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Notable Gadigal interpreter and sailor
Nanbaree (c.1782 – 12 August 1821), also named Nanbarry and Andrew Snape Hamond Douglass White, was an Aboriginal Australian of the Gadigal clan who undertook
Nanbaree
Indigenous Australians of the Sydney region
under construction, which had formerly been named Pitt Street station. Nanbaree was a young Gadigal boy who survived the smallpox outbreak in 1789. He
Gadigal
Burramattagal cross-cultural pioneer
Indigenous smallpox survivor, a boy named Nanbaree, had also been obtained by the British at the colony. Boorong and Nanbaree were taught English and were soon
Boorong
Indigenous Australian explorer and celebrity
joined the crew of HMS Reliance with another keen Indigenous mariner named Nanbaree on a trip to Norfolk Island in 1798, during which he impressed Matthew
Bungaree
Suburb in Sydney, Australia
feasting on a whale at Manly Cove and were seen by Captain Nepean, Mr White, Nanbaree & a party of men who had travelled to Manly Cove to walk to Broken Bay
Manly,_New_South_Wales
Indigenous Australian clan
A Past Revealed. Parramatta: Parramatta City Council. Isobel (1994). Nanbaree. Perth: Muhlings. ISBN 0646207091. Goodman, Michelle. "Baludarri, a significant
Burramattagal
Indigenous Australian cross-cultural pioneer
hundred people gathered. As a profound mark of respect, Colebee's nephew Nanbaree, who died in 1821, asked to be buried with Bennelong. Bennelong's final
Bennelong
Royal Navy officer, navigator and cartographer (1774–1814)
1799, joined the expedition as did another local Aboriginal man named Nanbaree. It was arranged that Captain John Murray and his vessel Lady Nelson would
Matthew_Flinders
from Sydney, became a bushranger following transportation to Tasmania Nanbaree (c.1782 - 1821) Gadigal man who survived the smallpox epidemic as a child
List of Indigenous Australian historical figures
List_of_Indigenous_Australian_historical_figures
Australian wildlife illustrator (1917–1995)
Margaret Senior Longmans Croydon, Vic 1967 Chadwick, Doris (1962). John and Nanbaree. London: Thomas Nelson. Levis, Ken. and Senior, Margaret. Henry Lawson
Margaret_Senior
Indigenous Australian captured by British colonists
the settlement's hospital. He helped nurse them, including a boy named Nanbaree and girl named Boorong. Soon after, Arabanoo himself displayed symptoms
Arabanoo
Contemporary accounts of the European settlement in Australia
of the colony, describes White adopting a young Aboriginal boy, named Nanbaree, who was orphaned by the smallpox epidemic at Port Jackson in 1789. Wikimedia
Journals_of_the_First_Fleet
Commercial hunting of whales in Australia
Captain Nepean of the NSW corps, and Mr White, accompnied [sic?] by little Nanbaree and a party of men, went in a boat to Manly Cove, intending to land there
Whaling_in_Australia
back to Surgeon White's hospital where they were quarantined. The boy Nanbaree was nursed back to health and adopted by Surgeon White, while the elder
Smallpox_in_Australia
Novel by D. Manning Richards
Colebee were all real people as were the secondary Indigenous Australians: Nanbaree, Booroong, Yemmerrawanne, Gooroobaroobooloo, Tedbury, and Bungaree. Nearly
Destiny_in_Sydney
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Surname or Lastname
Scottish
Scottish : topographic name for someone who lived in a valley, Gaelic gleann, or a habitational name from a place named with this word, such as Glen near Peebles.English : habitational name from a place in Leicestershire, so named from an Old English word glean ‘glen’, ‘valley’ (from Celtic glinn).Jewish (Ashkenazic) : presumably an Americanized form of one or more like-sounding Jewish names.A Scottish family of this name settled among the Dutch at Beverwijck in New Netherland in the 17th century and later became prominent in Schenectady.
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Tamil
To Shine Among All
Girl/Female
Hindi
Beautiful.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Rusher.Americanized spelling of German Rischer, a nickname for a hasty or impetuous person, from an agent derivative of Middle High German rischen ‘to rush’.Americanized spelling of Swiss German Rüscher, a topographic name for someone who lived on a mountainside, from southern dialect risch ‘slope’, ‘mountainside’ + -er, suffix denoting an inhabitant.Americanized spelling of North German Rischer, a topographic name from Middle Low German risch ‘reed’, a topographic name for someone who lived where reeds grew.Anglicized form of Eastern German Rischar, a nickname from Sorbian rýsar ‘knight’.
Boy/Male
Irish
Kingly.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
An Ascetic
Girl/Female
Indian, Telugu
Smile of Lord Laxmi
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, English, French, German, Hebrew
Son of the Earth; Form of Bartholomew; Son of Farmer
Girl/Female
Hindu
Sweet odor, Sweet smell, Aura, Fragrance
Boy/Male
British, English
Divine Protector
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