Moore River (including Mogumber)
Small Aboriginal settlement north of Perth.
Located 135 km north of Perth the tiny Aboriginal
settlement on Moore River 10 km west of Mogumber is a powerful reminder
of the appallingly insensitive treatment of Aboriginal people which has
characterised most of the history of white occupation of Australia.
The first European into the area was George
Fletcher Moore who discovered and named the river in 1836.
The modern history of the area began in 1916 when an
Aboriginal settlement was established at Moore River. The plan was to
create a farm which would provide employment for adult Aborigines and
concentrate the local Aboriginal population so that education and
health facilities could be provided for the children. This apparently
altruistic plan was merely a front for a settlement where Aboriginal
children from Perth could be sent and 'troublesome' Aborigines could be
'supervised'. It was little more than a fancy name for a prison camp.
The settlement, which had started as a centre for local
Aborigines, was soon being used to settle Aborigines from all over the
state. There was no consideration given to the differences which
existed in language and culture. As far as the authorities were
concerned Moore River was an ideal place to hide a problem which they
could not solve. There was no serious attempt to provide proper
facilities or proper food for the people coming to the area. Aborigines
from the north of the state were forcibly marched to the settlement.
Inevitably by the mid 1930s the settlement was overcrowded and
conditions were appalling.
In recent years the conditions at Moore River have
improved. By World War II it had become a mission school and recently
it has been taken over by the Aboriginal Land Trust.
The outstanding Western Australian Aboriginal poet and
playwright, Jack Davis, has left an extraordinary portrait of life at
Moore River (Davis lived at Moore River during the 1920s) in his play
Kullark where he dramatises the situation of an Aboriginal named Thomas
Yorlah who is forcibly moved to the settlement and makes numerous
attempts to escape.
Yorlah's description of the facilities available at
Moore River in the 1930s 'A bag humpy for my wife, a locked-up compound
for my kids, sleeping in beds riddled with bugs and fleas' sounds more
like the description of a prison than a farming settlement.
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Hotels
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Mogumber Tavern
Bindoon Moora Rd
Mogumber
Moore River
WA
6506
Telephone: (08) 9651 9044
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Cottages & Cabins
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Moore River Holiday Cottage
47 Mortimer St
Guilderton, 6056
Moore River
WA
6056
Telephone: 0408 914 443
Facsimile: (08) 9250 1674
Email: thea@moorerivercottage.com
Web site: http://www.moorerivercottage.com
Rating: ****
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