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Manning Index of South Australian History
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    Place Names of South Australia - W

    Wardang Island - Waterloo

    Wardang Island

    Nomenclature

    The name is derived from the Aboriginal wordang - 'wombat'. The first recorded occupation of the island was by George A. Anstey in 1851.By 1 April 1861 the lease had been transferred to Stephen Goldsworthy (lease no. 965). A covenant was included in this lease giving Aboriginal inhabitants and their descendants 'full and free right of ingress, egress and regress into, upon and over' the said island and to 'the springs and surface water thereon and to make and erect such wurlies and other dwellings as they have been heretofore accustomed, to make and erect and to take and use for food, birds and animals of a wild nature.'

    Goldsworthy transferred the lease to the Yorke Peninsula Aboriginal Mission Inc. on 8 April 1884 for £400. On 10 March 1887 a proclamation was published reserving the whole of the island for the use and benefit of the Aboriginal inhabitants of the province; this followed the granting of Aboriginal lease no. 136 to the Mission for twenty-one years from 1 January 1887.

    General Notes

    Its school opened in 1878 and closed in 1971.

    "Wreck of the Candida" is in the Register,
    25 February 1898, page 6e,
    31 March 1898, page 4g.
    Photographs of vessels wrecked on the island are in the Chronicle,
    31 May 1913, page 32.

    "French Ship Burnt Out [Notre Dame D'Arvor]" is in the Register,
    3 May 1920, page 7c.

    "The Wreck of the McIntyre - Something About Wardang Island" is in the Register,
    6 April 1927, page 13f.

    "SA's Robinson Crusoe [Andrew Golly]" is in the Register,
    17 June 1929, page 30d.

    An article on experiments in rabbit extermination is in The Mail,
    11 September 1937, page 39a.

    Also see South Australia - Flora and Fauna - Rabbits.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Wardlaw Vale

    Nomenclature

    A.G. Wardlaw, who owned several sections in the district.

    General Notes

    An obituary of J.C. Schober is in the Register,
    21 March 1892, page 4h,
    of A.G. Wardlaw on
    21 September 1894, page 5d.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Wardle Bridge

    Nomenclature

    A road from Hindmarsh Valley to Encounter Bay crossed the river at Michael Wardle's farm and the name was perpetuated when the bridge was replaced in 1961. Prior to building the original bridge travellers had to wait until low-tide and then cross the Hindmarsh River on the sandy beach.

    General Notes

    The Register of 1 November 1858, page 3h has an interesting letter in respect of the bridge - It says, inter alia: "... Mr Wardle tells us that the bridge is partly on his land and he has closed it and intends keeping it closed till he is compensated for the land he has been deprived of..."

    A letter from William Wardle is in the Chronicle,
    17 December 1859, page 2g.
    An obituary of Mrs Mary Wardle is in the Chronicle,
    22 July 1899, page 20c.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warman Well

    Nomenclature

    Named by C.G. Winnecke on 19 August 1883 after the expedition's camel man.

    General Notes

    An obituary of Mr C.G. Winnecke is in the Register,
    13 September 1902, page 7b.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warnertown

    Nomenclature

    Named by Governor Jervois after his private secretary, J.H.B. Warner.

    General Notes

    A complaint regarding the removal of the railway station, etc, is in the Register,
    29 November 1877, page 6b.

    "The Warnertown Railway Station" is in the Register,
    28 December 1887, page 6a.

    The school opened in 1878 and closed in 1971.
    An Arbor Day is reported in the Register,
    19 July 1907, page 7f.
    Also see South Australia - Education - Arbor Days.

    A sale of allotments is reported in the Chronicle,
    26 January 1878, page 2b (supp.).

    Information on its water supply is in the Register,
    30 December 1878 (supp.), page 1f.
    Observer,
    3 and 10 February 1883, pages 29b and 15b.
    Also see South Australia - Water Conservation.

    A sports meeting is reported in the Chronicle,
    16 August 1879, page 21f,
    21 August 1880, page 24f,
    7 September 1895, page 6e,
    5 September 1896, page 25e.

    Its first horse race meeting held on Mr Goldney's paddock is reported in the Chronicle,
    15 April 1882, page 21c; also see
    Advertiser,
    16 March 1883, page 7d,
    Express,
    12 March 1885, page 4b,
    Observer,
    28 September 1901, page 18b,
    13 October 1906, page 1d (supp.).
    Also see South Australia - Sport - Horse Racing.

    The opening of the Institute and a sports day are reported upon in the Chronicle,
    1 March 1902, page 35b,
    Register,
    5 March 1904, page 5f for a races and sports day.

    The laying of the foundation stone of the Catholic church is reported in the Register,
    11 December 1907, page 5a.

    The opening of a telephone office is reported in the Register,
    15 January 1910, page 1d,
    Observer,
    22 January 1910, page 15d.
    Also see South Australia - Communications - Telephones.

    Warnertown - Obituaries

    An obituary of J.H.B. Warner is in the Register,
    31 October 1891, page 4h.

    An obituary of George Cozens is in the Observer,
    6 May 1916, page 33c,
    of Mrs G. Cozens in the Register,
    14 August 1920, page 8c,
    of Patrick J. Walsh on 19 May 1928, page 15h.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warooka

    Nomenclature

    Derived from the Aboriginal wiruka -'muddy waterhole'.

    General Notes

    A proposed school is discussed in the Register,
    17 April 1878, page 5e,
    Observer,
    20 April 1878, page 20f; it opened in 1879.
    A photograph of students is in the Observer,
    23 March 1907, page 32,
    Chronicle,
    14 June 1934, page 35.

    The opening of the telegraph office is reported in the Chronicle,
    31 May 1879, page 1e (supp.).

    Also see South Australia - Communications - Telegraphic.

    A sports day is reported in the Chronicle,
    17 November 1877, page 22b,
    16 November 1878, page 22b,
    Observer,
    15 November 1879, page 3e,
    Chronicle,
    30 October 1880, page 12e,
    12 March 1904, page 13b,
    Register,
    14 March 1911, page 10c.

    The opening of the Institute is reported in the Register,
    23 July 1885, page 5d.

    The town and district are described in the Chronicle,
    12 May 1877, page 5e,
    Express,
    7 December 1877, page 3e,
    Farmers Weekly Messenger,
    8 December 1877, page 2b,
    Register,
    21 February 1878, page 7a,
    Advertiser,
    7 December 1877, page 6e,
    23 and 26 May 1879, pages 6b and 6a,
    29 November 1883, page 1c (supp.),
    Chronicle,
    12 August 1882, page 7d,
    1 December 1883, page 9a,
    Register,
    16 November 1889, page 6b,
    23 April 1904, page 9e and
    the effects of an earthquake on
    24 September 1902, page 8a and
    9 October 1902, page 4g.
    A photograph of the town is in The Critic,
    25 April 1903, page 7.

    A sports day is reported in the Chronicle,
    17 November 1877, page 22b,
    16 November 1878, page 22b,
    30 October 1880, page 12e,
    12 March 1904, page 13b.

    A proposed district council is discussed in the Chronicle,
    6 November 1880, page 26c.
    A photograph of council members is in the Observer,
    23 March 1907, page 32.
    Also see South Australia - Miscellany - Local Government.

    A horse race meeting is reported in the Chronicle,
    25 March 1899, page 17e and
    an earthquake on
    27 September 1902, page 34b.
    Also see South Australia - Sport - Horse Racing.

    The aftermath of an earthquake is reported in the Express,
    23 September 1902, page 1f;
    photographs, etc, are in the Observer,
    4 and 11 October 1902, page 23 and 34c.
    Also see South Australia - Natural Disasters - Miscellany.

    A photograph of the opening of the Methodist Church is in the Chronicle,
    3 August 1907, page 30,
    of members of a rifle club on
    5 July 1934, page 33.

    A report of bushfires is in the Chronicle,
    24 February 1912, page 40b.
    Also see South Australia - Natural Disasters - Bushfires.

    Complaints about the mail service are aired in the Register,
    27 January 1926, page 8f.
    Also see South Australia - Communications - Mail and Postal.

    "Old Warooka Days" is in the Advertiser,
    13 August 1935, page 17b.

    Warooka - Obituaries

    An obituary of James Angas Johnson is in the Chronicle,
    24 May 1902, page 33a,
    of Mrs Jane Young on 27 July 1907, page 40b,
    of Nicholas Player on 19 March 1921, page 31b,
    of Mrs Rachel Baker on 21 April 1928, page 49d.

    An obituary of George Thompson is in the Register,
    29 July 1916, page 6h.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warradale

    Nomenclature

    The Warradale Post Office opened on 1 December 1917 at the Oaklands railway station; a requisition for the name of the railway station to change to 'Warradale' is to be found in Railway Commissioner's docket no. 163/1923; also see Department of Lands docket no. 5275/1940 (copy in PRG 412 - Mortlock Library); it contains a letter written by Mr A. Hiscock which says, inter alia:

    General Notes

    "Oaklands or Warradale?" is in the Register,
    31 August 1925, page 8f.

    The need for a school is canvassed in the Advertiser,
    5 June 1926, page 13c,
    Observer,
    13 August 1927, page 49e.

    Photographs of Girl Guides are in the Observer,
    31 July 1930, page 32,
    of a women's athletics meeting in the Chronicle,
    27 November 1930, page 38.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warramboo

    Nomenclature

    An Aboriginal name for a 'lake', so called because of the prevalence of samphire swamps in the district.

    General Notes

    Its school opened in 1920.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warratta Vale

    See Place Names - Waratta Vale.

    Nomenclature

    The name was taken from a local homestead.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warreanga

    Nomenclature

    H.C. Talbot in Early History of the South-East says:

    Its derivation is unknown.

    General Notes

    Historical information is in the Register,
    23 July 1920, page 9d.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warren, Hundred of

    Nomenclature

    John Warren, MLC (1888-1912). Born in Scotland in 1831 he came to South Australia with his parents in the Iona in 1842. He died in 1914 at Mount Crawford; see Register, 14 September 1914, page 6f. As a pioneer colonist he expressed to the full the dangers and difficulties of opening up an unknown country. Practically the whole of his life was spent in pastoral and agricultural pursuits and as early as 1862 he was interested in a sheep station [on what was to be] the route of the Overland Telegraph Line which he held in partnership with his brothers-in-law, the Messrs Hogarth.

    General Notes

    Also see South Australia - Politics.

    The Hundred is described in the Advertiser,
    12 January 1910, page 7a.

    Biographical details of John Warren are in the Observer,
    9 March 1889, page 33b;
    an obituary is in the Register,
    14 September 1914, page 6f.

    "Some of the Farmers" is in the Register,
    17 October 1911, page 3b; also see
    26 October 1911, page 5b.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warrina

    Nomenclature

    Aboriginal for 'giving'.

    General Notes

    The school opened in 1889 and closed in 1891.

    The town is described in the Register,
    22 October 1889, page 6a,
    while a hospital, partly subsidised by railway construction workers, is discussed on
    29 July 1890, page 3f;
    the hotel is described on
    8 May 1894, page 5a.

    "The Sly Grog Curse" is in the Observer,
    26 October 1889, page 34d.

    A sports day is reported in the Chronicle,
    5 January 1895, page 22d.

    The obituary of John Robert Brumby of Warrina is in the Register,
    31 January 1896, page 6c
    and information on the family in the Advertiser,
    30 May 1934, page 16i.
    Refer Geoffrey H. Manning, Romance of Place Names of South Australia, page xxix for a map showing "Brumby's House, etc" at Warrina.

    The reminiscences of Mrs G.E. Brumby are in the Advertiser,
    23 April 1935, page 8d.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warriner Creek

    Nomenclature

    West of Lake Eyre South, named by B.H. Babbage in 1858. Thomas Warriner, a member of his party, who died at Wilmington on 21 March 1887.

    General Notes

    The Register of 13 February 1858 has a list of the members of Babbage's party where his name is recorded as "Warrener".

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warrio Gap

    Nomenclature

    About "5 miles south-east of Pernatty Lagoon" named by Charles Swinden on 7 August 1857 - "A remarkable gap in the ranges [named after] the blackfellow who showed the country to Campbell's party last January." - see Register, 24 August 1857, page 3f.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warrioota Station

    The school opened in 1920 and closed in 1923.
    A photograph of school children is in the Observer,
    7 May 1921, page 26.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warrow

    Nomenclature

    Aboriginal for 'violent storm'. A poem entitled 'Aboriginal Nomenclature - By a Native' appeared in the Register of 11 October 1893 and one verse reads:

    General Notes

    Information on the pastoral station is in the Advertiser,
    26 August 1871, page 2g,
    26 September 1871, page 3c,
    31 July 1906, page 7g.
    "Sale of an Estate" is in the Chronicle,
    2 October 1897, page 19c.
    A photograph is in the Observer,
    3 November 1906, page 30.

    Information on a proposed school is in the Observer,
    9 August 1873, page 10g;
    it opened in 1880 and became "Coulta" in 1906.

    The district and Mrs Germein's tomato sauce factory are described in the Observer,
    17 May 1884, page 41a,
    Register,
    22 May 1884 (supp.), page 1a; also see
    Chronicle,
    4 August 1906, page 39a.

    A sports day is reported in the Chronicle,
    21 February 1885, page 15b,
    4 May 1895, page 13a.

    A horse race meeting is reported in the Chronicle,
    14 January 1893, page 14f.
    Also see South Australia - Sport - Horse Racing.

    The destruction of rabbits on Mr Price Maurice's property is reported in the Advertiser,
    7 June 1893, page 6e.
    Also see South Australia - Flora and Fauna - Rabbits.

    An obituary of John Green is in the Register,
    16 August 1911, page 6h,
    of Daniel Morgan in the Observer,
    20 May 1922, page 31c.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Warunda Creek

    Nomenclature

    Aboriginal for 'swamp'.

    General Notes

    Articles about an ornithologist's camp and the location of Aboriginal relics at the creek are in the Register,
    18 and 25 October 1909, pages 9b and 10f,
    1, 10, 18 and 30 November 1909, pages 8f, 8i, 9b and 9a,
    7 and 23 December 1909, pages 9e and 9a,
    8 and 29 January 1910, pages 11a and 7a; also see
    30 September 1911, page 18c.
    Photographs are in the Observer,
    23 October 1909, page 31,
    Chronicle,
    6 November 1909, page 32.

    Also see South Australia - Flora and Fauna - Birds.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Washington Gardens

    Nomenclature

    A subdivision of part section 270, Hundred of Adelaide when 'special attention [was] directed to the ideal bitumen road which leads direct to the city, making transit to and fro a pleasure'; now included in Myrtle Bank. Emily M. Moorhouse laid it out in 1924. Her ancestor, Washington Moorhouse, retired to Adelaide and was buried at Glen Osmond.

    General Notes

    An obituary of Washington Moorhouse is in the Observer,
    11 May 1901, page 22d,
    of Mrs Moorhouse on
    5 August 1916, page 33a.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Washpool

    See under Place Names - Booyoolie.

    Nomenclature

    A waterhole in the Baderloo Creek 13 km north of Spalding in which sheep were washed prior to shearing.

    General Notes

    A photograph of a Washpool tennis team is in the Chronicle,
    21 March 1935, page 34.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Wasleys

    Nomenclature

    Joseph Wasley, who arrived in South Australia in the Royal Admiral in 1838.

    General Notes

    The school opened in 1874; see
    Advertiser,
    22 September 1874, page 3f,
    Register,
    10 April 1877, page 5g,
    Observer,
    14 April 1877, page 11d,
    4 February 1882, page 7d.
    An Arbor Day is reported in the Chronicle,
    14 August 1897, page 37a (see South Australia - Education - Arbor Day) and
    a "Hoisting the Flag" ceremony on
    25 May 1901, page 19d.

    The town is described in the Register,
    23 February 1882, page 5f,
    21 November 1903, page 9e.
    Photographs are in the Observer,
    18 January 1908, page 32.

    An editorial critique of an address given to the Wasley's Farmers' Club by Mr James Alexander is in the Register,
    16 February 1883, page 4e -
    his response appears on
    27 February 1883, page 6c.

    Information on its water supply is in the Register,
    23 February 1882, page 5f; also see
    7 December 1885, page 7d,
    1 September 1897, page 7g.
    Also see South Australia - Water Conservation.

    A protest meeting against high railway fares is reported in the Register,
    23 October 1882 (supp), page 4a.
    Also see South Australia - Transport - Railways - Miscellany.

    A railway accident is reported in the Chronicle,
    21 February 1885, page 8d.

    Information on a "rust proof" wheat bred by Richard Marshall is reported in the Chronicle,
    20 December 1890, page 7b.
    Also see South Australia - Industries - Rural, Primary and Secondary - Farming - Grain Diseases.

    The laying of the foundation stone of the Institute is reported in the Register,
    9 September 1895, page 6c.

    "Ladies at Cricket" is in the Chronicle,
    2 April 1904, page 13d.

    "Telephone to Wasleys" is in the Chronicle,
    15 June 1907, page 31.
    Also see South Australia - Communications - Telephones.

    The destruction of a chaff mill by fire is reported in the Observer,
    25 April 1908, page 15b.
    Also see South Australia - Industries - Rural, Primary and Secondary - Farming - Mills.

    Photograph of delivering wheat to the railway station are in the Chronicle,
    29 January 1910, page 30,
    3 March 1932, page 34,
    of hay stacks in the Observer,
    1 March 1913, page 31.

    "Attacked by Bees" is in the Observer,
    1 October 1910, page 39b.
    Also see South Australia - Industries - Rural, Primary and Secondary - Beekeeping.

    Floods are reported in the Observer,
    8 March 1913, page 38e.
    Also see South Australia - Natural Disasters - Floods.

    "Revolver Duel in Bank" is in The News,
    7 November 1924, page 1a.

    A photograph of Dr H.F. Altmann is in the Register,
    17 October 1927, page 10.

    A proposed memorial to Mr Charles Mullen - "the father of the process of scrub clearing known as Mullenising" - is in the Advertiser,
    21 June 1929, page 19e.

    Photographs of "Back to Wasleys" celebrations are in the Chronicle,
    28 October 1937, page 36.

    Wasleys - Obituaries

    The death of Mr H. Wasley is reported in the Chronicle,
    25 January 1868, page 7d.
    Biographical details of W.H. Wasley are in the Register, 29 December 1914, page 4g.
    An obituary of W.H. Wasley is in the Observer, 26 March 1927, page 11b.

    An obituary of Robert Oliver is in theObserver,
    28 April 1906, page 38c,
    of Thomas H. South in the Register, 18 September 1906, page 6f,
    of Edward Dingle on 5 August 1909, page 6i.

    An obituary of George Thomson is in the Register,
    21 August 1913, page 6f,
    of Mrs J.E. Selleck on 23 July 1914, page 8a.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Watchanie

    A photograph of school children is in the Chronicle,
    6 August 1931, page 32.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Watchman

    Nomenclature

    Weary teamsters built a hut here and, as they slept, employed a man to watch their bullocks.

    General Notes

    "Watchman's Plains" is mentioned in the Register,
    11 February 1858 (supp.), page 2.

    Parliamentary Paper 34/1877 shows the Watchman Plains School being conducted by Matilda C. Lear with 20 enrolled pupils;
    it opened in 1876 and closed in 1880.

    A description of a watchman's hut is in The Mail,
    11 June 1927, page 16c.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Waterfall Gully

    A fire is reported in the Register,
    19 February 1864, page 3c.

    A picnic is described in the Register,
    10 November 1879, page 5g.

    The drowning of a boy is reported in the Register,
    21 April 1884, page 7b.

    Improvements to the area are reported in the Register,
    19 December 1884, page 5c.

    A field naturalists' excursion is reported in the Register,
    15 December 1885, page 3g,
    6 December 1887, page 7e,
    22 May 1928, page 6e.

    Photographs are in the Pictorial Australian in January 1892 (supplement).

    "Terrible Drowning Accident" is in the Observer,
    9 April 1898, page 15a.

    "An Idyll in the Hills" is in the Advertiser,
    19 September 1904, page 5f,
    "A Scenic Gem" in the Chronicle,
    15 October 1910, page 40c.

    It and nearby environs are described in the Advertiser,
    8, 18 and 26 October 1910, pages 16e, 10c and 13d.
    Register,
    1 September 1885, page 5f,
    30 September 1911, page 8b and
    the kiosk on
    18 September 1912, page 12g,
    25 October 1912, page 6f,
    8 and 11 November 1912, pages 6e and 9a; also see
    Advertiser,
    17 February 1912, page 18h.

    "Preservation of Waterfall Gully" is in the Register,
    1 December 1909, page 6f.

    "Improving Pleasure Resorts" is in the Register,
    13 June 1911, page 4e; also see
    30 September 1911, page 8b.

    "Waterfall Gully Fatalities" is in the Register,
    5 June 1912, page 9a.

    Information on the kiosk is in Register,
    18 September 1912, page 12g,
    25 October 1912, page 6f,
    8 and 11 November 1912, pages 6e and 6e-9a; also see
    Advertiser,
    17 February 1912, page 18h,
    The Mail,
    12 October 1912, page 6e,
    9 November 1912, page 13d,
    Register,
    11 and 29 April 1913, pages 6g and 5e.
    A photograph is in the Chronicle,
    9 November 1912, page 29,
    Observer,
    10 December 1927, page 8 (supp.).

    "At Waterfall Gully" is in the Register,
    19 January 1916, page 4i.

    "Kurralta, Waterfall Gully" is in the Observer,
    31 December 1927, page 5c.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Watergate

    Records of the Primitive Methodist Church show it as the site of a chapel near Mount Barker.
    The Observer of
    29 December 1860, page 4e reports the opening of the chapel "at Battunga, near Macclesfield" and
    the Register of
    28 April 1854 mentions a flour mill operated by a Mr Marks at Watergate.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Waterhouse, Hundred of

    Nomenclature

    G.M. Waterhouse, MP (1857), MLC (1860-1864). G.M. Waterhouse, MP (1857), MLC (1860-1864). Born in Cornwall in 1824 he arrived from Tasmania in 1843, where he and his parents had resided since 1839. He entered Parliament in 1857 as a Member for East Torrens and was a vigorous opponent of State aid for religion. He went to New Zealand in 1864 where he entered Parliament and, for a time, was Acting-Governor.

    General Notes

    Also see South Australia - Politics.

    Mr Waterhouse's obituary is in the Register,
    3 October 1906, page 6a.

    Wardang Island - Waterloo
    W
    Place Names

    Waterloo Bay

    Nomenclature

    Prior to June 1865 it was not shown on maps but during that month the Surveyor-General, G.W. Goyder, and Captain Bloomfield Douglas were in the vicinity in the Government vessel Flinders. Therefore, it is probable it, together with Wellington and Wellesley Points, were so named to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the British victory over Napoleon at Waterloo under the command of the Duke of Wellington, the former Arthur Wellesley. Local legend has it that, following the murder of John Hamp by two Aborigines, the local tribe was rounded up and driven to the bay, where they jumped over the cliff to their death.

    General Notes

    The bay and district are described in the Observer of
    22 March 1879, page 11e; also see
    Register,
    24 March 1879, page 7b,
    24 June 1881 (supp.), page 2d.

    A controversy over the alleged massacre of Aborigines at the bay appears in the Register,
    27 February 1926, page 5a,
    6, 8, 11, 13, 16, 23, 29 and 30 March 1926, pages 12d, 12c, 12c, 14c, 15d, 12d, 13e-f and 13b,
    1, 8, 9, 14, 18 and 20 April 1926, pages 9c-12c, 7h, 13d, 6d, 7h and 12a,
    18 May 1926, page 7h; also see
    Observer,
    20 and 27 March 1926, pages 16a and 41c-60a,
    3, 10 and 24 April 1926, pages 29a-60c, 49c and 60a,
    The Mail,
    30 April 1932, page 16e for an informative article.

    A letter from Rodney Cockburn debunking the alleged massacre is in the Observer,
    12 October 1929, page 44e:

    Also see Observer,
    2 November 1929, pages 10e-54c,
    30 November 1929, page 54c,
    7 December 1929, page 55a,
    7, 14 and 28 December 1929, pages 55a, 37c and 45b and
    the reminiscences of Mr M.S.W. Kenny in
    the Advertiser,
    4 August 1932, page 10i: Also see The News,
    16 September 1937, page 21b,
    Chronicle,
    3 December 1971, page 3.

    The Alleged Massacre of Aboriginals at Waterloo Bay

    A Long-Lost Story of the Murders of John Hamp and James Beevor

    For nearly 100 years historians, both amateur and professional, have produced reams of conflicting stories surrounding the murders of Messrs Hamp and Beevor on Eyre Peninsula on 23 June 1848 and 3 May 1849, respectively. Hereunder is another version, abridged from an account of the tragedies by "Betty Mac" who declared that it:

    In what follows it is apparent that after Mr Hamp's murder the so called "massacre" was enacted and within twelve months, in an act of vengeance, the perpetrator of the first murder repeated, according to the white man's law, the offence upon Mr Beevor.

    Introduction

    Mangultie was seeking his next meal [with his lubra, Poochera] when her shrill voice was a screech and her finger pointed to the west... from the sandhills and from the cliffs those naked savages viewed with superstitious awe the alarming creation as it sheltered behind Waldegrave Island. A new era had begun, although those primitive folk knew it not, for it was the Investigator with Captain Flinders on board... the long open bay in which he had sheltered had a new name by which even some of the natives came in time to call it... It was Anxious Bay... The years passed by bringing with them vast changes. White men mounted on strange animals an driving before them other alien creatures, had come from the east...

    The white men expected the Aborigines to work for food. But why work? Sheep were more easily killed than a kangaroo or wallaby and the shepherds' wives would always give food if asked. Sometimes, argued the wise old men of the tribe, if they did work they would be whipped, and here would be shown markings on thin, scraggy arms and legs... on half-naked bodies... And so misunderstandings arose. Some unfortunate Aborigines were ill-treated, some innocent white folk were killed, and for this crime the blackfellows paid... Nature and the continual hunt for food had made the Aborigines cunning - and they were content to wait.

    The Murder of Mr Hamp

    On the shores of Lake Newland was erected a little hut, near the sheaoak trees, and in it lived a shepherd and his two sons. Sometimes the boys would guard the sheep, yarding them at nightfall, and the father would have the evening meal ready when the little lads' work was done... One evening... the boys came home ready and hungry for their "tea", but instead of their father they saw a blackfellow at the hut. Mangultie with an exultant gleam in his eye, pointed towards the camp oven. "Tea in there", he said. And on lifting the lid the little lads beheld the head of their father, and some distance away his body...

    The police were informed, the troopers from their various far apart posts of duty came together, and the whole district was aroused. Something had to be done. From north and east and south came horseback riders armed with rifles... Separating and moving inland in various directions those riders with their baying and barking dogs set off. Near and far they searched, gathering together from the hills and the little lakes, from the waterholes, and from the wurlies by the sandhills, the hunted Aborigines. Driving ever before them, those frightened men and women and children towards the south, adding a few here and there, the strange journey went on...

    Mangultie, with Poochera, hiding in a sandy wombat hole under a ledge of a rock, heard [them]... A trooper came along [and] pulled the matted grey hair of her head, and she, too, joined the hurrying throng of people - blackfellows with but one object, and that to escape from their pursuers... and ever onward were hurried a remnant of a tribe, and up and up, until the blue sea was seen... booming and splashing unceasingly... unheeding the puny dark forms above, and those, too, which clung to the very face of the cliffs. "The blacks have had a great fright - and they will never forget it", agreed that little handful of white folk that night as they dispersed from the cliffs at Waterloo Bay.

    When the stars were shining and the curlews, with eerie cries ran over the hills, Mangultie crept out of his hiding place and to the east he sped... From afar he selected a suitable clump of trees, and from these he chose the strongest, straightest bough he could find... Afterwards it was said among the blacks that Mangultie's spear was the best of all, but Mangultie said but little - he would shake his greying head and mutter to himself...

    The Murder of Mr Beevor

    [Mangultie's] wurlie was apart from the camp and mostly he dwelt alone... near Mount Joy... His chief interest centred round a tiny shepherd's hut in that vicinity... As the white man sat at his little window... a small aperture in one wall... [and] unused to the bush, the shepherd's ear was not attuned to catch a tiny discordant note... But the blackfellow's naked feet touched softly... Mangultie with his bitter memories and with his spear in his hand, a lean and aged figure, crept quietly, softly towards the hut... Mangultie's spear was ever sure... At Parkin, on the shores of Venus Bay, at the gaol to the east of the township, Mangultie was hanged... Parkin is but a memory, for among the drifting sands of this half-forgotten town the houses have fallen and the old gaol, too, is but a heap of crumbling stone...

    Corroborating Evidence

    Mr W. A. Barns who retired from pastoral activities on the West Coast in 1920 commented on the `massacre':

    In 1868 John Hamp's son, John Chipp Hamp (1835-1905), told of how he discovered his father's body and of "the rally made by the few settlers then in the district and of how they roused up the natives and how they made for the coast, where many of them were driven over the rocks and perished in the sea."

    Michael S.W. Kenny went to the West Coast in 1876 and "lived fifty years behind the bar" of the Colton Hotel where he "heard most things". In his reminiscences he recalls talking on many occasions with a former policeman, J.W. Ger(h)arty (1816-1897) - Mr Kenny records the name as "O'Garaghty" - who was a trooper in the district from the 1840s until taking up a pastoral run near Venus Bay in 1856. Mr Kenny concluded that according to this informant:

    Sources

    The Mail, 30 April 1932; Observer, 12 October 1929; 2 November 1929; Advertiser, 4 August 1932.
    Also see Robert Foster, Rick Hosking and Amanda Nettlebeck, Fatal Collisions, The South Australian frontier and the violence of memory, Wakefield Press, 2001

    The wreck of the Fanny Wright is discussed in the Observer,
    11 and 25 August 1877, pages 7d and 20g,
    29 September 1877, page 20d.

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    Place Names

    Waterloo

    Nomenclature

    In respect of Waterloo Corner the 'Waterloo Inn' once stood at the corner of St Kilda and Port Wakefield Roads.

    The suburb was laid out by Southern Estates Ltd in 1960 on part section 5028.

    General Notes

    The Adelaide Chronicle of 7 April 1840, page 2d carries an advertisement for the Village of Waterloo:

    The town on the Adelaide plains is described in the Register,
    30 June 1865, page 3h,
    7 September 1865, page 3d.

    The school on the Adelaide Plains opened in 1868 and closed in 1970; see Advertiser,
    4 November 1920, page 9e.

    Reminiscences of life on a station on the Waterloo Plains in the 1840s are in the Observer,
    5 August 1905, page 46d.

    A ploughing match is reported in the Observer,
    1 October 1870, page 10e,
    Chronicle,
    6 September 1873, pages 4d-10b.
    Also see South Australia - Industries - Rural, Primary and Secondary - Ploughing Matches.

    The formation of a cricket club is reported in the Observer,
    29 September 1877, page 5e.
    Also see South Australia - Sport - Cricket - Miscellany.

    A "fatal affray" is reported in the Observer,
    5 January 1878, page 7c.

    The burning of the Waterloo Mill is reported in the Observer,
    13 July 1878, page 3c.
    Also see South Australia - Industries - Rural, Primary and Secondary - Farming - Mills.

    The town is described in the Register,
    7 November 1873, page 7c,
    4 May 1889, page 7d,
    23 October 1903, page 8a.

    A sports day is reported in the Chronicle,
    9 January 1897, page 21a and
    a snow fall on
    3 August 1901, page 33e.

    A photograph of jubilee celebrations of the Lutheran Church is in the Chronicle,
    30 November 1907, page, 30.

    An obituary of H.M. Parker, district clerk, is in the Register,
    6 August 1909, page 4h.

    Biographical details of A.R. Wright, hotelier, are in the Register,
    15 July 1918, page 4h.

    An obituary of William Gilbertson of Waterloo Corner is in the Observer,
    25 March 1911, page 41a,
    of Mrs Elizabeth (Joseph) Phillips on 22 January 1927, page 27b, Register,
    14 and 19 January 1927, pages 8g and 13a,
    of Mrs Johannah Slattery in the Register,
    17 August 1927, page 13a.

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