The Port Phillip District Wars is a name given to a series of violent encounters between European settlers and Aboriginal Australians in the Port Phillip District.[1][2] They included the:
Convincing Ground massacre
Battle of Broken River
Campaspe Plains massacre
the Blood Hole massacre
the Gippsland massacres
Mount Cottrell massacre
^"Aboriginal history timeline (1770 - 1899)", Creative Spirits accessed 25 February 2014
^"'Aboriginal wars' memorial plan under fire", News.com.au 8 June 2008 accessed 25 February 2014
and 26 Related for: Port Phillip District Wars information
PortPhillip (Kulin: Narm-Narm) or PortPhillip Bay is a horsehead-shaped enclosed bay on the central coast of southern Victoria, Australia. The bay opens...
called the Western District area of south west Victoria. The wars are named after the region around the Eumeralla River between Port Fairy and Portland...
The Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars (1794–1816) were a series of conflicts where British forces, including armed settlers and detachments of the British Army...
James Parker at Port Sorell on the north coast on 31 August 1831. The killings would, in fact, turn out to be the last of the Black War, but they triggered...
The Australian frontier wars were the violent conflicts between Indigenous Australians (including both Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders)...
Victorian Age,:2, (1973) Nelson 1978 p.78 A. G. L. Shaw, A History of PortPhillipDistrict: Victoria Before Separation, Melbourne University Publishing, 2003...
Sydney in two casks. List of massacres of Indigenous Australians Tardif, Phillip (6 April 2003). "So who's fabricating the history of Aborigines?". The...
events at Waterloo Creek was raised again during the controversial "history wars" which began in the 1990s in Australia. A Sydney mounted police detachment...
The Kalkadoon Wars were a series of encounters between European colonists and the Kalkadoon people of Australia. Europeans started settling in the Kalkadoons'...
colony of New South Wales, known as the District of PortPhillip. In July 1851, the District of PortPhillip was established as its own colony, becoming...
18th and 19th centuries, are still found at Australian locations such as Port Essington and Groote Eylandt. The Makassans also planted tamarind trees (native...
including PortPhillip, Phillip Island, Phillip Street in the Sydney central business district, the suburb of Phillip in Canberra and the Governor Phillip Tower...
Retrieved 6 January 2020 – via Trove. George Augustus Robinson, journal, PortPhillip Protectorate, 18 October 1839-17 January 1840 Fullagar, Kate; McDonnell...
reenactment sequences in the 2022 documentary series The Australian Wars. Australian frontier wars Jandamarra of the Bunuba nation Kurdaitcha, who are also marked...
ISBN 9781742373355. Broome, Richard (2016). The Colonial Experience: The PortPhillipDistrict 1834-1860. Melbourne: La Trobe University. ISBN 9781875585106. "The...
government not to agree. University historians pleaded Yagan's cause in vain. Phillips, Harry; Black, David (1998). "Western Australia: July to December 1977"...
Aborigines he promised safety and an eventual return to tribal areas. History wars List of massacres in Australia List of massacres of Indigenous Australians...
Protector of Aborigines at PortPhillip. Tunnerminnerwait went with George Robinson on a major tour of the Western District from March to August 1841....
massacre. It is performed at a memorial site in Pinjarra. Australian frontier wars List of massacres in Australia "Register of Heritage Places – Assessment...
the colony of Queensland in the 1840s, as part of the Australian frontier wars. It was one in which the settlers were routed by a group of local Aboriginal...
and protection from the gangs of marauding stockmen who were roaming the district slaughtering any Aboriginal people they could find. These Aboriginal people...
This is a list of wars, armed conflicts and rebellions involving the Commonwealth of Australia (1901–present) and its predecessor colonies, the colonies...
Australia: Report of Mr. Moorhouse to His Excellency the Governor", PortPhillip Patriot and Melbourne Advertiser, 14 October 1841, p. 2 - via Trove....