A Picnic with the Natives: Aboriginal-European Relations in the Northern Territory to 1910

by Gordon Reid

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As Europeans began arriving in the Australian Northern Territory, meetings of locals and intruders were at first cautious, nervous, but generally cordial. Distant officials urged liberality and restraint upon the colonizers, but made no acknowledgement of Aboriginal rights. Uneasy peace ended with the coming of the pastoralists. Individual cases of mutual goodwill are documented, but from the chasm of misunderstanding between cultures and the clash of territorial interests grew hostility and bloodshed and a steady weakening of official resolve. Using colonists' written records, Gordon Reid has created a revealing picture, always with an eye to detail. The chilling phrase used as the book's title is just such a detail. It was tossed off in a letter to a friend from the head of the northern Territory's police force, in ironic reference to an impending act of bloody police retribution. Individual cases of mutual goodwill are documented, but from the chasm of misunderstanding between cultures and the clash of territorial interests grew hostility and bloodshed and a steady weakening of official resolve.
  • ISBN10 0522844197
  • ISBN13 9780522844191
  • Publish Date March 1992
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 18 October 2003
  • Publish Country AU
  • Imprint Melbourne University Press
  • Format Paperback (UK Trade)
  • Pages 232
  • Language English