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CHAPTER XXV - 1837, 1838

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

With the session of 1836, had closed the sitting of the Aborigines' Committee, and the drawing up of its report was entrusted to Mr. Buxton as its chairman. He was anxious to render this report a sort of manual for the future treatment of aboriginal nations, in connection with our colonies. Accordingly, in January, 1837, he invited Dr. Philip to Northrepps, and commenced his work.

“Dr. Philip has been here three days,” he writes. “We are in the heart of the Report on Aborigines. Oh! for a spirit of wisdom poured clown on our labours.”

The object of the report was to prove, first, the destructive cruelty to which the native tribes had generally been subjected: and, secondly, that wherever they had received equitable and humane treatment, they had increased in numbers, acquired the arts of civilized life, and accepted the blessings of religion.

“April 2. 1837.

“The next few months are very important, as in them the Aborigines' Report will be settled. Most earnestly I pray that it may stop the oppressor, and open the door for the admission of multitudes of heathens to the fold of Christ.

“Then there is the Apprenticeship Committee, which I bring forward on the 20th; and the Slave Trade Question, and East Indian slavery; and other deep and various interests which will speedily be unfolded. […] ”

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Memoirs of Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, Baronet
With Selections from his Correspondence
, pp. 415 - 428
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1848

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