Fort Dundas was the first outpost of Europeans in Australia's north.
It was a British fortification manned by soldiers, marines and
convicts, and built by them on remote Melville Island in 1824. It
lasted until February, 1829, when it was abandoned and left to the
termites.
The fort's purpose was twofold. Firstly, it was a physical
demonstration of Britain's claim to the New Holland continent as far
as longitude 129E, which excluded the Dutch and the French from
starting similar colonies, and it was the first of a series of
fortified locations around the coast. Secondly, it was promoted as the
start of a British trading post that would become a second Singapore
and compete with Batavia.
The settlement was named in a ceremony on 21 October 1824, but it was
not a success. In its short existence we have tales of great
privation, survival, greed, piracy, slavery, murder, kidnapping,
scurvy, and battles with the Indigenous inhabitants of the islands,
the Tiwi. It was also the site of the first European wedding and the
birth of the first European children in northern Australia.
None of the three military commandants who managed the outpost wanted
to be there and all were gratefully relieved after their posting. They
left behind thirty-four dead - victims of disease, poor diet and Tiwi
spears. Others died when the crews of the fort's supply ships were
slaughtered and beheaded by Malay pirates on islands to the north. Two
cabin boys from one of them, the Stedcombe, were enslaved by the
pirates.
What happened at Fort Dundas and why it was abandoned has been largely
untold. Nevertheless, it is one of the most engaging stories of
nineteenth century Australia.
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The British in North Australia 1824-29
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780992355876
Publisert
2019
Utgiver
Ebook Alchemy PTY Ltd
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter