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John Arthur Macartney

John Arthur Macartney (5 April 1834 - 10 June 1917) was an Irish-born Australian colonist, pastoralist, squatter and grazier who established a large number of frontier cattle stations in Queensland and the Northern Territory.

John Arthur Macartney

Early life edit

John Arthur Macartney was born into the prominent Macartney-Burgh family at Creagh, County Cork, Ireland in 1834. His ancestors were notable members of the British ruling class of Ireland generally known as the Protestant Ascendancy. His great-grandfather was Walter Hussey Burgh, Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, and his grandfather was Sir John Macartney, 1st Baronet of Lish, County Armagh. He was educated at Lucan School and by private tutors in Dublin.[1]

Emigration to the British colonies in Australia edit

In 1847, at the age of 13, J.A. Macartney emigrated to Melbourne with his parents, arriving in January 1848 aboard the Stag. His father, the Very Reverend Hussey Burgh Macartney had come to Australia to take up the position of the Dean of Melbourne within the Anglican church, a role he held until 1894. J.A. Macartney finished his education in Melbourne and after a brief period working with a law firm and prospecting for gold during the Victorian gold rush, he decided to pursue a career as a grazier. His father bought him the Wandiligong property in the Ovens River region, but he quickly sold out and bought the nearby Whorouly property. Here, he met Edward Graves Mayne who became his business partner in establishing cattle properties for the next 30 years.[1]

Acquiring land in the Rockhampton region edit

In 1857, Macartney decided to travel to the northern limits of British colonisation with a view to acquire landholdings. At this point of time the frontier was the Port Curtis District where the fledgling township of Rockhampton was situated. In early 1858, Macartney rode into Rockhampton with fellow colonist Dan Connor and Native Police officers John Murray and G.P.M. Murray. They found that the town only consisted of a store, an inn and two residents. Macartney soon acquired two large parcels of land: Glenmore on the northern bank of the Fitzroy River; and Waverley on grassland plains inland from Broad Sound. He also travelled out to the Mackenzie River with his cousin Sir John Macartney 3rd baronet, and P.F. MacDonald and staked further ownership claims to large acreages.[1] All this land was inhabited by various local groups of Aboriginal Australians whose ownership rights were largely ignored by both the colonists and the colonial government. Macartney's own father, who held the respected social position of the Dean of Melbourne, is even quoted as saying that the Aborigines "were not the rightful owners of the soil" and had "not been unjustly dispossessed by the white man."[2] When Macartney wrote his memoir, he concluded it with one of his favourite poems which was entitled "Take It Now" giving a further indication of his philosophy toward life.[1]

In 1859, Macartney attempted to stock the Belmont property with sheep when a shepherd named Tarrant was killed by local Aboriginal men. 2nd Lieutenant Frederick Carr of the Native Police together with his troopers, the Macartneys, P.F. MacDonald and Henry Brisdon, formed an armed group which set out to track down those responsible. The group followed the tracks and upon finding the Aboriginal camp used the Aboriginal troopers to "disperse" them.[1][3] One account of this incident describes how around hundred of the tribe were rounded up and "it ended in the usual way and the bulk of the wild mob were shot."[4]

In 1860 and 1861, Macartney formed or bought several other squatting pastoral properties in the region including Yatton, Avon Downs, Wolfang, Huntley, St Helens and Bloomsbury. He quickly sold these on for profit and focused on establishing his Waverley property as both a place of residence and a working cattle station. He sold St Helens and Bloomsbury to his cousins Sir John Macartney and William George Macartney, who subsequently had years of frontier conflict with the local Aboriginal population, calling in the Native Police on several occasions to conduct punitive expeditions.[5][6][7][4]

At Waverley, Macartney built a homestead and brought his wife, Annie Wallace-Dunlop whom he married in Melbourne in 1861, to live with him. The homestead had "shooting holes" in the walls "in case of attack by blacks."[8] Waverley became Macartney's main residence until 1896.

Expansion into Western Queensland edit

Drought, flood and financial difficulties in the early 1870s at Waverley contributed to Macartney deciding to expand his pastoral interests into the newly colonised areas of western Queensland. Macartney journeyed out to the Diamantina River where he established the Diamantina Lakes Station in 1875. In the following years he also bought the Bladensburg, Manuka, Tamworth, Yarrowmere and Amphitheatre stations in the Pelican Waterhole and Hughenden regions. Further north toward the Gulf of Carpentaria and in partnership with Hugh Louis Heber-Percy, he bought the Escott station in 1882.[1]

When taking up the Bladensburg property, Macartney is said to have wanted to view and take some of the unusual shin-bones of Aboriginal people who had been shot there in the previous months by the Native Police.[9][10] Carl Lumholtz, a travelling ethnographer from Norway, was shown the remaining skulls by Macartney's station manager in the early 1880s.[11] The site of the massacre was and still is called Skull Hole and is now part of a national park.[12]

Macartney held Diamantina Lakes until 1909 and many of the geographical features on the property are named after him and his business partner E.G. Mayne. These include Mount Macartney, Mayne Range and Macartney Range. Much of the landholding is now also a national park.[13]

Northern Territory edit

In 1884, the government of the British colony of South Australia opened up large parcels of uncolonised land in the Northern Territory for sale. Macartney took up the offer and purchased Florida Station for "half-a-crown per mile," the station consisting of 10,000 square miles of country and 300 miles of coastline,[14] most of which is now called the East Arnhem Region. The government report of the region just before Macartney's purchase read that some of the country consisted of "magnificent plains" but also that "the natives are numerous and inclined to be hostile."[15] In 1885, Macartney himself went to the region to inspect the property, where he and his companions had a skirmish with local Aboriginal people, firing their rifles at them.[1] Undeterred, Macartney organised 1,500 head of cattle and 200 horses to be overlanded from his Waverley property to Florida Station, a distance of around 2,000 miles. This feat of droving was conducted by Macartney's head stockmen, brothers Jim and Alf Randell. Jim Randell established the homestead at Florida and managed the property for Macartney. He bolted a small swivel cannon to the verandah of the new house to "keep the blacks...at arm's length."[16] Poisoned horse-meat was also given out to the local Aboriginal people which resulted in the deaths of many.[17]

Initially, Florida Station looked like being a successful venture, however, monsoonal floods in the wet-season and a previously unknown fatal disease in his cattle brought misfortune to Macartney.[18] Increasingly aggressive resistance from the Aboriginal people in the region brought matters to a point and in 1892, Macartney decided to abandon Florida Station.[19] As Ernestine Hill wrote in her book The Territory, "the blacks chased them out."[20]

Prior to abandoning Florida Station, Macartney had also bought into several other pastoral properties in the Northern Territory of which the large Auvergne Station on the Victoria River was the principal one. Macartney's experiences at Auvergne were as equally violent and financially disastrous as they were at Florida. His first manager there, Tom Hardy, was speared to death by members of the local Ngarinman people in 1889. Hardy's replacement, James "Barney" Flynn, who had worked for Macartney at Florida, appears to have developed severe psychological trauma from the frontier conflict there. When colonist Michael Durack visited Auvergne in 1890, he described Flynn as having hallucinations of being "surrounded by wild blacks" and waking up in the middle of the night "yelling like a maniac", running into the yard and firing his revolver into the empty night.[21][22] Flynn soon left and Macartney employed Sam "Greenhide" Croker as station manager who was famous for helping establish the nearby Wave Hill Station. In 1892 Croker was shot dead at Auvergne by an Aboriginal stockman during a game of cards.[23]

After the killing of Croker, Macartney hired John "Jack" Watson as manager for Auvergne. Watson came with an extreme reputation, being described as "one of the most violent men on the Northern frontier". With Frank Hann, Watson had established the Lawn Hill cattle station in Queensland. A visitor to the Lawn Hill homestead in 1883 noted that "Mr Watson has 40 pairs of blacks' ears nailed round the walls collected during raiding parties."[24] Watson had been in charge of Macartney's Florida Station during its final years and transferred the cattle from that abandoned station to Auvergne in 1893. By this stage, a global economic depression had set in and Macartney fell into severe financial difficulty. By 1896 he had sold off all his property interests in the Northern Territory.[14]

Later life edit

In addition to having to sell all his properties in the Northern Territory, the financial shock of the mid-1890s also forced Macartney to sell out almost all of his Queensland properties, including his home residence of Waverley station. He only retained the Diamantina Lakes property where he moved to in 1897. Now aged in his 60s with his pastoral empire destroyed, Macartney took on a contract as a mailman to make ends meet.[14] His situation slowly improved and in 1908 he was able to sell Diamantina Lakes to Sidney Kidman for £27,000.[25] Macartney now owned only relatively small interests in land near Longreach and at Baffle Creek and obtained employment as general manager for the Queensland Cattle Company.[1]

In 1912, he retired to Brisbane in relative wealth, purchasing the exclusive Ormiston House Estate where he died on 10 June 1917.[26]

Some of his descendants include mountaineer Tim Macartney-Snape and Australian Broadcasting Corporation board member Georgie Somerset.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Macartney, J. A. (John Arthur) (1909), Rockhampton fifty years ago : reminiscences of a pioneer ; Reminiscences of the early days in Rockhampton and elsewhere, J.A. Macartney, retrieved 17 October 2020
  2. ^ "NATIVE POLICE REPORT". The Courier (Brisbane). Vol. XVI, no. 1090. Queensland, Australia. 5 August 1861. p. 2. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^ "SIXTY YEARS IN QUEENSLAND". Morning Bulletin. No. 19199. Queensland, Australia. 27 February 1926. p. 7. Retrieved 17 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ a b "COAST PIONEERS". Daily Mercury. Vol. 61, no. 4761. Queensland, Australia. 23 January 1928. p. 4. Retrieved 19 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  5. ^ "NORTHERN MEMS". Northern Argus. Queensland, Australia. 27 June 1866. p. 3. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^ "PORT DENISON". Queensland Times, Ipswich Herald And General Advertiser. Vol. V, no. 566. Queensland, Australia. 16 January 1866. p. 4. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  7. ^ "None". Mackay Mercury And South Kennedy Advertiser. No. 471. Queensland, Australia. 17 April 1875. p. 2. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  8. ^ "The hostess of Ormiston House". The Courier-mail. Queensland, Australia. 2 June 1954. p. 10. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  9. ^ "BROCKS YARN". The Queenslander. Vol. LX, no. 1326. Queensland, Australia. 20 April 1901. p. 757. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ Bottoms, Timothy & Evans, Raymond (2013). The conspiracy of silence : Queensland's frontier killing-times. Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, N.S.W
  11. ^ Lumholtz, Carl & Anderson, Rasmus Björn, 1846-1936, (tr.) & Katherine Golden Bitting Collection on Gastronomy (Library of Congress) (1889). Among cannibals : an account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York
  12. ^ "Bladensburg National Park". Queensland Parks and Forests. Government of Queensland. 11 December 2009. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  13. ^ "Diamantina National Park". Queensland Parks and Forests. Government of Queensland. 19 October 2009. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  14. ^ a b c Durack, Mary (2014), Sons in the saddle, Penguin Random House Australia, ISBN 978-1-74274-998-3
  15. ^ "EXPLORATION IN ARNHEIM'S LAND". South Australian Register. Vol. XLIX, no. 11, 620. South Australia. 11 February 1884. p. 6. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  16. ^ "ON THE TRACK". Morning Bulletin. No. 19, 211. Queensland, Australia. 13 March 1926. p. 3. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  17. ^ "Florida Station poisoning". Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia. The Centre for 21st Century Humanities. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  18. ^ "A VISIT TO FLORIDA CATTLE STATION, NORTHERN TERRITORY". Adelaide Observer. Vol. XLV, no. 2414. South Australia. 7 January 1888. p. 9. Retrieved 19 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  19. ^ "Siftings, Local and Otherwise". Northern Territory Times and Gazette. Vol. XVI, no. 963. Northern Territory, Australia. 15 April 1892. p. 3. Retrieved 19 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  20. ^ Hill, Ernestine (1951), The Territory, Angus and Robertson, ISBN 978-0-7254-0019-4
  21. ^ Durack, Mary (2008), Kings in grass castles, Random House, ISBN 978-1-74166-759-2
  22. ^ Lewis, D. (Darrell) (2012), A wild history : life and death on the Victoria River frontier (1st ed.), Monash University Publishing, ISBN 978-1-921867-26-2
  23. ^ Buchanan, G. (Gordon) (1933), Packhorse and waterhole : with the overlanders to the Kimberleys, Angus & Robertson, retrieved 19 October 2020
  24. ^ Creaghe, Emily Caroline; Monteath, Peter, 1961- (2004), The diary of Emily Caroline Creaghe : explorer, Corkwood Press, ISBN 978-1-876247-14-0{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  25. ^ "WESTERN NOTES". Morning Bulletin. No. 13, 775. Queensland, Australia. 19 December 1908. p. 5. Retrieved 19 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  26. ^ "DEATH OF MR. J. A. MACARTNEY". The Brisbane Courier. No. 18, 534. Queensland, Australia. 12 June 1917. p. 6. Retrieved 19 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.

john, arthur, macartney, april, 1834, june, 1917, irish, born, australian, colonist, pastoralist, squatter, grazier, established, large, number, frontier, cattle, stations, queensland, northern, territory, contents, early, life, emigration, british, colonies, . John Arthur Macartney 5 April 1834 10 June 1917 was an Irish born Australian colonist pastoralist squatter and grazier who established a large number of frontier cattle stations in Queensland and the Northern Territory John Arthur Macartney Contents 1 Early life 2 Emigration to the British colonies in Australia 3 Acquiring land in the Rockhampton region 4 Expansion into Western Queensland 5 Northern Territory 6 Later life 7 ReferencesEarly life editJohn Arthur Macartney was born into the prominent Macartney Burgh family at Creagh County Cork Ireland in 1834 His ancestors were notable members of the British ruling class of Ireland generally known as the Protestant Ascendancy His great grandfather was Walter Hussey Burgh Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer and his grandfather was Sir John Macartney 1st Baronet of Lish County Armagh He was educated at Lucan School and by private tutors in Dublin 1 Emigration to the British colonies in Australia editIn 1847 at the age of 13 J A Macartney emigrated to Melbourne with his parents arriving in January 1848 aboard the Stag His father the Very Reverend Hussey Burgh Macartney had come to Australia to take up the position of the Dean of Melbourne within the Anglican church a role he held until 1894 J A Macartney finished his education in Melbourne and after a brief period working with a law firm and prospecting for gold during the Victorian gold rush he decided to pursue a career as a grazier His father bought him the Wandiligong property in the Ovens River region but he quickly sold out and bought the nearby Whorouly property Here he met Edward Graves Mayne who became his business partner in establishing cattle properties for the next 30 years 1 Acquiring land in the Rockhampton region editIn 1857 Macartney decided to travel to the northern limits of British colonisation with a view to acquire landholdings At this point of time the frontier was the Port Curtis District where the fledgling township of Rockhampton was situated In early 1858 Macartney rode into Rockhampton with fellow colonist Dan Connor and Native Police officers John Murray and G P M Murray They found that the town only consisted of a store an inn and two residents Macartney soon acquired two large parcels of land Glenmore on the northern bank of the Fitzroy River and Waverley on grassland plains inland from Broad Sound He also travelled out to the Mackenzie River with his cousin Sir John Macartney 3rd baronet and P F MacDonald and staked further ownership claims to large acreages 1 All this land was inhabited by various local groups of Aboriginal Australians whose ownership rights were largely ignored by both the colonists and the colonial government Macartney s own father who held the respected social position of the Dean of Melbourne is even quoted as saying that the Aborigines were not the rightful owners of the soil and had not been unjustly dispossessed by the white man 2 When Macartney wrote his memoir he concluded it with one of his favourite poems which was entitled Take It Now giving a further indication of his philosophy toward life 1 In 1859 Macartney attempted to stock the Belmont property with sheep when a shepherd named Tarrant was killed by local Aboriginal men 2nd Lieutenant Frederick Carr of the Native Police together with his troopers the Macartneys P F MacDonald and Henry Brisdon formed an armed group which set out to track down those responsible The group followed the tracks and upon finding the Aboriginal camp used the Aboriginal troopers to disperse them 1 3 One account of this incident describes how around hundred of the tribe were rounded up and it ended in the usual way and the bulk of the wild mob were shot 4 In 1860 and 1861 Macartney formed or bought several other squatting pastoral properties in the region including Yatton Avon Downs Wolfang Huntley St Helens and Bloomsbury He quickly sold these on for profit and focused on establishing his Waverley property as both a place of residence and a working cattle station He sold St Helens and Bloomsbury to his cousins Sir John Macartney and William George Macartney who subsequently had years of frontier conflict with the local Aboriginal population calling in the Native Police on several occasions to conduct punitive expeditions 5 6 7 4 At Waverley Macartney built a homestead and brought his wife Annie Wallace Dunlop whom he married in Melbourne in 1861 to live with him The homestead had shooting holes in the walls in case of attack by blacks 8 Waverley became Macartney s main residence until 1896 Expansion into Western Queensland editDrought flood and financial difficulties in the early 1870s at Waverley contributed to Macartney deciding to expand his pastoral interests into the newly colonised areas of western Queensland Macartney journeyed out to the Diamantina River where he established the Diamantina Lakes Station in 1875 In the following years he also bought the Bladensburg Manuka Tamworth Yarrowmere and Amphitheatre stations in the Pelican Waterhole and Hughenden regions Further north toward the Gulf of Carpentaria and in partnership with Hugh Louis Heber Percy he bought the Escott station in 1882 1 When taking up the Bladensburg property Macartney is said to have wanted to view and take some of the unusual shin bones of Aboriginal people who had been shot there in the previous months by the Native Police 9 10 Carl Lumholtz a travelling ethnographer from Norway was shown the remaining skulls by Macartney s station manager in the early 1880s 11 The site of the massacre was and still is called Skull Hole and is now part of a national park 12 Macartney held Diamantina Lakes until 1909 and many of the geographical features on the property are named after him and his business partner E G Mayne These include Mount Macartney Mayne Range and Macartney Range Much of the landholding is now also a national park 13 Northern Territory editIn 1884 the government of the British colony of South Australia opened up large parcels of uncolonised land in the Northern Territory for sale Macartney took up the offer and purchased Florida Station for half a crown per mile the station consisting of 10 000 square miles of country and 300 miles of coastline 14 most of which is now called the East Arnhem Region The government report of the region just before Macartney s purchase read that some of the country consisted of magnificent plains but also that the natives are numerous and inclined to be hostile 15 In 1885 Macartney himself went to the region to inspect the property where he and his companions had a skirmish with local Aboriginal people firing their rifles at them 1 Undeterred Macartney organised 1 500 head of cattle and 200 horses to be overlanded from his Waverley property to Florida Station a distance of around 2 000 miles This feat of droving was conducted by Macartney s head stockmen brothers Jim and Alf Randell Jim Randell established the homestead at Florida and managed the property for Macartney He bolted a small swivel cannon to the verandah of the new house to keep the blacks at arm s length 16 Poisoned horse meat was also given out to the local Aboriginal people which resulted in the deaths of many 17 Initially Florida Station looked like being a successful venture however monsoonal floods in the wet season and a previously unknown fatal disease in his cattle brought misfortune to Macartney 18 Increasingly aggressive resistance from the Aboriginal people in the region brought matters to a point and in 1892 Macartney decided to abandon Florida Station 19 As Ernestine Hill wrote in her book The Territory the blacks chased them out 20 Prior to abandoning Florida Station Macartney had also bought into several other pastoral properties in the Northern Territory of which the large Auvergne Station on the Victoria River was the principal one Macartney s experiences at Auvergne were as equally violent and financially disastrous as they were at Florida His first manager there Tom Hardy was speared to death by members of the local Ngarinman people in 1889 Hardy s replacement James Barney Flynn who had worked for Macartney at Florida appears to have developed severe psychological trauma from the frontier conflict there When colonist Michael Durack visited Auvergne in 1890 he described Flynn as having hallucinations of being surrounded by wild blacks and waking up in the middle of the night yelling like a maniac running into the yard and firing his revolver into the empty night 21 22 Flynn soon left and Macartney employed Sam Greenhide Croker as station manager who was famous for helping establish the nearby Wave Hill Station In 1892 Croker was shot dead at Auvergne by an Aboriginal stockman during a game of cards 23 After the killing of Croker Macartney hired John Jack Watson as manager for Auvergne Watson came with an extreme reputation being described as one of the most violent men on the Northern frontier With Frank Hann Watson had established the Lawn Hill cattle station in Queensland A visitor to the Lawn Hill homestead in 1883 noted that Mr Watson has 40 pairs of blacks ears nailed round the walls collected during raiding parties 24 Watson had been in charge of Macartney s Florida Station during its final years and transferred the cattle from that abandoned station to Auvergne in 1893 By this stage a global economic depression had set in and Macartney fell into severe financial difficulty By 1896 he had sold off all his property interests in the Northern Territory 14 Later life editIn addition to having to sell all his properties in the Northern Territory the financial shock of the mid 1890s also forced Macartney to sell out almost all of his Queensland properties including his home residence of Waverley station He only retained the Diamantina Lakes property where he moved to in 1897 Now aged in his 60s with his pastoral empire destroyed Macartney took on a contract as a mailman to make ends meet 14 His situation slowly improved and in 1908 he was able to sell Diamantina Lakes to Sidney Kidman for 27 000 25 Macartney now owned only relatively small interests in land near Longreach and at Baffle Creek and obtained employment as general manager for the Queensland Cattle Company 1 In 1912 he retired to Brisbane in relative wealth purchasing the exclusive Ormiston House Estate where he died on 10 June 1917 26 Some of his descendants include mountaineer Tim Macartney Snape and Australian Broadcasting Corporation board member Georgie Somerset References edit a b c d e f g h Macartney J A John Arthur 1909 Rockhampton fifty years ago reminiscences of a pioneer Reminiscences of the early days in Rockhampton and elsewhere J A Macartney retrieved 17 October 2020 NATIVE POLICE REPORT The Courier Brisbane Vol XVI no 1090 Queensland Australia 5 August 1861 p 2 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via National Library of Australia SIXTY YEARS IN QUEENSLAND Morning Bulletin No 19199 Queensland Australia 27 February 1926 p 7 Retrieved 17 October 2020 via National Library of Australia a b COAST PIONEERS Daily Mercury Vol 61 no 4761 Queensland Australia 23 January 1928 p 4 Retrieved 19 October 2020 via National Library of Australia NORTHERN MEMS Northern Argus Queensland Australia 27 June 1866 p 3 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via National Library of Australia PORT DENISON Queensland Times Ipswich Herald And General Advertiser Vol V no 566 Queensland Australia 16 January 1866 p 4 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via National Library of Australia None Mackay Mercury And South Kennedy Advertiser No 471 Queensland Australia 17 April 1875 p 2 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via National Library of Australia The hostess of Ormiston House The Courier mail Queensland Australia 2 June 1954 p 10 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via National Library of Australia BROCKS YARN The Queenslander Vol LX no 1326 Queensland Australia 20 April 1901 p 757 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via National Library of Australia Bottoms Timothy amp Evans Raymond 2013 The conspiracy of silence Queensland s frontier killing times Allen amp Unwin Crows Nest N S W Lumholtz Carl amp Anderson Rasmus Bjorn 1846 1936 tr amp Katherine Golden Bitting Collection on Gastronomy Library of Congress 1889 Among cannibals an account of four years travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland Charles Scribner s Sons New York Bladensburg National Park Queensland Parks and Forests Government of Queensland 11 December 2009 Retrieved 18 October 2020 Diamantina National Park Queensland Parks and Forests Government of Queensland 19 October 2009 Retrieved 18 October 2020 a b c Durack Mary 2014 Sons in the saddle Penguin Random House Australia ISBN 978 1 74274 998 3 EXPLORATION IN ARNHEIM S LAND South Australian Register Vol XLIX no 11 620 South Australia 11 February 1884 p 6 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via National Library of Australia ON THE TRACK Morning Bulletin No 19 211 Queensland Australia 13 March 1926 p 3 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via National Library of Australia Florida Station poisoning Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia The Centre for 21st Century Humanities Retrieved 24 January 2021 A VISIT TO FLORIDA CATTLE STATION NORTHERN TERRITORY Adelaide Observer Vol XLV no 2414 South Australia 7 January 1888 p 9 Retrieved 19 October 2020 via National Library of Australia Siftings Local and Otherwise Northern Territory Times and Gazette Vol XVI no 963 Northern Territory Australia 15 April 1892 p 3 Retrieved 19 October 2020 via National Library of Australia Hill Ernestine 1951 The Territory Angus and Robertson ISBN 978 0 7254 0019 4 Durack Mary 2008 Kings in grass castles Random House ISBN 978 1 74166 759 2 Lewis D Darrell 2012 A wild history life and death on the Victoria River frontier 1st ed Monash University Publishing ISBN 978 1 921867 26 2 Buchanan G Gordon 1933 Packhorse and waterhole with the overlanders to the Kimberleys Angus amp Robertson retrieved 19 October 2020 Creaghe Emily Caroline Monteath Peter 1961 2004 The diary of Emily Caroline Creaghe explorer Corkwood Press ISBN 978 1 876247 14 0 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link WESTERN NOTES Morning Bulletin No 13 775 Queensland Australia 19 December 1908 p 5 Retrieved 19 October 2020 via National Library of Australia DEATH OF MR J A MACARTNEY The Brisbane Courier No 18 534 Queensland Australia 12 June 1917 p 6 Retrieved 19 October 2020 via National Library of Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Arthur Macartney amp oldid 1195384315, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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