1877:
Dec. 12 - Despite years of
agitation to move the customs house from Sweers Island, William Thornton
- the Chief Collector of Customs - writes to the Colonial Treasurer to
suggest that it would be "... impolitic in the extreme to remove the Head
Quarters of the Customs from Sweers Island to Normanton ..." (168)
where a branch of the customs had already been established.
1878:
Dec. 30 - W.J. Greenaway (169)
appointed as sub-collector of customs at Sweers Island to replace McManus,
who had drowned. (170)
1880:
Jun. 16 - A report (171)
concerning the removal of the customs establishment from Sweers Island
to Normanton carries the marginal notes: 'Approved subject to the reduction
in boatmen employed - I see the £75 is only for shifting - inquiry
should be made to see it it is worth shifting.' 'Removal of customs ...
approved ... 31.8.80.' The expenses for the removal of the customs was
paid from contingencies.
(172
Sept. 15 - Captain C. Pennefather
arrived at Sweers Island from Thursday Island aboard Q.G.S. PEARL to chart
the waters around Point Barker. Because he had not been able to procure
a sufficient supply of water at Thursday Island, he "filled up at this
place, the water being good and plentiful". (173
In the official report presented to both Houses of the Queensland Parliament,
Captain Pennefather reports that the Island is "lightly timbered; with
soil of loose sandy nature. At the time of our visit it presented a very
sterile appearance owing to want of rain and its being overstocked; in
fact, it seemed wonderful how the quantity of stock, over 1200 in number
(cattle, sheep and goats), managed to exist. (174)
He also reports that "there are two cocoa-nut trees on the Island, thriving
and doing well, also guavas, dates, tamarinds, etc., - the climate of the
place being apparently well suited to the growth of fruits of the kind".
(175)
As far as the township is concerned,
Pennefather was less enthusiastic, observing that "the few remaining buildings
on the island are very much affected with white ants, and would hardly
pay for removal. The site of the once thriving township of Carnarvon is
only to be recognised by the heaps of broken bottles which mark the positions
of the various buildings which have now totally disappeared". (176)
More interestingly, Captain
Pennefather mentions the inscribed tree at Point Inscription and is the
first of several authors (177) to suggest that the earlier date was of
Dutch origin. He reports that "on an old tree is to be seen the name of
H.M.S. INVESTIGATOR with the date 1802, and a still earlier date, supposed
to have been carved by the Dutch." (178)
Sept. 20 - "Having filled up
with fuel and water, sailed from Sweer's" (179)
to survey the other islands and the adjacent mainland, subsequently arriving
at Thursday Island on 25th October.
?1889:
W. Saville-Kent visited Sweers
Island. In his book on the Great Barrier Reef (180),
he describes and shows photographs of specimens of coral rock conglomerate
collected from Sweers Island. In addition he reports (181)
that "had space permitted, another highly interesting and instructive photograph
would have been reproduced here viz., a view of the low sand cliff immediately
facing the beach on Sweer's Island, where the specimens just described
were collected ...... The aspect of this cliff is very singular ..... Some
twenty years ago Sweer's Island was visited by a devastating hurricane,
which well nigh wrecked the homestead established there, and during it
the cliff, ranging from ten to twenty feet in height, was more or less
completely submerged ....... The action of the latest hurricane, and accompanying
inundation ....... was to undermine an extensive area of the face of the
cliff, to such an extent, that a large portion has fallen down and lies
scattered in huge, heaped-up blocks at high-tide level. A little way inland,
out of the reach of the sea and spray, the stratum of siliceous sand and
ironstone gravel occurs without any admixture of carbonate of lime."
1901:
With the abandonment of Carnarvon,
Sweers Island reverted to Aboriginal use. It seems likely that animals
left on the island were killed by the natives.
The first anthropologist to
visit the area was Dr. Walter E. Roth, Northern Protectors of Aborigines,
who was accompanied by native police from the mainland and J.F. Bailey,
Director of the Brisbane Botanic Gardens. Tindale claims that the visit
is not well documented although it is reported that a small plant collection
from Bentinck Island and some photographic negatives are in existence.
The only negative so far located
(182)
shows a group of eight men in front of a row of dilapidated buildings in
the deserted township. [Correspondence (183))
from the Queensland Herbarium claims that no records of plant collections
from Bentinck Island collected by J.F. Bailey are held there although Blake
(184)
cites specimens of Melaleuca leucodendra and M. viridiflora
collected in June 1901 on Bentinck and Sweers Island respectively.]
Roth's report (185)
mentions the inscribed tree as well as that "a few remains of Landsborough's
cottage are still visible. The island itself is at present held under occupation
license: it is well watered, carries about 700 sheep and 400 goats, and
has a good anchorage."
1902:
Oct. - "SS WATER LILY rescued
the crew of the schooner MYSTERY after she was wrecked at Albany Heads
in October while bound from Sweers island to Burketown." (186)
1903:
June 11 - Dr. Walter E. Roth,
Northern Protectors of Aborigines, departs Normanton in the MELBIDIR accompanied
by Charles Hedley, Conchologist from the Australian Museum, Sydney, constable
Warner and two trackers. (187)
June 13 - Roth's party "arrived
at Sweers Island, anchoring in the Roads, and took in some fresh water."
From here, they travelled to various of the islands around Sweers Island.
In his report. Roth mentions that "... Mr. Hedley has made an excellent
collection of marine zoology, including about 400 species of molluscs:
he is of opinion that the Gulf of Carpentaria fauna should be considered
an out-lier rather of the indian than of the Pacific Ocean. The salient
characters of the region are the slight development of reef-building corals,
and their associated fauna, as compared with the Torres Strait and the
East Coast of Queensland. Towards the head of the Gulf, the corals entirely
disappear, and the mangrove-swamp fauna is developed in great luxuriance..."
(188)
"After service around several
Australian ports, the old iron paddle steamer FRANCIS CADELL, 140 tons,
was abandoned as a derelict in the river near Burketown," (189)
1908:
"The ketch MARK TWAIN sprang
a leak and foundered near Speers Island on 27 July." (190)
1910:
Howard, Northern Protector
of Aborigines (and successor to Roth) visits Bentinck Island.
1915:
Mr. J. Bleakley, Chief Protector
of Aboriginals, visited the Bentinck- Sweers Island area.
1916
(?):
John MacKenzie who, in 1911,
had obtained a government lease over Sweers Island and part of Bentinck
Island where he had earlier lived, moved to Sweers Island to carry out
'lime-burning' from a kiln (191)
constructed on the western side of Inspection Hill. Lime was sold around
the Gulf ports. He had a house and kept sheep, goats and horses. He had
two Aboriginal helpers from Mornington Island who soon became disenchanted
by the continual diet of goats' heads and livers and returned to Mornington
Island. (192)
MacKenzie then obtained Aboriginal-Malay halfcasts as helpers and a white
partner named Nelson. (193)
1917:
First missionary, the Rev.
Robert Hall, came to Mornington Island from Mapoon. MORNING STAR was the
mission lugger. (194)
After Rev. Hall was killed, the Police, led by Sergeant Scanlon, formed
a search party for the killers. Using the MORNING STAR they sailed from
Burketown for Sweers island to obtain "more wood and water .... and the
policemen shot some of the goats and sheep left there. We camped there
to cook the meat and sailed next day for Dugong River on Mornington Island."
(195)
Bleakley visits Bentinck Island.
1918:
According to Tindale (196),
a Bentinck islander account recalls a hostile attack by a white party in
1918. Accompanied by dogs and mounted, the party consisted of 'an unidentified
white man with helpers' and was reportedly responsible for the deaths of
eleven persons. Elsewhere (197)
Tindale reports the death in c.1918 of 'Ngiltalngati' as a result of being
"shot by white man who came in a boat from Sweers Island: ran away to top
of sand hills at Berumoi and died". This appears to be supported (198)
by a detailed verbal account provided by Roma Kelly (Dibirdibi Mambunkingathi)
who was born at Mambunki on Bentinck Island in 1917. (199)
This account indicates that the European party almost certainly included
McKenzie, but it is unclear who was with him on Bentinck Island at the
time of the massacre.
There are numerous folk tales
surrounding the killing of the last of MacKenzie's goats and a horse,
[Roughsey pp. 97-98: An old
Kaiadilt man now living at Mornington told me some stories about his early
life on Bentinck and his first sight of white men and their boats. Their
first meeting with the white man was when a small guano mine was worked
on Sweers Island, just across from Bentinck. A very small town called Carnarvon
was built to house the workers. This is how old Thadudgunthee, or Jack
as we now call him, remembers those days.
The white
men had a big camp on Sweers. One day they came across to Bentinck Island
after water. As soon as they came ashore they started shooting at us .......
After a few years the white men all got in their boats and left Sweers
..... Next morning we went on to the town where we collected many things.
We found a few tomahawks and many pieces of steel and nails to make spearheads.
While we were looking about for these things we saw strange animals coming
down to the well. The animals were white and had two sticks on their heads.
We had never seen goats before but we decided to kill and eat them. The
well had the only water on the island so we camped there and speared three
or four each day until they were all gone.
Long after the Kaiadilt left
Sweers, another white man called McKenzie came to live on the island. He
frightened the Bentincks away by shooting at them.]
1922:
John MacKenzie's operation
on the island ceased. [Why?]
1925-27:
Three efforts were made by
officers from the Mornington Island Mission to make contact with the Bentinck
islanders. These attempts were carried out during beche-de-mer operations
by Mornington Islanders using Fowler Island as a base. The first really
successful contact was in late 1927 when 48 Bentinck Islanders were contacted
and photographed in groups with the missionary officers.
1934:
The Island is declared as a
'reserve for the use of the Aboriginal inhabitants of the State' (200)
1937:
Bleakley and a party of Government
Ministers made a visit to Bentinck Island.
1940:
Eleven Bentinck Islanders were
sent to Aurukun Mission after the killing of a Mornington islander, 'Cripple
Jack', had occurred on Allen Island. Relationships between the Mornington
and Bentinck Islanders had deteriorated since the beche-de-mer operations
of the 1925-27 period. These eleven natives were held at Aurukun until
1953 when they were sent to Mornington Island to join the remainder of
the Bentinck Islanders.
1942:
Oct. 1 - Walkabout' Magazine
has an article by 'E.D.F.' entitled 'An Historic Island' which provides
an interesting account of Sweers Island, its history and that "to-day,
the ruins of the old settlement on Sweer's Island are plainly visible.
Frameworks of buildings and a few old rusty tanks and sheets of iron show
that the island once supported a considerable population. An old ant-eaten
jetty still stands. The land cleared and ploughed by the hardy settlers
has almost disappeared in the encroaching bush. Lonely and forgotten are
a number of graves on a tree-choked rise overlooking the old town, Most
of the inscriptions have been obliterated by weather and time," (201)
1943:
Oct. - RAAF personnel from
the radar station no. 313 (established on Mornington Island in March 1943)
visit the island in the mission launch, arriving off Sweers Island ('Milt']
about midday. Deciding to go ashore to look at the township of Carnarvon,
they were attacked by a group of spearthrowing Kaiadilt. The visitors retreated
to the launch and fired several shots, killing 'Kongarangati dawart', a
young Bentinck man. (202)
Some of the warning shots are reported to have hit a Kaiadilt woman in
the thigh while she was digging for yams inland. (203)
The Kaiadilt killed on the beach was buried nearby.
Detailed investigations were
conducted by the mission superintendent J.B. McCarthy, the airforce and
the Queensland Police and the facts taken from the various witnesses (204)
can be summarised as follows:
"... camped ... on.., a narrow
sand point opposite Raft Point ..... "...... two RAAF men went down along
the beach to have a look at a well and a grave
...... started to walk up the
beach to where the grave was .....
"...... and I decided to go
and have a look at the well and remains of an old building there ......
We had walked about fifty yards along the beach...."
"Some men went down the beach
and the others up along the beach collecting wood to light a fire for tea.
I went over the sandhill, and waited at an old wreck for Mitchener, Jack
to come back"
"Mitchener, Jack and myself
went along the beach towards the old wreck.... Lewis, Gully and myself
walked along the beach in the opposite direction .... to have a look at
a well and the remains of a camp."
"Wyllie, Jack and myself went
along the beach towards an old wreck collecting wood...... When I arrived
back with the wood, I sat on the beach ..... Lewis Wyllie and Gully walked
along the beach in the opposite direction to where we were gathering wood
to have a look at a native well."
"The first job to do was to
gather wood....., and we brought it back and Jack built a fire..... and
Wyllie and I decided to go and have a look at the well and remains of an
old building there. We walked about 50 yds along the beach when we heard
natives screaming out......
"Mitchener. Jack and myself
went towards an old wreck gathering fire-wood..... .....Lewis, Gully and
I went to have a look at a well in the opposite direction. When we were
about 100 yds along the beach we heard a lot of shouting...."
"...... the body was buried
..... on the side of a small hill sloping to the water edge and the body
would be about 25 ft above HWM and about 30 yds from the water edge. Beyond
the grave the hill extended another 20 ft or so ......
1945:
Twenty-five Bentinck Islanders
visited Mornington Island for a month in the June-July period.
1946:
'G.P.' writing in 1946, describes
the township as follows: "Today, the ruins of the old settlement on Sweer's
Island are plainly visible. Frameworks of many buildings and rusted tanks
and sheets of iron, and an old ant-eaten jetty remain. Lonely and forgotten
are a number of graves on a tree-choked rise overlooking the old settlement.
Most of the inscriptions have been obliterated by weather and Time. One
cannot help wondering what would have been the result of the Sweer's Island
settlement had it remained. Would It have prospered or would its island
seclusion have eventually caused its abandonment?" (205)
1947:
Aug. - Forty-two Aboriginals
were found in very poor condition on Sweers Island. They were taken to
the Mornington Island Mission by the Superintendent Rev. J.B. McCarthy.
Subsequent examination in December of the natives remaining on Bentinck
Island revealed a prevalence of malnutrition and disease (tuberculosis
and dysentery).
1948:
February - Cyclone. The mission
launch anchored off Sweers Island and found seven men and their wives and
families which were taken aboard and moved to Mornington Island. (206)
1960:
Norman Tindale, with a party
containing 20 Kaiadilt people, visited the Bentinck-Sweers Island area.
Some archaeological investigation was carried out around Inscription Point
and in the coastal area west of Inspection Hill.
1963:
Dec. - Curators of the Australian
Museum (Drs. McMichael and Yaldwyn) visited Sweers Island and collected
marine intertidal organisms on behalf of the Australian Museum.
1970:
Southers and Dickens commenced
the erection of a tourist facility and purchased freehold property in parts
of the old township of Carnarvon. Subsequently, the interests were purchased
by Broken Hill South, who investigated the Island as a potential shipping
point for Lady Annie phosphate rock.
1971:
Jan.-Feb. - Mr. John Dymock,
an amateur naturalist, visits the Island and prepares a map and lists showing
flora, fauna and sites of historical interest. (207)
Mar. - All freehold land within
the town, of Carnarvon, with the exception of portions 2, 3, 8, 10, 11,
12, 13, is resumed by the Crown. (208)
1973:
Oct. 6 - 12 - Drs. P. Saenger,
M.S. Hopkins and C.C. McIvor, aboard the KATOORA. completed a biological
survey of the Island and made collections as part of the investigations
to assess the environmental impact of the proposed port development by
Broken Hill South Pty. Ltd.
1982:
Dec. 14 - Tenders called for
the development of a tourist complex on Sweers Island closed with no responses
received. Aboriginal protests against such a development had been made
on the grounds that the island was a sacred tribal area but the Lands Minister,
Mr. Glasson, said that the lack of interest was due to economic considerations.
(209)
The Minister stressed that the Government would still study any future
proposals for a Sweers Island tourist venture.
1988:
May - "A new resort has opened
up on Sweers Island in the Wellesley Group and caters for reef and offshore
fishing. Although only small scale at this stage, it certainly indicates
the trends for the future." (210)
1989:
The boundaries of the Aboriginal
Reserve on the Island are redefined to exclude previously surveyed areas
of crown land and the airstrip. (211) Two sections are established, the
northern section comprises 775 ha while the southern section is of 480
ha.
[Title Page] [Part 1]
[Part 2] [Part 3] [Notes]
[The Investigator Tree]
