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BungareePrint Page
The memorial commemorates the contribution made by Bungaree to the surveying of the area in 1790`s. The local aborigines names the headland Norah Bungaree in this honour.
Bungaree or Bongaree was an Aboriginal man who came from the Broken Bay area to settle in Sydney in 1791. Attracted by `his good disposition and manly conduct` Matthew Flinders took him in the Norfolk on his voyage to Moreton and Hervey Bays in Queensland in 1799. He also accompanied Flinders in the Investigator during his circumnavigation of Australia, 1801-1803.
In 1817 Bungaree sailed with Phillip Parker King to north-western Australia. He proved very useful in making contact with new tribes and was commended by both Flinders and King. Regarded by the authorities as the leader of the township Aboriginal people, he generally wore a discarded uniform and cocked hat. In 1815 Governor Lachlan Macquarie installed him with some of his tribe on a farm at George`s Head in Sydney. However farming was not to their liking and the venture eventually failed. Bungaree died in 1830 after a long illness.
Location
Address: | Bush Street, Norah Head Lighthouse, Norah Head, 2263 |
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State: | NSW |
Area: | AUS |
GPS Coordinates: | Lat: -33.281667 Long: 151.576111 Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate. |
Details
Monument Type: | Monument |
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Monument Theme: | People |
Sub-Theme: | Indigenous |
Dedication
Approx. Monument Dedication Date: | 1986 |
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Erected in recognition
of Bungaree, a prominent
Aboriginal of the Central Coast.
Bungaree's regional knowledge and
contacts were used by colonists
in their reconnaissance of the
coast line near Norah Head in the
late 1790s.
Local Aboriginals named this
headland Norah Bungaree to
commemorate the honour and respect
bestowed upon Bungaree for his
services to the early colonists.