Editing Black War
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Following the killing of a prominent settler on 22 August, a group of settlers wrote to Arthur protesting against his change in policy. The Aborigines Committee and Executive Council also advised him that stronger measures were required to subdue the hostile Oyster Bay and Big River nations.<ref name=":05">{{harvnb|Ryan|2012|pp=129–130}}</ref> In response, Arthur extended martial law to the whole of Van Diemen's Land on 1 October.{{sfn|Calder|2010|p=181}} He also ordered every able-bodied male colonist to assemble on 7 October at one of seven designated places to join a massive drive to sweep the hostile Aboriginal people from the settled districts in a military campaign which became known as the Black Line.<ref name=":05" />{{sfn|Boyce|2010|p=273}} The news was greeted enthusiastically by the colonist press. The ''Hobart Town Courier'' said that it doubted settlers would need persuading "to accomplish the one grand and glorious object now before them".{{sfn|Calder|2010|p=182}} |
Following the killing of a prominent settler on 22 August, a group of settlers wrote to Arthur protesting against his change in policy. The Aborigines Committee and Executive Council also advised him that stronger measures were required to subdue the hostile Oyster Bay and Big River nations.<ref name=":05">{{harvnb|Ryan|2012|pp=129–130}}</ref> In response, Arthur extended martial law to the whole of Van Diemen's Land on 1 October.{{sfn|Calder|2010|p=181}} He also ordered every able-bodied male colonist to assemble on 7 October at one of seven designated places to join a massive drive to sweep the hostile Aboriginal people from the settled districts in a military campaign which became known as the Black Line.<ref name=":05" />{{sfn|Boyce|2010|p=273}} The news was greeted enthusiastically by the colonist press. The ''Hobart Town Courier'' said that it doubted settlers would need persuading "to accomplish the one grand and glorious object now before them".{{sfn|Calder|2010|p=182}} |
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=== North-west conflict === |
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The Aboriginal people of |
The Aboriginal people of north-west Tasmania had sporadic and sometimes violent encounters with the British before the region was colonised in 1826. The colonists were servants of the [[Van Diemen's Land Company]] which had been granted land for grazing sheep and cattle. An escalating cycle of violence broke out in 1827 after company shepherds killed an Aboriginal man and abducted Aboriginal women for sex. A shepherd was speared and more than 100 sheep killed in retribution, and colonists responded with a dawn attack on an Aboriginal campsite, killing 12. The conflict led to the [[Cape Grim massacre]] of 10 February 1828 in which shepherds armed with muskets ambushed up to 30 Aboriginal people as they collected shellfish at the foot of a cliff.<ref name="northwest2">{{harvnb|Clements|2014|pp=180–189}}</ref><ref name=":06">{{harvnb|Boyce|2010|pp=202–205}}</ref> |
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On 21 August 1829, four company servants killed an Aboriginal woman at Emu Bay, near present-day [[Burnie, Tasmania|Burnie]]. An investigation was launched but no one was prosecuted. Three company men were fatally speared in July and October 1831 and there were heavy losses inflicted on sheep and oxen. There were 16 recorded acts of violence against Aboriginal people in the conflict, but the number of Aboriginal deaths is unknown. Company employees stated that they believed killing Aboriginal people was justified to protect livestock.<ref name=":06" /><ref name="northwest2" /> |
On 21 August 1829, four company servants killed an Aboriginal woman at Emu Bay, near present-day [[Burnie, Tasmania|Burnie]]. An investigation was launched but no one was prosecuted. Three company men were fatally speared in July and October 1831 and there were heavy losses inflicted on sheep and oxen. There were 16 recorded acts of violence against Aboriginal people in the conflict, but the number of Aboriginal deaths is unknown. Company employees stated that they believed killing Aboriginal people was justified to protect livestock.<ref name=":06" /><ref name="northwest2" /> |
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The population of the |
The population of the north-west clans fell from an estimated 400-700 at the time of colonisation to about 100 by 1835. The population of the neighbouring northern Aboriginal people fell from 400 in 1826 to fewer than 60 by mid-1830. Violence in the north-west ceased in 1834 but resumed between September 1839 and February 1842 when Aboriginal people made at least 18 attacks on company men and property.<ref name="northwest2" />{{sfn|Ryan|2012|pp=168–174}}<ref name=":06" /> |
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=== Military strategy and tactics === |
=== Military strategy and tactics === |