In The Sydney Morning Herald of 18 January 2014, Fairfax Media reported that in an address to the National Australia Day Council, noted scientist Tim Flannery, expressed his 'sense of outrage' that the Australian War Memorial (AWM) refuses to honour Aboriginal warriors who fought and died defending their lands and their people against white invader settlers in the Frontier Wars of 1788-1928.
He said that in any other war, Australia's Aborigines "would have been awarded the Victoria Cross" but the AWM in Canberra does not even acknowledge them. The Frontier Wars began when Bidgigal resistance hero Pemulwuy (c1750 -1802) killed Governor Arthur Phillip's convict gamekeeper near Sydney in 1790.
Pemulwuy's audacity outraged Governor Phillip and his native policy changed immediately. He ordered his aide Watkin Tench to lead a punitive expedition to bring back any six Bidgigal or their heads. The expedition was a failure though Phillip's order presaged countless such wanton reprisals against Australia's Indigenous people for the next 140 years.
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In his recent book, Forgotten War (Newsouth 2013), Australian historian Henry Reynolds says in recent times, Australian military historians have followed the lead of conventional historians in acknowledging the Frontier Wars of 1788-1928.
In 1990, Jeffrey Gray published A Military History of Australia in which he observed that the conflict between the Australian Aboriginal tribes and settler invaders has been persistently downplayed with the result that Aborigines have not been conceded the dignity due to a worthy opponent.
Gray defines war 'as an act of force to compel an enemy to do your will' and he comes down decisively in favour of viewing the conflict between Aborigines and the British as warfare. He contends that to deny the status of combatant to Aboriginal peoples is to deny their bravery and their will to resist the British invasion with every ounce of their being.
Dr John Connor is an historian from the Australian Defence Force Academy and in his book The Australian Frontier Wars 1788-1838 (UNSW 2002), he brings the first fifty years of the Australian frontier into the mainstream of the military history in Australia.
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He says the British Army found it difficult at first to operate on the Australian frontier because Aboriginal guerrilla tacts minimised the effect of muskets and Aboriginal warriors generally were able to evade pursuit. The situation began to change from 1825 when the army issued soldiers with horses giving them the mobility to counter Aboriginal tactics over a wide frontier.
On Anzac Day, Australians commemorate102,000 Australian men and women who lost their lives in defence of this country in overseas wars. In considering Indigenous deaths in the Frontier Wars, Reynolds estimates conservatively that frontier violence caused around 2000 European deaths while Indigenous deaths numbered at least 20,000.
Historians generally regard the Frontier Wars to have ended in 1928 with the killing of a large number of Warlpiri people (officially thirty-one) by a police punitive party at Coniston in the Northern Territory in response to the death of a European.
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