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Louisa
Briggs 1836 - 1925 Aboriginal leader
Louisa
Briggs (1836-1925), Aboriginal leader, was born on 14 November 1836
on Preservation Island, Bass Strait, the second daughter of Polly
Munro and Robert Strugnell, who in 1818 as a seventeen year old
chimney-sweep had received a seven year sentence of transportation.
Polly was a daughter of Doogbyerumboreoke, a Woirorung woman from
Port Phillip, and James Munro, a sealer permanently settled on Preservation
Island. Louisa grew up in a stable island community, learning to
read but not write. At seventeen she married John Briggs, the son
of another Aboriginal woman and a seaman turned sealer.
About 1853 they went to the Victorian goldfields, where the first
of their nine children was born. For some years they worked as shepherds
in the Beaufort district and in 1871 shortly after Louisa bore her
last child, they were admitted destitute to Coranderrk Aboriginal
Station. Coranderrk had been created an Aboriginal Reserve earlier
at the request of Louisa's Woiworung and Bunurong relatives, but
was then under control of the Board for the Protection of Aborigines,
and producing hops. John was employed as a ploughman but left after
a dispute about the Board's failure to pay a cash wage to all workers.
The family was readmitted in 1874, again in need.
On Coranderrk Louisa acted as nurse and midwife. She was appointed
matron in 1876, the first Aboriginal to replace a European on salaried
staff. By ability, position and hereditary right she became spokesperson
for the residents, though her letters to the Board had to be written
for her. The Board's policy of bringing Aboriginal orphans from
elsewhere in Victoria to Coranderrk and using the profits from hops
for their support, kindled the simmering resentment over poor wages,
culminating in rebellion. That the newcomers had no traditional
claim to reserve land, was an additional grievance. After initial
success in securing the reappointment of the popular first manager,
Louisa fought the Board's plans to sell Coranderrk, and remove Coranderrk
residents to other reserves. She gave evidence to the 1876 inquiry
but after further complaint was forced off the reserve. She was
then a widow. With her younger children she moved to Ebenezer Aboriginal
Station where she became a confidante of the missionary, but her
children objected to conditions there. She wrote complaining they
were starving.
After a week-long strike and another inquiry in 1881 which recommended
dismissal of the manager and permanent retention of Coranderrk,
Louisa and her family were reunited. Her sons were refused permission
to take up land on Coranderrk as selectors but it became a statutory
reserve and thus 'permanent'. Louisa was reappointed matron but
another woman was placed over her; she later was in trouble for
taking sugar and hops to make beer. Under an 1886 Act 'half castes'
under 35 years of age were expelled from reserves. When Louisa's
adult sons were forced off, she followed. Unable to earn a living
from shepherding, in 1885 the family entered Muloga Mission, on
the New South Wales side of the Murray, and from there removed to
nearby Cumeroogunga Reserve in 1889. Louisa's later years saw her
move to Barmah where she was refused rations 'for the reason she
is a half caste of Tasmania', then back to Cumeroogunga, where she
died in 1925. She was a strong-minded, hard-working woman, a regular
church-goer, remembered for her humour, audacity and courage.
Heather Radi
Diane Barwick, 'This Most Resolute Lady' in Metaphors of Interpretation
ed Diane Barwick 1985.
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