Lonely Graves WA.

Prospecting Australia

Help Support Prospecting Australia:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Nightjar

Contributor Plus
Supporting Member
Joined
Sep 26, 2013
Messages
3,775
Reaction score
12,156
Location
Home-Waikiki, Prospect-Leonora
During a recent trip to Bundarra we found what we believe to be a lonely unmarked grave. Remote area approximately 1.5 kilometres SSW of Garden Well.
Does anyone know who you can contact to give details? Vaguely remember years a group was going around marking graves that were unmarked?

1622862903_lonely_grave.jpg


1622862904_lonely_grave2.jpg
 
G'day

Yes definitely looks like a grave, even though it has the cross on it, it could possibly be a later aboriginal one as well, I found a very similar one along the Paynes Find Yalgoo road some years ago, marked in a similar fashion with quartz rocks, it was only small maybe 600/700 mm long so I assumed it was probably for a baby, also found another along the Beebyn/Karbar road its between an old mine shaft and the road, it still had a wooden stick cross on it the first time I saw it, over the years as they have graded the road it was slowly being covered up so it could be completely out of sight by now.

cheers

stayyerAU
 
Mrs Isaacs lonely grave at Wilson's Patch, WA
Met Victor Isaacs back in 1990 and the following years saw first hand the work he and his wife did to help their community.
Victor and his wife visited us at our camp 3 kilometres to the East many times as they passed by on their way to shoot a kangaroo to feed their mob back at their camp. (Some may remember the domes/buildings and water tower on the right on Darlot Road just after turning off the Goldfields Hwy 70 km's north of Leonora.)
The below link shows how red tape can be so wrong, how can Australia become one if a husband and wife can't be laid to rest together?
Mrs Isaacs lays in a lonely grave at Wilson's Patch and Victor in a lonely grave in Leonora, they should have been laid together.

https://www.mediastatements.wa.gov.au/Pages/Gallop/2002/04/Wilson's-Patch-burial-request-denied.aspx

Wilson's Patch burial request denied
Friday, 19 April 2002

19/4/02

Indigenous Affairs Minister Alan Carpenter has upheld a recommendation by the Aboriginal Lands Trust to deny permission for a deceased Aboriginal man to be buried at Wilsons Patch, near Leonora.

The Ministers decision is in line with a strong expression of views by the lands traditional owners in the Leonora area.

The family of Victor Isaacs had sought permission for him to be buried at the site, where Mr Isaacs wife, Joan, was buried in 1990. The lands traditional owners opposed the request.

Mr Carpenter said he was saddened by the circumstances of the matter.

He said the case was a tragic example of how Western Australia was still dealing with the historically ad-hoc and deficient approach to Aboriginal issues in this State.

The traditional owners are of the view that Mr Isaacs is not a traditional land owner, and that neither he nor Mrs Isaacs should have been allowed to be buried at Wilsons Patch, he said.

For whatever reason, the wishes of the traditional owners were not taken into account in 1990. Today, in line with our new approach to indigenous affairs, traditional owners are listened to.

If I rejected the trusts recommendation, I would be denying the traditional owners their right to have a say in the decision-making process.

Mr Carpenter said he realised the Isaacs family would be disappointed by the decision, and he could understand their grief.

I also understand that the family has rejected a suggestion that Mrs Isaacs be exhumed, so she may be buried alongside her husband at another location," he said.

"Such a step is certainly not ideal, but the offer remains in place.

Mr Carpenter acknowledged the good work which Mr and Mrs Isaacs performed in the Leonora area.

The Isaacs were tireless workers for the Aboriginal community, he said.

I will ask the Department of Indigenous Affairs to prepare some options for the State of WA to acknowledge their efforts and their achievements properly.
The Minister thanked the members of the Aboriginal Lands Trust for their efforts in dealing with the issue.

This has been a difficult matter, with no room for compromise, he said.

A decision had to be made, and any decision was always going to result in one of the parties being aggrieved.

The trust members have carried out their duty well.

Minister's office: 9213 6806
 

Latest posts

Top