Arthur was born around 1820. His parentage is unclear but he himself stated that he was from the clan of people who inhabited the region around
Ben Lomond in north-eastern
Van Diemen's Land. It is possible that he was the son of Rolepa (also known as Trowlebunner), a senior man of the Ben Lomond tribe and that his mother was probably either
Luggenemenener or Toogernupertooner also from this tribe. As a young Indigenous boy, Arthur lived through the violence and dispossession of British colonisation and the
Black War. During this period, he became separated from his kin and taken from his country in unclear circumstances. He appears to have been too young to retain much knowledge of his people's language and culture. He lived on the streets of the British colonial settlement of
Launceston with another Aboriginal boy, where in order to survive, they became joined to a criminal gang, working as petty thieves and
pickpockets. He was referred to by the name of "Friday". In February 1832 Arthur and the other Aboriginal boy were taken off the streets of Launceston by
George Augustus Robinson, an evangelical Christian who was employed by the colonial government to round up the remaining Indigenous Tasmanians. Robinson sent the boys to the orphan school in
Hobart where the other boy died but Arthur survived and learnt to read and write in English. In May 1835, he was transported to the
Wybalenna Aboriginal Establishment on
Flinders Island, where almost all the other 200 or so surviving Aboriginal Tasmanians were placed into exile. ==Wybalenna==