Duncan McNab

Here he was again refused permission to embark on a mission to the Aboriginal peoples until 1875 where he began work in the colony of Queensland. McNab firmly believed in restoring Aboriginal peoples to equal rights and considering their attachment to their land he believed that the best way of assisting them was to help them to become settlers on sections of their own tribal land and on equal terms to that of white settlers. However, his ideas was met with powerful opposition from settlers as well as from sections of the Catholic leadership, subsequently forced McNab to leave Queensland in 1882. He then began a mission amongst Aboriginal prisoners in Western Australia, later setting up a small mission station in Goodneough Bay in the remote north of the Kimberley region. Age and illness caused him to retire to Victoria where he died in 1896.
Duncan McNab, was a first cousin once removed to Sister Mary MacKillop. Provided by Wikipedia
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3by Paul Bowie, Duncan McNab, Carl de Wet, Paul Watson, Tracey Crickett, Jan McCulloch, Pauline Young, John Freestone, Neil Houston, Jill GilliesGet full text
Published 2020-12-01
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