Tongerlongeter — the Tasmanian resistance fighter we should remember as a war hero
- Written by Nicholas Clements, Adjunct Researcher, University of Tasmania
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised this article contains images and names of deceased people.
Australians love their war heroes. Our founding myth centres on the heroism of the ANZACs. Our Victoria Cross recipients are considered emblematic of our highest virtues. We also revere our dissident heroes, such as Ned Kelly and the Eureka rebels. But where in this pantheon are our Black war heroes?
If it’s underdog heroism we’re after, we need look no further than the warriors who resisted the invasion of their homelands between 1788 and 1928. And none distinguished himself more than Tongerlongeter — the subject of a new book[1] I have written with historian Henry Reynolds[2].
Tongerlongeter’s story
In Tasmania’s “Black War[3]” of 1823–31, Tongerlongeter led a stunning resistance campaign against invading British soldiers and colonists. Leader of the Oyster Bay nation, he inspired dread throughout the island’s southeast. Convicts refused to work alone or unarmed, terrified settlers abandoned their farms, the economy faltered and the government seemed powerless to suppress the insurgency.
It was a legacy Tongerlongeter could never have imagined in 1802, when his people encountered the French explorers under Nicolas Baudin[4] on Maria Island. Having never heard of foreign lands or peoples, they concluded the pale-faced visitors were ancestral spirits returned from the dead. If zombies are an apt comparison, they were soon to experience a zombie invasion.
References
- ^ new book (www.newsouthbooks.com.au)
- ^ Henry Reynolds (www.utas.edu.au)
- ^ Black War (theconversation.com)
- ^ Nicolas Baudin (www.ourtasmania.com.au)
- ^ New South Books (www.newsouthbooks.com.au)
- ^ Risdon Cove (www.utas.edu.au)
- ^ Lieutenant Governor George Arthur (adb.anu.edu.au)
- ^ 137 documented attacks in 1828, 152 in 1829, and 204 in 1830 (rdp.utas.edu.au)
- ^ Friday essay: Truganini and the bloody backstory to Victoria's first public execution (theconversation.com)
- ^ The Black Line (www.nma.gov.au)
- ^ State Library of Victoria (handle.slv.vic.gov.au)
- ^ George Augustus Robinson (www.utas.edu.au)
- ^ Henry Reynolds: Australia was founded on a hypocrisy that haunts us to this day (theconversation.com)
- ^ eventually exiled (library.oapen.org)
- ^ King William (www.examiner.com.au)
- ^ asked (unsworks.unsw.edu.au)
- ^ the same day as his namesake (www.britannica.com)
- ^ Hidden women of history: Wauba Debar, an Indigenous swimmer from Tasmania who saved her captors (theconversation.com)
- ^ later wrote (www.cambridge.org)
- ^ Treaty of Waitangi (nzhistory.govt.nz)
- ^ Shutterstock/Alex Cimbal (www.shutterstock.com)
- ^ Victoria Cross (pmc.gov.au)
- ^ Friday essay: it's time for a new museum dedicated to the fighters of the frontier wars (theconversation.com)
- ^ Caupolicán (en.m.wikipedia.org)
- ^ Samuel Sharpe (pripsjamaica.com)
- ^ Juana Azurduy (www.encirclephotos.com)
- ^ Black War memorial in Hobart’s Cenotaph precinct (www.theaustralian.com.au)
- ^ Shutterstock/D. Cunningham (www.shutterstock.com)