Sydney Upon arrival in Australia, Schmidt was admitted as a member of Lang's Presbyterian Synod of
New South Wales Although joined by fellow German missionary Reverend
Christopher Eipper, Schmidt did not have much success in bringing Christianity to the Aboriginal people in the area, and his mission was dismantled at the behest of the colonial government in 1846.
Kilcoy Poisoning Schmidt was also notable for being involved in leaking the details of a deliberate mass poisoning of Aboriginal people at
Kilcoy in Queensland to the Sydney press. Schmidt had recorded in his
travel diary the details of the incident, in which as many as sixty Aboriginal people were given
flour and other rations laced with
strychnine by white settlers. Not wanting to upset the delicate situation and cause any reprisal attacks, the authorities attempted to hush up the affair. Fellow minister and evangelical reformer
John Dunmore Lang published the details from Schmidt's travel diary in the
Colonial Observer, causing a major scandal in
Sydney, the colonial capital. ==Return to Europe, and Samoa==