Boab Prison Tree, Derby
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The Baobab Prison Tree, Derby is a 1,500-year-old, large hollow ''
Adansonia gregorii ''Adansonia gregorii'', commonly known as the boab and also known by a number of other names, is a tree in the family Malvaceae, endemic to the northern regions of Western Australia and the Northern Territory of Australia. Names The specific ...
'' (Baobab) tree 6 kilometres south of
Derby, Western Australia Derby ( ) is a town in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. At the 2016 census, Derby had a population of 3,325 with 47.2% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent. Along with Broome and Kununurra, it is one of only three towns i ...
with a girth of 14.7 metres. It had been reputed to have been used in the 1890s as a lockup for
indigenous Australian Indigenous Australians or Australian First Nations are people with familial heritage from, and membership in, the ethnic groups that lived in Australia before British colonisation. They consist of two distinct groups: the Aboriginal peoples ...
prisoners on their way to Derby for sentencing, but there is no evidence that it was ever used to house prisoners.


Early use

In the Nyulnyulan languages of the Western Kimberley, boab trees are called 'larrgadiy' (''alt. spelling'' larrgadi) and have considerable mythological significance. The ancient trees are often regarded as cherished individuals with unique personalities. Anthropologist Herbert Basedow was one of the first Europeans to document the Derby Boab Tree. In his 1916 expedition to the Kimberley region, Basedow photographed it and captioned the image as "the hollow trunk of a live Boab used by the aborigines as hut and burial place, Mayhall's well, King Sound". Basedow (1918) also wrote that: " e natives have long been in the habit of making use of this lusus naturae reak of natureas a habitation; it is indeed a dry and comfortable hut". He found bleached human bones lying on the floor, which suggests that Aboriginal people had also used the tree as an
ossuary An ossuary is a chest, box, building, well, or site made to serve as the final resting place of human skeletal remains. They are frequently used where burial space is scarce. A body is first buried in a temporary grave, then after some years the ...
for the dead. The human remains seen at the tree by Basedow and other early non-Indigenous visitors have disappeared, and may have been stolen.


The 'prison tree'

Kristyn Harman and Elizabeth Grant traced the prison tree myth back to 1948. Around that time, an Australian artist called Vlase Zanalis spent eight months camping in and around Derby. Zanalis became intrigued by the region's extraordinary boab trees. When one of his resulting art works titled 'The Boab Tree' was later exhibited at Sydney, the ''Albany Advertiser'' described the tree as having in its 'earlier days' had its trunk 'used as a prison of a temporary nature until it was possible to transfer the prisoners to a more permanent abode'. Harman and Grant concluded that the 'history' of another boab tree (located at Wyndham) was transposed to the Derby tree. Over time, this myth was repeated and became accepted as a 'fact', despite not being supported by the available historical evidence. Kim Akerman also refuted the notion, on the grounds that Aboriginal histories do not support the story that this tree was used to imprison Aboriginal people (either by the Derby police force, or by blackbirders taking enslaved Aboriginal people to the coast).


The tree today

The tree is now a tourist attraction. It is protected under the
Aboriginal Heritage Act 1972 The ''Aboriginal Heritage Act 1972'' (AHA) is a law in the state of Western Australia governing the protection of Aboriginal cultural sites, which is as of 2022 being superseded by the '' Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act 2021'' (ACH Act). The ...
. In recent years a fence was erected around the tree to protect it from too much human traffic, carving of initials etc., and compacting of surrounding soil by vehicles.


See also

*
Boab Prison Tree, Wyndham The Boab Prison Tree is a large hollow ''Adansonia gregorii'' (boab) tree just south of Wyndham, Western Australia, near The Diggers Rest and the Moochalabra Dam (Wyndham's water supply), on the King River road. The tree was once known as the Hil ...
*
Jail tree A jail tree is any tree used to incarcerate a person, usually by chaining the prisoner up to the tree. Jail trees were used on the American frontier in the Territory of Arizona, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries; jail trees were also used ...
*
List of individual trees The following is a list of notable trees. Trees listed here are regarded as important or specific by their historical, national, locational, natural or mythological context. The list includes actual trees located throughout the world, as well as ...


Notes


References


Boab Prison Tree
About-Australia.com. Retrieved 1 February 2009. {{coord, -17.3507, 123.6699, display=title, region:AU-WA_type:landmark Individual trees in Western Australia Kimberley (Western Australia) Individual baobab trees State Register of Heritage Places in the Shire of Derby-West Kimberley