first peoples – before european colonisation...prepare ochres. a sharp stone, which functioned as...

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designs on the skin side. They were then sewn together using the sinews from kangaroo tails as thread. Aboriginal people throughout southeastern and western Australia wore the cloaks to keep themselves warm, protect them from the weather, carry babies, to sleep on or under, for burial, and to share stories and language through the etched designs. The cloak was worn over one shoulder and under the other, and was fastened at the neck using a small piece of bone or wood. They were warm, weatherproof cloaks worn either fur-in or fur-out de- pending on the weather. MT WILLIAM STONE QUARRY The right to hunt and procure food in any tract of land belonged to the group of people born there, and could not be infringed upon without permission. However, there were places in which the whole tribe had an interest. The Mt William stone quarry, near Lancefield, was one of these. Mt William was famous throughout southeastern Australia as a source of the highly valued greenstone, used for making hatchet heads. They were made from roughly shaped hard stone, which was then ground against another stone to make a sharp edge. The Wurundjeri leader in the 1880s, William Barak, said, “When the neighbouring tribes wanted stone for tomahawks they usually sent a message to Billibellary [the main custodian]. When they arrived they camped around the place”. Hatchets and axe heads were traded for possum skins and other items of value. Prestige was attached to ownership of one of these items and they were widely traded. They have subsequently been found throughout Victoria, New South Wales and South Australia. The Mt William stone quarry is exceptional for its size, intensity of quarrying and intensive work stations. Today it is a heritage-listed site with restricted access where you can see the remains of hundreds of mining pits and the mounds of waste rock that surround the old work stations. COLONISATION When the first white explorers arrived the land was covered in native grasses; the result of carefully managed environmental practices honed over thousands of years by the Indigenous inhabitants. In 1836, a total of 40,000 sheep were unloaded at Port Phillip Bay from Tasmania and within five years their numbers had swelled to 100,000. As squatters increasingly took up land on these natural grasslands, the different grazing patterns of their stock resulted in degradation of the land and loss of food for native fauna and the Indigenous inhabitants. Over time the clans were forced further and further away from their lands. The new settlers hunted kangaroos and wallabies for sport. Domestic cats and dogs preyed on smaller fauna, further reducing food sources. Sometimes there was no alternative for the Indigenous inhabitants but to hunt sheep in order to avoid starvation. This brought about severe repercussions, which further outlawed Aboriginal people from their own land. Blankets were distributed by the colonists as a substitute for the waterproof possum skins, and, as the settlement developed, WOIWURRUNG The people of the Woiwurrung language group are the traditional ‘owners’ of the lands between Gisborne, Sunbury, Mt Macedon and the Werribee River in the west, to Mt Baw Baw in the east, and to the Great Dividing Range in the north. Boundaries tended to follow the natural features of the landscape, such as rivers and mountain ridges. Within each language group were a number of family groups, or clans. Within the clan structure were various family groups comprising thirty to sixty people who lived, hunted and travelled together. Numbers would vary depending on family visitors to the group at any one time. They did not live in permanent settlements but, rather, camped for periods within defined clan boundaries where food was plentiful, and moved on when the land needed to rejuvenate. Aboriginal people did not own the land in the European sense but belonged to, or were ‘owned by’ it. The land provided all the Wurundjeri (now the common term for descendants of all the Woiwurrung clans) needed – food, water, shelter, medicine – which they treated with respect. (Source: The Aboriginal History of the Yarra website.) The clan occupying the area now known as Upper Plenty was the Balluk-Willam, whose lands extended from east of the Great Dividing Range to Lancefield in the north. The Kulin Nation was an alliance of five landholding nations in central Victoria who spoke a related language. THE DREAMING The Dreaming is a complex concept at the centre of Aboriginal religion and life. ‘The Dreaming’ is the closest translation of the Aboriginal concept of ‘how the world works’. Its closest Christian parallel would be the story of creation. In most stories of The Dreaming, the ancestral spirits came to earth in human form. As they moved through the land they created animals, plants, rocks and land formations. Once the ancestral spirits had created the world they changed into trees, stars, rock, watering holes or other objects. These are the sacred places of Aboriginal culture and have special properties. The ancestral spirits also laid down the laws and established the relationships and responsibilities of groups and individuals (kinship obligations) to each other and the land. These are the laws by which Aboriginal people lived. Dreaming stories passed on important knowledge and cultural values to later generations through song, dance, painting and story-telling. A ‘corroboree’ was a highly structured performance involving music, dance and costume. A great deal of skill and knowledge was required to perform, and, while anyone could perform, the ceremony was for invited guests only. The different clans present would compete to outdo each other. MOEITY The people of the Kulin Nation were represented by Bunjil (eaglehawk) and Waang (crow). An individual’s moeity was inherited from their father and dictated all behaviour, social relationships and marriage partners. Wurundjeri clan law only allowed marriage between different moeities and clans, thus keeping genetic variation strong. The moeity system also created alliances between other clans, which were maintained by regular meetings for trade, initiations, celebrations and resolving differences. Written by Rose King. Edited and designed by Claire McGregor. WAY OF LIFE Contrary to popular belief the Aboriginal people were not nomads but moved around their tribal lands depending on where seasonal foods were available. All clan members knew their land in great detail, including the best times to visit each area according to weather and availability of food. They would only travel out of their land for ceremonial reasons, to meet with other clans or to trade. They were permitted to enter into another clan area where there were family connections and/or if physical survival depended on it, for example, in times of food scarcity. At various times in the year clan meetings would occur. The clan living in the area would issue the invitation to meet, always at a time when food was plentiful. These were important events to settle differences but also to allow young people to meet and select partners from other clans in the language group. When foreign people passed through, or were invited to tribal lands, the ceremony of ‘Tanderrum’, or, freedom of the bush/welcome to country, was performed. This allowed safe passage and temporary access and use of land and resources. It was a diplomatic rite involving the landholder’s hospitality and a ritual exchange of gifts. The leaves of the wattle, cherry ballart and river red gum were burnt on a fire as part of the ceremony. The smoke was both cleansing and sent prayers to Bunjil. Locally sourced green leaves are placed on a small fire. The smoke is used to cover participants’ bodies, ridding them of what is not needed. It also cleanses the area. The group feels it is leaving behind troubles and beginning something new. Reasons for holding the rite are then discussed. The ceremony ends with dancing and singing. Shelters, known as ‘willams’, were built from available materials, such as branches and sheets of bark placed over a sapling hung between forked posts. In warmer weather windbreaks were made using branches of trees. The type of shelter constructed depended on conditions at the time and the planned length of stay in that particular area. The length of stay would also be dependent on the local availability of food. There were strict rules governing the arrangements of huts and shelters, depending on the age, sex of family members and the tribal affiliations of any visitors. Campsites were usually close to water. Hunting and gathering activities were confined to a five- to ten-kilometre radius of the campsite with men and women responsible for different activities. Bilang bilang: dilly bag Bilang bilang were used to carry collected foods, such as berries and tubers, as well as personal belongings. They were worn around the neck or often placed over the head and secured behind the ears in order to keep the hands free. Plant fibres, such as lomandra or cumbungi, were used to make the bags. Grinding stone Grinding stones were used for many purposes, including pulping roots and tubers, and crushing small animals to make them easier for small children and the elderly to chew and digest. Pounding some foods on a grinding stone and washing in water could help remove toxins from poisonous plants. Leaves and bark were crushed to make medicines. Large grinding stones were used to mill seeds in drier areas, but this was not common in Victoria. Soft rocks and clay were crushed to make pigments for painting and decoration. The larger grinding stones were not usually carried but were left in camp ready for the next visit. Axes and hatchets Ground-edged stone axes and hatchets were general-purpose tools used for a variety of tasks: to cut open the limbs of trees to get possums from hollows; to split open trunks to get honey, grubs or the eggs of insects; to cut off sheets of bark for huts or canoes; to cut down trees; to shape into wood for spears or shields; and to butcher large animals. They were important tools and there was at least one stone axe in every camp, in every hunting or fighting party and in every group travelling through the bush. Axes were valued trade items. Woomera: spear thrower The woomera could be described as the equivalent of the Swiss army knife because it has many functions. Primarily, it is a spear thrower, which acts as a lever to allow men to throw spears at greater distances and speeds. Most woomera had a peg or socket at one end to engage the butt of a spear. The curved body could be used as a mixing bowl to prepare ochres. A sharp stone, which functioned as a knife, was often attached. Boondi stick Clubs were used as weapons for hunting game and fighting. They differed in shape and design. The timber used in manufacture depended on availability, but they were usually crafted from heavy hardwoods. Killer boomerang The killer boomerang, right, is a non- returning boomerang, characterised by its long tapering edges and heavy weight. It can be aimed and thrown with great force to bring down large game, such as kangaroo. They were often used in ceremonies and for making music. While non-returning boomerangs were used for hunting, returning boomerangs with a symmetrical curved shape were generally used for leisure, or sometimes to act as a decoy to bring down birds of prey. POSSUM-SKIN CLOAKS Possum-skin cloaks are one of the most sacred cultural expressions of southeastern Aboriginal peoples. Possum skins were pegged out on sheets of bark using fire-hardened wooden pegs. The stretched skins were left to dry and decorated using red and yellow ochre Aboriginal people were forced to wear European-style clothing. The new clothing and blankets proved quite inadequate for the lifestyle of the Indigenous people and many died as a result of contracting respiratory illnesses. Wool production boomed. Processing works for wool and tallow production polluted the waterways, rendering the water undrinkable. When drought struck in 1880 the results were disastrous. Various ‘Protectorate’ systems (where a territory is protected and controlled by another) were tried and failed, resulting in the government adopting policies to keep all the Aboriginal people together on mission stations. This meant that many Aboriginal people were removed from their traditional places and sacred sites and families broken up. Residents of Coranderrk Aboriginal Station in Healesville sent deputations to the Victorian Government during the 1870s to 1880 protesting against their lack of rights and the threatened closure of the settlement. Activist William Barak and others sent the following petition on behalf of the Aboriginal people of Coranderrk to the Victorian Government in 1886. In 1886 the Aboriginal Protection Act was passed that barred anyone other than full Aboriginal people and ‘half-castes’ over 35 years of age from all reserves. This broke up Coranderrk, in Healesville, which had been a haven for orphans of mixed parentage; those least able to support themselves. Many of these people became fringe-dwellers on the edge of society. Table: Aboriginal population of early Melbourne. Population by year(s) Tribe 1836–37 1839–42 1852 1863 Wauthaurong 375 118 31 15 Jajowurrung ~ 300 142 38 Woiwurrung& Boonwurrung 350 207 59 33 Taungerong ~ 600 ~ 95 TOTAL ~ 1225 ~ 181 Stats from Museum Vic Human Journeys – gallery of life storyline. Even with early census records, the above figures are the at-best approximations of population over 15 years of age between 1842 and 1863. By 1863, 80–85% of the original population ceased to exist. Out of an original family of 10, 8 would die in the ‘Melbourne area’. Data collated by Dean Stewart, 2003. Coranderrk Petition Could we get our freedom to go away Shearing and Harvesting and to come home when we wish and also to go for the good of our Health when we need it ... We should like to be free like the White Population there is only a few Blacks now rem[a]ining in Victoria, we are all dying away now and we Blacks of Aboriginal Blood wish to have now freedom for all our life time ... Why does the Board seek in these latter days more stronger authority over us Aborigines than it has yet been? First Peoples – Before European Colonisation Everyone would leave camp in the morning; the women and the children fishing and gathering plants, while the men and teenage boys would hunt kangaroos, wallabies and possums and trap birds. The riverside campsites meant ready access to river reeds and rushes that could be split into fibres and pounded to make rope, nets, fish traps, such as an eel trap, right, and baskets. Aboriginal men carried reed spears and a spear thrower, a boomerang and hafted (a 34-cm-long wooden handle, or haft) stone axe, often worn on a string belt around the waist. Sharp stone knives and ceremonial objects were carried in grass string bags. Women would carry food in reed baskets and string bags, such as the dilly bag, along with their favourite digging stick. Recreation A favourite ball game of the Wurundjeri was Marn Grook. “The men and the boys joyfully assemble when this game is to be played. One makes a ball of possum skin, somewhat elastic, but firm and strong. The players of this game do not throw the ball as a white man may do, but drop it and at the same time kicks it with his foot. The tallest men have the best chances in this game. Some of them will leap as high as five feet from the ground to catch the ball. The person who secures the ball kicks it. This continues for hours and the natives never seem to tire of the exercise.” (The Aborigines of Victoria, Robert Brough-Smyth, 1878.) Marn Grook could involve up to 50 players and was played at gatherings and celebrations. It was played over a large area and to observers appeared to lack a team objective; having no real rules, scoring or winner. However, it is believed by many to be the origins of Australian Rules Football. TOOLS, IMPLEMENTS AND WEAPONS Fire The importance of fire as a tool should not be underestimated. Aside from the obvious uses, such as for cooking and providing warmth, fire was also used to manage the land, clear understorey in forests and maintain grasslands. In addition, fire-fronts were used to drive game to waiting hunters. Fire played an important part in manufacturing tools, for example, hardening wooden spear points and digging sticks, heating resins and preparing plant fibre for string making. Fire also played an important part in many religious ceremonies, such as Tanderrum. Kannan (ganan): digging stick Ganans were an essential part of a woman’s toolkit. Saplings of any hardwood were collected and shaped, then both ends were hardened in the fire. They were sometimes used as fighting sticks but usually used in combination with a tarnuk to dig up tubers, such as murnong. Digging sticks also helped aerate the earth. Tarnuk, coolamon: wooden bowl Tarnuks are multipurpose vessels used for collecting foods, such as nuts, fruits and small game, and for carrying water. They could also be used for cradling small babies. Usually they were crafted from hardwoods, such as the timber from the manna gum. Cracks were mended with a mixture of tree resin and wood ash. Map showing the clans forming the Kulin Nation. Based on a map from Aboriginal Melbourne. Permission: Gary Presland. Man ornamented for corroboree. Photograph by: Antoine Fauchery and Richard Daintree, 1857–1859. Courtesy: SLV. BUNJIL WAANG (Eaglehawk) (Crow) MOEITY MOIETY Kulin Nation Federation of five distinct but strongly related communities sharing a similar language. DJA DJA WRUNG WATHAURUNG BOONERWRUNG TAUNGURUNG WOIWURRUNG (Tribe – Western (Tribe – Western (Tribe – Eastern (Tribe – Eastern (Tribe – Eastern Kulin language) Kulin language) Kulin language) Kulin language) Kulin language) WURUNDJERI-WILLAM BALLUK-WILLAM GUNUNG-WILLAM- KURUNG-JANG- MARIN-BALLUK GUNAIKURNAI BALLUK BALLUK (Clan) (Clan) (Clan) (Clan) (Clan) (Clan) Dandenong to the east, Includes the Yarra East of the Great Werribee River to Land south of the The land east of the Tarwin River to the River and extends Dividing Ranges, its Sunbury River. Maribyrnong.Wurundjeri-Willam south. north from the western boundaryand Balluk-Willam. Maribyrnong River close to Kyneton. to Mt William and Lancefield. Victorian Aborigines in front of Mia Mia (temporary shelter). Photographer: Fred Kruger, circa 1866–77. Smoking pyre. Aboriginal people outside a slab hut in Victoria. Photographer: Fred Kruger, circa 1880. Aborigine in canoe. Photographer: Fred Kruger, circa 1880. Bilang bilang – dilly bag. Marn Grook. The caption on the picture reads: ‘Never let the ball hit the ground’. From William Blandowski’s Australien in 142 Photographischen Abbildungen, 1857 (Haddon Library). Faculty of Archaeology and Anthropology, Cambridge. Source: Wikipedia. Fire sticks. Digging stick. Tarnuk, top, lined with paperbark to accommodate a baby. Woomera: spear thrower. Boondi sticks. Portrait of an unidentified woman carrying a baby, wearing a possum-skin cloak. Photographer: Samuel White Sweet, South Australia, circa 1870s. Sewn and incised possum-skin cloak of Wurundjeri origin (Melbourne Museum). ABOVE and RIGHT: Mt William stone axe quarry. TOP RIGHT: Example of a stone hatchet. Pineaxe. Stone axe. Stone axes. One of the earliest printed views of Victoria showing a sealers’ settlement in Western Port. Lithograph by Guerard, 1833. Published in Voyage de la Corvette, l’Astrolabe, L’atlas historique, Plate 21. Courtesy: SLV. Wurundjeri near Collins Street, Melbourne, 1839. Watercolour by W Knight. A group of women and children wearing blankets. Group of petitioners at Coranderrk. Photographer unknown. Courtesy: La Trobe Picture Collection, SLV. The Aboriginal Mission Station, Coranderrk. Photographer: Fred Kruger, circa 1880–81. Courtesy: La Trobe Picture Collection, SLV. Women at Coranderrk sitting outside weaving baskets. Photographer unknown. Courtesy: La Trobe Picture Collection, SLV. The Upper Plenty Hall Committee of Management gratefully acknowledges the support of the Victorian Government through the Community Support Fund and Public Record Office Victoria for making this project possible. O O O O

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Page 1: First Peoples – Before European Colonisation...prepare ochres. A sharp stone, which functioned as a knife, was often attached. Boondi stick Clubs were used as weapons for hunting

designs on the skin side. They were then sewn together using thesinews from kangaroo tails as thread.

Aboriginal people throughout southeastern and western Australiawore the cloaks to keep themselves warm, protect them from theweather, carry babies, to sleep on or under, for burial, and to sharestories and language through the etched designs.

The cloak was worn over one shoulder and under the other, andwas fastened at the neck using a small piece of bone or wood. Theywere warm, weatherproof cloaks worn either fur-in or fur-out de-pending on the weather.

MT WILLIAM STONE QUARRYThe right to hunt and procure food in any tract of land belonged tothe group of people born there, and could not be infringed uponwithout permission. However, there were places in which the wholetribe had an interest. The Mt William stone quarry, near Lancefield,was one of these. Mt William was famous throughout southeasternAustralia as a source of the highly valued greenstone, used for makinghatchet heads. They were made from roughly shaped hard stone,which was then ground against another stone to make a sharp edge.

The Wurundjeri leader in the 1880s, William Barak, said, “Whenthe neighbouring tribes wanted stone for tomahawks they usuallysent a message to Billibellary [the main custodian]. When they arrivedthey camped around the place”. Hatchets and axe heads were tradedfor possum skins and other items of value. Prestige was attached toownership of one of these items and they were widely traded. Theyhave subsequently been found throughout Victoria, New South Walesand South Australia.

The Mt William stone quarry is exceptional for its size, intensityof quarrying and intensive work stations. Today it is a heritage-listedsite with restricted access where you can see the remains of hundredsof mining pits and the mounds of waste rock that surround the oldwork stations.

COLONISATIONWhen the first white explorers arrived the land was covered innative grasses; the result of carefully managed environmentalpractices honed over thousands of years by the Indigenousinhabitants. In 1836, a total of 40,000 sheep were unloaded at PortPhillip Bay from Tasmania and within five years their numbers hadswelled to 100,000. As squatters increasingly took up land on thesenatural grasslands, the different grazing patterns of their stockresulted in degradation of the land and loss of food for native faunaand the Indigenous inhabitants. Over time the clans were forcedfurther and further away from their lands.

The new settlers hunted kangaroos and wallabies for sport.Domestic cats and dogs preyed on smaller fauna, further reducingfood sources. Sometimes there was no alternative for the Indigenousinhabitants but to hunt sheep in order to avoid starvation. Thisbrought about severe repercussions, which further outlawedAboriginal people from their own land.

Blankets were distributed by the colonists as a substitute forthe waterproof possum skins, and, as the settlement developed,

WOIWURRUNGThe people of the Woiwurrung language group are the traditional‘owners’ of the lands between Gisborne, Sunbury, Mt Macedon and theWerribee River in the west, to Mt Baw Baw in the east, and to the GreatDividing Range in the north. Boundaries tended to follow the naturalfeatures of the landscape, such as rivers and mountain ridges.

Within each language group were a number of family groups, or clans.Within the clan structure were various family groups comprising thirtyto sixty people who lived, hunted and travelled together. Numbers wouldvary depending on family visitors to the group at any one time. They didnot live in permanent settlements but, rather, camped for periods withindefined clan boundaries where food was plentiful, and moved on whenthe land needed to rejuvenate. Aboriginal people did not own the landin the European sense but belonged to, or were ‘owned by’ it. The landprovided all the Wurundjeri (now the common term for descendants ofall the Woiwurrung clans) needed – food, water, shelter, medicine –which they treated with respect. (Source: The Aboriginal History of theYarra website.)

The clan occupying the area now known as Upper Plenty was theBalluk-Willam, whose lands extended from east of the Great DividingRange to Lancefield in the north.

The Kulin Nation was an alliance of five landholding nations in centralVictoria who spoke a related language.

THE DREAMINGThe Dreaming is a complex concept at the centre of Aboriginal religionand life. ‘The Dreaming’ is the closest translation of the Aboriginalconcept of ‘how the world works’. Its closest Christian parallel would bethe story of creation.

In most stories of The Dreaming, the ancestral spirits came to earthin human form. As they moved through the land they created animals,plants, rocks and land formations. Once the ancestral spirits had createdthe world they changed into trees, stars, rock, watering holes or otherobjects. These are the sacred places of Aboriginal culture and have specialproperties.

The ancestral spirits also laid down the laws and established therelationships and responsibilities of groups and individuals (kinshipobligations) to each other and the land. These are the laws by whichAboriginal people lived.

Dreaming stories passed on importantknowledge and cultural values to latergenerations through song, dance,painting and story-telling.

A ‘corroboree’ was a highly structuredperformance involving music, danceand costume. A great deal of skill andknowledge was required to perform,and, while anyone could perform, theceremony was for invited guests only.The different clans present wouldcompete to outdo each other.

MOEITYThe people of the KulinNation were representedby Bunjil (eaglehawk) andWaang (crow). An individual’smoeity was inherited fromtheir father and dictated allbehaviour, social relationshipsand marriage partners.Wurundjeri clan law onlyallowed marriage betweendifferent moeities and clans,thus keeping geneticvariation strong.

The moeity system alsocreated alliances betweenother clans, which weremaintained by regularmeetings for trade, initiations,celebrations and resolvingdifferences.

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WAY OF LIFEContrary to popular belief the Aboriginal people were not nomads butmoved around their tribal lands depending on where seasonal foods wereavailable. All clan members knew their land in great detail, including thebest times to visit each area according to weather and availability of food.They would only travel out of their land for ceremonial reasons, to meetwith other clans or to trade. They were permitted to enter into anotherclan area where there were family connections and/or if physical survivaldepended on it, for example, in times of food scarcity.

At various times in the year clan meetings would occur. The clan livingin the area would issue the invitation to meet, always at a time when foodwas plentiful. These were important events to settle differences but alsoto allow young people to meet and select partners from other clans in thelanguage group.

When foreign people passed through, or were invited to tribal lands, theceremony of ‘Tanderrum’, or, freedom of the bush/welcome to country,was performed. This allowed safe passage and temporary access and useof land and resources. It was a diplomatic rite involving the landholder’shospitality and a ritual exchange of gifts. The leaves of the wattle, cherryballart and river red gum were burnt on a fire as part of the ceremony.The smoke was both cleansing and sent prayers to Bunjil.

Locally sourced green leaves are placed on a small fire. The smoke isused to cover participants’ bodies, ridding them of what is not needed.It also cleanses the area. The group feels it is leaving behind troubles andbeginning something new. Reasons for holding the rite are then discussed.The ceremony ends with dancing and singing.

Shelters, known as ‘willams’, were built from available materials, such asbranches and sheets of bark placed over a sapling hung between forkedposts. In warmer weather windbreaks were made using branches of trees.The type of shelter constructed depended on conditions at the timeand the planned length of stay in that particular area. The length of staywould also be dependent on the local availability of food.

There were strict rules governing the arrangements of huts and shelters,depending on the age, sex of family members and the tribal affiliations ofany visitors.

Campsites wereusually close towater. Hunting andgathering activitieswere confined to afive- to ten-kilometreradius of the campsitewith men and womenresponsible fordifferent activities.

Bilang bilang: dilly bagBilang bilang were used to carry collectedfoods, such as berries and tubers, as well aspersonal belongings. They were worn aroundthe neck or often placed over the head andsecured behind the ears in order to keep thehands free. Plant fibres, such as lomandra orcumbungi, were used to make the bags.

Grinding stoneGrinding stones were used for many purposes, including pulping rootsand tubers, and crushing small animals to make them easier for smallchildren and the elderly to chew and digest. Pounding some foods ona grinding stone and washing in water could help remove toxins frompoisonous plants. Leaves and bark werecrushed to make medicines. Largegrinding stones were used to millseeds in drier areas, but this was notcommon in Victoria. Soft rocks and claywere crushed to make pigments for painting and decoration. The largergrinding stones were not usually carried but were left in camp ready forthe next visit.

Axes and hatchetsGround-edged stone axes and hatchets were general-purpose tools usedfor a variety of tasks: to cut open the limbs of trees to get possumsfrom hollows; to split open trunks to get honey, grubs or the eggs ofinsects; to cut off sheets of bark for huts or canoes; to cut down trees;to shape into wood for spears or shields; and to butcher large animals.They were important tools and there was at least one stone axe in everycamp, in every hunting or fighting party and in every group travellingthrough the bush. Axes were valued trade items.

Woomera: spear throwerThe woomera could be described as the equivalent of the Swiss armyknife because it has many functions. Primarily, it is a spear thrower,which acts as a lever to allow men to throw spears at greater distancesand speeds. Most woomera had a peg or socket at one end to engagethe butt of a spear. The curved body could be used as a mixing bowl toprepare ochres. A sharp stone, which functioned as a knife, was oftenattached.

Boondi stickClubs were used as weapons for hunting game and fighting. Theydiffered in shape and design. The timber used in manufacture dependedon availability, but they were usually crafted from heavy hardwoods.

Killer boomerangThe killer boomerang, right, is a non-returning boomerang, characterisedby its long tapering edges and heavyweight. It can be aimed and thrownwith great force to bring down largegame, such as kangaroo. They wereoften used in ceremonies and formaking music. While non-returningboomerangs were used for hunting, returning boomerangs with asymmetrical curved shape were generally used for leisure, or sometimesto act as a decoy to bring down birds of prey.

POSSUM-SKIN CLOAKSPossum-skin cloaks are one of the mostsacred cultural expressions of southeasternAboriginal peoples.

Possum skins were pegged out on sheetsof bark using fire-hardened wooden pegs.The stretched skins were left to dry anddecorated using red and yellow ochre

Aboriginal people were forced to wear European-style clothing. Thenew clothing and blankets proved quite inadequate for the lifestyleof the Indigenous people and many died as a result of contractingrespiratory illnesses.

Wool production boomed. Processing works for wool and tallowproduction polluted the waterways, rendering the water undrinkable.When drought struck in 1880 the results were disastrous.

Various ‘Protectorate’ systems (where a territory is protectedand controlled by another) were tried and failed, resulting in thegovernment adopting policies to keep all the Aboriginal peopletogether on mission stations. This meant that many Aboriginalpeople were removed from their traditional places and sacred sitesand families broken up. Residents of Coranderrk Aboriginal Stationin Healesville sent deputations to the Victorian Government duringthe 1870s to 1880 protesting against their lack of rights and thethreatened closure of the settlement. Activist William Barak andothers sent the following petition on behalf of the Aboriginal peopleof Coranderrk to the Victorian Government in 1886.

In 1886 the Aboriginal Protection Act was passed that barred anyoneother than full Aboriginal people and ‘half-castes’ over 35 years ofage from all reserves. This broke up Coranderrk, in Healesville, whichhad been a haven for orphans of mixed parentage; those least able tosupport themselves. Many of these people became fringe-dwellers onthe edge of society.

Table: Aboriginal population of early Melbourne.

Population by year(s)Tribe 1836–37 1839–42 1852 1863Wauthaurong 375 118 31 15

Jajowurrung ~ 300 142 38Woiwurrung&Boonwurrung

350 207 59 33

Taungerong ~ 600 ~ 95

TOTAL ~ 1225 ~ 181

Stats from Museum Vic Human Journeys – gallery of life storyline.Even with early census records, the above figures are the at-best approximations ofpopulation over 15 years of age between 1842 and 1863.By 1863, 80–85% of the original population ceased to exist.Out of an original family of 10, 8 would die in the ‘Melbourne area’.Data collated by Dean Stewart, 2003.

Coranderrk PetitionCould we get our freedom to go away Shearing and Harvesting and to come homewhen we wish and also to go for the good of our Health when we need it ...

We should like to be free like the White Population there is only a few Blacksnow rem[a]ining in Victoria, we are all dying away now and we Blacks ofAboriginal Blood wish to have now freedom for all our life time ...

Why does the Board seek in these latter days more stronger authority over usAborigines than it has yet been?

First Peoples – Before European ColonisationEveryone would leave camp in the morning; the women and thechildren fishing and gathering plants, while the men and teenage boyswould hunt kangaroos, wallabies and possums and trap birds.

The riverside campsites meant readyaccess to river reeds and rushes thatcould be split into fibres and pounded tomake rope, nets, fish traps, such as an eeltrap, right, and baskets. Aboriginal mencarried reed spears and a spear thrower,a boomerang and hafted (a 34-cm-longwooden handle, or haft) stone axe, often worn on a string belt aroundthe waist. Sharp stone knives and ceremonial objects were carried ingrass string bags. Women would carry food in reed baskets and stringbags, such as the dilly bag, along with their favourite digging stick.

RecreationA favourite ball game of the Wurundjeri was Marn Grook. “The menand the boys joyfully assemble when this game is to be played. Onemakes a ball of possum skin, somewhat elastic, but firm and strong. Theplayers of this game do not throw the ball as a white man may do, butdrop it and at the same time kicks it with his foot. The tallest men havethe best chances in this game. Some of them will leap as high as fivefeet from the ground to catch the ball. The person who secures the ballkicks it. This continues for hours and the natives never seem to tire ofthe exercise.” (The Aborigines of Victoria, Robert Brough-Smyth, 1878.)

Marn Grook could involve up to 50 players and was played atgatherings and celebrations. It was played over a large area and toobservers appeared to lack a team objective; having no real rules,scoring or winner. However, it is believed by many to be the origins ofAustralian Rules Football.

TOOLS, IMPLEMENTS AND WEAPONS

FireThe importance of fire as a tool should not be underestimated. Asidefrom the obvious uses, such as for cooking and providing warmth,fire was also used to manage the land, clear understorey in forests andmaintain grasslands. In addition, fire-fronts were used to drive game towaiting hunters.

Fire played an important part in manufacturing tools, for example,hardening wooden spear points and digging sticks, heating resins andpreparing plant fibre for string making. Fire also played an importantpart in many religious ceremonies, such as Tanderrum.

Kannan (ganan): digging stickGanans were an essential part of a woman’s toolkit. Saplings of anyhardwood were collected and shaped, then both ends were hardened inthe fire. They were sometimes used as fighting sticks but usually used incombination with a tarnuk to dig up tubers, such as murnong. Diggingsticks also helped aerate the earth.

Tarnuk, coolamon: wooden bowlTarnuks are multipurpose vessels used for collecting foods, such as nuts,fruits and small game, and for carrying water. They could also be usedfor cradling small babies. Usually they were crafted from hardwoods,such as the timber from the manna gum. Cracks were mended with amixture of tree resin and wood ash.

Map showing the clans forming the Kulin Nation. Based on a map fromAboriginal Melbourne. Permission: Gary Presland.

Man ornamented for corroboree. Photographby: Antoine Fauchery and Richard Daintree,

1857–1859. Courtesy: SLV.

BUNJIL WAANG(Eaglehawk) (Crow)

MOEITY MOIETYKulin Nation

Federation of fivedistinct but strongly related

communities sharing a similar language.

DJA DJA WRUNG WATHAURUNG BOONERWRUNG TAUNGURUNG WOIWURRUNG(Tribe – Western (Tribe – Western (Tribe – Eastern (Tribe – Eastern (Tribe – EasternKulin language) Kulin language) Kulin language) Kulin language) Kulin language)

WURUNDJERI-WILLAM BALLUK-WILLAM GUNUNG-WILLAM- KURUNG-JANG- MARIN-BALLUK GUNAIKURNAIBALLUK BALLUK

(Clan) (Clan) (Clan) (Clan) (Clan) (Clan)Dandenong to the east, Includes the Yarra East of the Great Werribee River to Land south of the The land east ofthe Tarwin River to the River and extends Dividing Ranges, its Sunbury River. Maribyrnong.Wurundjeri-Willamsouth. north from the western boundaryand Balluk-Willam.

Maribyrnong River close to Kyneton.to Mt William andLancefield.

Victorian Aborigines in front of Mia Mia (temporaryshelter). Photographer: Fred Kruger, circa 1866–77.

Smoking pyre.

Aboriginal people outside a slab hut in Victoria.Photographer: Fred Kruger, circa 1880.

Aborigine in canoe. Photographer: Fred Kruger, circa 1880.

Bilang bilang – dilly bag.

Marn Grook. The caption on thepicture reads: ‘Never let the ballhit the ground’. From WilliamBlandowski’s Australien in 142Photographischen Abbildungen,1857 (Haddon Library). Faculty ofArchaeology and Anthropology,Cambridge. Source: Wikipedia.

Fire sticks.

Digging stick.

Tarnuk, top, lined with paperbark toaccommodate a baby.

Woomera: spear thrower.

Boondi sticks.

Portrait of an unidentified womancarrying a baby, wearing a possum-skincloak. Photographer: Samuel WhiteSweet, South Australia, circa 1870s.

Sewn and incised possum-skin cloak ofWurundjeri origin (Melbourne Museum).

ABOVE and RIGHT: Mt William stone axequarry.TOP RIGHT: Example of a stone hatchet.

Pineaxe.

Stone axe.

Stone axes.

One of the earliest printed views of Victoria showinga sealers’ settlement in Western Port. Lithograph byGuerard, 1833. Published in Voyage de la Corvette,l’Astrolabe, L’atlas historique, Plate 21. Courtesy: SLV.

Wurundjeri near Collins Street, Melbourne, 1839.Watercolour by W Knight.

A group of women and children wearingblankets.

Group of petitioners at Coranderrk. Photographerunknown. Courtesy: La Trobe Picture Collection, SLV.

The Aboriginal Mission Station, Coranderrk.Photographer: Fred Kruger, circa 1880–81.Courtesy: La Trobe Picture Collection, SLV.

Women at Coranderrk sittingoutside weaving baskets.Photographer unknown.Courtesy: La Trobe PictureCollection, SLV.

The Upper Plenty Hall Committee of Management gratefully acknowledges thesupport of the Victorian Government through the Community Support Fund andPublic Record Office Victoria for making this project possible.

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