lambie on australian story now, page-22

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    Dodgy family tree, hmmmm. More rubbish.


    "And there remains mystery around Thomas Hite, with the tribunal acknowledging there was no record for him in the Tasmanian archives and there being no mention of him as a sealer in Brian Plomley's authoritative book covering the era, Friendly Mission.
    Heather Sculthorpe, chief executive of the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre, said Senator Lambie's maiden speech was the first time she too had heard any suggestion that the senator had an Indigenous heritage.
    "She's not known in the Aboriginal community and that statement was a shock to us," Ms Sculthorpe said.
    "These days if people don't know who their tribal ancestors are, they tend to claim Mannalargenna like they used to claim Truganini as their ancestor."
    Mr Mansell is calling on Senator Lambie to produce evidence of her family tree so the validity of her claim can be tested.
    "She should present that evidence of her so-called Aboriginality to us because we are the relatives," he said."




    Jacqui Lambie's Indigenous heritage claims surprise members of Tasmania's Aboriginal community

    Australian Story
    By Helen Grasswill
    Updated 15 minutes agoTue 9 Sep 2014, 8:53am
    PHOTO: In Jacqui Lambie's maiden speech to the Senate on September 3 she claimed to share Aboriginal "blood, culture and history" through her mother's family (AAP: Lukas Coch)
    RELATED STORY: Lambie admits tensions with 'real deal' Palmer
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    MAP: TAS
    Palmer United Party Senator Jacqui Lambie has landed herself in another dispute, this time with leaders of Tasmania's Aboriginal community.
    The outspoken Senate newcomer claimed in her maiden speech last week that she was related to, if not descended from, a prominent Aboriginal resistance leader of north-eastern Tasmania.
    "I acknowledge and pay my respects to Australia's Aboriginal traditional owners. I share their blood, culture and history through my mother's, Sue Lambie's, family," Senator Lambie said.
    "We trace our history over six generations to celebrated Aboriginal chieftain of the Tasmania east coast, Mannalargenna."
    Clyde Mansell, a community elder and acknowledged direct descendant of Mannalargenna, said it was news to him.
    "That's my family. And she's not part of it," he said.
    Mr Mansell, who is also chair of the Aboriginal Land Council of Tasmania, branded Senator Lambie's claims as "absolutely outrageous and scandalous".
    "They're totally unfounded," he said.
    "There's no evidence that I'm aware of that would justify Jacqui Lambie standing up in the Australian Parliament and making those claims. She didn't have the right.
    "There was no reference back to the community about whom she's making this ridiculous claim.
    "She had no idea what she was saying and couldn't even pronounce the name [Mannalargenna] properly."
    Conflicting family trees

    Senator Lambie provided some documents to Australian Story on Monday afternoon.
    A family tree indicates a lineage from one of Mannalargenna's granddaughters, Margaret (also known as Mary), who was the offspring of Mannalargenna's daughter Worretermoeteyenner and a sealer, George Briggs, who had abducted her.
    But that is where things become complicated.
    This key ancestor in Senator Lambie's family tree, Margaret Briggs, is said to have married a Thomas Hite, with the rest of the family emanating from them.
    But there is no trace of a Thomas Hite in the Tasmanian archival records.
    Lambie admits to tensions



    Jacqui Lambie has admitted to tensions with Clive Palmer but says she has been impressed by the knowledge of a man who is the "real deal".

    And the Tasmanian Pioneer Index shows that Margaret Briggs died in 1839, aged 22, with no mention of a spouse or offspring, all of which is consistent with a detailed Briggs family genealogy.
    Senator Lambie's family tree, however, says that Margaret Briggs married a Thomas Hite and had two children, one a daughter, Ann, who married William Aylett, and that this is the branch of the family from which the Lambies are descended.
    The documents provided to Australian Story include the findings of a 2002 Administrative Appeals Tribunal dispute relating to rights to participate in an ATSIC election.
    Claimants gave evidence that a pardoned convict, Samuel Hite, married another former convict, Mary Ann Pendrill, and that Samuel had a brother, Thomas Hite, who came to Tasmania as a sealer-sailor and took up with an Aboriginal woman.
    This pairing is said to have resulted in a daughter, Ann, born in 1837, who was taken in by Samuel Hite and his wife Mary Ann and recorded as their own.
    Ann went on to marry a William Aylett, and evidence was given that both are buried in the Jenner Cemetery at Wynyard, with Ann in the Aboriginal section and William in the white section.
    On this basis, the tribunal found that the claimants were "the descendants of Thomas Hite and an Aboriginal woman".
    However, there remains the question of Ann Hite's parentage and any evidence to link her to Margaret Briggs or her grandfather Mannalargenna.
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    And there remains mystery around Thomas Hite, with the tribunal acknowledging there was no record for him in the Tasmanian archives and there being no mention of him as a sealer in Brian Plomley's authoritative book covering the era, Friendly Mission.
    Heather Sculthorpe, chief executive of the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre, said Senator Lambie's maiden speech was the first time she too had heard any suggestion that the senator had an Indigenous heritage.
    "She's not known in the Aboriginal community and that statement was a shock to us," Ms Sculthorpe said.
    "These days if people don't know who their tribal ancestors are, they tend to claim Mannalargenna like they used to claim Truganini as their ancestor."
    Mr Mansell is calling on Senator Lambie to produce evidence of her family tree so the validity of her claim can be tested.
    "She should present that evidence of her so-called Aboriginality to us because we are the relatives," he said.

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-08/anger-over-jacqui-lambies-aboriginal-claims/5728622
 
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