- Frederick Panter
Frederick Kennedy Panter (1836–
13 November 1864 ) was apoliceman , pastoralist and explorer in colonialWestern Australia . While exploring in theKimberley region of Western Australia in 1864, he was murdered byAustralian Aborigine s.Born in 1836, Frederick Panter was a relative1 of
Governor of Western Australia Sir Arthur Kennedy. Little is known of his early life, except that he was apolice constable inQueensland , came toWestern Australia , and by 1861 was Perth'sInspector of Police .In 1864, Panter was selected to lead an expedition to
Camden Harbour to test the story of a convict,Henry Wildman , who claimed to have found gold there many years earlier. On arrival in the area, Wildman became sullen and uncooperative, and tried to escape. No gold was found, but large areas of good pastoral land were discovered around Roebuck Bay. Consequently, a public company, theRoebuck Bay Company , was formed to establish a chain of stations in the area, and Panter joined the advance party that sailed to the area to set up a base camp. The following month, Panter, along withJames Harding andWilliam Goldwyer set out from the base camp on an expedition to explore the area around La Grange Bay. ThePanter-Harding-Goldwyer expedition did not return, and eventually a search party underMaitland Brown was sent to find them. Brown'sLa Grange expedition party eventually found the three men dead, having been clubbed and speared to death by natives. Panter and Harding were apparently killed in their sleep. Goldwyer's death was harder to interpret; some sources claim that all three men were killed in their sleep, while others assert that Goldwyer was keeping watch. The date of death of the men was determined from the date of the last entries in the men's journals.The bodies of Panter, Harding and Goldwyer were returned to Perth, where thousands of spectators attended their public
funeral . In February 1913, a monument to Brown and the three murdered men, theExplorers' Monument , was unveiled in Fremantle.At the time of Panter's death, he was engaged to marry Georgiana, daughter of John and
Georgiana Molloy .References
*cite book|author=Erickson, Rica (ed.)|year=1979|title=Dictionary of Western Australians 1829–1914|location=Nedlands, Western Australia|publisher=University of Western Australia Press|id=ISBN 0-85564-163-0
*cite book|author=Forrest, Kay|year=1996|title=The Challenge and the Chance: The Colonisation and Settlement of North West Australia 1861–1914|location=Victoria Park, Western Australia|publisher=Hesperian Press|id=ISBN 0-85905-217-6Notes
#Some sources say nephew, others cousin.
Persondata
NAME=Panter, Frederick Kennedy
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=explorer and policeman
DATE OF BIRTH=1836
PLACE OF BIRTH=Australia
DATE OF DEATH=13 November 1864
PLACE OF DEATH=La Grange, Western Australia
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