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Title:
"William
Buckley's Dreamtime"
Date:
2006
Acrylic on Board.
BUCKLEY, WILLIAM
(1780-1856), 'wild white man', was born at Marton,
Cheshire, England, the son of a small farmer. He was reared by his
maternal grandfather, who sent him to school and apprenticed him to a
bricklayer. He joined the Cheshire Militia, and later the 4th Regiment.
Because of his great height, 6 ft 6 ins (198 cm), he became pivot man
of his company. In 1799 he served in the Netherlands and was wounded in
action. After his return to England, he was convicted at the Sussex
Assizes on 2 August 1802 of having received a roll of cloth knowing it
to have been stolen, and was sentenced to transportation for life. He
was taken to Port Phillip in April 1803 in the Calcutta with a party
under Lieutenant-Governor Collins, and there Buckley and two companions
absconded from the camp. Fearful, weary and hungry, they sent signals
of distress to the Calcutta from the other side of Port Phillip Bay but
these were not noticed. Buckley's friends turned back and were not
heard of again. He fed on shellfish and berries, and was befriended by
Aborginies of the Watourong tribe, who believed the big white stranger
to be a reincarnation of their dead tribal chief. He learnt their
language and their customs, and was given a wife, by whom, he said, he
had a daughter. For thirty-two years he lived mostly in a hut that he
built near the mouth of Bream Creek on the coast of southern Victoria.
Legends have grown up around his name, but a careful investigation of
John Morgans, "The Life and Adventures of William Buckley" (Hobart,
1852),
suggests that his account is close to fact.
Buckley said there were occasional white
visitors to Port
Phillip during these years, but he was afraid to give himself up until
July 1835, when he overheard the Aborginies plotting to rob a visiting
ship and murder the white intruders. He surrendered to the party under
J. H. Wedge at Indented Head. At first he had forgotten his own
language, but he was identified by the tattoo mark on his arm, and the
initials 'W.B.'
Wedge, who thought he would be a valuable intermediary, obtained his
pardon from Lieutenant-Governor Arthur. John Batman employed him as
interpreter at a salary of £50 per year, and he later became
government
interpreter. But he was confused in his loyalties, and felt that
neither the Aborginies nor the whites trusted him entirely. Unhappy
and disillusioned, he left for Hobart in December 1837. He became
assistant store-keeper at the Immigrants' Home, and from 1841 to 1850
was gate-keeper at the Female Factory. He retired on a pension of
£12 per year to which the Victorian government added £40
per year. On
27 January 1840 he had married Julia Eagers, the widow of an emigrant,
at St John's Church of England, New Town. She had two daughters.
Buckley died at Hobart on 30 January 1856. He has generally been
represented as a person of low intelligence, but his easy assimilation
into a primitive way of life may also suggest that he was intelligent,
shrewd and courageous. Some authentic portraits exist, including
sketches by Wedge, in the State Library of Victoria, and a portrait by
Ludwig Becker, later copied by Nicholas Chevalier, which is owned by J.
E. Pyke, of Hawthorn, Victoria.
Author: Marjorie J Tipping
***Folklore suggests that after surrendering himself, one of the first
words he spoke in English was "bread"
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