3.8 Article

Herbert Basedow and the removal of Aboriginal children of mixed descent from their families

Journal

AUSTRALIAN HISTORICAL STUDIES
Volume 34, Issue 121, Pages 122-138

Publisher

UNIV MELBOURNE
DOI: 10.1080/10314610308596240

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The Adelaide geologist, doctor and anthropologist Herbert Basedow (1881-1933) twice played a decisive, if unwitting, role in the development of policies for the removal of part-Aboriginal children from their families. He first became involved in Aboriginal politics in 1911 when he was appointed Chief Protector of the Northern Territory and he suggested the collection of 'half-caste' children in Darwin. By his early resignation he lost control over the execution or extent of the later program and certainly did not approve of what was done in the name of 'protection'. While in Germany between 1907 and 1910 to advance his studies in anthropological anatomy and under the influence of Professor Hermann Klaatsch of Breslau University, Basedow further developed theories which linked the racial origin of the Indigenous Australian to the Neanderthal Man. He popularised the theory in his 1925 book The Australian Aboriginal, where he suggested that progressive cross-breeding of Aborigines with Europeans would quickly eliminate all Aboriginal racial characteristics. The idea was avidly picked up by A.O. Neville, Chief Protector of Western Australia between 1914 and 1940, and led to the largest experiment in biological engineering ever undertaken in Australia.

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