- James Dawson (activist)
James Dawson (
July 05 ,1806 –April 19 ,1900 ) was a prominent champion of Aboriginal interests. He was born at Bonytoun,Linlithgow and arrived inHobsons Bay ,Port Phillip , Australia onMay 2 1840 with his wife Joan Anderson Park, niece of Mungo Park. He tried dairy farming in the Yarra valley for a time but moved to broader pastures in thePort Fairy district in 1844. For the next 22 years Dawson was in partnership in a cattle and sheep station, "Cox's Heifer Station" later namedKangatong , some 10 miles east ofMacarthur .In 1866 he left the district and settled for a while near Melbourne, but later moved back to the
Camperdown area living atWuurung Farm on the edge ofLake Bullen Merri , where he became Local Guardian of the Aborigines in 1876. In 1882, he returned from a trip home to Linlithgow to find that the last survivor of theDjargurd wurrung , Wombeetch Puyuun, had died and was buried outside the Camperdown cemetery. After an unsuccessful appeal for public support to finance a memorial in the cemetery he had a granite obelisk erected at his own expense and had Wombeetch Puyuun’s remains reburied at its foot. The obelisk has two dates, 1840 and 1883, which mark the mere 43 years it took for white settlement to displace the Djargurd wurrung from the Camperdown area.James Dawson and his daughter,
Isabella Park Taylor (1843-1929), shared a deep interest in Aboriginal civilisation. They used their years atKangatong to study the languages and cultures of the indigenous peoples of the volcanic plains. He vigorously defended Aboriginal interests against government officials, politicians, his fellow squatters and others, a crusade that he kept up until his death in 1900 atCamperdown at the age of 93.References
* "Australian Aborigines: The Languages and Customs of Several Tribes of Aborigines in the Western District of Victoria, Australia", published in 1881, James Dawson.
* “Prehistory of Australia”, published by Allen & Unwin in 1999, John Mulvaney & Johan Kamminga.
* West Lothian Courier, June 2 1900, page 5.
* Camperdown Chronicle, April 21, 1900.
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