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Bessy
Cameron 1851 - 1895 Aboriginal teacher
Bessy
Cameron (1851-1895), Aboriginal teacher, was born probably in 1851
in Nyungar country (King George Sound), West Australia. Her mother's
name is not known; her father was an 'old native servant' of Henry
Camfield, Government Resident at Albany. Anne Camfield, a governess
and teacher before marriage to Henry, in 1852 opened a 'native institution'
(later known as Annesfield) with the backing of the Society for
the Propagation of the Gospel where Aboriginal children were to
be 'trained in the habits of civilised life' and 'taught the great
truths of Christianity'. A brother and a sister attended this school
with Bessy who proved an excellent pupil. She enjoyed reading and
music and took her certificate of proficiency with honours.
Her ability having been recognised, arrangements were made for her
to attend a 'model school' in Sydney (similar to those for training
pupil teachers), where she received a 'superior education' and became
an accomplished pianist. In 1866 she went back to Albany where she
helped Mrs Camfield in the school and was salaried church organist.
In the 1860s Moravian missionaries in Victoria, finding they had
little success with Aboriginal women, took steps to find Christian
wives for their converts. They arranged for five young women from
Annesfield to be sent to their Ramahyuck mission, nominating Bessy
by name as a teacher. The others were expected to marry. Bessy arrived
in 1867 anticipating a later return to her dear Mrs Camfield. She
was expected to do housework as well as teach, but she gave satisfaction
and her skills, especially her playing of the harmonium, were frequently
on display.
Trouble began when a European man wished to marry her. She had been
brought up to expect a European rather than a native would be her
husband and she appears to have liked him. Unwilling to lose her
the missionaries moved her temporarily to Lake Tyers, and decided
'it would be best to get her married'. They brought Donald Cameron,
a Jupagilwournditch man from Ebenezer, a gentle pleasant man with
some mission education, whom Bessy married on 4 November 1868. The
Camerons were to take charge of the mission's new 'boarding house'.
For Bessy it was a demotion and though she was 'in charge', her
work was closely scrutinised. On coming to Ramahyuck she had experienced
a marked deterioration in her material environment; she now lost
all initiative in those accomplishments which she had been taught
to value highly.
She found solace in reading. Neglect of the domestic side to her
duties led to criticism and finally to the removal of the Camerons
from the boarding house to the mission village. They left Ramahyuck
but returned; Bessy left Donald, then was reconciled; they were
expelled from Ramahyuck but unable to earn enough to support their
four surviving children they begged to be allowed back. On the way
back another child was stillborn. Neither on the mission nor away
from it, could they make a life for themselves. They returned to
Lake Tyers mission where another child was born; there Bessy found
some comfort in her harmonium and the singing. They were forced
to move again by the 1886 'half-caste' act, though Bessy was allowed
back on Ramahyuck in 1887 seriously ill following a miscarriage.
She left and returned again. Her last years were spent battling
to keep her younger children and her children's children from being
taken from them. She died on the 12 January 1895.
From a shy young woman she became assertive, independent and questioning.
At the end of her life, she was fighting to stop her children being
taken, as she had been, to be brought up 'white'.
Heather Radi
Bain Attwood, '. . . In the Name of All My Coloured Brethren and
Sisters: a Biography of Bessy Cameron' Hecate 1986.
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