- Carl Wilhelm Schmidt
Reverend Carl Wilhelm Schmidt (died 1864cite encyclopedia | title = Schmidt, Karl Wilhelm Edward | encyclopedia = Australian Dictionary of Biography | volume = 2 | publisher =
Melbourne University Press | year = 1967 | first = Niel | last = Gunson] ), also known as Karl Schmidt, was a Germanmissionary , and an ordained minister of the Prussian United Church [cite book |title=The Germans in Australia|last=Tampke|first=Jurgen|year=2007 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0521612432|pages=p58] . Schmidt's missionary work took him toQueensland andSamoa , where he founded a number of Lutheran institutions and settlements [cite book | last = Thiele | first = F. Otto | title = One Hundred Years of the Lutheran Church in Queensland | location = Brisbane | year = 1939] .Early life
Schmidt was born in Stargard,
Pomerania (Stargard SzczecińskiPoland ). He studied at the Universities of Halle and Berlin, before becoming the first theological student of Dr. Rev. J E Gossner, a minister of theBethlehem Bohemian Church in Berlin. Gossner was the founder of the "Evangelical Union for the Spread of Christianity among the Heathen", and he recommended Schmidt to lead a party of nine missionaries trained for work with a British society.In 1837, Schmidt came to the notice of Rev
John Dunmore Lang in Australia, via Samuel Johnson, a friend of Gossner's in London. After being joined by fellow missionaryChristopher Eipper inGreenock, Scotland , Schmidt and his party set sail for Australia on the "Minerva". Conditions aboard the ship were harsh, with Moritz Schneider, a surgeon employed by Lang, dying oftyphoid en route. Schmidt arrived inSydney in January 1838.Missionary Work in Australia
ydney
Upon arrival in Australia, Schmidt was admitted as a member of Lang's Presbyterian Synod of
New South Wales on 15 March 1838. He founded the "New South Wales Society in aid of the German Mission to the Aborigines", whose mission involved supporting a mission in connection with government funding. Schmidt ministered to a German congregation in Sydney for some months while a party scouted in theMoreton Bay area for a suitable site. Upon arrival inBrisbane in June 1838, Schmidt found that his scouting party had selected a location north of the settlement that they called Zion's Hill.Zion's Hill Mission
He was the leader of the first European settlement in what is now the area of Nundah,
Queensland , when he helped found the "Zion's Hill" mission, located near to the modern-day "Walkers Way" [cite web | title = Early History of Nundah | url=http://www.northgateward.org/home_earlyhistory.html | accessdate = 2007-01-29 ] . Although joined by fellow German missionary ReverendChristopher Eipper , Schmidt did not have much success in bringing Christianity to the Aboriginal people in the area, and his mission was dismantled at the behest of the colonial government in 1846 [cite book |title=The Australian People: An Encyclopedia of the Nation, its People and their Origins|last=Jupp |first=James |year= 2002 |publisher= Cambridge University Press |isbn= 978-0521807890|pages=p369] .Kilcoy Poisoning
Schmidt was also notable for being involved in leaking the details of a deliberate mass poisoning of Aboriginal people at Kilcoy in Queensland to the Sydney press. Schmidt had recorded in his
travel diary the details of the incident, in which as many as sixty Aboriginal people were givenflour and other rations laced withstrychnine by white settlers. Not wanting to upset the delicate situation and cause any reprisal attacks, the authorities attempted to hush up the affair. Fellow minister and evangelical reformerJohn Dunmore Lang published the details from Schmidt's travel diary in the "Colonial Observer", causing a major scandal inSydney , the colonial capital [cite book |title= [http://books.google.com/books?id=G60Cgsnzc7AC&pg=PA54&dq=nundah+history&lr=&sig=WJH1P1D6oxTo_Pp7Er4LXCru8yc A History of Queensland] |last=Evans |first=Raymond |year=2008 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location= |isbn=978-0521545396 |pages=p54] .Return to Europe, and Samoa
Following the failure of the Zion's Hill mission, Schmidt returned to England in 1846. He briefly ministered to a Lutheran congregation in
London before being accepted by theLondon Missionary Society . From 1848 to 1857, he served as a missionary inSamoa . InMay 25 ,1855 , his wife died, and in 1857 he resigned from the society and started a free school for the children of foreign residents of the city ofApia inSamoa . Around this time he also married Salaneta, a Samoan woman, with whom he had one son. He died in Apia in early 1864.References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.