Australian Aborigines in Chains: Photos From the 1900s – Rare Historical Photos
This picture is taken in the early 1900s at the Wyndham prison. Wyndham is the oldest and northernmost town in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. It was established in 1886 as a result of a gold rush at Halls Creek. However, the circumstances and the story behind this picture remain unknown. The Aboriginals could have been arrested under the various local laws passed that forbid them from entering or being within a certain distance of named towns. They could also have been arrested for drinking or owning firearms which were illegal for them at various times. It’s also possible that they have been rounded up to be moved to reserve areas which were being created at the time and that these individuals did not want to move. It could even be a staged picture for tourists/publicity reasons.
Long after such practices were assumed to belong to a distant colonial past, Aboriginal people in Western Australia were still being restrained with neck chains. As late as 1958, witnesses in Halls Creek, in the Kimberley region, reported seeing Aboriginal prisoners chained for weeks at a time to a veranda post outside the local police station. These scenes were not isolated incidents but part of a broader system of control that operated with little scrutiny for decades.
From the late nineteenth century through the mid-twentieth century, horse-mounted police routinely detained Aboriginal men, women, and children from pastoral stations across the north of Western Australia. Their removal was often justified by allegations of cattle theft, though their presence itself was seen as an obstacle to the rapid expansion of the cattle industry. At its height, between the 1880s and the 1940s, hundreds of Aboriginal people were bound with heavy iron neck chains, each weighing about 2.4 kilograms, and forced to march vast distances from their country, sometimes as far as 400 kilometers. In some cases, prisoners were further restrained by being fastened to iron rings set into the floor.
Indigenous men linked together by chains around their necks. Taken sometime between 1898-1906.
‘The pastoralists might’ve had their euphemisms – such as “dispersal”, when what they really meant was killing.’
Northern Territory Aboriginal prisoners, 1800s.
Aboriginal men in chains. Frontier conflict and disputes over territory saw thousands of Indigenous Australians apprehended by colonial authorities.
Prisoners in chains with a white man holding the end of the chain, probably in Wyndham, ca.1930.
Neck chains were finally abolished in late 1958 following sustained national and international criticism, particularly from church groups and trade unions, alongside the introduction of police vehicles equipped with secure lockups. For many Aboriginal people, including the children at Moola Bulla, this reform came only after generations had already endured the weight of a system designed to control, intimidate, and remove them from their land.
Chained men, again in the Kimberley. Date unknown.
(Photo credit: Australian Archives).Related
Source: Australian Aborigines in Chains: Photos From the 1900s – Rare Historical Photos