The Black Tracker
Swart bloodhounds of the fenceless West,
Black gallopers that lead the Law,
To whom your victims stand confessed
By every lightest line they draw;
The hawks that high above you sail
Have eyes less keen to pierce the blue,
The dingo on his hunting trail
Runs slacker in the chase than you!
Your naked fathers, seeking food
By signs upon the sand grew wise,
And tracked their quarry till it stood,
And bore it home, a hard-won prize.
Now, clothed and horsed and paid in gold,
Ye rid across the self-same sands
To track the outlaw to his hold
And leave him in his foreman’s hands!
With head upon your horse’s mane,
With eyes intent on every clue,
By swamp and river, ridge and plain,
Ye follows as the fates pursue.
Behind you, blood on spur and heel
And foam on-chain and rein and ring,
With hands that tighten on their steel,
Ride fast the troopers of the King!
The killer’s threat is in your eyes
The falconers and the hunter’s pride;
Athwart your brow, a vengeance lies,
Unborrowed from the band ye guide.
The hate that shaped your father’s spears,
The blood-lust of a thousand years
Comes back to fan your hearts to fire!
Yet I have seen your passion sleep,
Your hate and lust and anger die,
When stirred by human love as deep
As ever moved a mothers sigh,
Ye rode upon a gentler trail
And followed, through the scrubland wild,
In sorrow that ye scorned to veil,
The footprints of a lost bush child!
By Will H Ogilvie
Soon after the founding of the colony of Western Australia, aboriginal people were employed by the Western Australia police. In the early days, they have not termed trackers and some did a full range of policing duties. They were called various names in early reports, for example, Native Constables and Police Assistants – or just plain constables, like settler police officers.
For the most part, they worked with aboriginal people to prevent acts of violence and theft. Sometimes they worked as ordinary town constables, such as the unnamed man recruited at Albany in 1840. By the year 1854, the word trackers became more common; they were employed in both Perth and Fremantle, not just in the bush.
As the decades rolled by their roles became more specialised. They helped hunt down and catch murderers, thieves, and other criminals, to find lost or missing persons and – before the mid-1900s – to manage and move patrol equipment and act as interpreters in court. One perhaps underestimated aspect of tracker work was diplomacy – acting as ‘in between’ men when patrols were moving through relatively unknown country.
Trackers were not contracted, employees or official members. They were casual workers and were attached to individual police officers. The latter officers received a special allowance from the WA Police and had to use it to pay for the food and clothing of the tracker and his family. If money was needed for extra expenses, police officers were required to pay out of their own pockets.
Because of the periodic nature of their work, which could at times fade out as police personnel moved on or working needs changed, records pertaining to trackers were badly kept. For many, no records of any kind survive, but the same is true for a great many non-aboriginal law enforcement officers operating in the 1800s and right up until fairly recent times. Time and various policy decisions have not been kind to police personnel records.
Peter Conole
WA Police Historian (Retired 2013)
Moya Sharp
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