AUSTRALIANA ABORIGINAL –
“Henry Reynolds and Nicholas Clements uncover the extraordinary story of one of Australia’s greatest military leaders. Tongerlongeter is an epic story of resistance, sorrow and survival. Leader of the Oyster Bay nation of south-east Tasmania in the 1820s and ’30s, Tongerlongeter and his allies prosecuted the most effective frontier resistance ever mounted on Australian soil, inflicting some 354 casualties. His brilliant campaign inspired terror throughout the colony, forcing Govenor George Arthur to counter with a massive military operation in 1830. Tongerlongeter escaped by the cumulative losses had taken their toll. On New Year’s Eve 1831, having lost his arm, his country, and all but 25 of his people, the chief agreed to an armistace. In exile on Flinders Island, Tongerlongeter united remnant tribes and came the settlement’s ‘King’ – a beacon of hope in a hopeless situation.”
First Nations (AIATSIS) Subject:
- History – Frontier conflict – Leaders
- Race relations – Violent – Massacres, murders, poisonings etc. – To 1900
- Tongerlongeter
- Arthur, George. Sir, 1784-1854
- Robinson, George Augustus, 1791-1866
- Tongerlongetter, approximately 1790-1837
- Black Line (1830)
- Aboriginal Tasmanians — Biography
- Aboriginal Tasmanians — Government policy — History — 1803-1851
- Aboriginal Tasmanians — History — 19th century
- Aboriginal Tasmanians — Relocation — History — 1803-1851
- Aboriginal Tasmanians, Treatment of — History — 19th century
- Civic leaders — Australia — Tasmania — Biography
- Civil disobedience — Australia — Tasmania — Biography
- Aboriginal Tasmanians
- Civic leaders
- Civil disobedience
- Politics and government
- Social conditions
- Flinders Island (Tas.) — History — 1803-1851
- Oyster Bay (E Tas SK55-06)
- Tasmania — History — 1803-1900
- Tasmania — History — 19th century
- Tasmania — History — Black War, 1825-1831
- Tasmania — Politics and government — 19th century
- Tasmania — Social conditions — 19th century
- Tasmania, Southeastern — History — 1803-1900
- Tasmania