Towards the end of 1930 he obtained an appointment as medical officer at the
Palm Island Aboriginal Settlement. He looked forward to being able to end his days, as he thought, in comfort, with a reasonable amount of leisure and some facilities for experimenting with cotton and lungfish. Unfortunately, owing to a delay on the journey, he lost most of the young fish which he was taking with him, and did not have sufficient to carry on the work. When at last he reached the island, he was disappointed. Instead of an island covered with tropical scrub, he found "a huge granitic rock covered with blady grass, with scrub only in the gullies " There was no fishing or shooting, and very few insects and birds. The only cultivation was a reclaimed swamp, which was all needed to grow food for the Aboriginal people. Although the heat and humidity made him sick, and there was no water suitable for irrigation, he attempted to grow his cotton varieties, cuttings of which he had brought from Eidsvold. The island being covered with
blady grass, he considered whether this could be put to any use, and inquired into the possibility of making paper out of it. He firmly believed that it was his duty to improve the living conditions of the Aboriginal people, and was not afraid publicly to criticise the location and management of the settlement. In addition to the unwelcome publicity which he gaveto the island. Bancroft continually endeavoured to make full use of all the available land for growing food, and strenuously opposed the policy of growing
Mauritius beans for sale to the farmers on the mainland while the Aboriginal people were almost starving. == Later life ==