The Black War 'is an important book for the whole of Australia and for anyone with an interest in our national story.' Henry Reynolds - Foreword, The Black War. Between 1824 and 1831, at least 218 colonists and some 600 Aborigines died violently in eastern Tasmania.. "The whole war culminated with the Black Line in September and October 1830. It remains to this day, the largest domestic military offensive in Australia's history, and it was a complete fiasco.

Tasmania's Black War a tragic case of lest we remember?

Tasmania's Black War a tragic case of lest we remember?

The National Picture, The Art of Tasmania's Black War by Tim Bonyhady Goodreads

Tasmania's Black War a tragic case of lest we remember?

Noted works The Black War

The Black War Fear, Sex and Resistance in Tasmania by Nicholas Clements

Helping us to see when we don’t want to look Pursuit by The University of Melbourne

A breastplate reveals the story of an Australian frontier massacre

Tasmania's Black War a tragic case of lest we remember?

Helping us to see when we don’t want to look Pursuit by The University of Melbourne

Australia’s frontier war killings still conveniently escape official memory Indigenous

Tasmania's Black War a tragic case of lest we remember?

The truth about John Batman Melbourne’s founder and ‘murderer of the blacks’

Tasmania's Black War a tragic case of lest we remember?

The Black line In Tasmania by Ben Fox
Memorial to commemorate Tasmania’s Black Wars

Tasmania's Black War a tragic case of lest we remember?

Tasmania's Black War a tragic case of lest we remember?

The Black War Tasmania still torn by its history SBS The Point
The National Picture The Art of Tasmania's Black War Queen Victoria Museum & Art Gallery
The Promise (2019) by Julie Gough. Colonial genocidal policies enacted against Tasmania's Indigenous people are at the heart of Tense Past, Gough's retrospective at the Tasmanian Museum and.. The Black War in Tasmania 1823-1834, is widely perceived by historians as one of the best documented of all Australia's colonial frontier wars. Yet debate still rages about whether massacres were a defining feature and whether they accounted for the deaths of many Aborigines. As Keith Windschuttle has pointed out, this is an important.