Cora was one of the two known wives of the notable Aboriginal explorer and celebrity
Bungaree. After Bungaree's first wife, Matora, died in the mid-1820s, Cora became Bungaree's principal wife and the couple were readily identified in Sydney as the "king" and "queen" of the local Aboriginal population. Bungaree and Cora were associated with a group of surviving Indigenous people from a number of coastal clans of the Sydney, Central Coast and Newcastle regions. They camped at various places along the eastern harbour, such as
Georges Head,
Rose Bay,
Camp Cove,
The Domain and
Elizabeth Bay. Camp Cove in particular was a favourite place of residence, attracting up to a few hundred Indigenous people at any one time due to its fishing and cultural importance. Cora was widowed after Bungaree's death in 1830. After the death of her husband Bungaree in 1830, Cora Gooseberry became a leader among a regrouped band. Cora continued living with other Aboriginal people at places such as Camp Cove into her older years, retaining cultural knowledge of the coastal Sydney area, only some of which she guardedly shared with enquiring British people. In the last few years of her life, she moved into the city, where she became a resident at the hotels owned by her ex-convict friend named Edward Borton. ==Death==