19th century John Henry Fleming, the leader of the massacre, was never captured. He hid or was protected, either in the Hawkesbury district, on a relative's property inland from Moreton Bay, or in Van Diemen's Land (according to conflicting reports that remain unresolved). He later became a respected farmer, church warden and justice of the peace in the Hawkesbury district. John Blake, one of the four men acquitted at the first trial and not subsequently charged, committed
suicide in 1852. One of his descendants believes he did so out of a guilty conscience. The Myall Creek case led to significant uproar among sections of the population and the press, more so voiced in favour of the perpetrators.
The Sydney Herald was particularly strident, declaring in October 1838 that "the whole gang of black animals are not worth the money the colonists will have to pay for printing the silly documents on which we have already wasted too much time". In November 1838 the paper's editorial said if Aboriginal Australians, referred to as the "filthy, brutal cannibals of
New Holland" and "ferocious savages", Not all newspapers or white settlers took the same view.
The Australian published a poem by
Eliza Hamilton Dunlop, "
The Aboriginal Mother", on 13 December 1838, about a week after the seven men were found guilty, but several days before they were hanged. The poem expresses Dunlop's sorrow over the massacre and expresses sympathy for the Aboriginal people of Australia. Dunlop responded to criticism by the
Sydney Herald, arguing on behalf of the poem and explaining why her views were correct. The editorial in
John Dunmore Lang's newspaper
The Colonist on 12 December 1838 argued at length that "the murders... are, to a serious extent, chargeable upon us as a
nation". The Myall Creek massacre is often cited as the only massacre of its kind in colonial Australia for which white people were subsequently convicted and executed for killing Aboriginal people. But there was at least one case prior to Myall Creek in which whites were held responsible. In 1820, two convicts, John Kirby and John Thompson, attempted to escape from the colony but were captured by local Aboriginal people and returned to
Newcastle. A military party accompanied by two constables set out to meet them. They saw Kirby stab Burragong (alias King Jack), whereupon he was felled by a
waddy. Burragong initially appeared to recover, saying that he was
murry bujjery (much recovered) and collected his reward of a "suit of clothing". However, he later complained of illness. Ten days after being wounded, he died from the stabbing. The Myall Creek massacre was the latest of many massacres that took place in that district (the Liverpool Plains) around that time. As elsewhere in the colony, the Aboriginal people at times resisted the expanding invasion of their land by spearing sheep and cattle for food and sometimes attacking the stockmen's huts and killing the white men. In the Liverpool Plains district, some cattle had been speared and huts attacked, with two whites killed (allegedly by Aboriginal people). The squatters complained to Acting Governor Snodgrass, who sent Major James Nunn and about 22 troopers up to the district. Nunn enlisted the assistance of up to 25 local stockmen and together they rode around the district killing any Aboriginal people they came across. Nunn's campaign culminated in the
Waterloo Creek massacre of 1838 at Waterloo Creek. Although no definitive historical records are available of the event, estimates of Aboriginal people murdered range from 40 to more than 100. When Nunn returned to Sydney, many of the local squatters and stockmen continued the "drive" against the Aboriginal people, including the Myall Creek massacre. However, because of community outrage, Governor Gipps did not encourage further prosecutions after this. Neither the Waterloo Creek massacre nor the later McIntyre's Station massacre were prosecuted, although each was said to have resulted in a greater number of Aboriginal deaths. In his book,
Blood on the Wattle (1998), travel journalist
Bruce Elder says that the successful prosecutions of the Myall Creek massacre resulted in pacts of silence among whites becoming a common practice to avoid sufficient evidence becoming available for future prosecutions. Two Sydney newspapers reported that poisoning Aboriginal people became more common, considered "much safer" for whites than outright attacks. Many massacres went unpunished due to these practices, The Myall Creek massacre and the subsequent trial and hanging of some of the offenders had a profound effect on the "outside" settlers and their dealing with indigenous people throughout all sections the colonial Australian frontiers. The
Sydney Herald and the spokesmen for the settlers in the remote districts of New South Wales and Victoria, frequently leading men such as
William Wentworth, typically classified the trial and execution of the offenders as "judicial murder". Similar opinions were voiced years later in
Queensland, the most populated section of the continent in terms of indigenous people, where it was the subject of numerous statements in the then newly separated parliament. In 1861, there was almost unanimous agreement that the prosecution and hanging in 1838 had been nothing less than '...judicial murder of white men in Sydney', as the government spokesman
Robert Ramsay Mackenzie phrased it in his speech in the Legislative Assembly on 25 July, and that 'white troopers were "useless" as they could not be "acting against the blackfellows as they wished, lest an outcry should be raised against them, and they could be prosecuted for murder. The notion seemingly almost unanimously agreed to by the first Queensland parliament was that no white man should ever be prosecuted in Queensland for the killing of a black.
21st century legacy On 9 June 2023, ahead of the 185th anniversary of the massacre,
The Sydney Morning Herald published an
editorial that apologised for its part in "spreading racist views and misinformation while campaigning for the killers to escape justice". It said that its disapproval of the death sentence for the 7 of the 12 men involved was "not due to a lack of evidence or genuine doubts over the integrity of any legal process, but because the perpetrators were white and the dead black". It admitted that its coverage was out of step with other reporting at the time, and also apologised for other articles encouraging readers to kill Aboriginal people if they felt "threatened". ==Stockyard controversy==