Dost Mahomet

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Dost Mahomet (c1873 – 1909)[1] used his camels to transport goods between the ports and remote inland mining and pastoral settlements of the Coolgardie, Pilbara and Murchison regions of Western Australia at the turn of the 19th century.

A Brahui (Brohi) speaker, he was born at Lal Bhakar, a village a few kilometres from Karachi, where his grandfather had settled after migrating from the mountainous Khuzdar area in Baluchistan, three hundred odd kilometres west.

In 1893, Dost disembarked at the port of Fremantle with 25 camels. He trekked inland with them to Coolgardie seeking work at the new gold diggings. In his early years in the colony, Dost attended night classes at Perth Boys High School to learn English in which he became very proficient.[2]

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[edit] Camel Business

Gold was first discovered in Coolgardie in 1892 beginning the famous Coolgardie-Kalgoorlie gold rush for surface gold and, later, the extensive underground mining of gold which is still underway. Camel transport operators quickly established themselves here, many living in a tent settlement at the end of Coolgardie Street. Demand for transport was high and Dost acquired more camels and found men to work for him.

Over the next decade, Dost carried goods to remote settlements further north including Laverton, Wiluna, Cue, Port Hedland and Marble Bar. He had drays built to help in haulage.[3] Pastoral stations had been edging northwards following reports from exploring expeditions led by John and Alexander Forrest, Lawrence Wells, David Lindsay and John Wedge. Many of these expeditions relied on some camel transport. De Gray, Mundabullaangana, Pardoo, Tabba Tabba and Wallareenya were all pastoral stations, well established before Port Hedland became a gazetted town in1896. Camels were still to be seen loaded with wool bales loping between some of these stations and the rail head until the mid nineteen thirties.

Mining operations in the Pilbara preceded those at Coolgardie with gold, tin, lead, zinc, tantalite, antinomy and bismuth being among the minerals chipped from the Pilbara rocks and sands during this period. (It was to be another sixty years before the Pilbara region acquired global status for its vast iron-red ore bodies.) The miners needed equipment, large and small. Small stores and hotels alongside prospecting sites retailed food, drink, clothing and other supplies which were brought in by camels as well as teams of horses and bullocks and, eventually, by rail from the Whim Creek wharves. Five years after the shifting of the port to Port Hedland, a new rail link was made to Marble Bar.

Dost set up a permanent base at Port Hedland in 1906 servicing the Pilbara region. Although his older brother Jorak had preceded Dost to Western Australia, it was Dost who became the leading figure among the cameleers in the north-west. Other Brahui relatives worked in the area alongside other cameleers from Balochistan, Afghanistan and northern India. Many made journeys back and forth between Western Australia, South Australia and their birthplaces. By law, all were subject to racial restrictions applying to migration, type of business, occupation, employment and location. For example, after 1897, on departure, special permission was needed for those wishing to return to Western Australia. Following the Federation of the Australian colonies, continued residence and entry again required legal permit.[4]

European cameleers also worked in the Pilbara, usually hitching wagons behind camel teams, unlike the method of loading individual camels traditionally used by Baloch and Afghan cameleers.

In 1908, not long after Dost settled in Port Hedland, storekeepers at Marble Bar began arranging contracts with some of the camel operators to have their goods transported from the Port Hedland wharves. Contract rates were lower than the established going rates. Tensions flared. Non contractors refused to cart for the storekeepers and went “on strike” rallying against “non-union” rates. Two hundred and fifty camels at 32 Mile Well were unhobbled and scattered into the scrub. Camel loads were flung to the ground. The dispute was eventually settled after police and officials from both Perth and the local area intervened and facilitated discussions between the opposing parties. Troubles resurfaced periodically - three years later agreement was reached to almost double cartage rates, but it had been a period of financial stress to the cameleers.[5]


[edit] An Australian family

In Coolgardie, Dost Mahomet formed a lasting relationship with Annie Charlotte Grigo, whom he met when she was working at a bakery run by her father. The bakery owner was John de Braun, who also owned the gentleman’s grand hotel, the Esplanade in Perth. Annie’s family had migrated from Peakdowns in Queensland. Annie’s parents were European born – her mother in Horsens, Denmark, her father in Mitchulan, Prussia.

Marriage was opposed by Annie’s father and brothers. The pair eloped by camel and took ship to India. At Lal Bhaker, Dost’s birthplace, the two were married by traditional Muslim custom. Annie was 17 years old. Their firstborn was a son, Mustafa born1896. Annie and Dost then returned to the camel business in Western Australia, leaving their first born in the village.

Five children were born in Western Australia - Lillian Rosetta (1898-1970), Hagu (Ada)1902-1987), Alious Ameer (Arthur) (c1904-1988), Jenneth (Jean) (1906-), Pathama (Violet) (1908-1983). The couple led a mobile life working the camels through the goldfields and stations of northwest Western Australia, finally establishing a permanent home in Port Hedland were they were respected members of a small town of approximately 200 by 1909. Their home was built on the block they bought in Kingsmill St. In a seeming challenge to Dost’s strict Muslim practices,[6] he bought the old brewery opposite the Esplanade Hotel. The eldest two girls attended the local primary school when it opened in 1906 alongside other children of European, Aboriginal and Chinese descent.

Camels were hobbled away from the town. The family milked goats for milk and butter. [7]

Despite earlier family antagonisms, once established at Port Hedland, Dost provided finance to assist his wife’s sister in her purchase of a hotel a few kilometres from the town. He also assisted two of Annie’s brothers in gaining employment and becoming established in business. Life within the extended family, however was often not harmonious.The brothers were heavy drinkers, sometimes violent and not always respectful of Muslim practices.

Dost was a short, but strong man.[8]. Wrestling was a sport he engaged in, occasionally with Europeans, but more frequently with other cameleers.[9] He also had a reputation for quick temper and there are reports of physical violence in the home.[10]


[edit] Dost and Annie’s deaths

Both parents died violently not longer after building their Australian-style home at Port Hedland.

The circumstances of Dost's death in1909 are unclear. It is known that Dost was killed at home during a long and fearsome fight with his two brothers-in-law. One of them fatally smashed open the back of Dost’s skull with a heavy piece of jarrah. The two brothers stood trial in Broome in June 1909. They were acquitted of murder. Dost’s Brahui relatives attributed Dost’s death to Annie’s brothers and held Annie at least partially responsible for their acquittal.

Dost was a man of wealth as well as standing when he died. He had left a written will bequeathing his assets to his children and Annie and designating his brother Jorak as executor. Annie left accounts that Jorak was withholding money from her and that life was very difficult. She finally agreed to Jorak’s offer of financial security and a good education for the children on condition that she return to India with the children. But, she boarded ship in fear for her life.

In Karachi, she took precautions, for example, establishing contact with the British Resident in the town. She was well remembered by many of Dost’s relatives around Karachi, working and joking alongside women in the village in their day to day lives. Warned by some of them of threats to her life, she and the children moved one evening to a compound the other side of Karachi gaining the protection of a trusted relative.

Annie slept with a small revolver under her pillow and a watchdog outside. Three months after landing in Karachi, in August 1910, Annie was stabbed to death in her bed while her two youngest children lay alongside. Two nephews and a third person were charged with murder but were acquitted because of lack of identification.

After the court trial, the five youngest children were returned to Australia under an agreement between the district magistrate at Karachi and the Federal and Western Australian Governments. They were eventually placed in the care of the State. After their deaths, accounts of their parents’ assets included camels, property in Port Hedland, monies owing to the estates, and jewelry, but the children did not come to inherit any of this.[11]


[edit] Oral histories

With the exception of 15 hours of taped interviews by the Perth Battye Library, very little account of their early lives was passed on by the Australian born children. In sharp contrast, many stories about Dost and Annie have been handed down among the relatives around Karachi.

The tamarind tree that still grows in Port Hedland at the site known as One Mile is reputed to have been planted by Dost Mahomet.


[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Jayne Garnaut, "Events in the lives of Annie and Dost Mahomet" (Document 0040g), p. 6)
  2. ^ Jayne Garnaut, "Events”, p. 17.
  3. ^ Jayne Garnaut, "Events”, p. 3.
  4. ^ Patrick Bertola, "Undesirable Persons" in Iain McCalman, Alexander Cook and Andres Reeves, Gold Forgotten Histories and Lost Objects of Australia, (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2001)
  5. ^ Pilbara Goldfields News
  6. ^ Jayne Garnaut, "Events”, p. 6.
  7. ^ Jayne Garnaut, "Events”, p. 15.
  8. ^ He was 5 foot 4 inches, with a 53 inch chest. Jayne Garnaut, "Events”, p. 5.
  9. ^ Jayne Garnaut, "Events”, p. 4.
  10. ^ Jayne Garnaut, "Events”, p. 5.
  11. ^ Jayne Garnaut, "Events”, p. 23.

[edit] Further reading

Jayne Garnaut, Events in the lives of Annie and Dost Mahomet. Document 0040g.