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Tarereenore,
or Walyer, also known as the Amazon of Van Diemen's Land, was born
near St Valentine's Peak, Tasmania. She was a Plairherehillerplue,
of the north tribe, who were under pressure from three sources:
white sealers seeking Aboriginal women; other Aborigines also seeking
women to trade with sealers; and the expansion of pastoralism. In
her teens Walyer was abducted by Aboriginal men and sold to sealers
living on the Bass Strait Islands. As the number of seals declined
the labour of Aboriginal women was used more widely in hunting kangaroos
and other game, and also in the muttonbird trade. Some women were
brutally treated. Without their skill and labour the white men could
not have survived.
By 1830 Walyer had returned to mainland Tasmania and was reported
to be the leader of a small group of Aborigines much feared by other
Aborigines and by whites. In June 1830 she was reported leading
a group of eight men, a boy and a woman. George Augustus Robinson,
appointed to round up all surviving Tasmanian Aborigines, first
made contact in September 1830, by which time her group had grown
to include a number of women and children. He narrowly escaped being
ambushed by her warriors, whom he saw heading towards his previous
day's camp carrying spears. Robinson believed that Walyer's 'mob'
was responsible for 'nearly all the mischief perpetrated west of
the Tamar'. According to his Aboriginal informant, 'She carried
a little fowling piece and would fire at the white men's huts and
call them to come out and the blackfellows would spear them, and
would make use of bad language'.
In December she was again in the Bass Strait Islands, perhaps in
flight from Robinson and assisted by sealers. She was taken to tiny
Penguin Island where five other Aboriginal women and a white man
were working. She tried to persuade the women to murder the man
and steal his boat. When they refused she was effectively trapped
on the island, where one of Robinson's men found her and took her
to the Swan Island Aboriginal station. There she refused to answer
to Walyer, calling herself Mary Ann, but she revealed her identity
by calling her old dog Whiskey by name. Robinson kept her isolated
from other Aborigines, fearing she would incite revolt. She was
'desperate - and possessing a deal of cunning'.
She managed, nevertheless, to alarm the others by telling them that
soldiers were coming from Launceston to shoot them all. She boasted
to the other women that she had taught her people how to load and
fire guns, and that she and her people had killed many white people
and robbed their huts. She expressed implacable hatred of the invader:
'she liked a lutetowin (white man) as she did a black snake'. Female
leadership seems unlikely to have been a feature of Tasmanian Aboriginal
culture, though many of the women who had lived with sealers emerged
as very strong leaders on Flinders Island Aboriginal station. For
years they were thorns in Robinson's side with their refusal to
submit to his program of enforced 'Christianisation and civilisation'.
Walyer did not survive long in captivity. She died on 5 June 1831,
no doubt to Robinson's great relief. She had inspired great loyalty
and great fear.
Julia Clark
Lyndall Ryan The Aboriginal Tasmanians 1982.
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