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Buckley's Chance

Page 34

by Garry Linnell


  Fawkner, John Pascoe. John Pascoe Fawkner’s Sullivan Bay Reminiscences. Lavender Hill Multimedia, 2002.

  Feltham, John. The Picture of London for 1803. Lewis and Company, 1802.

  Female Convicts Research Centre (contributors). Convict Lives: Women at Cascades Female Factory. Convict Women’s Press, 2012.

  Flannery, Tim (ed.). The Birth of Melbourne. Text Publishing, 2002.

  Flannery, Tim (edited and introduced by). The Life and Adventures of William Buckley. Text Publishing, 2002.

  Fox, Jacqueline. Bound by Every Duty: John Lewes Pedder, Chief Justice of Van Diemen’s Land. Australian Scholarly, 2018.

  Frankel, David and Major, Janine (eds.). Victorian Aboriginal Life and Customs: Through Early European Eyes. Bundoora La Trobe University. Ebureau, 2017.

  Futility Closet. The Wild White Man. Podcast 189. www.futilitycloset.com/2018/02/19/podcast-episode-189-wild-white-man/.

  Gammage, Bill. The Biggest Estate on Earth: How Aborigines Made Australia. Allen & Unwin, 2012.

  Garner, Alan, Strandloper. Harvill Press, 1996.

  Garner, Alan. The Voice That Thunders: Essays and Lectures. Harvill Press, 1997.

  Goodridge, Charles Medyett. Narrative of a Voyage to the South Seas, and the Shipwreck of the Princess of Wales Cutter, with an Account of Two Years Residence on an Uninhabited Island. W. C. Featherstone, 1841.

  Goodridge, Charles Medyett. Statistical View of Van Diemen’s Land … Forming a Complete Emigrant’s Guide. Hamilton and Adams, 1832.

  Gregory, Edmund. Narrative of James Murrells. Self-published, 1896.

  Gwynne, S. C. Empire of the Summer Moon. Scribner, 2010.

  Harcourt, Rex. Southern Invasion, Northern Conquest. Golden Point Press, 2001.

  Hayden, Kevin. Wild White Man: a Condensed Account of the Adventures of William Buckley Who Lived in Exile for 32 Years (1803–35) amongst the Black People of the Unexplored Regions of Port Phillip. Marine History Publications, 1976.

  Haythornthwaite, Phillip J. Redcoats: the British Soldiers of the Napoleonic Wars. Pen and Sword Books Ltd, 2012.

  Hill, Barry. Buckley, Our Imagination, Hope. In ‘William Buckley: rediscovered’, Geelong Art Gallery, 2001.

  Hitchcock, Tim. The Streets of London: from the Great Fire to the Great Stink. Rivers Oram Press, 2003.

  Howitt, Alfred William. Native Tribes of Southeast Australia. Creative Media Partners, 2015.

  Hudspeth, W. H. Rise and Fall of Charles Swanston. ‘Papers and proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania’, 1948.

  Hughes, Robert. The Fatal Shore. Vintage, 2003.

  Jackson, Lee. Dirty Old London: the Victorian Fight against Filth. Yale University Press, 2014.

  Jay, Mike. The Unfortunate Colonel Despard. Bantam, 2005.

  Jones, Pauline (ed.). Historical Records of Victoria. Volume 1: beginnings of permanent government. Victorian Government Printing Office, 1981.

  Karskens, Grace. The Colony: a History of Early Sydney. Allen & Unwin, 2010.

  Kruta, Vladislav. Dr John Lhotsky: the Turbulent Australian Writer, Naturalist and Explorer. Australia Felix literary club, 1977.

  Labilliere, Francis Peter. Early History of the Colony of Victoria, from Its Discovery to Its Establishment as a Self-Governing Province of the British Empire. Sampson Low, Marston, Searle and Rivington, 1878.

  Langhorne, George. Reminiscenses of James Buckley Who Lived for Thirty Years among the Wallawarro or Watourong Tribes at Geelong Port Phillip, Communicated by Him to George Langhorne. Manuscript. First published in The Age, 29 July 1911.

  Levis, John. These Are the Names: Jewish Lives in Australia 1788–1850. Melbourne University Publishing, 2013.

  Lewis, Milton J. Medicine in Colonial Australia, 1788–1900. Medical Journal of Australia, 201(1), July 2014.

  Maynard, John and Haskins, Victoria. Living with the Locals: Early Europeans’ Experience of Indigenous Life. National Library of Australia, 2016.

  McConvell, Patrick, Kelly, Piers, Lacrampe, Sebastien. Skin, Kin and Clan: the Dynamics of Social Categories in Indigenous Australia. ANU Press, 2018.

  McPhee, Alex. The First Chapter in the History of Victoria. E. W. Cole, 1911.

  Memmott, Paul. Gunya, Goondie and Wurley: the Aboriginal Architecture of Australia. University of Queensland Press, 2007.

  Morton, Joseph C. The American Revolution. Greenwood, 2003.

  Morgan, John. ‘Memorial: to the right honorable the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, the right honorable the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury, and to Her Majesty’s Secretary of State for the colonies, the right honorable Earl Grey, the humble memorial of John Morgan, now resident in Hobart Town, Van Diemen’s Land, and one of the coroners of the territory.’ Private circulation, 1852.

  Morgan, John. The Life and Adventures of William Buckley, Thirty-Two Years a Wanderer amongst the Aborigines of the Then Unexplored Country round Port Phillip, Now the Province of Victoria. Archibald MacDougall, 1852.

  Mullaly, Paul R. Crime in the Port Phillip District, 1835–51. Hybrid Publishers, 2008.

  Munster, Peter M. Putting Batman and Buckley on the Map of St Leonards: the Story of Early Contact and Settlement at St Leonards, Victoria. 2004.

  Nichols, Mary (ed.). The Diary of the Reverend Robert Knopwood, 1803–1838: First Chaplain of Van Diemen’s Land. Tasmanian Historical Research Association, 1977.

  Pascoe, Bruce. Convincing Ground: Learning to Fall in Love with Your Country. Aboriginal Studies Press, 2007.

  Pascoe, Bruce. Dark Emu. Magabala Books, 2014.

  Pascoe, Bruce. Wathaurong – the People Who Said No. Wathaurong Aboriginal Co-operative, 2003.

  Pateshall, Nicholas. A Short Account of a Voyage around the Globe in HMS Calcutta 1803–1804. Edited with an introduction by Marjorie Tipping. Queensberry Hill Press, 1980.

  Preston, Diane. Paradise in Chains: The Bounty Mutiny and the Founding of Australia. Bloomsbury, 2017.

  Pyke, W. T. (ed.). Savage Life in Australia: The Story of William Buckley the Runaway Convict Who Lived Thirty-Two Years among the Black of Australia. E. W. Cole, 1889.

  Renshaw, Will. Marvellous Melbourne and Spiritual Power. Acorn Press, 2014.

  Reynolds, Henry. The Other Side of the Frontier: Aboriginal Resistance to the European Invasion of Australia. University of New South Wales Press Ltd, 2006.

  Robertson, Craig. Buckley’s Hope. Scribe, 1980.

  Rogers, Thomas. ‘Friendly’ and ‘hostile’ Aboriginal Clans: the Search for Gellibrand and Hesse. History of Australia, Volume 13, 2016.

  Rogers, Thomas James. The Civilization of Port Phillip: Settler Ideology, Violence and Rhetorical Possession. Melbourne University Publishing, 2018.

  Rogers, Woodes. A Cruising Voyage around the World, First to the South Seas … British Library Collections, 1712.

  Ryan, Lyndall. Tasmanian Aborigines: a History Since 1803. Allen & Unwin, 2012.

  Seal, Graham. The Savage Shore: Extraordinary Stories of Survival and Tragedy from the Early Voyages of Discovery. Yale University Press, 2016.

  Selcraig, Bruce. The Real Robinson Crusoe. Smithsonian magazine, 2005.

  Schneid, Frederick C. Napoleon’s Conquest of Europe: the War of the Third Coalition. Praeger Publishers, 2005.

  Seal, Graham. Great Convict Stories: Dramatic and Moving Tales from Australia’s Brutal Early Years. Allen & Unwin, 2017.

  Shaw, A. G. L. A History of the Port Phillip district: Victoria before Separation. Melbourne University Publishing, 2003.

  Shillinglaw, John J. (ed.). Historical Records of Port Phillip: the First Annals of the Colony of Victoria. Government Printer, Melbourne, 1870.

  Source documents for William Buckley. www.williambuckleyconvict.wordpress.com.

  Staniforth, Mark. Diet, Disease and Death at Sea on the Voyage to Australia, 1837–1839. International Journal of Maritime History, 1996.

  Stephens, Geoffrey. Knopwood: a Biography. Moonah, 1990.

  Sullivan, Martin. Men and Women of Port Phillip. Hale and Ironm
onger, 1985.

  Taylor, Rebe. The Wedge Collection and the Conundrum of Humane Colonization. Meanjin. Summer, 2017.

  Tipping, Marjorie. Convicts Unbound: The Story of the Calcutta Convicts and Their Settlement in Australia. Viking O’Neil, 1988.

  Todd, Andrew alias William. The Todd Journal. Geelong Historical Society, 1989.

  Tuckfield, Francis. The Journal of Francis Tuckfield, Missionary to Port Phillip, Southern Australia, 1937. Unpublished (microform). National Library of Australia.

  Tudenhope, Cecily, M. William Buckley. Hall’s Book Store, 1962.

  Tuckey, J. H. An Account of a Voyage to Establish a Colony at Port Phillip, in Bass’s Strait, on the South Coast of New South Wales, in His Majesty’s Ship Calcutta, in the Years 1802–3–4. Longman and co, 1805.

  Vaux, James Hardy. A New and Comprehensive Vocabulary of the Flash Language. Online edition at Project Gutenberg. www.gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600111.txt.

  Vaux, James Hardy. Memoirs of James Hardy Vaux – Volume 1. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2016.

  Walsh, Edward. A Narrative of the Expedition to New Holland in the Autumn of the Year 1799. Robinson, 1800.

  Waterfield, William. Extracts from the Diary of the Reverend William Waterfield, First Congregational Minister at Port Phillip, 1838–1843. Victorian Historical Magazine. Vol. 3 No. 3, March 1914.

  Wedge, John Helder. The Visit to Port Phillip in 1835 of John Helder Wedge. Margaret Carnegie collection reprint; No.4. Centre for Library Studies, Riverina-Murray Institute of Higher Education, 1986.

  Welsh, Frank. Australia: A New History of the Great Southern Land. Overlook Press, 2006.

  Westgarth, William. Personal Recollections of Early Melbourne and Victoria. CreateSpace Independent Publishing, 2015.

  Westgarth, William. The Colony of Victoria: Its History, Commerce and Gold Mining; Its Social and Political Institutions down to the End of 1963; with Remarks, Incidental and Comparative, upon the Other Australian Colonies. Sampson Low, Son and Marston, 1864.

  Wilkins, J. M. The Life and Times of Captain William Lonsdale 1799–1864. Self-published, 1991.

  Wilton, Elizabeth. On the Banks of the Yarra: a Story of William Buckley and John Batman. Rigby, 1969.

  Winfield, Rif. British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Chatham Publishing, 2014.

  Woodriff, Daniel. Captain of HMS Calcutta and the Sullivan Bay Settlement of 1803–4 (edited and with notations by Richard Cotter). Lavender Hill Multimedia, 2002.

  INDEX OF SEARCHABLE TERMS

  Aboriginals

  agriculture

  alcohol, and

  Australia, coming to

  battles between

  belief systems

  Buckley as interpreter/liaison

  Buckley, first encounters with

  Buckley’s return to white society

  Chief Protector of Aboriginals

  cultural practices

  escaped convicts, and

  ethnic cleansing

  European encounters with

  government mission, establishment of

  hunting

  impact of European settlement

  languages

  massacres

  medicine

  missionaries, and

  murder of

  native food

  Native Police Force

  oral tradition

  patriarchal society

  resistance to white occupation

  stars, using the

  Tasmanian, treatment of

  ties to the land/country

  ‘treaty’ with

  tribal organisation

  waterways

  women

  working for whites

  Africa

  Age of Enlightenment

  Akers, William

  Alkmaar

  American Revolution

  Apostles

  Appleton, William

  apprenticeships

  Armstrong, Neil

  Arthur, Lieutenant-Governor George

  Buckley’s pardon

  Tasmanian Aboriginals, treatment of

  Astley, Philip

  Badtjala people

  Baird, Jane

  Baitbanger

  Ballarat

  Banks, Sir Joseph

  Cook, sailing with

  Barak, William

  barnabil (oyster)

  barnong (possum)

  Barrabool Hills

  Barrallier, Francis

  Barwon River

  Bass Strait

  Batavian republic

  Bateman, William

  Batman, Eliza (nee Callaghan)

  death

  Batman, Henry

  Batman, John

  background

  Brady, capturing

  Buckley, working with

  Buckley’s pardon

  character

  death

  erasure of name

  Fawkner, and

  Melbourne, founding of

  syphilis

  Tasmanian Aboriginals, treatment of

  ‘treaty’ with natives

  Batman, John Charles

  Battery Point

  Beagle

  Becker, Ludwig

  Bellarine Peninsula

  Bellerophon (HMS)

  Bengalat balug people

  Bennett, James

  Bergen, Battle of

  bernarr (duck)

  Betbenjee

  Bidjigal clan

  Big River people

  Billot, C. P.

  Bindal clan

  Birri Gubba people

  Black Line

  Black River, Battle of

  Black War

  Bligh, William

  Blue Mountains

  Bogong moths

  Bolger, Peter

  Bombay

  Bonwick, James

  Batman, on

  The Last of the Tasmanians

  boomerang

  Boonwurrung people

  Bourke, Sir Richard

  Melbourne, naming of

  Bracefell, David

  Brady, Matthew

  Braybyn

  Breamlea

  bricklaying

  Bridger, William

  Brisbane

  British East India Company

  British Empire

  Bromley, Edward

  Buckley, Elizabeth see Stanway, Elizabeth (nee Buckley)

  Buckley, Jonathan

  Buckley, Julia see Eagers, Julia Buckley, Martha

  Buckley, William ‘Murrangurk’

  Aboriginal interpreter/liaison, as

  Aboriginal women, and

  Aboriginals, first encounters with

  arweet or ngurungaeta, as

  Assistant Storeman, Immigrants’ Home

  Batman, and

  birth

  childhood

  children

  death

  death of Aboriginal family members

  death sentence

  education

  employee of His Majesty’s Government

  escape

  Europeans, contact with

  fame

  Fawkner, and

  Fyans, and

  gatekeeper, as

  Gellibrand, and

  Giant Hacho

  Gibraltar mutiny

  government pension

  Hobart, in

  land gift to Robertson

  marriage

  military service

  missionaries, and

  native lifestyle, learning

  ‘original discoverer of Port Phillip’

  Orton, and

  pardon

  physical description

  Port Phillip Association, and

  portrait

  return to white community

  size

  talking

  theft of cloth

  typhus

  Van Diemen’s Land, in

>   Wedge, working with

  Buckley’s Cave

  Buckley’s Falls

  Bullet

  Bunce, Daniel

  Bungin

  Buninyong tribe

  buniya (eels)

  Bunjil (eagle hawk/Karringalabil)

  Bunker Hill, Battle of

  Bunurong people

  Bunyip

  burns, controlled

  bushrangers

  Bussorah Merchant

  Byrne, James

  Byrne, Mary

  Byrne, Stephen

  Caesar, John ‘Black’

  Cain, Tubal ‘Two Ball’

  Calcutta (HMS)

  ‘crossing the line’

  deaths on board

  journey to Australia

  Callaghan, Eliza see Batman, Eliza

  Callantsoog, Battle of

  Campbell, Duncan

  Camperdown

  Canambaigle

  Canary Islands

  Cane, Elizabeth

  cannibalism

  escaped convicts

  Cape of Good Hope

  Cape Town

  Cape York

  Captivity

  Caroline Matilda, Queen

  Cascades Female Factory

  mortality rates

  Cashman, Johnny

  Castricum

  Chief Protector of Aboriginals

  Childers, Hugh

  cholera

  Christian VII, King

  Cinque Ports

  Clancy, Ellen

  Clancy, William

  Clarke, Thrasycles

  ‘club’ hairstyle

  Clyde Company

  Coal River (Newcastle)

  Cobb, Eliza see Fawkner, Eliza

  Colac

  Collins, Arthur Tooker

  Collins, George

  Collins, Henrietta

  Collins, Lieutenant-Governor David

  death

  Governor Phillip, and

  Judge Advocate, as

  Port Phillip, in

  printing press

  treatment of convicts

  Collins, Maria (nee Proctor)

  Colonial Times

  Conant, Justice

  convict work gangs

  England, in

  Convincing Ground massacre

  Cook, Lieutenant James

  Cooper, Robert

  Copenhagen, Battle of

  Cornwall Chronicle

  corroboree

  Cosgrove, Ellen

  Cosgrove, John

  Cowper, William

  Cox, Thomas

  crime and punishment

  New Holland, in

  Cutts, William

  Dampier, William

  Darwin, Charles

  Aboriginal people, on

 

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