The Kurnai people resisted the European invasion of their land. It is extremely difficult to ascertain the numbers killed in the guerilla warfare undertaken, or the numbers who died in the massacres that were inflicted upon the Gunaikurnai by the superior weaponry of the Europeans. A partial list from letters and diaries for an exhibition called
Koorie, mounted by the
Museum of Victoria in 1991, included: • 1840 – Nuntin- unknown number killed by
Angus McMillan's men • 1840 – Boney Point – "Angus McMillan and his men took a heavy toll of Aboriginal lives" • 1841 – Butchers Creek – 30-35 shot by Angus McMillan's men • 1841 – Maffra – unknown number shot by Angus McMillan's men • 1842 – Skull Creek – unknown number killed • 1842 – Bruthen Creek – "hundreds killed" • 1843 –
Warrigal Creek – between 60 and 180 shot by Angus McMillan and his men • 1844 – Maffra – unknown number killed • 1846 – South Gippsland – 14 killed • 1846 – Snowy River – 8 killed by
Captain Dana and his
Australian native police • 1846-47 – Central Gippsland – 50 or more shot by armed party hunting for a
white woman supposedly held by Aborigines. No such woman was ever found • 1850 – East Gippsland – 15-20 killed • 1850 – Murrindal – 16 poisoned • 1850 – Brodribb River – 15-20 killed In 1846, Gippsland
squatters, Henry Meyrick, wrote in a letter to his relatives in England: The blacks are very quiet here now, poor wretches. No wild beast of the forest was ever hunted down with such unsparing perseverance as they are. Men, women and children are shot whenever they can be met with … I have protested against it at every station I have been in Gippsland, in the strongest language, but these things are kept very secret as the penalty would certainly be hanging … For myself, if I caught a black actually killing my sheep, I would shoot him with as little remorse as I would a wild dog, but no consideration on earth would induce me to ride into a camp and fire on them indiscriminately, as is the custom whenever the smoke is seen. They [the Aborigines] will very shortly be extinct. It is impossible to say how many have been shot, but I am convinced that not less than 500 have been murdered altogether. In 1863, Reverend
Friedrich Hagenauer established Rahahyuck Mission on the banks of the
Avon River, near Lake Wellington, to house the Gunaikurnai survivors from west and central Gippsland. The mission sought to discourage all tribal ritual and culture. It closed in 1908 and the few remaining residents were moved to the
Lake Tyers Mission. ==Native title agreement==