language was spoken over a large area from Cairns to Port Douglas and west towards Mareeba. In the south it extended almost to Atherton.

Clan membership was based on patrilineal descent groups, whereby children inherited the totems of their fathers. 
Group of men and boys at Atherton Tableland, ca. 1895. This photograph is of Aboriginal men and boys in their traditional body paint, with shields, boomerang, wooden swords and spears. cicatrices can be seen on some men. The elderly man on the left has a kangaroo bone nose piercing, a pearl shell pendant and headband. The young man laying in front of the group has a forehead band of Nautilus shell and is holding a nulla nulla [club/ sword]. The shield and body design are unique to this Atherton Tableland area. State Library of Queensland
Marriages were generally polygamous (a husband having two or more wives), and arranged by parents and elders according to customary law. 

Some distinctive aspects of Aborignal clans of the rainforest region south of Cairns: cannibalism, mummification prior to cremation, and the holding of fighting corroborees to settle disputes. Lumholtz (1.) observed that; "Mortal wounds are extremely rare" and the combatant knows "that his opponent, through fear of his relatives, will not carry the conflict to the extreme......if necessary they will interfere and prevent his getting wounded".
Man and child from the Atherton Tablelands, ca. 1895. This photograph is of an Aboriginal man, wearing only a belt, carrying a child on his shoulder and a woven bag on his back.
Tindale and Birdsell also note that Rainforest people would carry about the skull and jawbones of the dead for long periods before disposal by burning. And they used beaten bark blankets, carried fig-tree baskets sewn with lawyer cane, and employed methods for leaching alkaloids from toxic nuts. 

Hallorans Hill was an Aboriginal meeting place, and the site of the current showground was a bora ground.
Aborignal people near their wurley ( temporary shelte)r, made with branches and bark. Cicatrices are visible on shoulders (tribal markings, are visible as scars). One man making a dilly bag. n.d.

Exploration

On 29 April 1875, James Venture Mulligan led a government-sponsored expedition, which passed the sites of Mareeba and Atherton, crossed the Herberton Range and found tin in the Wild River, Heberton.

John Atherton, a grazier and overlander, was born in Lancashire, England, in 1837, he was the first settler on the Atherton tablelands in 1877. The town of Atherton is named after him.

Atherton lived at Emerald End, at the junction of Emerald Creek and the Barron River, for thirty years. He also discovered alluvial tin at a place he named Tinaroo. It is reported that when Atherton found the tin he shouted "Tin, Harroo!!" to his prospecting companion.

The first gold rush began in Australia in May 1851, which resulted in people moving from areas in Australia and flocking here, from all over the world.

The tin finds on the Atherton Tablelands also brought miners and settlers to the region, which resulted in competition for land and effects on food availability for Aboriginal hunter-gathers. European diseases to which the Aboriginal people had no immunity were also a great threat. Frontier violence in Queensland was particularly brutal.

This violence led to detachments of the Queensland Native Mounted Police being sent to the Atherton Tablelands. Historian Henry Reynolds has described the Native Police as “the most violent organisation in Australian history”. 
Native Police, Rockhampton, 1864, 1st Lieutenant George Murray (back row 2nd left) and his detachment of Native Mounted Police taken 1 December 1864 at Rockhampton. George Murray became Brisbane's Chief Police magistrate after his service in the NMP. Back Row: Trooper Carbine, 1st lt George Murray, 2nd Lieutenant unknown, Camp Sgt unknown, Corporal Michael. Front Row: Trooper Barney, Hector, Goondallie, Balantyne and Patrick. Queensland Police Museum

Priors Pocket

The town of Atherton was initially called Priors Pocket, after the Prior Brothers, Walter & Thomas, who cut cedar there in 1880.

A track connecting Port Douglas and Herberton passed through Priors Pocket, as did a surveyed railway route from Herberton to Mareeba.

Atherton was named by Falconer West Hutton, the surveyor who prepared the town layout on 11 May 1885.

A Town Develops

The town of Atherton grew from timbergetters camps in the late 1800s. Then as a staging post for Cobb and Co. Coaches, which stopped at the Barron Valley Hotel in the main street on their way to Herberton and Port Douglas. 
Cobb & Co's mail coach on the Port Douglas - Herberton Road, Queensland, 1887, State Library of Queensland
Atherton provided the surrounding mining centres with services and produce.

Thomas Peake's original Barron Valley Hotel, built in the 1890s, was a shack built beside the track to Herberton.

Town lots were first sold on 23 February 1886. Some purchasers were the Kelly, McGeehan, Tucker, Loder, Windhaus and Mazlin families.
Tennis party in Atherton, Queensland, 1888, SLQLD

Chinatown

More than 100 000 Chinese came to the Australian colonies between the 1840s and 1890s.
 
When tin was discovered on the Wild River in 1880, Chinese working with European timbergetters, moved into the Atherton area. The Chinese established a settlement called Cedar Camp across Piebald Creek. Many Chinese were market gardeners and supplied vegetables to the district. 

In the early 1900s, Cedar Camp, also known as Chinatown, was the social and commercial centre for over a thousand Chinese people living in the Atherton district. 

Many of the Chinese were Tennant farmers who grew maize.

Located at Herberton Road, Atherton, Chinatown was established from the 1880s to 1920s. There was a short main street with small timber and iron shops and houses. There were general goods stores, a herbalist, two gambling dens and a place of entertainment. Lee Sye was one store owner.

However, in the early 1900s, some Chinese people at Atherton responded to the collapse of the Qing dynasty in China, and the 1911 Revolution. The animosity and upheaval between anti-Qing dynasty supporters of Sun Yatsen clashed with those who were more nationalistic and pro-monarchy.  This turmoil resulted in some Chinese moving away from Atherton.
Morning Bulletin (Rockhampton, Qld. : 1878 - 1954), Friday 23 February 1912,
After WWII, when land was resumed for retuned soldiers, many Tennant farmers moved from the area.

1890s

In 1890 a school committee formed at Atherton and raised £65 for a provisional school, a simple two-room timber building which opened in 1891, at the corner of Mabel and Vernon streets. In 1895 the teacher resigned and the children were sent to school at Carrington until a new teacher was appointed and the school reopened in 1896.  The school closed in 1905, and in 1906 it reopened as Atherton State School.
Three Aboriginal adults and two children are moving camp. Each adult is carrying a woven basket on their back and the two men are have children are carrying children on their shoulders. Group at Atherton Tablelands, ca. 1895. State Library of Queensland

Atherton Pioneer Cemetery opened in 1897, and closed in 1927.

1900s

Atherton women, with shoulder cicatrices [scarification]. These women are demonstrating their basket weaving technique.Women in the Atherton Tableland, QLD, 1900s, State Library of Queensland
Group in front of shelter, Atherton Tableland, ca. 1900. Two men, two women and a child in front of their wooden, branch Gunyah [hut/ shelter]. Cicatrices [scars] can be seen on the men. One is holding a nulla nulla with shield. The other man is holding a boomerang with spear and wearing cloth to cover his pubic area. In front of the child is a basket. State Library of Queensland
Matron and staff of the Atherton Hospital, Queensland. 1900, SLQLD
Atherton Hotel, Atherton, QLD, 1900. SLQLD
Atherton swimming pool. Atherton, QLD, 1900, SLQLD
In 1901 the population of Atherton was 218.

The School of Arts opened 1902.

The original Atherton Hospital was located at 18 Victoria St, Atherton QLD. The building then became Audley House.

The railway arrived in Atherton in 1903, located behind the Barron Valley Hotel, which led to the demise of the the Cobb and Co. routes through to Herberton.
POSTCARD: Railway Station, Atherton, QLD, Vintage Queensland
A Taoist temple was constructed at Atherton in 1903.
Rider on a mule in front of Lee Sye's store in Atherton, 1904, SLQLD
Atherton's first annual show was held in 1904.
Atherton Hotel on Victoria Day, Queensland, 1904 Mark Brazier's Atherton Hotel had two-storeys. The upper verandahs had union jack balustrades. On the day of the photograph the hotel was thronged with people on the balconies and on the footpaths below. North Queensland Register
Willie at The Atherton Show, QLD, North Queensland Register (Townsville, Qld. : 1892 - 1905), Monday 24 July 1905
Atherton Show, QLD, North Queensland Register (Townsville, Qld. : 1892 - 1905), Monday 24 July 1905
Queensland Ambulance, Atherton, QLD, established 1906
Horse team in the Atherton district hauling a log across a stream, ca. 1905, State Library QLD
Horse Drawn-Royal Mail coach in Main Street, Atherton, QLD, in 1908
Atherton Cricket team, Queensland, 1908, North QLD Register
General view of Atherton - circa 1908.- Vintage Queensland
Commonwealth Hotel in Atherton, 1908. Adjoining businesses of the Commonwealth Hotel and Hunt's Emporium in Atherton. The hotel has a wide encircling verandah and the Hotel's sign is painted on the corrugated iron roof. SLQLD
Building Atherton Railway. Atherton end of the tunnel, coach road at the top of hill.  Week (Brisbane, Qld. : 1876 - 1934), Friday 11 March 1910
Blanket distribution at Atherton, QLD, 1911, SLQLD
Interior of Chinese joss house at Atherton, QLD, Western Mail (Perth, WA : 1885 - 1954), Friday 14 February 1913
In 1913 there were at least 13 Islander farms in the Atherton district.

Dr Eric Mjöberg from Sweden travelled around the Atherton tableland in 1913 and made observations about Aboriginal material culture on the Atherton Tablelands. One of the photos in his 1918 book shows an Aboriginal mia mia (shelter) under construction on a lawyer vine frame at Prior's Pocket (Atherton) .
Bland vilda djur och folk i Australien, his travel account, Bonnier, Stockholm, 1915, Mjöberg, E. G
Atherton, QLD, 1914 Queen Carnival

WWI

Alfred Edwin Winterford, 25th Battalion, of Atherton, Qld. Studio portrait of Second Lieutenant (2nd Lt) Alfred Edwin Winterford, 25th Battalion, of Atherton, Qld. Winterford, a land commissioner, had served 15 months in the 2nd Queensland Mounted Infantry during the South African War of 1899 to 1902. He enlisted in the AIF in January 1916 and was promoted to the rank of 2nd Lieutenant in August 1916. 2nd Lt Winterford embarked from Sydney with the 19th Reinforcements, aboard HMAT Wiltshire (A18) on 7 February 1917. He arrived in France for service on the Western Front on 9 July 1917 and was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant (Lt) on 1 September 1917. On 4 October 1917 he was wounded in action by a gunshot wound to the thigh. He returned to the front on 7 April 1918 and was killed in action in France on 10 June 1918. Lt Winterford was 44 years of age.
Post Office and Courthouse at Atherton, on the tablelands ca. in 1915 Far North Qld
Smith Residence at Atherton, Queensland 1917. SLQLD
Land was resumed for retuned soldiers at Atherton after WWI.
Golden Grove Butter Factory, Atherton, QLD, Northern Herald (Cairns, Qld. : 1913 - 1939), Thursday 13 June 1918
Atherton, QLD, Northern Herald (Cairns, Qld. : 1913 - 1939), Thursday 9 January 1919

1920s

Ronald Grainer was born on 11 August 1922 in Atherton, became known for his television and film score music, especially the theme music for Doctor Who, The Prisoner, Steptoe and Son and Tales of the Unexpected.

St Joseph's School opened in 1923.

In 1924 there were five hotels at Atherton.
Atherton Hospital, QLD, 1925. SLQLD
Golfers at the links in Atherton, QLD, ca. 1925, SLQLD
Nurses at Atherton QLD, about 1926. JM
Atherton Main Street near the war memorial statue, Queensland, 1928, SLQLD
Main Street, Atherton, Queensland, 1928
Arrival of the train at Atherton station, QLD, 1928, The Queenslander
Atherton Ambulance Brigade, Atherton, QLD, 1928
Queenslander home set in a tropical garden at Atherton, QLD, 1929, SLQLD
Joss house, atherton, QLD, Queenslander (Brisbane, Qld. : 1866 - 1939), Thursday 12 December 1929

1930s

Sconder (Alexander) Nasser, a migrant from Lebanon took over the ownership of the Barron Valley Hotel in 1930.
Maize picker at work, Atherton, North Queensland, c 1930, Queensland State Archives

In 1933 the population of Atherton was 1585.

Main Street Atherton, QLD, 1934, SLQLD
Maize Silos, Atherton, QLD, c 1935, Queensland State Archives
The Atherton Hotel has been a landmark at Atherton, QLD, since the early 1900s. A fire occurred on the 16th September 1941, leaving only a charred pole. The new hotel on this site opened in late 1954. Affectionately known as "The Stump"

The Maize Board began manufacturing the "Athmaze" (Atherton Maize) in 1936. 
The Maize Board began manufacturing the "Athmaze" Athmaize (Atherton Maize) in 1936., Atherton QLD
Johnstone River Advocate and Innisfail News (Qld. : 1928 - 1941), Friday 2 October 1936
Roxy Theatre on Main Street in Atherton, QLD, in 1936
On the Atherton Tableland, Sydney Mail (NSW : 1912 - 1938), Wednesday 28 July 1937
The arrival of the Governor (Sir Leslie Wilson) and Lady Wilson at Atherton, where his Excellency opened the Queen Carnival and sports meeting conducted bythe Atherton Agricultural Society and the local branch of the R.S.S.I.L.A. In the picture above Sir Leslie is being received by the shire clerk, Miss J. Taylor. In the background, Lady Wilson is receiving a basket of flowers. Telegraph (Brisbane, Qld. : 1872 - 1947), Wednesday 28 June 1939

1940s

The establishment of the Tablelands Base Area in 1942 as a base for rehabilitating and training troops, created a lot of Army traffic through Atherton's main street. Many of Atherton's buildings housed both Australian and American forces. 

The Atherton Courthouse was used as a wartime hospital for officers during World War II. There are air raid bunkers beneath the building.

Nearby Mareeba Airfield also functioned as a staging post for battles in New Guinea and the Pacific.

William Lindsay Jue Sue of Atherton enlisted in the Royal Australian Air Force 25 May 1942 (of Chinese descent). A9301: RAAF, NCOs and Other Ranks.

In 1942 the Military took over the Atherton Showground and remained there for three years.

In November 1943 an Australian Defence Canteen was erected at the Atherton Showgrounds, becoming known as Merriland Hall.
Australian Army canteen "igloo" under construction in Atherton, Queensland, 1943
ATHERTON, QLD. 1943-12-24. SUPPER TIME DURING THE CHRISTMAS PARTY AT THE WOMEN'S SERVICES CLUB. IDENTIFIED PERSONNEL ARE: SERGEANT BOYD, AUSTRALIAN WOMEN'S ARMY SERVICE (1). AWM
ATHERTON, QLD. 1944-04-25. TROOPS OF THE 3RD DIVISION AND ALLIED UNITS FORMING UP ON THE GILLIES HIGHWAY NEAR THE GRAND HOTEL FOR THE ANZAC DAY SERVICE AT THE WAR MEMORIAL. THE SALVATION ARMY TRUCK IN THE FOREGROUND SUPPLIED THE MICROPHONE, ETC. AWM
ATHERTON, QLD. 1944-04-25. EX-SERVICEMEN OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR AND SECOND WORLD WAR PARTICIPATING IN THE ANZAC DAY MARCHING THROUGH MAIN STREET TOWARDS THE WAR MEMORIAL. SPECTATORS STAND IN THE STREET AND ON THE BALCONY OF THE GRAND HOTEL. AWM
ANZAC Day celebrations, Atherton, QLD, 1944, SLQLD
ATHERTON, QLD. 1944-04-25. MEMBERS OF THE AUSTRALIAN ARMY MEDICAL WOMEN'S SERVICE MARCHING ALONG MAIN STREET TOWARDS THE WAR MEMORIAL DURING THE ANZAC DAY MARCH. SPECTATORS STAND IN THE STREET AND ON THE BALCONY OF THE GRAND HOTEL. AWM

The Atherton Shire Hall, built in 1898, was destroyed by fire in 1948, and an igloo building built during the war became a Community Centre.

1950s

William John Bock, who lived at Atherton during the town's early days, made an audio recording discussing the early town prior to his death on 19 February 1953.

In the 1950s, Tinaroo Dam was built on the Barron River as part of an irrigation scheme to support agriculture.

A two ring bora ceremonial site (Aboriginal) existed at Alberton until the 1950s, when it was destroyed for a pineapple plantation.
Main Street, Atherton, QLD, 1950s, Vintage QLD
Main Street, Atherton, QLD, about 1950s
Atherton Main Street circa early 1950's looking south, QLD
Convent and Catholic church, Mable Street, Atherton, QLD - 1950s, Vintage QLD

More Recently

The Atherton Public Library opened in 1978.

The 36th Premier of Queensland, Peter Beattie, in office from 1998 to 2007, grew up at Atherton.

At the 2011 census Atherton had a population of 7,287.


Around Atherton

The Grand Hotel, Atherton, QLD, built in 1936
The Atherton Hotel has existed since the early 1900s. In 1944 a fire broke out, leaving only a charred light pole which was dubbed the "black stump". The new building was not finished until 1954, so a temporary bar to satisfy the pub's loyal clientele was quickly set up on adjacent land. The hotel is still affectionately known as "the Stump"
Carrington Hotel at Atherton, QLD
The Atherton War Memorial, QLD, was unveiled on 1 May 1924. Australia lost 60,000 from a population of about 4 million, representing one in five of those who served in WWI

The Barron Valley Hotel at 53 Main Street, Atherton, Tablelands Region, Queensland, Australia, was designed by Hill & Taylor and built from 1940 to 1941. Has been run by the Nasser family for 70-90 years
Atherton Performing Arts Theatre is a heritage-listed former military depot and now theatre at 6 Silo Street, Atherton, QLD, built in 1943. It is also known as Atherton WWII Igloo
Atherton State School Head Teacher's Residence, was built in 1913 to accommodate the large family of the school's head teacher at the time, Joseph Johnson Heritage branch staff
Atherton War Cemetery was built in 1942, Atherton, QLD. It contains a Cross of Sacrifice and 164 graves and headstones for soldiers and airmen killed during World War II
In November 1943 an Australian Defence Canteen was erected at the Atherton Showgrounds, becoming known as Merriland Hall, Atherton QLD
The Atherton Courthouse, QLD, was built in 1941 and features timber panels constructed from rare quilted, Queensland rainforest maple, which is no longer milled in Australia
WWII before restoration, Atherton, QLD
Main Street, Atherton, QLD



Things To Go and Places to Go


Museums & Galleries Trail

Hou Wang Chinese Temple and Museum

The Convicts Came to Australia

 The Background

Hanging outside Newgate Prison

In Britain in 1688, there were 50 offences on the statute book, for which the death penalty could be imposed. By 1776, there were almost four times as many crimes punishable by death.

1776 was also the year that Britain halted transportation of convicts to its American colonies due to the outbreak of war and the Declaration of Independence.

Transportation as punishment for criminal offences was next in severity to the death sentence. The Elizabethan Act of 1597 had first introduced transportation into English law "For the punishment of Rogues, Vagabonds, and Sturdy Beggars – to be banished out of this Realm and all other Dominions thereof-".


Since the 1718 Transportation Act, about 57,000 convicts were sent to the American colonies.

British prisons became full, and prison ships called hulks were used. The first hulk used as a prison was the Tayloe, moored in the Thames in London in 1775. The Home Office, however, offered pardons to prisoners who joined the Army or Navy or voluntarily left the British Isles for the duration of their sentence.
Prison hulk HMS Success at Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Much pressure was on Home Secretary, Lord Sydney, to find an alternative destination to send convicts from the overflowing prisons.

The sloop HMS Nautilus was sent to explore the west coast of Africa and to select ''a proper spot for the making of a settlement if … judged expedient''.

Das Voltas Bay on the southwest coast of Africa was examined and judged unsuitable for a penal colony, as there was ''no bay, river or inlet but only a steep barren rocky shoreline … without … a drop of fresh water or … a tree''.

In 1783, James Matra, who had travelled on the HMS Endeavour with Captain James Cook in 1770, proposed a "Settlement at New South Wales". Cook's opinion of Matra, however, had been that he was "good for nothing".
Replica of the sailing ship HMS Endeavor, (Dennis4trigger)
Sir Joseph Banks, the famous botanist who also sailed to Australia in 1770, on the HMS Endeavour, was asked to give his advice in a report to a committee of the House of Commons about where in the world to establish a British penal colony. 

Joseph Banks recommended Botany Bay as the site for a penal colony as: ''.....in every respect adequate to the purpose''. Although, Banks had described the site in his journals as being swampy, with sandy soil. 

James Cook died in 1779 and was involved in exploration rather than colonisation.

Orders Issued

On August 18 1786, Lord Sydney instructed Treasury to: ''forthwith'' provide ''a proper number of vessels for the conveying of 750 convicts to Botany Bay''.

The First Fleet of 11 ships left Portsmouth on 13 May 1787 with more than 1480 men, women and children on board. As well as British and Irish convicts, there were African, American, French, and around 16 Jewish people on board. 
Convicts embarking for Botany Bay, NSW, Rowlandson, Thomas, 1756-1827
Commanded by Captain Arthur Phillip, the journey of The First Fleet lasted eight months.
Sailing into the unknown, across the ocean route used only once by Abel Tasman and twice by James Cook, the convicts knew that they had little chance of seeing their homeland or loved ones again.

Once out at sea, Phillip allowed the convicts on deck: “in order to breathe purer air". The fleet would sail via Tenerife (Canary Islands), to Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) and Cape Town (South Africa).

Those undertaking the voyage to Terra Australis (Southern Land) suffered great hardships at sea. Only 25 deaths occurred during the voyage, probably due to careful planning and good treatment of the convicts under Phillip's conscientious and efficient command. Many convicts put on weight and were healthier when they arrived in Australia than when they left England.
Construction and Real Estate Journal (Sydney, NSW : 1930 - 1938), Wednesday 23 February 1938
During the last leg of the journey, November–December 1787, the First Fleet was battered and tossed about as the ships made their way through the Roaring Forties (extremely powerful westerly winds). 

Lieutenant Philip Gidley King described the dreadful situation on board HMS Supply: "strong gales … with a very heavy sea running which keeps this vessel almost constantly under water and renders the situation of everyone on board her, truly uncomfortable".

The miserable convicts, mostly confined to the hulls, were thrown about as the ships heaved and plunged through the sea, constantly wet and cold.

The first ship, HMS Supply, reached Botany Bay on 18 January 1788. However, it was soon apparent that Botany Bay had poor soil, little freshwater and was exposed to harsh winds.

Captain Phillip decided to go north to Port Jackson.

Interestingly, a French expedition on a voyage of discovery under navigator Comte de La Pérouse had arrived off the coast on 24 January 1788. But the French ships were unable to enter Botany Bay until 26 January, the same day that the First Fleet moved to Sydney Cove in the harbour of Port Jackson.

La Pérouse and his ship would disappear at sea in that same year.
The grave of French priest Pere le Receveur, of the ill-fated La Perouse expedition, Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1871 - 1912), Saturday 29 November 1884
Governor Phillip, the first Governor of the first Australian colony, named the settlement at Port Jackson, Sydney, after, Lord Sydney, the British government's Home Secretary.

The formal instructions from King George III (America's last king and the Australian colonies' first) regarding the Aboriginal people were to "conciliate their affections" to "live in amity and kindness with them". 

Phillip strove very hard to establish friendly and peaceful relations and would greet the Gadigal clan of the Eora Nation (Aboriginal people of of Port Jackson) with open arms, or with a handshake, and guns laid on the ground. (The word Eora means "here" or "from this place")

However, the British also wanted to show their strength. Watkin Tench expressed this: "Our first object was to win their affections, and our next was to convince them of the superiority we possessed: for without the latter, the former we knew would be of little importance".

But the Eora people did not want the Berewalgal (strangers) here. They were a clan-based warrior culture with their own customary law.
Papers of Sir Joseph Banks - charts and illustrations, ca 1790s
Each clan lived in well-defined areas, the kinship system and complex cultural practices governed their way of life.

The Eora women and children were kept away while the men yelled warnings. Lieutenant Philip Gidley King wrote in his journal: "All the natives which were seen when we first arrived at Port Jackson danced violently, shouting "woroo woroo, go away".

There were high points and low points. Two months after landing, the Eora and the British danced "hand in hand like children at a picnic". They both sang and frolicked about. One of the British men, much to the amusement of the Eora people did "apply [a] handkerchief where Eve did ye fig leaf". (he applied a handkerchief, in the style of a fig leaf, to a nude Eora woman)
Drawing from William Bradley's Journal, A Voyage to New South Wales, ca. 1802. 11. "First interview with the Native Women at Port Jackson New South Wales"
Drawing from William Bradley's Journal, A Voyage to New South Wales, ca. 1802. 13. "View in Broken Bay New South Wales. March 1788'. Note: Eora and British dancing in the foreground
As Australian Aboriginal people had no chiefs or other centralised institutions, Governor Phillip soon found that offers of friendship had to be repeated to the many different and separate clans. As time went on, it became apparent that the British knew little about this land and its people. 

Lady Juliana

Chartered to transport female convicts to Australia, Lady Juliana sailed before the Second Fleet with 226 female convicts, and arrived at Port Jackson on 6 June 1790. Most women convicts on board were London prostitutes: the Lady Juliana developed a reputation as a floating brothel.

The ship's steward, John Nicol, who wrote an account of the voyage stated that: "when we were fairly out to sea, every man on board took a wife from among the convicts, they nothing loath".
 Ladies of The Broad Arrow, World's News (Sydney, NSW : 1901 - 1955), Saturday 16 February 1952
The Lady Juliana was well managed, kept clean and fumigated. The women were allowed free access to the deck and given fresh food.

Sailing via Tenerife, Cape Verde, Rio Janeiro (staying 7 weeks) and the Cape of Good Hope (staying 4 weeks), the women also provided "services" at the various ports. Or as John Nicol the ship's steward expressed it: "We did not restrain the people on shore from coming on board through the day. The captains and seamen, who were in port at the time, paid us many visits".
Wellington Times (NSW : 1899 - 1954), Thursday 2 November 1905
The voyage took an astonishing 11 months. Many of the convict women arrived pregnant, and seven babies were born during the voyage. 

A British newspaper later commented:

"The female convicts carried to Botany Bay, by the Lady Juliana transport, were delivered very soon after their arrival of thirty-seven children, the exact number of men in the ship!"

Elizabeth Barnsley, one of 151 convicts transported on the Lady Juliana, was described by John Nicol as: "a noted sharper and shop-lifter" whose family (she told him) "for one hundred years back, had been swindlers and highwaymen". She petitioned the government agent to wear her own clothes instead of convict dress (which she was allowed while at sea). She was also: "very kind to her fellow convicts, who were poor. They were all anxious to serve her. She was a queen among them".

Nichol also wrote about the parents of Sarah Dorset, who came to the ship before the Lady Juliana left England. When they found that their daughter was on board, they blessed god that they had found their daughter at last. The parents came onto the ship, and the father said to Sarah, with great feeling, "my lost child". The mother sobbed, and Sarah fainted as she fell at their feet.

Sarah was convicted of stealing a greatcoat from a London pub, and had become a "disorderly girl" (prostitute). She was sentenced to seven years' transportation to the colonies.

The Second Fleet

The Second Fleet, also known as the "Death Fleet", consisted of six ships carrying settlers, convicts and supplies to Sydney Cove, Australia, in 1789 (four transport ships and two storeships).

Of the 1006 convicts transported aboard the Second Fleet, one quarter died during the voyage, and about 40 per cent were dead within six months of arrival in Australia.

The firm, Camden, Calvert & King, previously had been involved in transporting slaves to North America, undertook to transport, clothe and feed the convicts for a flat fee, whether they landed alive or not.

The Justinian arrived in Sydney 20th June 1790, with much-needed supplies (Food harvests had failed). A week later, the Surprise, Neptune and Scarborough, arrived with convicts in a terrible condition.


During the nine-month voyage, the convicts were chained below deck and the private contractors reduced the rations, to increase their profits.


Reverend Richard Johnson, who accompanied the First Fleet, later wrote: "The misery I saw amongst them was unexprissable [sic] … their heads, bodies, clothes, blankets, were all full of lice. They were wretched, naked, filthy, dirty, lousy, and many of them utterly unable to stand, to creep, or even stir hand or foot. … covered over almost with their own Nastiness".
Daily Telegraph (Sydney, NSW : 1931 - 1954), Wednesday 9 February 1938

The Chapman

The Chapman departed Cork, Ireland, with 200 male convicts on board, 15 March 1817, from the beginning keeping the convicts in double irons. 

One of the sentry's reported that the convicts were picking the locks. Then the convicts broke the locks and swarmed the decks. 
World's News (Sydney, NSW : 1901 - 1955), Wednesday 18 June 1930
An informer, Michael Collins, hoping for favours, claimed that a mutiny was being planned by the convicts so that they could sail away to America. Five convicts were flogged on suspicion. 

The ship's cook then claimed that the convicts were forcing the hospital bulkhead, and the soldiers opened fire, resulting in 3 convicts being killed and 22 injured. 

Terry Kiernan, a convict, later told the court of inquiry that most of the convicts were in bed, and all were in irons when the shooting began.
It was reported that third mate, Baxter, had shouted "Fire away, boys, and kill them all".

The dead were thrown overboard, and the wounded were not treated until the next morning, as the surgeon was too afraid. 

Four men were declared to be ringleaders of the "mutiny", and chained on the open deck. 

The convicts were put on half rations for the remainder of the journey. And 70-100 convicts were chained every night to an iron cable. 

Surgeon Dewar told the convict Kiernan, "If any one complains about rations I won't flog him. I'll shoot him".

The ship's log supplied evidence of the extreme brutality, which included floggings for convicts rattling their chains, speaking Irish or coughing.
News (Adelaide, SA : 1923 - 1954), Friday 22 October 1954
Governor Macquarie's secretary, Mr Campbell wrote: "This was inhuman, barbarous, and cruel beyond all reason — even a mutiny could not justify it".

Other members of the court reported to Macquarie that no criminal charges could succeed against the officers of the Chapman.

Captain Drake, who was sent home under open arrest, took action to sue Macquarie for unlawfully detaining his ship during the inquiry. (1.) "A History of Australia", by Majorie Barnard.
News (Adelaide, SA : 1923 - 1954), Friday 22 October 1954

The Westmoreland

The convict ship Westmoreland transported 185 convict women and 18 children from various British prisons to Hobart Town, Van Diemen’s Land, arriving 3 December 1836.
Sunday Times (Perth, WA : 1902 - 1954), Sunday 22 October 1944
The Surgeon Superintendent of the Westmoreland, Dr James Ellis, perhaps influenced by Quaker reformer Elizabeth Frye and the British Ladies Society for the Reformation of Female Prisoners, suggested to the Admiralty that the convict women would behave better during the long voyages if they were gainfully employed in making patchwork. 
The Rajah Quilt is a large quilt that was created by women convicts in 1841 whilst travelling from Woolwich to Hobart using materials organised by Lydia Irving of the British Ladies Society for promoting the reformation of female prisoners convict ship sub-committee. The quilt was presented to Jane Franklin. The quilt was sent back to Britain for Elizabeth Fry, the leader of the British Ladies Society. The quilt's provenance was then unclear until it was rediscovered in 1989. It is now held by the National Gallery of Australia
Surgeon-Superintendent James Ellis also observed the seven foot clearance under the beams allowing sufficient room for lofty berths and a good circulation of air, for the convict women.

The journey took 113 days.

Some facts

Between 1788 and 1868, more than 162,000 convicts were transported to Australia.

Around 40,000 Irish convicts were transported to Australia between 1791 and 1867, including at least 325 who had participated in either the Irish Rebellion of 1798, the rebellion of 1803 or the Young Ireland skirmishes in 1848.

The majority of convicts were transported for petty crimes. With the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in Britain in the 1780s, life became very difficult for many people. Machinery was invented that replaced cottage industries and farm work. Many people moved to the cities, which became overcrowded with poor and displaced people. People stole things to survive.

Almost 20% of Australians today have a convict ancestor.