Malay Town

Malay Town was the unofficial name for an area of Cairns in Australia.[1] It was built around Alligator Creek by Malay workers in the early 1900s, but by the 1920s was mainly populated by Torres Strait Islanders, with many immigrant communities also represented.[2]

History

The town itself was surrounded by swamp and mangroves and bordered the city dump.[3] It was described in the following terms:[1]

...there was a place called "Malay Town" set up in Cairns where a whole range of people lived — Aborigines, Torres Strait Islanders, Malays, Chinese, Indians; in fact, everybody except Europeans — and there were probably one or two of them that no-one else wanted.

There were, though, some post-World War I German migrants and many living in the town learned multiple languages from their neighbours.[4]

Many of the town's Torres Strait Islander inhabitants were members of three large families who had moved to mainland Australia without permission (their movement restricted by the government until 1947). The Pitt, Sailor and Walters families were among the largest single group of Malay Town inhabitants.[5]

gollark: Has anything been happening during my ~5 day absence?
gollark: 3dd6
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gollark: I made a second at some point for unknown reasons and never put it back.
gollark: I always carry two neural connectors for no good reason.

See also

References

  1. "Greater autonomy for Torres Strait Islanders" (PDF). Hansard. House Of Representatives Standing Committee On Aboriginal And Torres Strait Islander Affairs. 25 October 1996. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  2. Law, L. (2011). "The ghosts of White Australia: Excavating the past(s) of Rusty's Market in tropical Cairns". Continuum. 25 (5): 669–681. doi:10.1080/10304312.2011.605519.
  3. Fairweather by Murray Bail (Murdoch Books, 2009)
  4. Historical highlights by Denise Carter (The Cairns Post, 30 March 2013)
  5. Torres Strait Islanders by Anna Shnukal (from Multilcutlural Queensland 2001: 100 years, 100 communities, A century of contributions, Department of the Premier and Cabinet (Queensland), 2001)
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