Knowledge (XXG)

Kikatapula

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392:, an English builder and evangelical Christian, who would regularly minister the prisoners, with Kikatapula assisting him in church services. Robinson helped Kikatapula to become conciliated with British rule and when Governor Arthur suggesed that Kikatapula become a mediator between the remaining Palawa and the colonists, Kikatapula agreed. Arthur then installed the former resistance leader in the role of a guide to one of the 'roving parties' tasked with capturing his former comrades. 284:, when Sarah Birch came out of the house and begged Kikatapula to desist. Unaware that Sarah had moved there from Hobart, Kikatapula broke off the attack. Sarah convinced him to leave the gang and join her at Lovely Banks as a farmhand. Kikatapula agreed and stayed at the property. Musquito and the gang continued raiding but in August 1824, Musquito was finally captured and held in custody at Old Hobart Gaol. 440:'s 'friendly mission'. This mission was planned to act as conciliatory expedition to make amicable contact with Palawa in the remote western areas of Van Diemen's Land. But during its progress, it developed into an expedition to herd all Palawa remaining in Tasmania out of their country and into enforced exile on the small islands of 502:
to place all the Palawa he had rounded-up. After staying here several weeks, Kikatapula became listless and although considered married to Pagerly, began womanising. Robinson was unhappy with this behaviour and took Kikatapula with him to Hobart in January 1831 to discuss finalising the plans for the
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making him eligible to give evidence under oath at court, Arthur was reluctant to charge him with any crime. If Kikatapula was placed on trial, he would give sworn statements of the widespread killings of Aboriginal people by the colonists which would embarrass and in turn bring legal charges against
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In November 1823, their "tame mob" were camped back at Grindstone Bay, which had been a favourite hunting ground for the Oyster Bay people but was now part of Silas Gatehouse's sheep property. Musquito bartered with the stockmen there and arranged for three Aboriginal women to provide sexual services
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Thomas Birch and his wife Sarah, took a keen interest in and became quite fond of Kikatapula. They accommodated him in their Hobart mansion, teaching him to read and write English, letting him take care of their children, and baptising him in the Christian faith. He was given his patron's name of Tom
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On 17 July 1828, just he was previously, Kikatapula was formally discharged from custody. This time though, with the hostile intent of the colonists at large being overt and probably assuming he would be shot dead on the streets of Hobart, Kikatapula refused to leave the jail. He petitioned Governor
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After Musquito and another Aboriginal man named Black Jack were both found guilty and hanged to death in February 1825, followed by another two of Kikatapula's kinsmen being executed in 1826, Kikatapula became furious. With the concurrent continued violent expansion of the British into Palawa lands,
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In Hobart, Governor Arthur gave permission for Robinson to take his Palawa guides and round-up the last of the Oyster Bay and Big River people still holding out in central and eastern Van Diemen's Land. Robinson first took all the Palawa living and imprisoned in Hobart back to Swan Island, where he
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in the remote west of the colony. However, Sarah Birch intervened on his behalf and he was released from custody. He immediately fled the settlement and returned to rejoin Musquito and his mob. The gang of insurgents then continued raiding farms and killing settlers throughout the southeast and
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In June 1831, Robinson with Kikatapula and his other guides set out to collect the estimated 76 Indigenous people left in the whole of the eastern half of Tasmania. Kikatapula, by this stage having resided upon the barren islands reserved for their exile, had no inclination of turning over his
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Kikatapula continued to be a guide for Robertson's 'roving party' for much of 1829, but being employed to track down and capture his own people became disconcerting to him. He therefore became non-compliant and obstructive in guiding the soldiers to Palawa hideouts. Much to the frustration of
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and sealing interests in eastern Tasmania, having an outpost at Grindstone Bay in the heart of Kikatapula's Paytirami homeland. In late 1818, there was severe conflict between the Paytirami and Birch's men, and it seems that Kikatapula arrived or was taken to Hobart around this time, as he is
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With Mannalargenna's aid, the mission found Umarrah and his associates in late August and finally toward the end of the year, they located the last hold-outs of the Oyster Bay / Big River people just north of Lake Echo in the central highlands. This group of only 16 people which included the
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arrived in the region soon after, rapidly obtaining a reputation for brutality and the kidnapping of young Palawa women and girls to be used as their sex slaves. Some of Kikatapula's female kin were abducted in this manner, and his clan destroyed the sealers' furs and huts in revenge.
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who was a leading figure of the Tyerrernotepanner tribe. It is perhaps not surprising that Kikatapula led the soldiers to these people who were his traditional enemies. Governor Arthur was pleased with Kikatapula and this outcome, and held Umarrah in jail not as a criminal but as a
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and he also briefly worked as a guide for a British surveying team. In 1821, Thomas Birch died and with it Kikatapula lost one of his main sources of protection in the colonial world that he was transplanted into. He was subsequently treated poorly by the other workers at the farm.
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continued to worsen during his incarceration, with Governor Arthur declaring that 'the natives' should be driven from settled districts altogether. Bands of armed 'roving parties' were deployed to extirpate the Palawa from wherever they were found. Other Palawa leaders such as
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Kikatapula returned to the war-zone and continued the fight against colonisation throughout 1827. In a skirmish with the British in April that possibly killed 30 Palawa, Kikatapula was reported as being shot dead, but this proved false and the raids continued.
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and was determined that it was his patriotic duty to inflict injury upon the white man. Throughout 1825 and 1826 he led many raids against the colonists, which resulted in over a dozen settlers being killed, some of which Kikatapula had personal emnities with.
123:, he spent part of his youth living with the colonists, learning English and being baptised as a Christian. During the 1820s, he withdrew from British ways, and became a feared and formidable leader of Indigenous resistance during the early stages of the 241:
With their combined grievances against the British, and having a gang of Aboriginal followers which at times numbered over 100 Oyster Bay, Big River and Bruny Island people; Musquito and Kikatapula came to be a significant force against the colonists.
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Hearing of Musquito's incarceration, Kikatapula left Lovely Banks in October, and was almost certainly the leader of a group of 64 members of the Oyster Bay tribe who courageously entered Hobart to solicit Musquito's release. Although Governor
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Robertson, his 'roving party' failed to capture a single Aborigine for the whole of 1829. Blame was directly placed on Kikatapula and the other Palawa guides for being duplicitous and Kikatapula was removed from the role in December 1829.
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encouraged Kikatapula to leave the mob and return to Hobart, perhaps so that he could avoid further responsibility for their attacks. On arriving in the town, Kikatapula was arrested and it was organised for him to be transported to the
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was receptive to their entreaties and ordered some huts to be built at Kangaroo Point to accommodate them, Musquito remained incarcerated and the disappointed Oyster Bay people soon returned to the bush and continued their insurgency.
357:, Kikatapula was recaptured by local constables and transferred to Hobart Gaol. The same problems of charging him with any crimes and his giving of disturbing evidence still existed, so the authorities held him without charge. 482:
where Robinson was informed of Governor Arthur's new proclamation of a bounty of £5 for each Palawa captured. Robinson quickly changed the goal of the mission from one of friendly meetings to coercive assembly.
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for the stockmen in exchange for food. When the women were returned, a stockmen shot one of them in the back. The "tame mob" exacted their revenge by killing two of the stockmen and severely wounding another.
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By late 1826, colonial newspapers were calling not only for his capture, but for the extermination of all 'the natives' from the island, and large punitive expeditions were massacring dozens of Palawa.
494:, which was Governor Arthur's next plan to remove the Aboriginal people of Van Diemen's Land by having a line of thousands of colonists many miles long, drive the remaining Palawa southeast into the 447:
Robinson and his mission set out from Hobart in January 1830 with Kikatapula and eleven other Palawa guides to act as envoys in contacting the Indigenous peoples. The other eleven Palawa included
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Kikatapula, however, soon rejoined with Robinson in Launceston to undertake a further expedition back to the northwest of Tasmania to gather the few remaining Palawa there and take them to the
233:, and he was the leader of a group of refugee Palawa men and women called the "tame mob". Musquito convinced Kikatapula to leave the British lifestyle, return to his people and join his mob. 451:, Umarrah, Woureddy and Kikatapula's future wife Pagerly. They first travelled with difficulty through the rugged southwest region of the island, meeting some Ninene people from around the 567:
on Flinders Island. Robinson was to be paid £1,000 for this. Kikatapula, for all his work for the government over the last few years had been promised a boat, but he never saw it.
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In April 1832, they set out from Launceston but Kikatapula soon fell ill. He continued on, but his condition worsened through April and in May Robinson had to leave him at
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After a brief return to Hobart with their captives, Kikatapula and the forty other Palawa were hastily shipped off to Flinders Island for their enforced exile. The
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Kikatapula and other leaders of the resistance stepped up their operations resulting in the conflict becoming even more bloody, evolving into what is known as the
322: 498:. Robinson's mission was to join the Black Line operation but instead continued northeast to try and locate Palawa there. Robinson soon established a base at 185:
region, bringing further violence and displacement upon his people. Kikatapula also experienced conflict with displaced traditional enemy tribes, such as the
404:, the son of a wealthy Scottish plantation owner and his black slave mistress. With six soldiers of the 40th Regiment, Robertson and Kikatapula set out from 574:. Around 13 May, Kikatapula died and was buried at the back of the Van Diemen's Land Company store. His was the first Christian burial at what is now 146:. After the successful removal of the most notable Palawa (including himself), Kikatapula died guiding Robinson during a later expedition in 1832. 130:
He was eventually caught and jailed and, with limited options, he agreed to act as a guide for a roving party of armed colonists to capture other
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while still a youth. He bore a large notable scar in the middle of his forehead, inflicted from an unknown source during his harsh upbringing.
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At some stage during his adolescence, Kikatapula became closely associated with Thomas Birch, a prominent British colonist who arrived in
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from Eastern Tasmania. As a young child, he witnessed the arrival of the first European sailing vessel his clan had seen. It anchored off
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those in authority. Arthur therefore, to the ire of the colonial press, released Kikatapula without charge in January 1827.
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remaining people to the British. His indifference forced Robinson to obtain the services of another Palawa man named
186: 578:. His unmarked grave is located in the park between West Beach and North Terrace at the top end of Wilson Street. 472: 437: 389: 139: 336:, where Governor Arthur came to visit him. Probably because Kikatapula spoke English quite well and had been 499: 813: 258: 159: 135: 131: 467:
of Aboriginal people by the company's workers. The mission managed to rescue a young Palawa man named
818: 487: 155: 108: 329:. In a morning attack, the soldiers killed 14 Palawa and captured another 10, including Kikatapula. 544:
was all that was left of a population that numbered over a thousand only a few decades previously.
517: 495: 281: 262: 250: 464: 405: 326: 214: 107:– 13 May 1832) was a leading Indigenous figure during the British invasion and colonisation of 32: 782: 757: 725: 693: 659: 479: 401: 254: 557: 468: 182: 385:, where he would be safe from colonial retribution, but instead Arthur kept him locked up. 521: 504: 421: 412: 222: 143: 142:
on his 'friendly mission' to round up the remaining Indigenous people and exile them to
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In June 1824, the gang were preparing to ransack the homestead at Lovely Banks near
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central parts of the island, with Kikatapula being clearly identified as a leader.
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had appropriated a large area of land at Cape Grim and Robinson was told of the
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Friendly Mission, the Tasmanian journals and papers of George Augustus Robinson
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who had been sent to Van Diemen's Land for resisting British occupation in the
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Kikatapula considered his people who had died at the hands of the British as
261:, setting fire to the house and killing a servant. They then raided farms at 257:. By December though, they managed to regroup and raid a settler property at 553: 456: 448: 361: 298: 124: 436:
Kikatapula was then immediately transferred to the position of a guide for
459:, encountering more Palawa, but having Umarrah abscond along the way. The 416: 374: 321:
In November of that year, a detachment of constables and soldiers of the
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In 1820, the Birches put Kikatapula to work on their Duck Hole Farm near
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as they are also known. Kikatapula was then ordered to accompany
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Tracking down the last remaining Oyster Bay/Big River people
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area. They then proceeded north along the west coast toward
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and after a brief skirmish, captured five people, including
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recorded as being in the hospital at Hobart in early 1819.
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was over and Van Diemen's Land had been almost completely
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caught up with Kikatapula's gang at Bank Head Farm near
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While continuing his stay in jail, Kikatapula met with
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Kickerterpoller, Black Tom, Black Tom Birch, Kikatamana
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Kikatapula was posted to guide the 'roving party' of
87: 79: 58: 45: 23: 154:Kikatapula was born around the year 1800 into the 210:Birch, but was more commonly known as Black Tom. 588:List of Indigenous Australian historical figures 229:region, camped at Duck Hole Farm. His name was 8: 777:Reynolds, Henry; Clements, Nicholas (2021). 408:in November 1828 to hunt down 'the blacks'. 683: 681: 679: 677: 675: 31: 20: 411:They soon tracked a group of Palawa near 253:tracked down and dispersed the mob near 715: 713: 711: 709: 599: 377:took the fight up against the British. 829:Resistance to colonialism in Australia 747: 745: 743: 741: 649: 647: 645: 643: 641: 639: 637: 635: 633: 631: 629: 627: 625: 623: 345:Continued conflict and re-imprisonment 181:and pastoral settlers had entered the 16:Indigenous Tasmanian resistance leader 621: 619: 617: 615: 613: 611: 609: 607: 605: 603: 431: 353:In November 1827, at Bryn Estyn near 265:before retreating into the interior. 221:In late 1822, an Aboriginal man from 7: 490:in October, where they heard of the 688:Plomley, NJB; Robinson, GA (2008). 516:moved the site of exile firstly to 471:from the sealers located at nearby 565:Wybalenna Aboriginal Establishment 14: 756:. Crows Nest: Allen & Unwin. 395: 274:Macquarie Harbour Penal Station 201:in 1808. Birch had significant 560:of its Indigenous population. 237:Insurgency against the British 1: 658:. Mile End: Wakefield Press. 101: 49: 720:Clements, Nicholas (2014). 478:In July 1830, they reached 845: 37:Painting of Kikatapula by 548:Last expedition and death 503:exile of all Palawa onto 461:Van Diemen's Land Company 332:Kikatapula was placed in 193:Household of Thomas Birch 30: 824:Van Diemen's Land people 438:George Augustus Robinson 432:'Friendly mission' guide 390:George Augustus Robinson 140:George Augustus Robinson 486:The mission arrived in 91:Pagerly (Tuererningher) 752:Ryan, Lyndall (2012). 381:Arthur to send him to 177:By the 1810s, convict 360:In the meantime, the 132:Aboriginal Tasmanians 781:. Sydney: NewSouth. 754:Tasmanian Aborigines 654:Cox, Robert (2021). 396:'Roving party' guide 809:History of Tasmania 692:. Hobart: Quintus. 558:ethnically cleansed 536:resistance leaders 532:to help guide him. 518:Gun Carriage Island 496:Forestier Peninsula 305:Capture and release 251:punitive expedition 465:Cape Grim massacre 724:. St Lucia: UQP. 402:Gilbert Robertson 187:Tyerrernotepanner 160:Oyster Bay people 111:, later known as 109:Van Diemen's Land 95: 94: 836: 793: 792: 774: 768: 767: 749: 736: 735: 717: 704: 703: 685: 670: 669: 651: 469:Tunnerminnerwait 106: 103: 80:Other names 68: 66: 54: 51: 35: 21: 844: 843: 839: 838: 837: 835: 834: 833: 799: 798: 797: 796: 789: 776: 775: 771: 764: 751: 750: 739: 732: 719: 718: 707: 700: 687: 686: 673: 666: 653: 652: 601: 596: 584: 550: 522:Flinders Island 513: 505:Flinders Island 434: 422:prisoner of war 413:Little Swanport 398: 347: 307: 239: 223:New South Wales 195: 152: 144:Flinders Island 121:Black Tom Birch 117:Kickerterpoller 104: 75: 70: 64: 62: 52: 41: 26: 17: 12: 11: 5: 842: 840: 832: 831: 826: 821: 816: 811: 801: 800: 795: 794: 787: 779:Tongerlongeter 769: 762: 737: 730: 705: 698: 671: 664: 598: 597: 595: 592: 591: 590: 583: 580: 549: 546: 538:Tongerlongeter 512: 509: 473:Robbins Island 433: 430: 397: 394: 367:Tongerlongeter 346: 343: 306: 303: 238: 235: 194: 191: 151: 148: 115:. Also called 93: 92: 89: 85: 84: 81: 77: 76: 71: 60: 56: 55: 47: 43: 42: 36: 28: 27: 24: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 841: 830: 827: 825: 822: 820: 817: 815: 812: 810: 807: 806: 804: 790: 788:9781742237770 784: 780: 773: 770: 765: 763:9781742370682 759: 755: 748: 746: 744: 742: 738: 733: 731:9780702250064 727: 723: 722:The Black War 716: 714: 712: 710: 706: 701: 699:9780977557226 695: 691: 684: 682: 680: 678: 676: 672: 667: 665:9781743058671 661: 657: 650: 648: 646: 644: 642: 640: 638: 636: 634: 632: 630: 628: 626: 624: 622: 620: 618: 616: 614: 612: 610: 608: 606: 604: 600: 593: 589: 586: 585: 581: 579: 577: 573: 568: 566: 561: 559: 555: 547: 545: 543: 542:Montpelliatta 539: 533: 531: 530:Mannalargenna 525: 523: 519: 510: 508: 506: 501: 497: 493: 489: 484: 481: 480:Circular Head 476: 474: 470: 466: 462: 458: 454: 450: 445: 443: 439: 429: 425: 423: 418: 414: 409: 407: 403: 393: 391: 386: 384: 378: 376: 372: 371:Montpelliatta 368: 363: 358: 356: 351: 344: 342: 339: 335: 334:Richmond Gaol 330: 328: 324: 323:40th Regiment 319: 315: 312: 304: 302: 300: 294: 291: 290:George Arthur 285: 283: 278: 275: 270: 266: 264: 260: 256: 252: 247: 243: 236: 234: 232: 228: 224: 219: 216: 211: 207: 204: 200: 192: 190: 188: 184: 180: 175: 172: 167: 165: 161: 157: 149: 147: 145: 141: 137: 133: 128: 126: 122: 118: 114: 110: 99: 90: 86: 82: 78: 74: 61: 57: 48: 44: 40: 34: 29: 22: 19: 814:1800s births 778: 772: 753: 721: 689: 656:Broken Spear 655: 569: 562: 551: 534: 526: 514: 485: 477: 446: 435: 426: 410: 399: 387: 379: 359: 352: 348: 331: 320: 316: 308: 295: 286: 279: 267: 259:Mayfield Bay 248: 244: 240: 220: 212: 208: 196: 176: 168: 164:Maria Island 158:clan of the 153: 129: 120: 116: 97: 96: 18: 819:1832 deaths 500:Swan Island 442:Bass Strait 355:New Norfolk 179:bushrangers 105: 1800 69:13 May 1832 53: 1800 39:Thomas Bock 803:Categories 594:References 520:, then to 492:Black Line 488:Launceston 453:Port Davey 183:Oyster Bay 150:Early life 98:Kikatapula 65:1832-05-13 25:Kikatapula 554:Black War 457:Cape Grim 449:Truganini 362:Black War 299:Black War 282:Colebrook 263:Cranbrook 156:Paytirami 125:Black War 582:See also 406:Richmond 338:baptised 327:Orielton 269:Musquito 231:Musquito 215:Richmond 169:British 113:Tasmania 572:Emu Bay 417:Umarrah 383:England 375:Umarrah 311:martyrs 255:Swansea 203:whaling 171:sealers 73:Emu Bay 785:  760:  728:  696:  662:  576:Burnie 227:Sydney 199:Hobart 136:Palawa 88:Spouse 783:ISBN 758:ISBN 726:ISBN 694:ISBN 660:ISBN 540:and 373:and 59:Died 46:Born 134:or 119:or 805:: 740:^ 708:^ 674:^ 602:^ 524:. 507:. 475:. 444:. 424:. 369:, 301:. 249:A 127:. 102:c. 50:c. 791:. 766:. 734:. 702:. 668:. 100:( 67:) 63:(

Index


Thomas Bock
Emu Bay
Van Diemen's Land
Tasmania
Black War
Aboriginal Tasmanians
Palawa
George Augustus Robinson
Flinders Island
Paytirami
Oyster Bay people
Maria Island
sealers
bushrangers
Oyster Bay
Tyerrernotepanner
Hobart
whaling
Richmond
New South Wales
Sydney
Musquito
punitive expedition
Swansea
Mayfield Bay
Cranbrook
Musquito
Macquarie Harbour Penal Station
Colebrook

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