First contact with Europeans The Gweagal first made visual contact with Cook and other Europeans on the 29 April 1770 in the area which is now known as "Captain Cook's Landing Place", in the
Kurnell area of
Kamay Botany Bay National Park. It was the first attempt made, on Cook's
first voyage, in the
Endeavour, to make contact with the Aboriginal people of Australia. In sailing into the bay, Cook noted two Gweagal men posted on the rocks, brandishing spears and fighting sticks, and a group of four too intent on fishing to pay much attention to the ship's passage. Using a telescope as they lay offshore, approximately a kilometre from an encampment consisting of 6–8
gunyahs,
Joseph Banks recorded observing an elderly woman come out of the bush, with at first three children in tow, then another three, and light a fire. While busying herself, she looked at the ship at anchor without showing any perplexity. She was joined by the four fishermen, who brought their catch to be cooked. When Cook and crew made their first landfall two Gweagal men came down to the boat to fend off what they thought to be spirits of the dead. They shouted "
Warra warra wai," meaning "You are all dead," and gestured with their spears. Cook's party attempted to communicate their desire for water and threw gifts of beads and nails ashore. The two Aboriginal men continued to oppose the landing and Cook fired a warning shot. One of the Gweagal men responded by throwing a rock, and Cook fired on them with small shot, wounding one of them in the leg. The crew then landed, and the Gweagal men threw two spears before Cook fired another round of small shot and they retreated. The landing party found several children in nearby huts, and left some beads and other gifts with them. The landing party collected 40 to 50 spears and other artefacts. Cook and his crew stayed at Botany Bay for a week, collecting water, timber, fodder and botanical specimens and exploring the surrounding area. The Indigenous inhabitants observed the Europeans closely but generally retreated whenever they approached. Cook's party made several attempts to establish relations with the Indigenous people, but they showed no interest in the food and gifts the Europeans offered, and occasionally threw spears as an apparent warning.
The Gweagal Spears and Shield Cook and Banks returned to England in 1771 with a large collection of flora, fauna and cultural artefacts from their first Pacific voyage. This included 40 to 50 spears from the Gweagal people. Banks was convinced the spears were abandoned (on the shores of Kurnell) and "thought it no improper measure to take with them all the
lances which they could find, somewhere between 40 or 50". Cook gave some of the spears to his patron,
John Montagu,
First Lord of the Admiralty and Fourth Earl of Sandwich, who then gave them, to his
alma mater Trinity College at the
University of Cambridge in England. The La Perouse Local Aboriginal Land Council and La Perouse Aboriginal Community Alliance worked with the Cambridge museum towards repatriation of the three known remaining spears. On 23 April 2024, the spears were repatriated to the Gweagal people by the university. The
British Museum holds an Aboriginal shield which it had previously identified as probably the one acquired from Botany Bay in 1770. The shield was lent to the
National Museum of Australia in Canberra for an exhibition called
Encounters: Revealing stories of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander objects from the British Museum, from November 2015 to March 2016. Shayne Williams, a Gweagal elder of the La Perouse Community of Botany Bay, saw the shield, thought it was not typical of locally made shields, and asked the British Museum to further investigate its provenance. Following the investigation, anthropologist
Nicholas Thomas concluded in 2018 that the shield is made of red mangrove and is not the one taken from Botany Bay in 1770. Williams states that it is very likely a
Gugu Yimidhirr shield acquired by Cook during his stay at the
Endeavour River in north Queensland (a region where red mangrove is abundant). Historian and archivist Mike Jones, while not disputing the outcome of the workshop or Thomas' conclusion, has challenged the use of purely European sources and perspectives to support the provenance of Indigenous artefacts, saying that the shield has become a "cultural touchstone". Legal academic Sarah Keenan wrote in 2017 that Indigenous perspectives and methodologies were not used in the workshop, and a different conclusion may have been reached, or other knowledge gained about its significance, had such methods been applied. However, representatives from the local indigenous community did participate in the workshop and their perspectives were taken into account. Thomas states that the fact that the shield is not the one represented in the story of the Gweagal Shield does not mean that it should not be repatriated. == Notable people ==