Authors
Ann Curthoys
Publication date
2020/9
Journal
Studies in Western Australian History
Issue
34
Pages
59-77
Description
Western Australia entered Britain's worldwide system of convict transportation before the first convicts arrived from Britain in June 1850. In August 1838, the colony had established a system of internal transportation, when it began transporting convicted Nyungar men to the Aboriginal prison on Rottnest Island/Wadjemup. Drawn from Britain's long-standing use of transportation beyond seas as a system of punishment and deterrence, the colony's internal transportation system was adapted for local conditions arising from the creation of a British settlement on Aboriginal land. This article explores the early years of Aboriginal incarceration on offshore islands in Western Australia, starting with the sending of Nyungar men Yagan, Dommera and Ningena to Carnac Island in 1832, and concluding with the temporary closure of the Aboriginal prison on Rottnest Island in September 1849. It shows the multiplicity of …
Total citations
20212022202320241131