HUNGRY ABO.
Ate
Human Flesh
The hungry abo. ate human flesh as readily as he now does
rabbit.
John Forrest on his first expedition, which took him 25 miles
beyond what is now Laverton (W. A.), found ample evidence of
cannibalism among the tribes all over what later became the
North Coolgardie goldfields.
In her book telling of life last century in a Westralian
parsonage, Mrs. Millett gives the story, told by her male
house-servant, of how an abo. father, during prolonged winter
rains which made all hunting a failure, killed a sister to
provide food for the others of the family.
Records of the W.A. Supreme Court tell of the trial at Geraldton
on October 10, 1873, of Yarradee and Mullagelly, accused of the
murder of four-year-old Edward Dunn, snatched almost from his
father's door, then carried off into the forest, killed and
eaten; the picked bones being thrown into the Megrew Well, from
which they were recovered.
The two adult diners - two boys also partook of the feast - were
hanged.
On a Murchison (W.A.) sheep station Molly Maguire, who held the
position of wash lady, was the one gin whom nothing could tempt
to go "walkabout."
Well-nurtured on white-feller tucker, Molly tipped the
steelyards at 15 stone; she had no illusions as to what would
happen to her well-padded carcass.