Social Commentator

John Francis Dowling – An Update

In 2019, I published The Murder of John Francis Dowling and the Massacre of 300 Aborigines. By a letter dated 14 March 2025, I was informed by the minister of the Anglican parish of St Jude’s Randwick, Sydney, which has a remarkable historic cemetery behind the church, that a great sandstone slab had been discovered. It was the gravestone of a John Francis Dowling.

The inscription states: Beneath this stone lie the remains of John Francis Dowling who was cruelly murdered by the Blacks in his sleep during the night of the 13th June 1865 on the Paroo River Queensland at the early age of 29 years.

The tombstone inscription is consistent with Dowling’s death certificate, which is not surprising, and is an additional piece of physical evidence that John Dowling was killed on the Paroo River and not the Bulloo River. On 5 July 2017, the Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia 1788-1930 website was launched. The ABC proclaimed without critically examining the site that “Now a landmark project mapping those massacres has hit a sobering point — 250 sites have been documented across almost every state and territory.” In 2019, the site declared with great authority that between 1 Jan 1865 and 31 Dec 1865 at Thouringowa Waterhole, Bulloo River, 300 Aboriginals were killed: “Following the killing of Ardoch station owner John Dowling (on the Bulloo River), his brother Vincent led a posse of settlers including EO Hobkirk and set out in revenge and found the Kullila camped on the eastern side of the river and chased them towards the Grey Range, shooting them down as they ran. McKellar says the posse was led by the native police and that 300 were killed.”

I my book of 2019, I conclusively proved that John Dowling was murdered on the Paroo River by the Blacks and that there was no massacre of Blacks on the Bulloo River by Vincent Dowling or any other person or persons. The Massacre website of 2025, now records that between 1 Jan 1865 and 31 Dec 1865 at Thouringowa Waterhole, Bulloo River, 30 Aboriginals were killed. That is a 90% reduction. No explanation is given for the reduction. My book of 2019 is now cited in the sources. However, the Massacre website still persists with the allegation that a massacre occurred at the hands of Settler(s), Stockmen/Drover(s).

The tombstone is beyond doubt a relic to rival any historic gravestone to be found within the churchyards of England. It is a find to be treasured and preserved for future generation of Australians.

The Murder of John Francis Dowling and the Massacre of 300 Aborigines by Paul Dillon, ISBN 9781925826500 Paperback, 124 pages, $29.95 available from Connor Court Publishing, Brisbane.

Standard
Social Commentator

Fraser Island Massacre – More fake history.

In 2022, I published FRASER ISLAND MASSACRE Vrai ou Faux, Connor Court Publishing Pty Ltd, Brisbane. In Chapter 4, The Massacre, I referred to the website, Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia, 1788-1930.[1] The website, at Site List, identified a massacre on Fraser Island listing 100 Aboriginal people killed between 24 Dec 1851 and 3 Jan 1852. The sources quoted for the incident were:

Lauer, P 1977, ‘Report of a Preliminary Ethnohistorical and Archaeological Survey of Fraser Island’, in Lauer, P. (ed.), Fraser Island, Occasional Papers in Anthropology, no. 8, Anthropology Museum, University of Queensland, St Lucia; and Sydney Morning Herald, January 22, 1852 – https://trove.nla.gov.au/ newspaper/page/1509723.

The particulars of the incident were:

To ‘break up’ Aboriginal clans that had sought sanctuary on the island a punitive expedition of eleven days duration was lead (sic) by Commandant Frederick Walker with 24 troopers of native police along with Lt Marshall and Sgt Major Dolan and captain and crew of the schooner, Maragaret (sic) and Mary, all armed and sworn in as special constables… Aboriginal people were ‘driven into the sea, and kept there as long as daylight and life lasted’. Lauer estimates that 100 Aboriginal people were killed.

The website was updated in 2024.[2] The number of Aboriginal killed was reduced from 100 to 50; no explanation was given for this reduction. The sources quoted for the incident now included, Vic Collins, Handwritten Account of an Aboriginal Massacre at Teewah, 2000.[3]

The 2024 particulars of this incident relating to Collins were:

Some comparable details, such as the deputisation of colonists, the killings on the beach and victims driven into the water, suggest this may be the same, or related to a massacre written from oral history by Vic Collins. According to Vic Collins a massacre took place just to the south of K’Gari on the mainland at Teewah Beach, north of Noosa: ‘The convicts were given their freedom provided they donned a red uniform (Red Coats) to keep the blacks in order. Stationed at Maryborough word came of a tribe of blacks stealing sheep from Mannumbar Station (on their way bay from Bunya Mts) Noosa blacks were blamed. The Red Coats track them to Teewah Beach. They were ordered to ride out on the beach and shoot the men (single shot muzzle loaders) then use swords on the remainder which they did. But children took to the water, so the officer in charge ordered the red coats to ride their horeses into the surf and trample the children till they drowned.’ (Collins, 2000)

Anybody with a smidgeon of nous would recognise that adding Vic Collins’ fairy tale does not enhance the probity of the supporting material for the alleged Fraser Island massacre but suggests that the authors of the website are clutching at straws to shore up their ludicrous piece of drivel on the so-called Fraser Island massacre.

Please refer to FRASER ISLAND MASSACRE Vrai ou Faux available from sales@connorcourt.com


[1] Ryan, Lyndall; Richards, Jonathan; Pascoe, William; Debenham, Jennifer; Stephanie Gilbert; Anders, Robert J; Brown, Mark; Smith, Robyn; Price, Daniel; Newley, Jack Colonial Frontier Massacres in Eastern Australia 1788 to 1930, v3.0, 2019. Newcastle: University of Newcastle, 2018, http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1340762 (accessed 11/9/2021). Funded by ARC: DP 140100399.

[2] Stage 5.0, Ryan, Lyndall; Debenham, Jennifer; Pascoe, Bill; Smith, Robyn; Owen, Chris; Richards, Jonathan; Gilbert, Stephanie; Anders, Robert J; Usher, Kaine; Price, Daniel; Newley, Jack; Brown, Mark; Craig, Hugh Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia 1788-1930 Newcastle: University of Newcastle, 2017-2024, https://c21ch.newcastle.edu.au/colonialmassacres (accessed 16/03/2024).

[3] Handwritten, single page account of a massacre of Aboriginal people in the late 1800s on Teewah Beach on the Cooloola Coast. The account is written by Vic Collins and relays information that was told to him by his father, William Collins, who had arrived in the area in 1896. State Library of Queensland

Standard