Mossman Gorge, Queensland

Mossman Gorge is a rural locality in the Shire of Douglas, Queensland, Australia.[2] In the 2016 census, Mossman Gorge had a population of 246 people.[1]

Mossman Gorge
Queensland
Mossman River in the Mossman Gorge
Mossman Gorge
Coordinates16.4675°S 145.3519°E / -16.4675; 145.3519
Population246 (2016 census)[1]
 • Density36.7/km2 (95.1/sq mi)
Postcode(s)4873
Area6.7 km2 (2.6 sq mi)
Time zoneAEST (UTC+10:00)
Location
  • 4.7 km (3 mi) SW of Mossman
  • 78.8 km (49 mi) NW of Cairns
  • 1,757 km (1,092 mi) NNW of Brisbane
LGA(s)Shire of Douglas
State electorate(s)Cook
Federal Division(s)Leichhardt
Suburbs around Mossman Gorge:
Finlayvale Mossman Mossman
Finlayvale Mossman Gorge Mossman
Syndicate Shannonvale Shannonvale

The locality takes its name from the valley Mossman Gorge created by the Mossman River through the Daintree National Park to the west of the locality (in Syndicate and Shannonvale). The Mossman Gorge Centre is the gateway to the valley which is a tourist attraction with a suspension bridge providing access to a 2.4-kilometre (1.5 mi) loop walk through the rainforest of the National Park. It is part of the traditional homeland of the indigenous Kuku Yalanji people ( (Goo-goo Ya-lan-gee).[3][4][5][6]

Geography

The locality is approximately 77 km from Cairns along the Captain Cook Highway.

History of Mossman Gorge

The Eastern Kuku Yalanji (Goo-goo Ya-lan-gee) people have occupied this area for thousands of years prior to first contact. They are recognised as the Traditional Owners for this area.[7][8]

European Contact

European settlement of the Mossman Gorge district began with the discovery of gold. In 1872, William Hann was commissioned by the Queensland Government to explore Cape York Peninsula to assess its mineral and land resources. During the exploration, one of Hann’s party discovered gold on the Palmer River.[9] After hearing of the discovery, James Mulligan led an expedition to the Palmer River in 1873. Mulligan reported that the sandbars of the river glittered with gold, which started a huge gold rush to the district.[10][8]

By late 1873 the first government officials and prospectors came ashore at the Endeavour River accompanied by a detachment of Native Police.[8]

Cooktown was established to service the Palmer River. Within 4 months, Cooktown and the Palmer River goldfield had a population of about 3,000 people.[11] After James Mulligan found gold on the Hodgkinson River in 1876, Port Douglas was established as a port to service the Hodgkinson goldfield. The town grew rapidly and at the height of the gold rush had a population of 12,000.[12][8]

With the help of Native Police patrols, European settlement expanded along the coastal belt, and extensive areas of lowland rainforest were cleared.[12] In 1874, the Native Police were sent to explore the country inland from Trinity Bay to find another road to the Palmer River. They followed the Bloomfield River upstream but were unable to penetrate the thick scrub. The Native Police officer reported that they had found the Aborigines "exceedingly daring and threatening" and ‘"had to disperse them on 3 or 4 occasions".[7][13][8]

At the newly established Port Douglas, it was reported in a newspaper, with reference to the Native Police, that:[14]

"Sub-Inspector Douglas had paid the settlement a visit and ‘succeeded in driving about a dozen blackfellows into the sea, a few miles south of this place, and shortly after some desultory firing took place in a scrub close by, the result of which is not known’"

Vast amounts of cedar were harvested from the Mossman River and Daintree River valleys during the 1870s, resulting in further clashes between the Kuku Yalanji and the settlers. In 1878, Aborigines were reported to have killed three cedar cutters on the Daintree River. As was the usual practice after these events, the Native Police were sent to avenge the deaths.[15][8]

In 1880, the Native Police were sent to the Mossman River after Aborigines attacked a Chinese camp and speared to death one of the occupants.[16] By 1882, the cedar on the Mossman River was almost worked out and the land was being cleared to grow sugar cane.[17][8]

In 1885, a Mossman River selector named Sydney Barnard was found dead with multiple spear wounds to his body.[18] The Native Police were again sent out to "avenge the murder".[19] This frontier violence was a frequent occurrence in the region during the 1870s and 1880s.[8]

Selector Daniel Hart from the Mossman River wrote to the Queensland Premier in 1889, stating that, since the Europeans had taken all the land in the district, the Aborigines were being driven to starvation, which forced them to steal food, which then resulted in reports to the police. Then, "a dozen trackers and troopers follow their tracks and disperse them with bullets".[20][8]

In 1897, the Queensland Parliament passed the Aboriginal Protection and Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act 1897 (the Protection Act). Under section 9 of the Protection Act, the Home Secretary was granted the power ‘"o cause Aboriginals within any district to be removed to and kept within the limits of any reserve situated in the same or any other district".[21] There were 113 documented removals from the Mossman Gorge area. People were removed to settlements including Yarrabah, Mona Mona, Palm Island, Woorabinda, Cherbourg and Cape Bedford.[22][8]

In 1916, an Aboriginal reserve at Mossman Gorge was gazetted on 64 acres of land donated by a cane farmer named Jack Johnston, of Mango Park Estate, Mossman River.[23] Some of the Kuku Yalanji who had survived the onslaught of European settlement and had not been removed by the government, gradually moved to the Mossman Gorge Mission. Those who did make the shift generally came from their traditional camps at sites like Jinkalmu, Brie-Brie and the Junction on the Mossman River.[24][8]

The Gorge Mission was managed by Pentecostal missionary Isabella Hetherington, who had arrived in Mossman Gorge about 1930. Initially, Hetherington and her companion Ethel Vale lived in a humpy and undertook the heavy manual work of clearing dense scrub, planting gardens and establishing a school. As the mission was not recognised by the government, it was often without funds, but the missionaries carried out ministerial duties including conducting funerals, and tending to the sick.[8]

In 1933, Hetherington was recognised as an Assembly of God missionary and a small school and church were built at the mission. She managed the mission until her death in August 1946. She was buried in the Mossman Gorge cemetery. After Hetherington passed away, Ethel Vale took over.[24][8]

On 20 April 1949, the Superintendent of the Gorge Mission started "a daily school" [25] and in 1958 children from the Gorge Mission started attending the Mossman Gorge State School.[26] In 1960, the Gorge Mission was home to 69 people including 38 children.[27][8]

In 1962, the population of Gorge Mission increased after the Daintree Mission was closed and its residents transferred to the Gorge Mission.[28][8]

The Daintree Mission had its beginnings in 1926, after 120 acres of land had been gazetted as an Aboriginal reserve on the Daintree River.[29] In 1935, the Almason Estate at Bailey's Creek was purchased for the purpose of establishing an Aboriginal mission, to be controlled by the Seventh Day Adventists for the Aboriginal people living around the Daintree district.[30][8]

In September 1940, the Protector of Aboriginals at Mossman Gorge wrote to the Director of Native Affairs in relation to the unsuitability of the Aboriginal reserve on the Daintree River. He noted that the land was too steep to be cultivated and there were no suitable building sites on the reserve. After Seventh Day Adventist missionary, Jardine Green, departed from the Daintree Camp in 1940, Pastor William Arehurst and his wife, who belonged to the Assemblies of God church, offered to take over and establish a mission station near the old reserve.[8]

Pastor H S G Davidson ran the mission until his resignation in December 1945. During his time, Davidson made several unsuccessful attempts to increase his control over the Aboriginal people on the mission by requesting to be appointed a superintendent. The Director of Native Affairs Office, however, would only appoint a superintendent if the land on which the mission was situated was gazetted as an Aboriginal reserve. This was not possible unless the land, which was owned by the church, was surrendered to the Crown.[8]

Eventually, in 1947, the Assembly of God church offered to sell the mission to the government. The purchase was not approved; the church then attempted to offer the mission to the government under a deed of trust. This option was also rejected.[31][8]

On 5 July 1962, the Assembly of God advised that arrangements to close down the Daintree Mission had been completed and that the Daintree Mission families had been transferred to the Mossman Gorge Mission.[32][8]

Australian brushturkey at Mossman Gorge

In 1973, one of the last Assembly of God missionaries at the Gorge Mission departed, and the mission was handed over to the Australian Inland Mission. Towards the end of the 1970s, the Brethren replaced the Church of Christ as missionaries at Mossman Gorge. At the end of 1995, the Brethren departed, leaving only itinerant missionaries.[33][8]

Fauna

Fauna commonly observed in the gorge includes the Australian brushturkey, orange-footed scrubfowl, the brilliant metallic-blue Ulysses butterfly and the Boyd's forest dragon. More than 430 species of birds have been spotted in the gorge, along with 18 species of reptiles, 12 species of amphibians and several species of fishes. Seasonally, the buff-breasted paradise kingfisher visits, nests and breeds. Jungle perch or spotted flagtail fish are commonly observed in the river waters from the popular tourist spot at the river’s edge.[6][34]

Flora

Spurwood, Dysoxylum pettigrewianum at Mossman Gorge

More than five hundred different species of Australian native plants grow in the lowland tropical rainforests in the gorge area, including a wide diversity of species of trees, shrubs, vines, epiphytes and ferns. Some species abundant along the public walking tracks, often noticed and photographed by tourists, are as follows. The bright orange seasonally fruiting, small shrubs of chain fruits Alyxia ruscifolia and hairy red pittosporum Pittosporum rubiginosum occur commonly along the tracks. Many vine species grow up to the canopy, including the well known and conspicuous wait-a-while or rattan palm–vines Calamus australis and more related spp.. Many epiphytes grow on the trees’ branches and trunks, including the often noticed ferns, the birds–nest ferns Asplenium australasicum, basket ferns Drynaria rigidula and elkhorn ferns Platycerium hillii; large epiphyte and hemiepiphyte trees and shrubs, including commonly the many strangler figs Ficus spp., umbrella trees Schefflera actinophylla and the cape jitta Fagraea berteroana. Locally abundant and conspicuous large trees include the Daintree penda Lindsayomyrtus racemoides with wet season purple new foliage growth, abundant cauliflorous trees that have flowers and fruits on the trunk, for example, the cluster figs species Ficus spp. and the yellow mahogany trees Dysoxylum parasiticum. Further locally abundant species of trees include the Australian native nutmeg trees Myristica insipida, the several lady apples or lilly pillies species Syzygium spp. and lining the Mossman River and the creeks’ banks the golden penda trees Xanthostemon chrysanthus.[3][4][5][6][34]

gollark: This is a clean build of the Random Stuff API, singlethreadedly also.
gollark: "serverwatch" has no support for webhooks, but it does have push notifications so I bet I could tweak it eventually.
gollark: I can see no* possible problems with this.
gollark: It uses the highly advanced config technique of "recompile with new data".
gollark: https://github.com/micromaomao/serverwatch seems acceptable, thoughts?

See also

References

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Mossman Gorge (SSC)". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  2. "Mossman Gorge - locality in Shire of Douglas (entry 48777)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 4 November 2019.
  3. "Culture: Kuku Yalanji People; History". Mossman Gorge Centre. Retrieved 9 September 2014.
  4. Bamanga Bubu Ngadimunku Inc. (Kuku Yalanji of the Mossman Gorge); Fisher, Colin; Ross–Kelly, Bella (1996). Aspects and Images of Kuku Yalanji Life at Mossman Gorge. Assistance: with writing the way told by Tom Popp and with keeping their way by Bennett Walker Qld DEH. Mossman, Qld: Bamanga Bubu Ngadimunku Inc. pp. 1–32. ISBN 0-646-27739-1. Retrieved 9 September 2014.
  5. Bamanga Bubu Ngadimunku Inc. (Kuku Yalanji of the Mossman Gorge); Roberts, John; Fisher, Colin; Gibson, Roy (2008) [1995 original ed.]. A Guide to Traditional Aboriginal Rainforest Plant Use. Assistance: with writing plant information by Tom Popp and with recording plant use by Bennett Walker Qld DEH (reprinted ed.). Mossman, Qld: Bamanga Bubu Ngadimunku Inc. pp. 1–36. ISBN 9780646229911. Retrieved 9 September 2014.
  6. "Mossman Gorge, Daintree National Park: Nature, Culture and History". Department of National Parks, Recreation, Sport and Racing. Retrieved 9 September 2014.
  7. Walker on behalf of the Eastern Kuku Yalanji People v State of Queensland [2007]FCA 1907.
  8. "Mossman Gorge". Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community histories. 3 July 2017. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  9. Author unknown, ‘Mr Hann’s Exploring Party’, Brisbane Courier, 17 December 1872, 4; G C Bolton, Hann, William (1837-1889) (Australian Dictionary of Biography 2013) http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/hann-william-3708 at 22 January 2013.
  10. G Pike, Queen of the North: A Pictorial History of Cooktown and Cape York Peninsula (G Pike, Mareeba, 1979) 22-23.
  11. H Pohlner, Gangurru (Hope Vale Mission Board, Milton, 1986).
  12. Cairns Museum, Mining, (date unknown) http://www.cairnsmuseum.org.au/mining.htm at 23 January 2013.
  13. Author unknown, ‘The Palmer’, The Queenslander, 4 April 1874, 8.
  14. Author unknown, ‘Progress at Port Salisbury’, The Queenslander, 6 October 1877, 6.
  15. Author unknown, ‘Port Douglas’, Brisbane Courier, 2 February 1878, 7.
  16. Author unknown, ‘The Palmer’, The Queenslander, 30 October 1880, 563.
  17. Author unknown, ‘Port Douglas’, The Queenslander, 29 April 1882, 518; Author unknown, ‘Port Douglas’, Brisbane Courier, 30 October 1882, 3.
  18. Queensland State Archives, Justice Department, Series SRS 36/1, Inquest Files, Item JUS/N117, 1885/151, inquest into the death of Sydney Barnard
  19. Author unknown, Title unknown, Queensland Figaro, 4 April 1885, 421.
  20. Correspondence, Item COL/A579, 1889/4281, Correspondence from Port Douglas and the Mossman River in relation to a complaint that Aboriginal women have been abducted from Baileys Creek.
  21. C Anderson, ‘Queensland Aboriginal Peoples Today’ (1986) 4th Series 1, Queensland Geographical Journal, 303.
  22. Department of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Partnerships, Community and Personal Histories Removals Database (access restricted).
  23. R Guy, Baptised Among Crocodiles (Assembly of God, Mossman Gorge, 1999) 10, http://webjournals.ac.edu.au/journals/EB/baptised-among-crocodiles/chapter-one-european-settlement-leading-to-mission/ at 8 April 2013.
  24. B Chant, Hetherington, Isabella (1870-1946) (Australian Dictionary of Biography 2013) http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/hetherington-isabella-12980 at 23 January 2013.
  25. R Guy, Baptised Among Crocodiles (Assembly of God, Mossman Gorge, 1999) 10, http://webjournals.ac.edu.au/journals/EB/baptised-among-crocodiles/chapter-one-european-settlement-leading-to-mission/ at 8 April 2013. p78.
  26. R Guy, Baptised Among Crocodiles (Assembly of God, Mossman Gorge, 1999) 10, http://webjournals.ac.edu.au/journals/EB/baptised-among-crocodiles/chapter-one-european-settlement-leading-to-mission/ at 8 April 2013. p117.
  27. R Guy, Baptised Among Crocodiles (Assembly of God, Mossman Gorge, 1999) 10, http://webjournals.ac.edu.au/journals/EB/baptised-among-crocodiles/chapter-one-european-settlement-leading-to-mission/ at 8 April 2013. p120.
  28. R Guy, Baptised Among Crocodiles (Assembly of God, Mossman Gorge, 1999) 10, http://webjournals.ac.edu.au/journals/EB/baptised-among-crocodiles/chapter-one-european-settlement-leading-to-mission/ at 8 April 2013. p127.
  29. Queensland, Queensland Government Gazette,16 October 1926, 1590.
  30. Queensland State Archives, Chief Protector of Aboriginals Office, Series SRS 4356, Item A/58859, 1937/1074, Batch File: Aboriginals, Reserves N, Bayleys Green.
  31. Queensland State Archives 6Q/2, letter dated 28.9.1940.
  32. R Guy, Baptised Among Crocodiles (Assembly of God, Mossman Gorge, 1999) 10, http://webjournals.ac.edu.au/journals/EB/baptised-among-crocodiles/chapter-one-european-settlement-leading-to-mission/ at 8 April 2013. p127.
  33. GR Guy, Baptised Among Crocodiles (Assembly of God, Mossman Gorge, 1999) 10, http://webjournals.ac.edu.au/journals/EB/baptised-among-crocodiles/chapter-one-european-settlement-leading-to-mission/ at 8 April 2013. p140.
  34. "Flora & Fauna". Mossman Gorge Centre. Retrieved 9 September 2014.

Attribution

This Wikipedia article contains material from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community histories: Mossman Gorge. Published by The State of Queensland under CC-BY-4.0, accessed on 3 July 2017.

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