
Robert Joel (Joe) Cooper (29 February 1860 – 7 August 1936)
was an Australian buffalo hunter in the
Northern Territory
The Northern Territory (abbreviated as NT; known formally as the Northern Territory of Australia and informally as the Territory) is an states and territories of Australia, Australian internal territory in the central and central-northern regi ...
who spent much of his life on
Melville Island (Yermalner).
He was also known as 'Jokupper', ‘white Rajah of Melville Island' and 'The king of Melville Island.
Biography
Cooper was born in 1860 at Fairview, a property near
Riverton in
South Australia
South Australia (commonly abbreviated as SA) is a States and territories of Australia, state in the southern central part of Australia. With a total land area of , it is the fourth-largest of Australia's states and territories by area, which in ...
, he was the son of George and Harriet Cooper.
As a young man, between 1878 and 1881, he first travelled to the Northern Territory as a
drover alongside his brother George Henry (Harry). They overlanded horses there and, for the next several years, worked there in the timber industry and began buffalo shooting on the
Cobourg Peninsula
The Cobourg Peninsula is a peninsula located east of Darwin in the Northern Territory, Australia. It is deeply indented with coves and bays, covers a land area of about , and is virtually uninhabited with a population ranging from about 20 ...
and surrounding areas.
He was in a relationship an
Iwaidja woman, named Alice, who, although not legally married, was to all intents and purposes his wife and was treated as such. They had three children together; two daughters, Josephine and Ethel, who predeceased him, and a son Reuben (c. 1898 - c. 1941) who later joined him as a buffalo shooter. Alice also had a son from an earlier relationship named Ted and he worked for Cooper.
In May 1893 Cooper and Harry moved to Melville Island (Yermalner) alongside
Edward Oswin Robinson who had taken a pastoral lease there. Robinson left soon after, leaving Cooper in charge as manager. Cooper, finding thousands of buffalo there to shoot, established a camp there in 1895.
The presence of Cooper and his team was not harmonious and several
Tiwi people
The Tiwi people (or Tunuvivi) are one of the many Aboriginal Australian, Aboriginal groups of Australia. Nearly 2,000 Tiwi people live on Bathurst Island (Northern Territory), Bathurst and Melville Island, Northern Territory, Melville Islands, ...
were shot and Cooper and another employee Barney Flynn were speared. By the end of 1896 Cooper and his team shot 4,644 buffaloes on the Island.
Robinson withdrew Cooper and his team by the end of 1896 and he returned to the Coburg Peninsula with four Tiwi people and learned the
Tiwi language
Tiwi is an Australian Aboriginal language spoken by the Tiwi people on the Tiwi Islands, within sight of the coast of northern Australia. It is one of about 10% of Australian languages still being frequently learned by children.
Traditional ...
from them.
He later returned to Yermalner in 1905 with a much larger group; including the men and women who had left with him and 20 Iwaidja people from the mainland. On their return Tiwi man Samuel Ingeruintamirri was sent ashore first to distribute goods and explain Coopers return; this was essential to their peaceful reentry.
This was, however, very confusing for the Tiwi people and Greg Tjipalilpwaingi Ulungura remembered:
The Iwaidja formed the nucleus of the buffalo shooting team and were armed; this intimidated the Tiwi. Cooper then stayed on for 10 years, shooting up to 1,000 buffalo a year, for their hides and horns. These were shipped to Darwin on his lugger ''
'Buffalo which was also used as a charter for government departments and officials.
He also cut cypress pine and fished for
trepang.
In 1906 Cooper received a visit from German physical anthropologist
Hermann Klaatsch
Hermann Klaatsch (10 March 1863 – 5 January 1916) was a German physician, anatomist, physical anthropologist, evolutionist, and professor at the University of Heidelberg from 1890, and at the University of Breslau (Wrocław) until 1916. who described him as a typical adventurer of the bush who had "a friendly relationship with the blacks".
In 1907 Cooper's brother Harry died on the Island and, there are conflicting stories of his death with some stories, perhaps promoted by Cooper, stating that he was speared to death by the Tiwi or died in the course of buffalo shooting.
Despite this his listed cause of death was
syphilis
Syphilis () is a sexually transmitted infection caused by the bacterium ''Treponema pallidum'' subspecies ''pallidum''. The signs and symptoms depend on the stage it presents: primary, secondary, latent syphilis, latent or tertiary. The prim ...
and this is supported by the obituaries published at the time of his death stating that he died suddenly of an illness.
In 1910 he befriended
Francis Xavier Gsell
Francis Xavier Gsell, Order of the British Empire, OBE (30 June 1872 – 12 July 1960) was a German-born Australian Roman Catholic bishop and missionary, known as the "Bishop with 150 wives". He was born at Benfeld, Alsace in 1872. He was ordain ...
, who established a mission on the nearby
Bathurst Island (Nguyu). He also befriended the Commonwealth Administrator of the Northern Territory
John Anderson Gilruth
John Anderson Gilruth (17 February 1871 – 4 March 1937) was a Scottish-Australian veterinary scientist and administrator. He is particularly noted for being Administrator of the Northern Territory from 1912 to 1918, when he was recalled afte ...
and biologist and anthropologist
Walter Baldwin Spencer
Sir Walter Baldwin Spencer (23 June 1860 – 14 July 1929), commonly referred to as Sir Baldwin Spencer, was a British-Australian Evolutionary biology, evolutionary biologist, anthropology, anthropologist and Ethnology, ethnologist.
He is k ...
. Spencer stayed with Cooper in 1911 and 1912 while studying the Tiwi people; the results of this research are published in ''Wanderings in Wild Australia'' (1928). After Spencer's 1911 visit he described Cooper as:
It is perhaps based on these friendships that Cooper was made an honorary sub-protector of Aborigines in 1911 and the authorities began sending Aboriginal people from other parts of the Northern Territory who were addicted to alcohol or opium to Yermalner.
People were also sent to Nguyu.
Cooper resigned from his position as sub-protector in November 1914 following allegations of cruelty towards Aboriginal people and the use of intimidating practices by his armed 'bodyguards' (a group of Iwaidja)
that included his step-son Ted (who was said to have been involved in several murders). These allegations were made by sawmiller Sam Green who witnessed Cooper remove an Aboriginal woman, Mary Damil, from his camp with a strap around her neck and removed her from a room using it. This incident was also witnessed by Richard Webb who signed a statement saying:
After Cooper's resignation he was replaced by Rev. Regis Courbon and all non-Tiwi people were returned to the mainland by order of the
Department of External Affairs.
Cooper also left Yermalner and became associated with several pastoral leases in the
Top End
The Top End of Australia's Northern Territory is a geographical region encompassing the northernmost section of the Northern Territory, which aside from the Cape York Peninsula is the northernmost part of the Australian continent. It covers a ...
and in 1921 he was trepanging in
Trepang Bay Trepang may refer to:
*A marine invertebrate harvested by trepanging, thus:
**A common name for species of the holothuroidea (sea cucumber) class of animals
* ''Trepang'' (SS-412), a World War II submarine sunk in 1967
* ''Trepang'' (SSN-674), a sub ...
.
He died in Darwin on 7 August 1936 and, on his death, he was reported to have killed over 100,000 buffalos.
Legacy
It is believed that the character of Ned Krater, in
Xavier Herbert's novel
Capricornia (1938) is based on Cooper and Norman Shillingsworth on his son Reuben although the later is more contested.
Cooper is the great-grandfather of footballer
Reuben Cooper
Reuben Cooper (born 14 August 1951) is a former Australian rules football player and coach. He was the first Northern Territorian in history to play in the Australian Football League, having debuted for South Melbourne in 1969.
Biography
Cooper, ...
.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cooper, Robert Joel
People from the Northern Territory
1860 births
1936 deaths
Australian hunters