VOICES

Encounters 2020

Voices

Films, discussions and debates from the perspective of those that lived on the shore.

All along the coast of eastern Australia during April and May 1770 people looked out to sea at a strange sight

As the HMB Endeavour sailed north, fires were lit warning others of its approach. At Kamay, Walumbaal Biri and other places, stories and songs of the arrival of these strangers were told for generations to come.

These voices have often been missed by a focus on the Endeavour voyage and the beginning of modern Australia. The lasting impact of the voyage on Australia’s First Peoples has only relatively recently been part of the conversation about Australian history.

For many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, the Endeavour voyage and Cook's claim of possession of what he called New South Wales in 1770, is seen as heralding the invasion of their country. 

VOICES urges all Australians to reflect on the enduring legacies of the Endeavour voyage and to learn about the survival of culture and the movement for rights and recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples as the Traditional Owners of these lands and waters.

 

The work, the strange big canoe, created with the team from Ample Projects, is based on journal records and Indigenous histories that weave keynotes from HMB Endeavour’s voyage along the east coast into the perspectives of Indigenous communities along the shore and officers and crew on the ship.

First Peoples

We know a great deal about the people who sailed on HMB Endeavour, but we know much less about the people they met along the way.

There are descendants, direct links and stories however, that have been handed down over generations, providing us with information that isn't found in colonial diaries and journals. 

Here you will meet some of the people who met James Cook. Some, such as Tupaia, travelled with Cook and often directed the Europeans encounters with First Peoples. Others were angered by Endeavour's uninvited presence on their shores, and some recorded the ship sailing past their coast. 

All of them influenced the events of 1770 in some way.

Laura's comments: This entire paragraph is so vague. Who was angered and who recorded the ship sailing past? More information needed! 

Two warriors

When the Endeavour shore party tried to land at Kamay Botany Bay on April 29th 1770, despite experiencing similar protocols in the Pacific and Aotearoa New Zealand they did not understand the reaction of the Gweagal people to the presence of these strangers.

Gweagal

The Gweagal people were the first to meet the Endeavour crew face to face on 29th April 1770. After the Two warriors opposed the strangers landing and were wounded by ‘small shot’ fired by Cook and his crew, the Gweagal avoided contact with the Europeans while they were scouring Kamay for water, wood and botanical specimens. The strangers also took many of the Gweagal people’s spears and other objects – some of which are still in museum collections today.

A walk-through guide on board the replica of James Cook's HMB Endeavour at the Australian National Mari-time Museum.

Gugu Yimithirr

In June 1770, the Endeavour limped into the Walambaal Birri (Endeavour River) after running aground on the Great Barrier Reef. The Gugu Yimithirr at first welcomed the strangers as they repaired their vessel for several weeks in their country. Conflict occurred later however, when the strangers took too many turtles.

L.S comments: More detail needed to flesh out this paragraph

Where are the Gugu Yimithirr community located? North Queensland?

Why did conflict occur over turtles? How many did they take? What happened?  

Stories from Guugu Yimithirr

 

The Gugu Yimithirr community has worked hard to find the stories from both sides of the encounter with the Endeavour and have worked together to both record and share their history through the telling of stories and culture in this film, which includes the encounters their ancestors had with those on board the Endeavour as it sailed past their country and landed on their homelands at Walambaal Birri in Cooktown. Aunty Alberta Hornsby and her daughter, work to record and recount the stories and histories of the Gugu Yimithirr people. The stories are shared by Harold Ludwick.

LS comments: Copy needs to change as it is far too repetitive and doesn't make much sense. Similarly, both Aunty Alberta Hornsby and Harold Ludwick relate the stories in the video

Bedhan Lag People

Bedhan Lag was called Possession Island by Cook. It was where he reported in his log that he raised the British flag and declared possession of ‘exact quote’. Historians have now suggested Cook may have amended his log to add this event as he had failed to declare formal possession earlier.

Related Articles

Links to files and articles

  • The Voyage
  • Voices
  • Resources
  • Events & Exhibitions
  • The Shore

    Australians have learned their history of the encounters that occurred on the east coast of Australia in 1770 from the Europeans who wrote diaries on the Endeavour, and from historians who have studied them. The history of 1770 has been very much a view from the ship, and only recently have non-Indigenous people recognised the importance of, and the long existence of, continuous stories about the coming of Captain Cook.
    Taking a view ‘from the shore’ means we begin to think about Cook’s voyage along the east coast of Australia in a very different way. It is a critical view, if we are to understand the momentous arrival of a ship that heralded massive change for Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islands Peoples.
     

     

    Badtjala traditional owner, cultural knowledge holder and linguist, Gemma Cronin shares some of the lore and history of the Badtjala people on the island K'Gari. She recounts the process of translating the Badtjala song which describes the sighting of Endeavour as it travelled past Tukki Wurru between 18-20 May 1770, a place Cook described as Indian Head.

    The Impact

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    Yirrkala paintings of the Saltwater collection

     

    In the fight to protect their land rights, the Yolŋu people of north-east Arnhem land produced a collection of 80 bark paintings that tell their stories of country and culture in an aim to educate strangers.

    Laura's comments: If we are going to use this video, it needs to be re-edited so it doesn't include the old logo at the end

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