Robert Russell
One man's private thoughts and observations provide a window into life in 19th century Gippsland.
Robert
Russell was a British surveyor, architect and artist who migrated to Australia in 1833. He was not an explorer, but his surveying
expeditions took him to remote and dangerous areas of Gippsland. His personal
diaries and drawings record the first European settlement of Gippsland.
When
the Gipps Land Company established a temporary settlement at Port Albert in 1843,
Russell had the task of surveying the surrounding countryside, much of which
was dense scrub. His work also took him to Wilson's Promontory, where he sketched a whaling station at
Refuge Cove. There is no other record of this station, and Russell's observations
precede the first recorded settlement of South Gippsland.
Russell's
work was sometimes risky. His writings make mention of a constant danger of
attack from Aboriginals and snakes, as well as the dangers of travelling by sea
in small vessels.
Only
small parts of his diary have survived, but they give a new perspective to our
understanding of life in Gippsland in the 19th century. An undated
entry notes:
Friday. rained all night. slept in bark mya in m[?]. bark from 6 to 10 feet wide. Sometimes spears natives. tea tree. McMillan (W McAlisters overseer came here first. He put count Strelelzsky on the track. Mr Kersopp for the company with five men came in the Singapore natives threw spears which was returned with blankfiring 5 men in all killed 2 of Mr Taylors and 2 others. Mr Taylors station on the Mitchell beautiful black soil...
– Robert Russell
Russell
makes an interesting point about McMillan exploring Gippsland before Strzelecki – decades before this became a
controversial issue – as well as recording an incident in which Aborigines
kill five white men.
A
number of Russell's letters have also survived, which amongst other things, show his sympathy for the Aboriginal people:
To leave the redress of injury in the hands of the whites is, to be a party to the murderous attacks to which all the natives of a new colony have been more or less subject...
– Robert Russell
Russell's observations not only record the first European settlement in Gippsland, but also present a different mentality to that of most European settlers of the time.
To avoid plagiarism, it's important to record the quotes you use. Paraphrasing and...
There's no special place to find quotes, but when you're researching, you'll start to...
Deadlines are part of life both in and out of school. Learn how to stick to them, and...
Search by tag
victorian history, settlement, colonial times, indigenous issues, convicts, exploration, prominent early Victorians

Rebels & outlaws
Land & exploration
Environment
Exploration





