The first Europeans to enter Taungurung country were
Hamilton Hume and
William Hovell who led an overland
expedition in 1824 to
Port Phillip. They named the
Goulburn River which was known to the Taungurung as
Warring.
Thomas Mitchell later travelled through the area in 1836. Neither party had significant direct contact with the Taungurung. A later Taungurung leader named Billy Hamilton, also known as Yabbee, described how as a lad he saw Mitchell cross the Goulburn River and in a hurry to remain out of sight, he lost his possum-skin rug.
Battle of Broken River Wealthy
squatter pastoralists soon followed, bringing flocks of sheep and cattle to take up grazing properties on Taungurung land.
William Faithfull and his brother George attempted to establish a
sheep station at what is now
Benalla on the
Broken River. Taungurung actively resisted the Faithfull brothers trying to take their land and killed eight of their workers in what has become known as the
Battle of Broken River of April 1838. Several Taungurung were also killed in this skirmish. Although the Faithfull brothers had to retreat to the
Ovens River, they were able, with the help of other colonists including
Peter Snodgrass and Colonel Henry White, to conduct a
punitive expedition against a group of Taungurung near what is now
King Valley, massacring a large number (probably around 50) of men, women and children.
Further massacres Other colonists also pushed into Taungurung country from mid-1838. At this time, workers at the newly established property of Captain Sylvester Browne (father of the author
Thomas Alexander Browne) near
Heathcote shot thirteen Taungurung people dead after some sheep were taken. Frederick Mundy shot many Taungurung dead after inviting them into his camp. Mundy told authorities that "he had given them such a punishing as they would not readily forget". Frederick Manton at
Moorilim sought permission to shoot some resident Aborigines. Up to forty Taungurung, Ngurraiillam and Djadjawurrung were killed in June 1839 during the
Campaspe Plains massacre. The massacre resulted after two employees of Captain Charles Hutton were killed and their sheep taken at the Campaspe Plains. A detachment of
New South Wales Mounted Police was summoned and they "fired indiscriminately at any and all Aborigines they saw". Colonists
Charles Ebden,
William Henry Yaldwyn and Henry Monroe led more shootings of Aboriginal people along the
Coliban River and the
Campaspe River in 1839 and 1840. Around what is modern-day
Mansfield, a
mass poisoning of the
yowung-illam balug clan of the Taungurung was reported in 1839. Bitteruc, a
yowung-illam elder at this time, stated that the land surrounding Mansfield was "good country, my country".
Armed campaign of resistance Taungurung resistance to British colonisation started with the Battle of Broken River and continued despite the severe retribution of the settlers. Later in 1838, a man named Kangan led a raid on Dr Forster's newly formed sheep station on the Goulburn River, killing a shepherd and taking his sheep. The
Native Police under C.L.J. de Villiers was called in to restore order. In early 1840, a Taungurung man named Burregregowel was wounded after being shot near the
Coliban River in a
punitive expedition led by Lt Frederick Russell of the NSW Mounted Police and the colonist Henry Monro. The son of Burregregowel, a man named
Winberri, subsequently helped lead a campaign of armed resistance against the British. Winberri and his Aboriginal followers raided
Peter Snodgrass' property along the
Yea River, holding Snodgrass' stockmen at gunpoint while taking their sheep and flour. Winberri had acquired firearms and referred to his men as his soldiers. He claimed the colonists' sheep should be as much his property as it was theirs because the sheep ate the same grass that his kangaroos ate, and that this was his country, not whiteman's country. Winberri's armed gang continued the roam the region, holding up a supply cart, shooting at its driver and threatening shepherds at
Murrindindi. In April 1840, they raided John Chisholm's Myrrhee station, killing one of his shepherds and taking four guns and a stash of ammunition. They then proceeded across to the upper Broken River, where they held up Peter Stuckey's
cattle station at what is now Barjarg. A skirmish developed and one of Winberri's men was wounded by gunfire, while a
Wiradjuri stockman named
Yarri working for Stuckey was also wounded by a spear thrown by another of Winberri's men. Winberri's gang retreated after this skirmish but soon held up another run in the
Delatite River region, threatening to shoot the manager of the property. The gang was also implicated in shooting two shepherds dead and stealing a herd of sheep at David Waugh's run also along the Delatite River in May. Around the same time, another armed group combining Taungurung and
Waywurru men, led by
Pallanganmiddang men named Harlequin (Jaggeroger), Merriman (Minnup) and Mickey, were raiding properties along the upper
Ovens River. In May, this group laid a "masterly" organised siege upon Dr George Mackay's
Whorouly station, killing three horses and a number of cattle before retreating. They also hacked to death one of Mackay's stockman who was implicated in the rape of a black woman.
The Lettsom raid and mass-imprisonment of Taungurung In October 1840, a large group of Taungurung people travelled to
Melbourne to conduct a major
corroborree with the
Wurundjeri people. The meeting of around 400 Kulin men, women and children occurred at what is now
Yarra Bend Park. In the early hours of Sunday 11 October, Major Lettsom with soldiers of the
28th Regiment and Border Police troopers under
Frederick Powlett, stealthily surrounded the large group while they slept. The soldiers and troopers then surprised the gathering and arrested and chained almost the entire group, with only a few escaping. Several people were wounded during the arrest in what was to become known as the
Lettsom Raid.
Winberri was soon identified and as he was being chained he broke loose and attempted to attack Lieutenant Francis Vignolles of the 28th Regiment with his
waddy. Sergeant Leary of the Mounted Police shot Winberri dead before he could land a blow on the lieutenant. The remaining 300 to 400 Aboriginal people were marched down
Heidelberg Road and into Melbourne. The women, children and old men who lagged behind were forced to keep moving by being pricked with bayonets and clubbed with rifle butts. Numerous injuries were recorded. The hundreds of Taungurung,
Woiwurrung,
Boonwurrung and
Wurundjeri captives were herded down
Collins Street and corralled into a yard adjoining the hospital, opposite the main barracks. Those identified as Wurundjeri, Woiwurrung or Boonwurrung were allowed to leave, but around 35 Taungurung men and boys remained imprisoned, chained together and incarcerated in a warehouse next to the barracks. That night some of the Taungurung attempted to escape from the warehouse. The soldiers guarding the warehouse discovered the attempt and shot dead a man and wounded another. Several others managed to escape. Most of the Taungurung were afterwards released, including a leading man named Billy Hamilton (also known as Yabbee), but ten were remanded in custody to face trial for the "outrages" against the British colonists in the Goulburn River region. Turrukmunnin, Nandermiel, Logermakoon, Piengingoon, Kowinyowlett, Waverong and four others faced court in early January 1841, where nine of them were found guilty and sentenced to 10 years transportation to
Cockatoo Island jail in
Sydney Harbour. On 14 January 1841, the nine convicted men were loaded onto a small vessel on the
Yarra River. While travelling down the river, the nine Taungurung men chained in irons, jumped overboard and attempted to swim to liberty. Four were shot dead, the others escaping with various wounds. Turrukmunnin, who was 17 years old, was wounded and recaptured. He was later released. Resistance by the Taungurung people still continued after the Lettsom Raid. As late as 1845, a gang of Taungurung men raided Alex Davidson's
Acheron River property, killing an Indian
coolie labourer.
Forced onto Aboriginal reserves As early as 1839, Taungerong were being directed, under a system of Aboriginal Protectorates, to reside on small reserves as the colonists took their land. The Taungerong were advised a reserve had been established for them at Murneyong (later known as
Mitchellstown) on the Goulburn River. James Dredge was the assistant
Aboriginal Protector in charge and the young Taungerong leader (
ngurungaeta) named Billy Hamilton (or Yabbee) was instrumental in negotiations involving his clan adapting to the new system. The reserve was later moved further north along the Goulburn River to Mungalook (now known as the town of
Murchison) and was eventually shut down in 1853. A Taungerong elder named Tatambo and his family continued to live a semi-traditional lifestyle in the area until at least 1870. Tatambo's remains and that of another dozen or so Taungerong are buried at Murchison cemetery. By 1858, there were estimated to be only around 50 of the Goulburn River people left alive, and only 30 of the
Devil's River clan. Their numbers before colonisation were believed to be approximately a thousand. Massacres, sexually transmitted diseases and
influenza brought by the colonists all contributed to the decimation. Forced prostitution of the Taungurung's girls and boys to the settlers added to the destruction of their society. In February 1859 some
Wurundjeri elders, led by
Simon Wonga and brother Tommy Munnering petitioned Protector
William Thomas to secure land on behalf of the Taungurung clans for the Kulin at the junction of the
Acheron and Goulburn rivers in Taungurung territory. Initial representations to the Victorian Government were positive, however the intervention of the most powerful squatter in Victoria,
Hugh Glass, resulted in their removal to a colder site, Mohican Station, which was not suitable for agricultural land and had to be abandoned. In March 1863 after three years of upheaval, the surviving Kulin leaders, among them Simon Wonga and
William Barak, led forty Wurundjeri, Taungurung and
Boonwurrung people over the
Black Spur and squatted on a traditional camping site on
Badger Creek near
Healesville and requested ownership of the site. This became
Coranderrk Station. The Coranderrk establishment was poorly maintained by the government's
Aboriginal Protection Board. Housing, sanitation, employment and food were all thoroughly inadequate. Kulin families who chose to stay on-country and not go to Coranderrk, had children
forcibly removed to Coranderrk by the Board. The death rate at Coranderrk in 1875 reached 20% of the population of 150. Most of the 50 surviving people at Coranderrk were forced out in 1923 and moved to
Lake Tyers Mission in
Gippsland. ==Taungurung in modern times==