Cowits
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Cowits was
Western Australia Western Australia (commonly abbreviated as WA) is a state of Australia occupying the western percent of the land area of Australia excluding external territories. It is bounded by the Indian Ocean to the north and west, the Southern Ocean to th ...
's first Aboriginal policeman, and was a member of a number of early exploratory expeditions.


Cowits and his brother, Souper

Cowits came from the
York York is a cathedral city with Roman origins, sited at the confluence of the rivers Ouse and Foss in North Yorkshire, England. It is the historic county town of Yorkshire. The city has many historic buildings and other structures, such as a ...
area. He was born around 1832. He had a brother named Souper. Souper was sentenced to two years prison on Rottnest Island for stealing a sheep from Burges’ farm. His story was set out in a report to Benefit Societies in England, and published in the ''
Perth Gazette ''The West Australian'' is the only locally edited daily newspaper published in Perth, Western Australia. It is owned by Seven West Media (SWM), as is the state's other major newspaper, ''The Sunday Times''. It is the second-oldest continuously ...
'' in September 1844, when he was reportedly about 11 years of age. In that story, he gives an account of his time at Rottnest and says that his mother and father and uncles were all dead, but he had a brother in York.


Young Cowits

Cowits was one of four Aboriginal children who were taught the alphabet by
Peter Barrow Peter Barrow (30 July 1813 – 6 October 1899) was a son of Sir John Barrow, 1st Baronet, and an early settler in the colony of Western Australia, becoming a magistrate and Protector of Aborigines, Guardian of Aborigines, Anglican priest and scho ...
during his 18 months in York in 1840 and 1841. From 1841, Cowits was being brought up in the house of Dr
Henry Landor Henry Landor (1815 – 6 January 1877) was the first medical superintendent of the Asylum For The Insane, London, Ontario, which was built to his specifications. He was one of those at the forefront in North America of the movement for moral trea ...
, a settler, physician, scientist and explorer, and one of three brothers who came to the
Swan River Colony The Swan River Colony, also known as the Swan River Settlement, or just Swan River, was a British colony established in 1829 on the Swan River, in Western Australia. This initial settlement place on the Swan River was soon named Perth, and it ...
in 1841 intending to make a fortune in six or seven years from sheep farming. In the York census of 1842, Cowits is referred to as “working for settlers in the York (Avon) District”. Landor farmed in partnership with Nathan Elias Knight, leasing Bland and Trimmer's farm in York, Balladong Farm, and squatting sheep at the Dale and Hotham. While there, Landor became concerned with the spread of disease among the Aborigines. It was his opinion that contact with white settlers had been the cause of the virulent diseases. He took it upon himself to gather as many Aborigines as he could to look after them properly, and he applied unsuccessfully for government money for a hospital, though received some funds for medical treatment. In January 1843, Landor and
Henry Maxwell Lefroy Henry Maxwell Lefroy (August 1818 – 18 July 1879) was a prominent explorer of the Mid West and Goldfields-Esperance regions of Western Australia. He was the son of Rev. John Henry George Lefroy, the rector of Compton and Ashe, who died when h ...
explored east of “the Dale” (
Beverley Beverley is a market town, market and minster (church), minster town and a civil parishes in England, civil parish in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England, of which it is the county town. The town centre is located south-east of York's centre ...
) and took Cowits with them “to shoot kangaroos, and to act as interpreter when our guides were unintelligible to us”. In December 1844, Landor explored the Deep River, discovering a "tree so high (63 paces to the first branch) that he could not look over it". A storm came and Landor and his "servant" took shelter in the hollow of an old jarrah tree that was so large it could even hold the horses. Landor left the Colony in 1845.


Cowits begins to assist the police

Cowits assisted John Drummond, head of police in York, then Toodyay. When
Walkinshaw Cowan Walkinshaw Cowan (25 December 180822 January 1888) was private secretary to Western Australian Governors John Hutt, Andrew Clarke and Frederick Irwin, then in 1848 he became Guardian of Aborigines and a justice of the peace, and then resident m ...
was appointed Protector of Natives and head of police in York in 1848, Drummond asked Cowits to convey a message to Cowan. Cowan recorded in his diary and also wrote in 1868 about this: However, Cowan began to complain about Drummond. In April 1850, a court of inquiry was held at York to enquire into Cowan's complaints. One of these was that Drummond went drinking at the Kings Head Hotel with Cowits and Tommy the native mail carrier, and did not report or charge anyone. Cowits gave evidence for Drummond which the court believed. The court found the charges "not proved being frivolous and vexatious", though Drummond was suspended from duties for a month. Also in April 1850, Cowits is recorded as having given evidence in a trial of three Aboriginal people for the murder of Yadupwert; all three were convicted and sentenced to death.


Cowan tries to get a house for Cowits

Despite these difficulties between Cowan and Drummond, Cowan formed a good relationship with Cowits and on 26 August 1850, Cowan wrote to the Governor on behalf of Cowits: Cowan did not receive a reply to his letter on behalf of Cowits and wrote again on 28 October 1851: Governor Fitzgerald responded: In 1852, the prison cells were constructed in York on the area selected by Cowan for Cowits' house, being the first buildings of the current
York Courthouse Complex The York Courthouse Complex, on Avon Terrace in York, Western Australia, was built from 1852 to 1896, and is one of the most significant built sites from a heritage and architectural perspective in the state. Cell block and police quarters ...
.


Brothers

Apart from Souper, Cowits' brothers were reportedly Nurgap, Dide, Nortap and Billiup. Souper also became an Aboriginal policeman, as did other brothers. In 1852, one brother was a servant of Mr Parker. Souper accidentally shot himself in the thigh in February 1853 in the course of arresting an Aboriginal escapee named Paddy. In 1864, Cowits and Souper were to have accompanied Assistant Surveyor Robert Austin on an expedition to “Shark’s Bay”, but Cowits became sick and had to stay at “Nombekine”, north of Northam, thereby avoiding the poisoning of horses that the expedition including Souper experienced.


Further expeditions

In 1863, Cowits accompanied Lefroy on his expedition east of York to the interior. Cowits was described by Lefroy as The journal of the expedition frequently refers to Cowits’ active and important role in the exploration. Lefroy comments with amusement that Cowits always called their camp “home”. The expedition also took with them a friend of Cowits,
Tommy Windich Tommy Windich ( – ) was an Indigenous Australian member of a number of exploring expeditions in Western Australia in the 1860s and 1870s. Tommy Windich (or Windiitj) was born around 1840 near Mount Stirling in Western Australia. Little is known ...
. John Cowan and Cowits proceeded beyond Smith’s station, and both had returned to York by mid October 1863. Cowits also accompanied an expedition of
Charles Cooke Hunt Charles Cooke Hunt (1833 – 1 March 1868, Geraldton) was an English explorer who led four expeditions into the interior of Western Australia between 1864 and 1866. Hunt was born in Sussex to John Hunt and Mary Ann (''née'' Cooke) and baptised ...
to the east of York in 1864, and again in July 1866 (including Windich), and an expedition of McRae and Scholl to the Fortescue in August and September 1866. He also worked on farms including Grass Dale, as did Windich.


Discovery of petroleum

Cowits and Windich joined Constable Edwards in the police expedition east in May 1866 which discovered petroleum.


Death

Cowits died of influenza, aggravated by drinking, in April 1868.CC Hunt’s 1864 Koolyanobbing Expedition edited by Ken Epton, Hesperian Press, p viii; Diary of Walkinshaw Cowan, from Pamela Statham Drew and AM (Tony) Clack: York, Western Australia: A Documentary History, p.110. Cowan said of him:


Notes


References

{{reflist 1830s births 1868 deaths Australian explorers Explorers of Western Australia Noongar people People from the Wheatbelt (Western Australia)