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Henry Dana

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Henry Edmund Pulteney Dana
Born(1820-12-25)25 December 1820
Died25 December 1852(1852-12-25)(aged 32)
OccupationPoliceman
Military career
AllegianceBritish-Australian
Service/branchAustralian Native Police Corps
Websiteexample

Henry Edmund Pulteney Dana(1820–1852) established theNative Police Corpsin thePort Phillip District(laterVictoria) in 1842, he was responsible for two massacres of Aboriginal people one at Barmah Lake in 1843 and the other at Snowy River in 1846. Dana was born in England, his father being Captain William Pulteney Dana of the 6th Regiment. Henry Dana migrated toVan Diemen's Land(laterTasmania) in 1840, but in 1842 he relocated to the Port Phillip District where he renewed acquaintance with SuperintendentCharles La Trobe,whom he knew in London. The two men became firm friends and Latrobe appointed Dana to establish a native police corps.[1]

Twenty-fiveAboriginesfrom variousGippslandtribes were enlisted at the depot atNarre Warren,and trained for mounted police duty by Dana and his second-in-command, Dudley Le Souef, under the general supervision of the assistant protector of Aborigines, William Thomas.[1]Dana's police force lasted longer than the original corps set up by Christiaan de Villiers in 1837, partly because Dana made some allowances for the Aborigines' traditional way of life. For example, during summer the troopers were generally allowed to rejoin their communities to take part in cultural activities.[2]

The Corps was controversial due to Dana's emphasis on the use of force, rather than arrest. For example, one trooper is reported to have said: "Captain say big one stupid catch them very good shoot them, you blackfellows, no shoot them me hand cuff you and send you to jail."[3]The Native Police Corps is estimated to have killed 125indigenous Australiansbetween 1835 and 1850.[4]Specific massacres of Aboriginal people include the LaTrobe Valley, Barmah Lake and Snowy River massacres.[5]

Dana made no real use of the tracking skills of his troops and used them in the more traditional role of mounted police. While they proved useful to the pastoralists who were rapidly taking over traditional Aboriginal land. Requiring Aborigines to arrest and even shoot down their own people proved demoralising for both sides.[1]

Dana was responsible for a massacre at Barmah Lake in 1843 where around 26 Aboriginal people were killed. Dana was speared in the thigh. The official report did not mention the murders and when challenged on the truthiness of the report Dana's reply was that "persons unconnected with the public service know nothing of reports... being apt to blurt out statements more properly held in reserve." On January 5, 1844, a man called Allan, called at GA Robinson's office in Melbourne and told him

...a number of men also women were shot by Dana's party at the Murry[sic]and children were knocked on the head with carrabines[sic].[6]They first sent out a party to look for the natives and then went and planted themselves in a scrub and sent two or three troopers to round or drive them like sheep to be large party carrelled; then they commenced firing and shot some of them in the river. Dana told me he had a brush with the natives. He went to the Murry[sic]by the Campaspe and returned said 20 men, one woman, five children were shot. Kelsh's overseer told me that he, Dana, said he would turn the natives out. (Robinson 5 Jan 1844).[7][8]

In 1844 Dana sent a letter toLa Trobereporting that he had just completed a second tour of the district: ‘from observation and information this part of the Province is perfectly free from any thing like outrages by the blacks... "[9]

Dana was responsible for a massacre at Snowy River on 16 December 1846 against where 15 Tatungalung or Krauatungulung were murdered. According to historian A.G.L. Shaw the number killed was between 15 and 23.[10][11]

When theGold Rushbegan in Victoria in 1851, the Native Police Corps was the only organised government force in the areas to which miners began to flock, and were used to enforce the authority of the earlygoldfields commissioners.However, Dana antagonised the gold diggers atBallaratin September 1851 with his rigorous attempt to collect the firstlicence fees.[1]

On 24 November 1852, Dana died ofpneumonia,having suffered severe exposure while on a search forbushrangers,and the corps was disbanded early in 1853. Dana was married and had four children.[1]

Dana Street in Ballarat is named after Henry Dana.[12]

Footnotes

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  1. ^abcdeNorman, Marilynne I."Dana, Henry Edward Pulteney (1820–1852)".Australian Dictionary of Biography.Canberra: National Centre of Biography,Australian National University.ISBN978-0-522-84459-7.ISSN1833-7538.OCLC70677943.Retrieved7 July2017.
  2. ^"Dana's Native Police Corps (1842-1853)".Tracking the Native Police.Public Reacords Office Victoria. Archived fromthe originalon 2 December 2008.Retrieved7 July2017.
  3. ^"Conflicts in the Field, and Criticism of Methods (1843)".Tracking the Native Police.Public Records Office Victoria. Archived fromthe originalon 21 August 2008.Retrieved7 July2017.
  4. ^Ben Kiernan, 2008,Blood and Soil: Modern Genocide 1500-2000,Carlton, Melbourne University Press, p.295
  5. ^"Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia, 1788-1930 - Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia, 1788-1930 Centre For 21st Century Humanities".c21ch.newcastle.edu.au.Retrieved13 September2020.
  6. ^Clark, ID (ed) 1998d, The Journals of George Augustus Robinson, Chief Protector, Port Phillip Aboriginal Protectorate, Volume Four: 1 January 1844-24 October 1845, H eritage Matters, Melbourne. p. 2.
  7. ^Cannon, M 1990, Who killed the Koories?, William Heinemann Australia, Port Melbourne. P. 139-140.
  8. ^"Centre For 21st Century Humanities".c21ch.newcastle.edu.au.Retrieved12 September2020.
  9. ^Fels, Marie.A QUASI-POLICING ABORIGINAL EXPEDITION IN PORT PHILLIP IN 1838(PDF).p. 128.
  10. ^"Snowy River - Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia, 1788-1930".Centre For 21st Century Humanities.Retrieved12 September2020.
  11. ^Shaw, A G L 1996, A history of the Port Phillip District: Victoria before separation, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne. P. 133.
  12. ^"Dana Street - Ballarat and District Industrial Heritage Project".bih.federation.edu.au.Retrieved13 September2020.