When retired teacher Robyn Hardina delved into her family history, she uncovered an ancestor's role in the early exploration of regional New South Wales.Indigenous men played a vital role in guiding the adventurers on the journeyMs Hardina said her fifth great-uncle, John Rowley, was involved in carving an alternate route into the state's Central West.
"The idea of the exploration was to open up new farming lands for pasture and to avoid the hazardous crossing of the Blue Mountains, which was discovered six years earlier," Ms Hardina said. "He wanted to run away and desert the party, but Charles Throsby convinced him to stay with the group and that they would protect him.""It would have been a real challenge to John if their interpreter had gone away, because they wouldn't have known where to go," Ms Hardina said.The explorations advanced the opening of agricultural lands west of the Great Dividing Range, including at present day Oberon.
"If you drive that back route through Black Springs and the Abercrombie River it's very hilly, it's got huge descents in the road. For his efforts, the government gifted Rowley 200 acres of land at Sutton, but his former convict and Indigenous counterparts received much less. "With that home he was praised by many people, because he introduced schooling in a part of his house," Ms Hardina said.
These are the stories we need to hear!
This is a perfect example of 2020 racist white colonialist history writing. Quite incredibly context blind BlackLivesMatter Wiradjuri
By following the trading routes of the aboriginals that had been moving around the country for thousands of years.
Someone will ”remember” an atrocity story.
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