The creation of the
Canning Stock Route in 1906–07 was a brutal time for many Martu people, who were forced to serve as guides and reveal
water sources after being run down by men on horseback, restrained by heavy chains and tied to trees at night. A
Royal Commission in 1908 exonerated government surveyor
Alfred Canning, after an appearance by
Kimberley explorer
John Forrest who asserted that all explorers had acted in such a fashion. Starting with the establishment of settlements like Bidyadanga, Papunya, and Jigalong, many people who would become the Martu moved or were taken from the desert to these settlements, especially Jigalong, where
missionaries and officials encouraged them to stop foraging by causing reliance on market goods. While they did incorporate market goods into their economy, their communion at Jigalong served their realisation of common interests and identities as Martu more than it did their assimilation to European institutions. The
rabbit-proof fence runs through Martu country and the
film of the same name, based on
a biographical novel by
Doris Pilkington Garimara, depicts the lives of three Martu girls, Doris's mother Molly Craig, Daisy Craig and Gracie Fields who escaped from the
Moore River Native Settlement to trek back on foot to Jigalong. Despite movement towards Jigalong, some Martu had not seen white people before the 1960s, but knew of them from their ancestors, who had generally avoided them since the creation of the Canning Stock Route, though some groups, especially when heavy rains secured better water sources, to move north towards stations and missions. In 1964,
Blue Streak missile tests were programmed to be launched into a sector of the area. The missiles, fired from
Woomera, were designed to dump in traditional Martu country. Successive Western Desert Aboriginal People had "come in", or were "brought in" to overcrowded settlements, such as
Papunya. In May of that year two patrol officers, Walter MacDougall and Terry Long, tasked with ensuring that the target area south of the
Percival Lakes was clear of Aboriginal people, sighted a small clan of Martu, consisting of 20 women and children. Some were widowed: the husbands of five had gone missing over the last several years, two had died from spearing. Terrified of the white men's four-wheeled
Jeeps, which they thought were monstrous "moving rocks", the women managed to evade attempts to discover them for four months, living off what to native eyes is a zone, though extremely arid, rich in food. Two native men, Punuma Sailor and Nyani from the Pilbara Mission, were called in, and on 23 September found a woman and her child. Eventually Nyani, who spoke a language the women could understand, sent messages through to the main group, which then decided to come in, joining MacDougall and Sailor at their camp. They were moved to the Jigalong
mission station. By the time the mission at Jigalong terminated in 1969, many Martu had moved away in recognition of their common need in self determination and formed their own settlements at Punmu, Kunawaritji, and Parnngurr. In these settlements, the Martu retained some market goods from their economy in Jigalong while maintaining a dependence on foraging. This hybrid economy was supported by subsidies and community infrastructure established by the government, without which the retention of foraging in wouldn't be possible in the economy's current state. The circumstances for what was one of the last first contact events in Australian history, the last being that of the
Pintupi Nine, was later recounted by Yuwali, a 17-year-old girl at the time, and the book,
Cleared Out: First Contact in the Western Desert, formed the basis of a 2009 documentary film
Contact. The Martu were granted
native title to much of their country in 2002, after almost two decades of struggle. It was geographically the
largest claim in Australia to that time. However, (
Karlamilyi) was not included. Martu representative Teddy Biljabu commented that they had been given "a body without its heart". ==Kinship system==