William Lanne (c.1835 – 3 March 1869), also spelt William Lanné and also known as King Billy or William Laney, was an Aboriginal Tasmanian man, known for being the last "full-blooded" Aboriginal man in the colony of Tasmania.

William Lanne

Early life and whaling edit

Lanne is believed to have been born around 1835.[1] In 1842 he was the youngest child in the last family taken from Kennaook/Cape Grim to the Aboriginal camp at Wybalenna on Flinders Island by George Augustus Robinson. His native name is lost, probably because at seven he was too young when arriving at Wybalenna and so the English name William he was given there stuck. He was the only one of his family to survive Flinders Island.[citation needed]

In 1847, he temporarily moved to Oyster Cove, and was sent to an orphanage in Hobart until 1851 when he returned. In 1855 the Tasmanian colonial government ordered that all able-bodied men and those of mixed descent from Oyster Cove were to find work outside the settlement. After this, Lanne found work as a whaler in the Tasmanian whaling and sealing industry. When on land he often resided in a local Hobart Town hotel such as the Dog and Partridge Hotel, alongside other shipmates and sailors. Lanne worked on many whaling ships, including the Aladdin, which sailed under the well-known whaler, Captain McArthur, the Jane, the Runnymede and the Sapphire. The latter worked the waters of the Southern, Indian and Pacific Oceans.[2] Lynette Russell has argued that in all but one of the numerous existing portraits of Lanne he is wearing his whaling attire, confidently asserting his identity as a seaman.[3]

Lanne had a good-humoured personality, was well-spoken and admired among the Hobart community. He is recorded as advocating for improving the living arrangements of the women at Oyster Cove Settlement by writing to colonial officials in 1864.[4] In 1868, he was a guest of honour at the Hobart Regatta, where he met the Duke of Edinburgh.[5] It is here that he was also introduced by the governor as the "King of the Tasmanians".[6]

Two weeks after returning from a whaling voyage on the Runnymede, which had been whaling in the southern Pacific Ocean, Lanne died on 3 March 1869 from a combination of cholera and dysentery. He was about 34 years old.[7]

 
Life at Oyster Cove Aboriginal station, painted c.1849 by Charles Edward Stanley

Human remains edit

Following his death, Lanne's body was dismembered and used for scientific purposes. An argument broke out between the Royal College of Surgeons of England and the Royal Society of Tasmania over who should possess his remains. A member of the English College of Surgeons named William Crowther applied to the government for permission to send the skeleton to the Royal College of Surgeons in London, but his request was denied.[8] Nonetheless, Crowther managed to break into the morgue where Lanne's body was kept, and decapitated the corpse, removed the skin and inserted a skull from a white body into the black skin.[9] George Stokell, from The Tasmanian Royal Society, soon discovered Crowther's work, and decided to thwart any further attempts to collect "samples" by amputating the hands and feet.[10] His body was buried in that state by Hobart's citizens and other sailors, but it was later exhumed for an inquiry and lost.[10]

Because he was accused of the theft of Lanne's head (and the illicit use of another white person's head), Crowther's honorary appointment as surgeon at the Colonial Hospital was terminated. Yet in 1869, the Council of the Royal College of Surgeons awarded him a gold medal and the first fellowship of the college ever awarded to an Australian.[8] Crowther later became Premier of Tasmania. Crowther claimed that, because Lanne had lived much of his life within the European community, his brain had exhibited physical changes, demonstrating "the improvement that takes place in the lower race when subjected to the effects of education and civilisation".[11]

Other colonists took note of Crowther's act:[12]

A fracas occurred outside the Council chamber, Hobart Town, a few nights ago. Mr. Crowther, member for Hobart Town, threatened his colleague, Mr. Kennerley, with personal violence, because of the latter's allusion to Mr. Crowther's alleged abstraction of the last aboriginal's head. Mr. Kennerley called the attention of the House to the circumstance, and Mr. Crowther was reprimanded.

Although it is not known for certain what happened to the stolen remains of Lanne, a report in The Times in 1912 headed "Conversazione of the Royal Society: recent advances in science" mentions the exhibition of "the desiccated brain of an aboriginal Tasmanian".[13]

Several bodies of Crowther's collection were donated to the anatomy department at the University of Edinburgh. In the 1990s, the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre believed Lanne's skull to be among them, and requested their return. The remains of Aboriginal people were ultimately returned and reburied, though the university officially denied that any of the remains belonged to Lanne.[11]

Legacy edit

William Lanne's name is believed to be the source of the "King Billy Pine", or Athrotaxis selaginoides, a native Tasmanian tree now an endangered species, threatened by climate change.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ Ryan, Lyndall (1981). The Aboriginal Tasmanians. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. p. 199. ISBN 0-7748-0146-8. OCLC 9461214.
  2. ^ Russell, Lynette (2012). Roving mariners : Australian aboriginal whalers and sealers in the southern oceans, 1790-1870. Albany: State University of New York Press. p. 76. ISBN 978-1-4384-4425-3. OCLC 859674439.
  3. ^ Russell, Lynette (2012). Roving mariners : Australian aboriginal whalers and sealers in the southern oceans, 1790-1870. Albany: State University of New York Press. p. 78. ISBN 978-1-4384-4425-3. OCLC 859674439.
  4. ^ Indigenous bodies : reviewing, relocating, reclaiming. Jacqueline Fear-Segal, Rebecca Tillett. Albany. 2013. p. 63. ISBN 978-1-4384-4822-0. OCLC 860879571.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. ^ Ryan, Lyndall (1981). The Aboriginal Tasmanians. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. p. 214. ISBN 0-7748-0146-8. OCLC 9461214.
  6. ^ Indigenous networks : mobility, connections and exchange. Jane Carey, Jane Lydon. New York: Routledge. 2014. p. 105. ISBN 978-1-317-65932-7. OCLC 882771246.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. ^ Russell, Lynette (2012). Roving mariners : Australian aboriginal whalers and sealers in the southern oceans, 1790-1870. Albany: State University of New York Press. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-4384-4425-3. OCLC 859674439.
  8. ^ a b David Davies, 1973 "The last of the Tasmanians" Archived 24 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Frederick Muller, London. 235-6)
  9. ^ The Times, Saturday, 29 May 1869; pg. 9; Issue 26450; col E
  10. ^ a b Broome, Richard (2019). Aboriginal Australians: A History Since 1788. Allen & Unwin. p. 104. ISBN 978-1760528218.
  11. ^ a b Lawson, Tom (2014). The Last Man: A British Genocide in Tasmania. I.B.Tauris. pp. 166–168. ISBN 9781780766263.
  12. ^ "Tasmania". Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle. Nelson, New Zealand. 15 August 1873. p. 3. A fracas occurred outside the Council chamber, Hobart Town, a few nights ago. Mr. Crowther, member for Hobart Town, threatened his colleague, Mr. Kennerley, with personal violence, because of the latter's allusion to Mr. Crowther's alleged abstraction of the last aboriginal's head. Mr. Kennerley called the attention of the House to the circumstance, and Mr. Crowther was reprimanded.
  13. ^ The Times, Thursday, 9 May 1912; pg. 4; Issue 39894; col A : "A rather gruesome exhibit was that of Professor Elliot Smith, the desiccated brain of an aboriginal Tasmanian, believed to be the only Tasmanian brain now in existence."
  14. ^ "Athrotaxis selaginoides (King Billy pine) description". The Gymnosperm Database. 7 October 2017. Retrieved 19 August 2022.

External links edit