The newly appointed Commissioner of Crown Lands Tyers arrived in
Gippsland in early 1844, and was soon involved in legal, moral and cultural problems of a different sort than what he found in Werten District the year before. On 11 February 1844, he notes in his diary: :
"I issued orders to both the border police and the blacks not to fire except in self defence – but to rush upon them and take them by surprise. When approaching the scrub however in line – one of the party fired and was followed by the whole. The natives being taken by surprise fled though the scrub – leaving everything behind them." Some time later a boating party on the
Gippsland Lakes, which included Tyers, was searching for a spot to land to gather dry sticks. A local grazier Dunderdale records: :
when it [the boat] neared the land the air was filled with a stench so horrible that Mr. Tyers at once put the boat about, and went away in another direction. Next day he visited the spot with his police, and he found that the dead wood covered a large pile of corpses of the natives shot by his own black troopers, and he directed them to make it a holocaust. The worst killing during Tyers' period happened on a tributary of the
Snowy River between today's
Orbost and
Marlo.
Native Police were involved, including some
Western Port blacks, traditional enemies of the
Kurnai. Commissioner Tyers reported:
"At least fifty [Aborigines] were killed by the native police and other aborigines attached to the parties in search of a white woman." Policemen Dan and Walsh, under Tyers' command were reported to be culpable, a local grazier Warman in his journal records "
as long as such persons as Messrs W. Dana and Walsh are in command of the native police nothing can be done to stop their extermination for the native blacks are the most cruel blood thirsty wretches alive, and nothing gives them so much pleasure as shooting and tomahawking the defenceless savages". Tyers was responsible for inaugurating government in Gippsland and virtually became 'King' of the huge isolated area, where lawlessness had been common and the Aboriginals hostile. He made a map showing holdings and their occupants and sent it to La Trobe in July 1844 with a descriptive and statistical report. He regulated the liquor trade and on his recommendations two police stations and a Court of Petty Sessions were established and two justices of the peace appointed. He improved
Port Albert to cope with the growing trade with
Hobart. He made extensive explorations of Gippsland, always making his land valuations after trigonometrical survey and collection of geological specimens. In 1846 he investigated the suitability of
Gabo Island for a lighthouse. He was appointed a
stipendiary magistrate in 1853. To this position was added that of warden of the Gippsland goldfields in 1861. He moved from Old Port to
Eagle Point, where in 1849 he married Georgina Caroline, sister of William Scott, a grazier at
Swan Reach. Later he moved to
Sale and then built a home, Seabank, at Old Port, where he retired in 1867. He died at Melbourne on 20 September 1870. ==References==