List of massacres of Indigenous Australians

Groups of Indigenous Australians were massacred on many occasions between the start of the English colonisation of Australia in 1788 and the 1920s. These massacres formed a significant element of the frontier wars.

The following list tallies a few of the better documented massacres of Aboriginal Australians, which took place mainly during the colonial period.

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

Some frontier collisions and massacres on record

1780s

1790s

1810s

1820s

1830s

1840s

Tasmania

1800s

1820s

Victoria

1830s

1840s

Western Australia

1830s

1840s

1860s

South Australia

Queensland

1840s

1850s

1860s

1870s

1880s

1890s

Northern Territory

1870s

1880-90s

Violence and massacres after federation

Western Australia

Kimberley region - The Killing Times - 1890-1920: The massacres listed below have been depicted in modern Australian Aboriginal art from the Warmun/Turkey Creek community who were members of the tribes affected. Oral history of the massacres were passed down and artists such as Rover Thomas have depicted the massacres.

1910s

1920s

Queensland

1910s

Northern Territory

1920s

See also

References

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  99. ‘The massacre of Aboriginal people in a ‘war of extermination’ was widespread and relentless. As one of the early missionaries, R.D.Joynt, wrote (1918:7), hundred had been “shot down like game.” And possibility, however, that they might have succeeded in preserving their cultural integrity ended drastically around the start of the 20th century when a huge London-based cattle consortium The Eastern and African Cold Storage Company acquired massive tracts of land to carve out a pastoral empire from the Roper River north into Arnhem Land. Purchasing all stocked and viable stations along the western Roper River, they began moving cattle eastward. Determined to put down all Aboriginal resistance, they employed gangs of up to 14 men to hunt down all inhabitants of the region and shoot them on sight. With police and other authorities maintaining a “conspiracy of silence”, they staged a systematic campaign of extermination against the Roper River peoples (Harris 1994:695-700). They almost succeeded.’ Gerhard Leitner, Ian G. Malcolm, The habitat of Australia's aboriginal languages: past, present and future, Walter de Gruyter, 2007 pp.143-4
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