Available Formats
A Wild History: Life and Death on the Victoria River Frontier
By (Author) Darrell Lewis
Monash University Publishing
Monash University Publishing
1st December 2023
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Indigenous peoples
Technology: general issues
Communications engineering / telecommunications
Paperback
352
Width 135mm, Height 210mm
300g
A new format of an acclaimed history joint winner of the Northern Territory Chief Ministers History Book Award 2013.
In 1883, pastoralists began to drive great herds of cattle into the Northern Territorys Victoria River District. They entered a vast tropical land of big rivers, wide plains and rugged ranges. It was a cattlemans paradise, but also a paradise for the Aboriginal peoples who had lived there for thousands of years. A twenty-year battle ensued between these two groups, but ultimately both sides lost, as the introduction of cattle began the destruction of the land for both.
The settlers who came to the district included cattle and horse thieves, outlaws, capitalists, dreamers, drunks and madmen. They established massive stations of up to 12,000 square miles on the traditional lands of the Aboriginal peoples. Lewis traces their legacies, from the explorers of the 1830s and 1850s to the founders of the big stations in the 1880s and 1890s, and finally the cattle duffers in the golden era of the early 1900s.
Drawing on rare yet rich documentary sources, Aboriginal oral traditions and investigations in the region undertaken over thirty-five years, Lewis pieces together the complex interactions between the environment, the powerful Indigenous tribes and the settlers, which produced what was truly a wild history.
If Ned Kelly had been gentler and more learned but just as much a bushman he might have written A Wild History. Tom Griffiths, Inside Story
Now at last this majestic tract of north Australia has its defining historyWild tales, dark times, deep history. Nicolas Rothwell, The Australian
An outstanding publicationHis meticulous research combined with extensive first-hand knowledge of locations and people result in a study already widely recognised as a major historical work. Professor David Carment, Public History Review
It is a story with which every Australian should become familiar. Henry Reynolds
It is a story with which every Australian should become familiar.
-- Henry ReynoldsNow at last this majestic tract of north Australia has its defining history Wild tales, dark times, deep history.
-- Nicolas RothwellIf Ned Kelly had been gentler and more learned but just as much a bushman he might have written A Wild History.
-- Tom Griffiths * Inside Story *An outstanding publication His meticulous research combined with extensive first-hand knowledge of locations and people result in a study already widely recognised as a major historical work.
-- David Carment * Public History Review *Darrell Lewis is an archaeologist, historian and bushman who has worked in the Outback for more than forty years. He has driven, helicoptered, boated or walked into many remote regions to document historic sites, record natural features and photograph Aboriginal rock art. He has also worked extensively with Aboriginal peoples and other residents in the Northern Territory and elsewhere. His books and articles cover Aboriginal rock art, environmental history, cattle station technology, European exploration and settlement of the Northern Territory. His most recent title is Where is Dr Leichhardt: The Greatest Mystery in Australian History.