History of Western Australia explained

The human history of Western Australia commenced "over 50,000 years ago and possibly as much as 70,000 years ago" with the arrival of Aboriginal Australians on the northwest coast.[1] The first inhabitants expanded across the east and south of the continent.

The first recorded European contact was in 1616, when Dutch explorer Dirk Hartog landed on the west coast, having been blown off course while en route to Batavia, current day Jakarta.

Although many expeditions visited the coast during the next 200 years, there was no lasting attempt at establishing a permanent settlement until December 1826. An expedition on behalf of the New South Wales colonial government, led by Major Edmund Lockyer, landed at King George Sound, and founded what became the port city of Albany. On 21 January 1827 Lockyer formally took possession for the British Crown the portion of New Holland not yet claimed by the crown; that is, the portion west of 129th meridian east. This was followed by the establishment of the Swan River Colony in 1829, which ultimately became the present-day capital, Perth. The harsh conditions faced by the settlers resulted in population growth being minimal until the discovery of gold in the 1880s. Since the gold rush, the population of the state has risen steadily, with substantial growth in the period since World War II.

Western Australia gained the right of self-government in 1890, and joined with the five other states to form the Commonwealth of Australia in 1901. The desire of Western Australians to revert to complete self-governance, separate from the Commonwealth, culminated in 1933 with a successful referendum for secession supported by 68% of electors. In 1935 the British parliament declined to act since secession would require the assent of the Australian parliament, and the movement lapsed with an improving economy and generous federal grants.[2] [3]

Aboriginal settlement

When Australia's first inhabitants arrived on the northwest coast 50,000 to 70,000 years ago the sea levels were much lower. The Kimberley coast at one time was only about from Timor, which itself was the last in a line of closely spaced islands for humans to travel across.[4] Therefore, this was a possible (even probable) location for which Australia's first peoples could arrive via boat. Other possible immigration routes were via islands further north and then through New Guinea.

In 1999 Charles Dortch identified chert and calcrete flake stone tools, found at Rottnest Island, as possibly dating to at least 50,000 years ago.[5] [6] A 2018 study using archaeobotany dated evidence of continuous human habitation at Karnatukul (Serpent's Glen) in the Carnarvon Range in the Little Sandy Desert from around 50,000 years ago.[7] [8] [9] Over the next tens of thousands of years various groups of Indigenous Australians slowly moved southward and eastward across the landmass. Aboriginal people were well established throughout Western Australia by the time European ships started accidentally arriving en route to Batavia (now Jakarta) in the early 17th century.

Early visits by Europeans

See main article: European exploration of Australia. The first European to sight Western Australia was the Dutch explorer, Dirk Hartog, the first European to suggest to have found a continent there, who on 26 October 1616 landed at what is now known as Cape Inscription, Dirk Hartog Island. Before departing, Hartog left behind an inscribed pewter plate affixed to a post. In 1696 the plate was discovered and replaced by Willem de Vlamingh and repatriated to the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. A multitude of Dutch visits followed during that century, charting virtually the whole of the west coast, the Western Australian south coast and Australia's northern coast.

The first English vessel to visit, when attempting to sail the Dutch-established Brouwer Route to the Indies, was Tryall, an East India Company-owned East Indiaman under the command of John Brookes who in 1622 sighted Point Cloates before later on 25 May wrecking on Tryal Rocks, off the northwest coast of Australia. Some of the 143 crew remained on the Monte Bello Islands for 7 days, during that time sighting Barrow Island, before sailing to Batavia in a longboat. A second boat brought some more crew to Batavia, so just over 40 people survived, including Brookes. Almost one hundred crew apparently perished in the wreck. Tryall became Australia's oldest known shipwreck.[10]

A later English visitor was William Dampier, who in 1699 sailed down some of the western coast of Australia. He noted the lack of water and in his description of Shark Bay in his account "A Voyage to New Holland", he expressed his frustration:[11]

A number of sections of the Western Australian coastline were given names which did not last past the exploratory era in names of features – such as Eendrachtsland. However some names, such as t Landt van de Leeuwin (Leeuwin's Land), materialised at a later date as Cape Leeuwin.

Timeline of European discovery and exploration

Below is a timeline of significant events from the 1616 landfall of Dirk Hartog until the eventual settlement of the Swan River Colony in 1829:

Conventional Long Name:

Swan River Colony (1829–1832)
(1832–1901)

Common Name:Western Australia
Subdivision:Colony
Nation:United Kingdom
Status Text:British Crown Colony
Government Type:Self-governing colony
Title Leader:Monarch
Title Deputy:Governor
Leader1:George IV first
Leader2:Victoria last
Year Leader1:1829–1830
Year Leader2:1837–1901
Deputy1:James Stirling first
Deputy2:Gerard Smith last
Year Deputy1:1829–1832
Year Deputy2:1895–1900
Year Start:1829
Year End:1901
Event Start:Established
Event End:Federation of Australia
Flag Type:Flag (1870–1901)
Flag:Flag of Western Australia
S1:Western Australia
Flag S1:Flag of Western Australia 1870-1953.svg

Colonial era

King George Sound

See main article: King George Sound. The first formal claim of possession for Great Britain was made on 29 September 1791 by Commander (later Captain) George Vancouver RN, on a spot he named Possession Point, at the tip of the peninsula between the waters he also named Princess Royal Harbour and King George the Third's Sound at Albany (the Third was dropped from the name in 1826).

In the early 19th century, the British became concerned about the possibility of a French colony being established on the west coast of Australia. In 1826, the Governor of New South Wales, Ralph Darling, ordered the establishment of a settlement at King George's Sound. An army detachment was sent from Sydney headed by Major Edmund Lockyer with eighteen soldiers, one captain, one doctor, one storekeeper and twenty-three convicts.

On 21 January 1827, the whole of Australia was claimed as British territory for the first time when Major Lockyer formally annexed the western portion of the continent in a ceremony on King George Sound.[14]

In March 1831, the penal settlement was withdrawn, and the control of King George's Sound was transferred from New South Wales to the Swan River Colony.[14] Captain James Stirling decreed that the settlement would be named Albany from 1 January 1832.[15]

The Swan River Colony

See main article: Swan River Colony. The first documented European settlements were established at the Swan River by James Stirling in 1829. The colonists first sighted land on 1 June, arrived in Cockburn Sound on 2 June, an official proclamation was made on 18 June and the foundation of the colony took place on 12 August. As Lieutenant Governor, Stirling had sole authority to draft laws and decide day-to-day affairs. On 6 February 1832, the colony was renamed Western Australia.[16]

Major towns of the colony developed slowly into the port city of Fremantle, the main settlement of Perth upriver, and Guildford.

Expansion 1829–1850

Much of the land around the Swan River Colony was unsuitable for agriculture and it was inevitable that the colony would have to expand beyond the Swan River area after the most fertile locations were quickly settled.

Sheep farming was the most successful early agricultural activity, and the basis of all expansion until the 1850s.

Convict era

See main article: Convict era of Western Australia. While Western Australia was initially a "free settlement", economic problems for settler capitalists led them to seek the transportation of British convicts. Western Australia became a penal colony in 1850.

The Gregory brothers led major exploration expeditions to many parts of the colony, including:

By 1859, all the other Australian colonies had their own parliaments and colonists in Western Australia began pushing for the right to govern themselves. The British Colonial Office opposed this because of the slow rate of growth and the presence of convicts. Petitions asking for some of the positions in the Legislative Council to be filled by elected members were presented to London twice during the 1860s.

By 1868, over 9,000 convicts had been transported to Western Australia on 43 convict ship voyages.

Expansion 1861–1885

Wool production, usually on large stations, was also the basis of expansion further east and northward.

The first permanent European settlements in the North West (later divided into the Pilbara and Kimberley regions) took place in the mid-1860s, initially at the Harding River, De Grey River and Roebourne (gazetted in 1867). Pearling also came to dominate the North West, initially in Nickol Bay, with a fleet at Tien Tsin Harbor (later renamed Cossack). In the North West, unlike southern Western Australia, the labour force was dominated by Indigenous Australians, often under harsh forms of unfree labour.

In 1870, some members of the Legislative Council were elected for the first time, although only male settlers with significant property could vote and the Governor could still veto the council's decisions.

John Forrest led two major expeditions:

In 1872, controversial explorer Peter Egerton Warburton made a journey from Alice Springs to the Western Australian coast.

Ernest Giles twice traversed the Gibson Desert between 1872 and 1876.

During the 1870s, the Murchison and Gascoyne regions were also settled by Europeans.

Other notable events

Gold discoveries, 1885–1900

See main article: Gold mining in Western Australia. Until the 1880s the economy of the state was based largely on wool and wheat. A major change in the colony's fortunes occurred in 1885 when gold was discovered and prospectors by the tens of thousands swarmed across the land in a desperate attempt to discover new goldfields.

In 1887 a new constitution, including proposals for responsible government, was drafted and sent to London by Governor Broome for approval. It was argued that due to the increasing wealth being generated by gold rushes, Western Australia should become a self-governing colony. An Act granting self-government was passed by the British Parliament in 1890, giving the Colony independence from the UK in matters other than foreign policy, defence and "native affairs". Section 70 of the self-government act established an Aborigines Protection Board,[19] under the control of the British Parliament, not the Western Australian one. Governor Broome had earlier warned the British Colonial Office that Western Australians could not to be trusted in matters relating to Aboriginal persons. A further clause to the constitution stated that 5,000 pounds or one percent of state revenues, whichever was the greater, was to be allocated to Aboriginal persons for their welfare and advancement. Many settlers resented these clauses, and Western Australia has never honoured this clause to its own constitution. A previous Governor, Sir William Robinson, was re-appointed to supervise the change. He travelled by train from Albany to Perth and towns en route lit bonfires and people gathered at railway sidings to celebrate his arrival and the new constitution. His arrival in Perth on 21 October 1890 saw the city decorated with elaborate floral arches spanning the city's main streets and buildings were decked with banners and flags.

In 1891 the rush to the Murchison goldfields began when Tom Cue discovered gold at the town which now bears his name. In the years that followed dozens of gold towns – Day Dawn, Nannine, Peak Hill, Garden Gully, Dead Finish, Pinnicles, Austin Island and Austin Mainland – flourished only to be abandoned when the seams were exhausted and the gold fever moved on.

The influx of miners from the eastern colonies and from overseas increased the presence of trade unions in Western Australia. The Trades and Labor Council, Perth was established in 1891 and Perth Trades Hall opened (1912). The first edition of the Westralian Worker appeared on 7 September 1900 and was followed shortly afterwards by the opening of the Kalgoorlie Trades Hall, the first such hall in Western Australia. A Trades Hall was opened in Fremantle in 1904.

An influx of people from Victoria, South Australia, and Tasmania led to Australian rules football becoming the dominant football code when several local rugby football clubs switched codes.

John Forrest – the first Premier of Western Australia and its only premier as a colony – clashed with Robinson over section 70. While Forrest had argued that Western Australians should accept section 70 to obtain self-government, by 1892 he was attempting to have it changed. William Traylen argued that

Discoveries at Coolgardie (1892) and Paddy Hannan's discovery at Kalgoorlie (1893) sparked true gold fever. Coolgardie prospered particularly well, becoming the third largest town in the colony after Perth and Fremantle.[20]

Gold inspired a new wave of exploration, including David Carnegie who, in 1896, led an epic expedition that travelled through the deserts north of Coolgardie, through the Gibson and Great Sandy Deserts to Halls Creek in the Kimberley, before returning to Coolgardie.

In the late 19th century there was talk of the gold-rich region around Kalgoorlie seceding from Western Australia, as a colony or state called Auralia. This campaign coincided with the reluctance in Perth regarding Western Australia taking part in Australian Federation. Talk of miners' separation and them taking their wealth elsewhere was seen as a threat to the stability of the colony.[20]

In 1899, Forrest succeeded unilaterally passing the Constitution Amendment Act, taking control of Aboriginal Affairs without approval of the British House of Commons. Many Aboriginal people argue that the 1899 amendment was an illegal usurpation of British government power and one percent of accumulated Government revenues should be set aside for Aboriginal welfare, as intended.

Other notable events

Federation of Australia

See main article: Federation of Australia. On 1 January 1901, following a proclamation by Queen Victoria, Western Australia, along with the other five British colonies of New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania and Victoria, formed the federation of the Commonwealth of Australia, of which they each became component states. However, Western Australia was reluctant to join the union, doing so only after they were offered a five-year transitional period on inter-state tariffs and a transcontinental railway line.

Development during the early twentieth century

The wealth generated from gold soon disappeared and by the early years of the 20th century, the economy was once again dependent on wool and wheat. This dependency meant that a dramatic fall in wool and wheat prices in the late 1920s – early 1930s saw the state's economic collapse. It was not to recover until after World War II when the Federal Government's postwar immigration policy saw a huge influx of migrants, nearly all of them from Europe, in the period 1947 to 1970.

Important events in Western Australia included the following:

World War II

See main article: Military history of Australia during World War II.

Postwar era (1946–1970s)

Events since 1971

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. cs1 . live . 2024-05-19.
  2. Book: Zimmerman. Augusto. Appleby. Gabrielle. Aroney. Nicholas. John. Thomas. The Future of Australian Federalism: Comparative and Interdisciplinary Perspectives. 2012. Cambridge University Press. 9781107006379. 79. https://books.google.com/books?id=AJQI3YLODDMC&pg=PA77. 17 October 2014. The Still Reluctant State.
  3. Book: Heilbronn. Gary N.. Introducing the Law. 2008. CCH Australia Limited. Sydney. 9781921873478. 48. 7. https://books.google.com/books?id=i3GSVRLdkc4C&pg=PA48. 17 October 2014. Commonwealth Parliament. etal.
  4. [Sylvia Hallam|Hallam, Sylvia J.]
  5. Web site: Australia colonized earlier than previously thought?. Archaeo News. 24 July 2003. Stone Pages. The West Australian (19 July 2003).
  6. Hesp, Patrick A., Murray-Wallace, Colin V. and C. E. Dortch, (1999), "Aboriginal occupation on Rottnest Island, Western Australia, provisionally dated by Aspartic Acid Racemisation assay of land snails to greater than 50 ka" (Australian Archaeology, No. 49 (1999).
  7. McDonald, Josephine. Reynen, Wendy . Petchey, Fiona . Ditchfield, Kane . Byrne, Chae . Vannieuwenhuyse, Dorcas . Leopold, Matthias. Veth, Peter. September 2018. Karnatukul (Serpent's Glen): A new chronology for the oldest site in Australia's Western Desert. PLOS One. 13 . 9. e0202511 . 10.1371/journal.pone.0202511. 30231025 . 6145509 . 2018PLoSO..1302511M . . The re-excavation of Karnatukul (Serpent’s Glen) has provided evidence for the human occupation of the Australian Western Desert to before 47,830 cal. BP (modelled median age). This new sequence is 20,000 years older than the previous known age for occupation at this site. free .
  8. McDonald, Jo. Veth, Peter. 2008. Australian Aboriginal Studies. 2008/1. Rock- art: Pigment dates provide new perspectives on the role of art in the Australian arid zone. . 4–21. ResearchGate.
  9. McDonald . Jo . Serpents Glen (Karnatukul): New Histories for Deep time Attachment to Country in Australia's Western Desert. . 30 . 1 . 2 July 2020 . 2047-6930 . 10.5334/bha-624 . 225577563 . free .
  10. The First Sighting of Australia by the English . The Geographical Journal . Ida . Lee . 1934 . 83 . April 1934. 317 . 10.2307/1786489 . 1786489 . 1934GeogJ..83..317L . 16 December 2013.
  11. Book: Dampier, William . A Voyage to New Holland . William Dampier . 3rd . 1729 . London . Project Gutenberg . 2022-09-29 . It was the 7th of August when we came into Shark's Bay; in which we anchored at three several places, and stayed at the first of them (on the west side of the bay) till the 11th. During which time we searched about, as I said, for fresh water, digging wells, but to no purpose. .
  12. Web site: King. Robert J.. Jean Pierre Purry's proposal to colonize the Land of Nuyts. Australia on the Map. Australasian Hydrographic Society. 23 November 2015. 2008. 18 February 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170218011334/http://www.australiaonthemap.org.au/jean-pierre/. dead.
  13. Web site: DIRK HARTOG ISLAND - History . https://web.archive.org/web/20050624042432/http://dirkhartogisland.com/history.htm . 24 June 2005 .
  14. Web site: King George's Sound Settlement . State Records . . 14 May 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140624194804/http://search.records.nsw.gov.au/agencies/2517 . 24 June 2014 .
  15. Book: Uren. Malcolm John Leggoe. Land Looking West: The Story of Governor James Stirling in Western Australia. 1948. Oxford University Press. London. 24.
  16. Web site: Swan River Colony Proclaimed. 2 May 1829 . POI Australia. English. 13 February 2021.
  17. Book: Frayne, Beth. The Long Toodyay Chronology, Part 1 1829–1900. 2011. Toodyay Historical Society. Toodyay. second.
  18. Web site: Wonnerup: A chronicle of the south-west. Stirling. Ros. Australian Heritage Magazine. 2011. 27 April 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110525170814/http://www.heritageaustralia.com.au/magazine.php?article=384. 25 May 2011. dead.
  19. https://www.wa.gov.au/system/files/2019-08/Launching%20the%20Ship_0.pdf Appendix 2, Page 2 of 2
  20. Book: Muir, Kenneth . 2012 . Gold: The precious metal that brought instant wealth and long-term prosperity . Sydney, NSW . Trocadero Publishing . 45, 46 . 978-086427-119-8 . 30 October 2021 . 29 October 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211029170925/https://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/5970804/Details . dead .
  21. Bureau of Meteorology (1998). Tropical Cyclones (A Guide for Mariners in Northwest Australia), Pamphlet, Commonwealth of Australia
  22. Web site: Aborigines Act 1897 – Legislation – Western Australia . Find & Connect . 28 June 2011 . 5 February 2020.
  23. Web site: History of the University . 14 June 2006 . 8 February 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070208202255/http://www.uwa.edu.au/visitors/about/history . dead .
  24. Web site: The wreck of the "Koombana", March 1912. Climate Education. Government of Australia Bureau of Meteorology. Trove. 15 June 2024. 17 March 2009. https://webarchive.nla.gov.au/awa/20090317054300/http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/96122/20090317-1643/www.bom.gov.au/lam/climate/levelthree/c20thc/cyclone1.html. dead.
  25. Book: HIstorical Encyclopedia of Western Australia . University of Western Australia Press . 2009 . 978-1-921401-15-2 . Gregory . Jenny . Crawley, Western Australia . Gothard . Jan.
  26. Web site: Wayward Governance: Illegality and its Control in the Public Sector . 2000-07-04 . Australian Institute of Criminology, Government of Western Australia . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20001001093858/http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/lcj/wayward/ch16.html . 2000-10-01 . 2024-05-28.
  27. Web site: Meteorological hazards. Geoscience Australia. Natural hazard risk in Perth, Western Australia – Cities Project Perth Report. Joe. Courtney. Miriam. Middelmann. 2005. 25 December 2012.
  28. Web site: Lee. David. Reluctant relaxation: The end of the iron ore export embargo and the origins of Australia's mining boom, 1960–1966. History Australia. Monash University Publishing. 23 November 2015. Clayton, Vic. 149–170. 2013. 24 November 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20151124101637/http://journals.publishing.monash.edu/ojs/index.php/ha/article/view/1024. dead.