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Barangaroo (c. 1750 – 1791) was an Aboriginal Australian woman best known for her interactions with the British colony of New South Wales during the first years of the European colonisation of Australia. A member of the Cammeraygal clan, she was the wife of Bennelong, who served as a prominent interlocutor between local Aboriginal people and the colonists.[1]

Key Information

Barangaroo was married to another man, and had two children with him prior to marrying Bennelong. Her first husband and two children all died before the second marriage, with the husband allegedly dying of smallpox. Barangaroo had a daughter named Dilboong with Bennelong, before dying shortly after in 1791; Dilboong only lived for a few months before dying.[2] Barangaroo had a traditional cremation ceremony with her fishing gear, and her ashes were scattered by Bennelong around Governor Arthur Phillip's garden, located in the modern-day Circular Quay.[2][3]

Like Bennelong, Barangaroo had a considerable influence on settler-Aboriginal relations during the first years of the British colonisation of New South Wales. When she first met the colonists in 1790, Barangaroo was described as being in her early 40's and was noted for her refusal to interact with the settlers in any significant way. Initially refusing to visit the colonists at Sydney Cove, she eventually went to meet Philip in 1791. Historians have argued that Barangaroo served as a matriarch of the Cammeraygal via her role as a fisherwoman.[4][5][3]

The accounts of Watkin Tench

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Watkin Tench, a British marine who came to Australia on board the First Fleet, described in his first-hand account A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson several encounters with Barangaroo.[6] At the first meeting between the colonists and Barangaroo in October 1790, he described how Bennelong presented her wearing a petticoat. "But this was the prudery of the wilderness, which her husband (Bennelong) joined us to ridicule, and we soon laughed her out of it. The petticoat was dropped with hesitation, and Barangaroo stood 'armed cap-a-pee in nakedness'." Tench said at the request of Bennelong "we combed and cut her hair, and she seemed pleased with the operation". She would not taste any of the wine that she was offered, even though she was invited to do so by Bennelong.[4][6] He also describes an occasion where a convict was flogged in front of an audience of Aboriginal people, for stealing from them. Barangaroo was angry, and menaced the man performing the flogging with a stick.[5][6] His final mention of Barangaroo in the text is to describe how Bennelong would strike Barangaroo with blows and kicks and "every other mark of brutality".[4][5][6]

Legacy

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A 22-hectare (54-acre) suburban area at Sydney's east Darling Harbour, not located in her traditional lands, was officially named in her honour in October 2006.[7][8][9][10][11] The site was formerly a dockland precinct, once known as The Hungry Mile, used for shipping, and has since been redeveloped into commercial office spaces, residences, a casino, hotel, and parklands.

SS Barangaroo was a ferry operating across Sydney Harbour prior to the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.[12] Barangaroo Street in the Canberra suburb of Chisholm is named in her honour.[13]

See also

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References

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from Grokipedia
Barangaroo (c. 1750 – 1791) was a Cammeraygal woman of the Eora nation from the area around North Harbour and Manly in what is now Sydney, Australia, recognized as a skilled fisherwoman and influential figure who exercised authority over younger women in her community through knowledge of laws, teaching, and rituals.[1][2] She married Bennelong, a Wangal man captured by the British in 1789, after losing her first husband and two children to smallpox introduced by European settlers.[1][2][3] As one of the Eora people's key providers of food via fishing, Barangaroo demonstrated significant autonomy and resistance to colonial encroachment, refusing European clothing, food, and customs during interactions in 1790 and actively opposing Bennelong's growing alignment with the settlers by breaking his fishing spear in protest.[1][2] She participated in early meetings with British officers, including an attempt in 1788 to lure settlers ashore for potential attack, and publicly challenged colonial punishments like flogging by threatening a convict executioner.[1] With Bennelong, she bore a daughter named Dilboong in 1791, who died in infancy, and Barangaroo herself perished shortly thereafter following the birth, after which her body was cremated with her fishing gear and ashes interred in the garden of Government House.[1][2][3] Her legacy endures in the naming of the Barangaroo precinct on Sydney's waterfront, honoring her as a symbol of pre-colonial Aboriginal strength and cultural continuity amid the transformative impacts of First Fleet arrival.[2]

Background

Clan Affiliation and Pre-Colonial Life

Barangaroo belonged to the Cammeraygal clan, a group within the broader Eora peoples whose territories extended along the northern shores of Sydney Harbour, encompassing coastal areas from present-day Manly Cove westward to the North Shore foreshores.[2][1][4] The Cammeraygal maintained custodianship over these salt-water domains, which provided essential marine and estuarine resources central to their sustenance.[5] Pre-colonial Cammeraygal existence revolved around mobile hunter-gatherer practices, with clanspeople camping in temporary sandstone cave shelters along the harbor foreshore rather than establishing permanent villages.[6][7] Their economy depended on seasonal exploitation of fluctuating resources, including fishing in nowie (bark canoes), hunting possum and kangaroo, and gathering native plants, reflecting adaptation to tidal and ecological cycles without domesticated agriculture or large-scale storage systems.[8][9] Social organization emphasized kinship ties and a shared dialect uniting clans for cooperative resource access, though ethnographic reconstructions indicate potential tensions over prime fishing grounds amid variable yields.[4]

Traditional Role and Skills

Barangaroo, as a woman of the Cammeraygal clan within the broader Eora nation, exemplified the essential role of women in sustaining their communities through skilled fishing practices that predated European contact. Eora women were the primary providers of seafood, utilizing bark canoes known as nawi to navigate coastal and harbor waters while employing handmade lines twisted from kurrajong bark, cabbage tree fibers, or flax plants, baited with chewed cockles to attract fish through burleying techniques.[10][11] These methods emphasized precision and sustainability, with women catching only what was needed for immediate consumption, reflecting a deep knowledge of tidal patterns, fish habitats, and seasonal migrations honed through generational transmission of fishing locations and associated songs.[1][2] Her proficiency extended to multifaceted water-based activities integral to survival, including swimming, diving for shellfish, and managing onboard cooking fires in canoes while often carrying infants, which underscored the practical demands and independence inherent in Eora gender divisions of labor.[12][13] Men typically speared fish from shorelines using gigs, complementing women's canoe-based line fishing, thereby forming a balanced system where women's contributions ensured food security and reinforced social structures through reliable resource provision rather than ceremonial roles.[10] This division highlighted women's authority in economic spheres, as their yields directly supported clan mobility and resilience in the pre-colonial Sydney region.[14]

Personal Life

Marriage to Bennelong

Barangaroo, a woman of the Cammeraygal clan, entered into marriage with Bennelong, a Wangal man, in approximately late 1789, following the death of his first wife, which occurred prior to his capture by British colonists and was possibly due to the smallpox outbreak that affected Sydney's Indigenous populations that year.[15][1] This union positioned Barangaroo as Bennelong's second wife, aligning with Eora practices where polygyny and serial marriages occurred after spousal deaths, often without formal ceremonies but marked by cohabitation and mutual obligations.[2] The marriage bridged the Cammeraygal and Wangal clans, both part of the broader Eora nation along Sydney Harbour, reflecting customary inter-clan pairings that reinforced kinship networks, facilitated access to fishing grounds and other resources, and navigated territorial politics amid environmental pressures and occasional conflicts.[3] Such alliances were pragmatic, serving to mitigate risks of isolation for smaller bands by expanding reciprocal rights and obligations across groups, as evidenced in early colonial records of Eora social structures.[16] Barangaroo demonstrated continuity in her role as a traditional fisherwoman and community figure during this period, persisting with pre-colonial practices even as Bennelong faced repeated British interventions, including his seizure in November 1789 from a site associated with her kin group.[17] This resilience underscored the marriage's grounding in Indigenous autonomy rather than accommodation to colonial influences at the time.[1]

Family and Children

Barangaroo had two children from her previous marriage, both of whom died prior to her union with Bennelong.[16] With Bennelong, she gave birth to a daughter named Dilboong (also spelled Dilboongh or meaning "bellbird" in Eora language) around 1790–1791.[3][16] Dilboong died in infancy, surviving only a few months after birth.[16][18] No other children are confirmed in historical records for Barangaroo and Bennelong. The high infant mortality among Eora people during early colonial contact stemmed largely from introduced diseases, such as the smallpox epidemic of 1789, which decimated populations and exacerbated vulnerabilities in traditional child-rearing disrupted by settlement.[19] Eora practices involved communal care, with women like fisherwomen managing infants alongside foraging and canoeing, but these were strained by rapid cultural transitions and health crises.[13]

Interactions with British Colonists

Early Encounters

Barangaroo, as the wife of Wangal clan member Bennelong, became indirectly involved in early British efforts to establish contact with Eora people following Bennelong's abduction on November 25, 1789, at Manly Cove, alongside Cadigal man Colebee, under orders from Governor Arthur Phillip to facilitate language learning and dialogue.[1][20] The capture highlighted Eora wariness toward Europeans, as Bennelong and Colebee were forcibly taken despite their mobility across Port Jackson's coves, reflecting the clan's preference for open terrains over confined colonial spaces.[21] Barangaroo maintained distance during the initial captivity period, which lasted until Bennelong's escape in May 1790, after which he briefly resumed traditional life with her, underscoring mutual suspicion amid sporadic observations of settler activities.[16][22] By September 1790, during a large gathering of approximately 200 Eora at Manly Beach feasting on a stranded whale, Barangaroo was first presented to British officers in a setting of cautious interaction, where Governor Phillip sought renewed negotiations post-escape.[1][16] This event exemplified Eora strategic mobility, assembling in numbers near but not within the settlement to assess European intentions, blending curiosity about novel events like whale strandings with persistent avoidance of deeper intrusion into Sydney Cove.[23] In October 1790, Barangaroo explicitly demonstrated this wariness by objecting to and refusing Bennelong's proposed visit to meet Phillip at Sydney Cove, prioritizing cultural autonomy over coerced engagements.[20][2] These encounters revealed an asymmetry: British initiatives for controlled dialogue contrasted with Eora emphasis on transient, observational contacts, fostering tentative familiarity without full trust.[13]

Cultural Exchanges and Demonstrations

In late 1790, Barangaroo participated in interactions where Eora fishing practices were prominently observed by British colonists, utilizing nawi bark canoes equipped with lines, shell hooks, and spears to target fish efficiently in Sydney Harbour's conditions.[1] These methods, managed adeptly by women like Barangaroo amid weather challenges and onboard fires for cooking, underscored the environmental adaptation of traditional techniques, contrasting with early colonial reliance on less precise netting that often yielded excess, as seen in the November 1790 haul of 4,000 Australian salmon at Kirribilli, which prompted her visible opposition due to its wastefulness.[1] [2] Such observations facilitated incidental knowledge transfer, with British accounts noting the impressiveness of Eora women's proficiency in canoe handling and targeted catches, aiding colonists' understanding of local ecology for subsistence.[1] However, Barangaroo's actions emphasized resistance over accommodation; she rejected European attire during colony visits, appearing in traditional white clay body paint and a septum bone ornament, even at formal gatherings, signaling a deliberate assertion of cultural norms over assimilation.[2] [13] In September 1790, during a meeting with soldiers, Barangaroo further demonstrated cultural boundaries by refusing British food and wine, prioritizing clan-sustained provisions from her fishing and gathering.[2] This stance extended to possessions, as evidenced by her breaking Bennelong's fishing spear in protest of his independent engagements with settlers, reinforcing preference for communal traditional lifeways incompatible with European individualism.[2] While these exchanges highlighted potential for practical skill-sharing, Barangaroo's consistent rebuff of material inducements limited deeper integration, reflecting underlying disparities in resource use and social structures.[1]

Historical Accounts

Watkin Tench's Observations

In his A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson (1793), Watkin Tench, a captain of marines in the First Fleet, provided detailed observations of Barangaroo, the wife of the Eora man Bennelong, during interactions around 1790–1791. Tench portrayed her as possessing a complex temperament, describing her as a "scold and a vixen" in the context of domestic disputes with Bennelong, noting that she received physical correction from him without sympathy from observers due to her argumentative nature.[24] This characterization reflected Tench's empirical recording of interpersonal dynamics among the Eora, though filtered through an ethnocentric lens that equated assertiveness with shrewishness, a common British cultural judgment on women. Despite this, Tench's accounts emphasized her independence, as seen when she opposed Bennelong's return to the Sydney settlement with tears and rage, breaking his fish-gig in protest before adopting a haughty demeanor upon reconciliation.[24] Tench highlighted Barangaroo's practical skills and resourcefulness in traditional Eora activities, particularly fishing. He observed her manufacturing fish-hooks with precision while awaiting Bennelong's return from Sydney, underscoring the women's role in crafting essential tools from shell and bone.[24] On another occasion, Tench depicted her engaged in fishing alongside Bennelong, shivering over a fire to dress small catches with her canoe nearby, illustrating the labor-intensive, gender-specific provisioning that sustained Eora groups amid coastal subsistence.[24] These details demonstrated Tench's attentiveness to Indigenous techniques, contrasting with vaguer colonial reports and aligning with broader patterns of Eora women's expertise in line-fishing from bark canoes, though Tench noted no exceptional prowess beyond routine proficiency.[24] During social encounters with colonists, Tench described Barangaroo's initial wariness evolving into participation, such as at a November 27, 1791, feast hosted by Governor Phillip, where she dined alongside Bennelong and others, refusing wine with evident disgust despite encouragement.[24] He also recounted her fierce reaction during a May 1791 flogging of a convict for stealing fishing tackle, where she menacingly brandished a stick in anger, contrasting her unsubmissive vigor with the meekness of another Eora woman, Daringa.[24] Tench's narratives, while occasionally judgmental—such as viewing her nakedness as "armed cap-a-pie" after discarding a gifted petticoat—offered verifiable, firsthand vignettes that prioritized observable behaviors over speculation, providing a relatively balanced primary record amid the era's limited documentation.[24] This approach lent empirical weight to his depictions, though inherently shaped by colonial detachment from Eora cultural norms like gendered autonomy in resource gathering.[24]

Other Contemporary Records

Governor Arthur Phillip's associates documented Barangaroo's interactions during her visits to the Sydney settlement from September 1790 onward. In September 1790, she was observed fishing with Bennelong and received colonial gifts, including a petticoat, while described as older than her husband with a history of two deceased children from a prior marriage and spear wounds from intertribal conflicts.[25] By November 1790, she arrived with Bennelong exhibiting illness and a fresh head wound, for which she received hospital treatment, with Bennelong attributing the injury to punishment for damaging equipment.[25] In December 1790, following a reconciliation after damaging a canoe in frustration, she dined with Phillip at Rose Hill farm.[25] Contemporary observers noted Barangaroo's daily presence at the settlement in 1790, where her physique—straight and well-formed, with a perforated nasal septum adorned by bone or stick, and otherwise naked—was remarked upon alongside an innocent demeanor.[25] On 8 May 1791, she dined at Phillip's house with Bennelong and Colebee, partaking in wine and coffee.[25] Approaching childbirth in August 1791, she prepared traditional nets from tea-tree bark, offering one to Phillip, and initially planned delivery at his residence before being persuaded to use the hospital.[25] David Collins recorded Bennelong's efforts to bring Barangaroo to the colonists, introducing her explicitly as his wife to facilitate her visits and aid his own reintegration.[26] Collins further described her in traditional roles, such as manufacturing fish-hooks by the fire during settlement interactions, underscoring her persistence in Eora practices amid colonial contact.[27] William Dawes listed Barangaroo among Eora women's names in his linguistic notebooks and noted minor exchanges involving her, including during a 1790s scene where she disrupted proceedings while Dawes attended to Bennelong.[28][29] Accounts from Phillip's circle, Collins, and Dawes consistently depict Barangaroo's progression from reluctance—evident in objections to early meetings—to routine visits, though injuries like spear wounds highlight persistent intertribal violence and health strains possibly exacerbated by colonial disruptions, including disease exposure.[25][1] Discrepancies arise in emphasis, with Phillip's records focusing on social and medical aid, while Collins stresses cultural continuity; overall, documentation remains fragmentary, centered on her tie to Bennelong rather than independent agency, reflecting selective colonial observation biases.[26][25]

Death and Immediate Aftermath

Circumstances of Death

Barangaroo delivered her daughter Dilboong in 1791, adhering to traditional Eora practices by giving birth in the bush despite Bennelong's urging to do so at Government House.[1] The infant survived only briefly, and Barangaroo died shortly afterward.[1] [13] Her remains were cremated in a traditional ceremony including her fishing gear, with ashes interred in the grounds of Government House.[30] [13] This occurred during a period of acute demographic collapse among the Eora, exacerbated by European-introduced pathogens; the 1789 smallpox epidemic alone had mortality rates approaching 50% in coastal Sydney clans, with ongoing vulnerability to infections compounding native morbidity.[31] Contemporary records, including those of Watkin Tench, do not specify a precise etiology for Barangaroo's death, though the temporal proximity to childbirth aligns with elevated risks of postpartum sepsis in pre-antibiotic contexts lacking sterile procedures.[19] No primary accounts attribute her demise directly to violence, intoxication, or interpersonal conflict, focusing instead on the immediacy following parturition.[1]

Impact on Bennelong

Following Barangaroo's death around late August 1791, Bennelong conducted a traditional Eora cremation ceremony for her remains, incorporating her fishing gear as per customary practices, before scattering the ashes in the garden of Government House at Sydney Cove.[16] This ritual, performed in proximity to British colonial authorities, exemplified adherence to Indigenous mourning customs amid intercultural contact.[1] Contemporary records do not indicate a prolonged withdrawal by Bennelong from British society attributable to her death; rather, he adhered to Eora norms by soon taking a second wife, Gooroobaroobooloo, a Gweagal woman whom he abducted in the aftermath.[3] This remarriage aligned with clan-based marital practices, where widowers typically formed new unions without extended seclusion.[3] No verifiable evidence suggests lasting alterations in Bennelong's conduct solely due to the bereavement; he maintained engagements with colonists, departing for England with Governor Arthur Phillip in December 1792.[3] His subsequent actions, including the voyage and return in 1795, reflect continuity in bridging Eora and British spheres rather than isolation.[16]

Legacy

Historical Significance

Barangaroo's historical significance lies in her embodiment of Eora women's agency during the initial phase of British colonization in New South Wales, as documented in contemporary accounts. As a Cammeraygal woman and skilled fisherwoman, she exemplified the central economic and provisioning roles held by Eora women, who manufactured fish-hooks and supplied staple seafood to their communities through daily coastal foraging and netting practices.[1] These activities underscored female autonomy in resource management, contrasting with British observers' underestimation of Indigenous women's labor contributions.[1] Her interactions further highlight patterns of cultural non-assimilation, marked by deliberate rejection of European customs. In September 1790, Barangaroo accepted but subsequently discarded a petticoat offered by colonists, refused wine during the encounter, and persisted in traditional attire, including a bone ornament, despite pressure from her husband Bennelong, who physically enforced compliance in one instance.[24][1] Tench described her as "fierce and unsubmissive," noting incidents such as menacing an executioner with a stick in May 1791 during a convict's flogging for stealing Indigenous fishing gear, and attempting to assault a wounded woman with stones and a club in November 1790, actions reflecting assertive defense of kin and opposition to colonial authority.[24] These behaviors, including emotional displays like scolding and breaking tools to protest separations, demonstrated relational influence and resistance to imposed hierarchies.[24] British documentation, primarily from officers like Watkin Tench, provides the core evidence of Barangaroo's role, revealing a figure of authority and defiance rather than accommodation. While later interpretations sometimes amplify her as a conciliatory "bridge-builder" between cultures, primary records emphasize her vixen-like temperament and non-conformity, offering empirical insight into Eora persistence amid contact-era disruptions without evidence of broader assimilation efforts on her part.[24][32] This portrayal, drawn from direct eyewitnesses, counters romanticized narratives by grounding her legacy in observable resistance dynamics.[24]

Modern Naming and Commemoration

The Barangaroo precinct in Sydney, encompassing a 22-hectare waterfront site on traditional Gadigal lands, was officially named in honor of Barangaroo, the Cammeraygal woman and wife of Bennelong, to commemorate her role as an influential Eora leader during early European settlement.[33][34] The naming decision, part of a broader urban renewal initiative announced by the New South Wales government in 2003, aimed to reflect Aboriginal cultural heritage while repurposing a disused industrial wharf area previously known as Darling Harbour Goods Yard and Millers Point.[35] Barangaroo Reserve, the precinct's central 6-hectare headland park featuring native landscaping, walking trails, and lookouts, opened to the public on August 22, 2015, following a $250 million development that emphasized sustainable design and public access to the harbor foreshore.[36][37] Subsequent place-naming within the precinct, announced in June 2015, incorporated 18 Eora-language terms and references to local history, such as Wulugul Walk for the foreshore path, to further embed Indigenous nomenclature amid commercial and residential structures like office towers and the Crown Sydney hotel-casino complex completed in 2020.[38][39] By 2025, the precinct had evolved into a mixed-use urban hub blending public green space with high-density development, generating economic activity through leasing and tourism while incorporating cultural nods like interpretive signage on Eora custodianship.[33] However, the commemoration has prioritized practical renewal—transforming contaminated industrial land into usable space—over standalone memorial elements, with commercial interests driving much of the built form.[40] Debates have arisen regarding the adequacy of Indigenous consultation in the naming process, with Aboriginal community members in 2014 criticizing insufficient input on the site's cultural significance and Barangaroo's specific Cammeraygal affiliation relative to the Gadigal location, arguing it overlooked deeper heritage protocols.[41] Further contention emerged in 2022 when the New South Wales government abandoned plans for a dedicated Indigenous cultural center at the precinct's Cutaway site, prompting accusations from Aboriginal leaders of sidelining cultural priorities in favor of private development, though proponents highlighted the naming itself as a meaningful acknowledgment amid urban constraints.[42][43] These discussions underscore tensions between heritage commemoration and the precinct's role as a revenue-generating public asset, with no major revisions to the naming by 2025.[44]

References

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