Introduction
This historical timeline represents a snapshot of the history of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, showing the impact of European settlement.
40,000 years ago
Aboriginal people have lived in Australia for more than 1200 human generations compared with eight generations since European settlement. [...]
30,000 years ago
A number of sites in the south-western region of Australia show evidence of hunter-gatherer people occupying the forests. [...]
12,000 years ago
Excavations at Wyrie Swamp in south-eastern South Australia have revealed tools used by the local Aboriginal people, including boomerangs, spears, throwing sticks, stone knives and scrapers. [...]
3,000 years ago
Dugout canoes were being used in coastal areas. Evidence of this has been found along the northern coast of Australia.
1606
Luis Vaez de Torres, a Portuguese seaman, was the first European to sail and name the strait separating Papua New Guinea from Australia. [...]
1642-44
Abel Tasman was commissioned by Anthony van Diemen, Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies, to explore the south seas. [...]
1688
William Dampier landed on the north-west coast of Australia. Australia was still known as New Holland and Dampier was the first English explorer to suggest that the British should further explore the land of New Holland.
1770
Captain James Cook sailed up the eastern coast of Australia, mapping from Point Hicks to the tip of Cape York. [...]
1788
The English, under Captain Phillip arrived first at Botany Bay and then at Sydney Cove where, on the 26 January, the Union Jack was raised. [...]
1789
A smallpox epidemic decimated the Aboriginal people around Sydney. These people were from the Cadigal group but became known to the British as the Eora people. [...]
1790-1802
Pemulwuy led an organised Aboriginal resistance to invasion for 12 years. He was a Bidjigal warrior and was believed to be about 30 when he began leading the resistance. [...]
1803
Tasmania was settled under an order from Governor King to establish another base for convicts and to ward off French interests. [...]
1813
Bennelong, one of the most well known Aboriginal people during the early days of European settlement, died. Bennelong was captured in 1789 by Governor Phillip as part of Phillip's plan to learn the language and customs of the local people. [...]
1815
Governor Macquarie opened a school for Aboriginal children, situated at Parramatta and called the 'Native Institution'. [...]
1823-25
The Wiradjuri people, led by Windradyne, waged a two-year war of resistance as European settlement spread east of the Blue Mountains. [...]
1830
A military operation known as the 'Black Line' was launched against the Aboriginal people in Tasmania. [...]
1831
Yagan led a Nyungar resistance to settlement in Western Australia that lasted for three years. [...]
1838
In June of 1838 an encampment of about 40 Kwiambal people was killed by Europeans in the Myall Creek Massacre. [...]
1860
The government of Victoria established the Central Board Appointed to Watch Over the Interests of Aborigines, also called the Aborigines Protection Board, which functioned until 1869. [...]
1868
The Polynesian Labourers Act was passed. Since the 1860s Islanders had been brought in to Australia to provide labour in the tropical industries, because white labour was scarce at the time and also because it was commonly believed that white people could not labour safely in the tropics. [...]
1868
The first Australian cricket team to tour overseas was an Aboriginal team that went to England. [...]
1871
The London Missionary Society arrived in the Torres Strait and set up operations on Darnley and Dauan Islands, eventually extending to all the Torres Strait Islands. [...]
1879
The Queensland Government annexed the Torres Strait through the passage of legislation by the Queensland and British parliaments. [...]
1880
The Queensland state government introduced the Pacific Island Labourers' Act, the first legislation regulating all aspects of the employment of labour from the Pacific Islands. [...]
1888
The phrase 'White Australia Policy' appeared for the first time in the Boomerang newspaper in Brisbane. [...]
1894
Jandamarra, a Pnuba Aboriginal who lived in the Napeer and Oscar Ranges in the West Kimberley led a campaign of resistance to the white settlers that lasted for six years. [...]
1901
Australia became one nation when the six self-governing colonies united. The Commonwealth of Australia was inaugurated on 1st January, 1901 in Sydney. [...]
1904
The Queensland Government took control of the Torres Strait Islander communities under a 'Protection' policy. This policy controlled every aspect of island life and removed the influence of the London Missionary Society. [...]
1905
The government of Western Australia brought in the Aborigines Act, created to '?make provision for the better protection and care of the Aboriginal inhabitants of Western Australia' (Aborigines Act, 1905). [...]
1910
Between 1910 and 1970 over 100 000 Aboriginal children throughout Australia were forcibly taken from their families and placed in church or state based institutions. They are known as the Stolen Generations. [...]
1914
Over 400 Aboriginal soldiers served in Australian forces during World War I, representing all states in Australia and with a large representation from Cape Barren and Flinders Islands off Tasmania. [...]
1931
Eddie Gilbert, an Aboriginal cricketer, bowled Donald Bradman out for a duck, Bradman saying that he had never faced a faster bowl. [...]
1932
William Cooper from Cummeragunja formed the Australian Aborigines League to protest against the living conditions of Aboriginal people. [...]
1936
Frustration over working conditions and paternalistic government policy led Torres Strait Islanders to band together in the All Island Maritime Strike. The strike was about the right of the Islanders to control their own wages and their own affairs - equity and autonomy. [...]
1937
A new government policy called the Assimilation Policy was officially agreed to by heads of State and Territory Aboriginal Affairs authorities, although many of the practices of the policy were already being implemented. [...]
1938
On January 26 1938, on the 150th anniversary of British arrival in Australia, the first National Day of Mourning was held. [...]
1939
During World War II about 3000 Aboriginal and Islander people served as formally enlisted Australian servicemen. [...]
1947
The islanders of Saibai in the Torres Strait experienced growing hardships including lack of water and flooding from monsoonal tides. [...]
1948
The Commonwealth government passed the Nationality and Citizenship Act under which all Australians were granted citizenship of their country of Australia. [...]
1955
The pearl and trochus shell industries in the Torres Strait were in the final stages of collapse, due to the introduction of plastic substitutes for pearl shell products. [...]
1955
In 1955 the first Moomba festival was held in Melbourne. The name for the festival came from Aboriginal people at Cormanderk who suggested the name 'moomba', telling officials it meant 'let's get together and have fun'. [...]
1962
The Commonwealth Electoral Act was amended so that Aboriginal people could vote. Enrolment was voluntary but once enrolled, voting was compulsory. [...]
1966
Charles Perkins led the Freedom Ride through northern New South Wales protesting against discrimination, including segregation in public places such as swimming pools. [...]
1967
A referendum held in 1967 saw 92 percent of Australians vote to have Aboriginal people included in the Australian census. For the first time since settlement by the British, Aboriginal people were given the same citizenship rights as other Australians. [...]
1968
Lionel Rose beat the bantamweight boxer 'Fighting' Harada in Tokyo and became the first Aboriginal World Boxing Champion. [...]
1970
In 1970 the Torres Strait Islander people united in a campaign to protest against a proposal by the government of Papua New Guinea to extend it's borders to control islands above the latitude of 10 degrees south. [...]
1971
The Aboriginal Flag was flown for the first time in Adelaide. Luritja artist, Harold Thomas, designed the flag to be an eye-catching symbol of Aboriginal race and identity. [...]
1971
In 1971 Evonne Goolagong won the Wimbledon Women's Singles tennis title. She came from the Wiradjuri people in New South Wales and went on to become a successful tennis coach. [...]
1975
The Racial Discrimination Act was passed in Federal Parliament. This Act makes racial discrimination unlawful in Australia and ensures that all Australians have the right to be treated equally in areas including employment, provision of goods and services and accessing public places. [...]
1976
Pat O'Shane, born in Mossman Queensland, graduated from the University of New South Wales, becoming the first Aboriginal person to be admitted to the Bar. [...]
1982
Mark Ella, an Aboriginal Australian rugby player from Sydney, was named Young Australian of the Year. [...]
1982
Eddie Mabo commenced proceedings in the High Court of Australia. Mabo came from Mer Island in the Torres Strait and he and four other Torres Strait Islanders wanted to establish their traditional ownership of their land. [...]
1992
In 1992, six months after the death of Eddie Mabo, the High Court ruled on the Mabo case, recognising that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have a special relationship with the land. [...]
2000
Corroboree 2000 took place in Sydney during Reconciliation Week to mark the end of a ten year official reconciliation process between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people. [...]
2000
Catherine Freeman won gold in the women's 400 metres race at the Sydney Olympic Games. She had a prominent role in the opening ceremony of the games, in lighting the Olympic torch. [...]
2001
The Myall Creek Massacre Memorial was established, bringing together descendants of the victims, survivors and perpetrators, in reconciliation. [...]
2004
The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC) was disbanded. This Commission was established under legislation introduced in 1988 by the Hawke Labor government to advise and advocate on Indigenous issues and to encourage Indigenous self-management and economic, social and cultural development. [...]
Conclusion
As this timeline has shown you, the arrival of European settlers was the beginning of a history of dispossession for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.
If you look at the Moving On section you will hear about our hopes and dreams as we look forward to the future.