Charles Christian Dutton


Charles Christian Dutton was a pastoralist in South Australia who disappeared, believed murdered by Aboriginals, while droving cattle from Port Lincoln to Adelaide.

Origins

Dutton was born in England, a son of John Dutton. In the 1830s he ran a store in Singleton, New South Wales with his brother Henry Pelerin Dutton ; the partnership broke up in 1837. H. P. Dutton, then ran a property on the nearby Patrick's Plains, became insolvent in 1844, and took up a pastoral lease in Queensland. Henry was the father of Queensland politician Charles Dutton.
Charles Dutton arrived in South Australia on the Abeona from Hobart in March 1838. He may have gone back to England then returned with his wife Ellen, née White, on the Dorset in January 1839. In Adelaide he was appointed clerk of the Supreme Court, and acted for a time as sheriff.

Likely massacre on Eyre Peninsula

Dutton pioneered and managed a cattle station named "Pillaworta", near Port Lincoln on the Eyre Peninsula, on behalf of pastoralist Charles Driver. In July 1842 he decided to abandon it through fear of the local Aboriginals, either the Nauo or Barngarla people, who were making hostile raids. Having taken his wife and children back to Adelaide by ship, he picked up a scratch team of Graham, Cox, Haldane and Brown to drove his cattle overland to safety near Adelaide. For the first day they had Lieutenant Hugonin of the 96th Regiment of Foot as an armed escort. Setting forth with 250 cattle in the direction of present Port Augusta, Dutton and his associates were never seen again, and no trace was ever found. All indications are that the entire party of five men were killed by Barngarla warriors somewhere near present Whyalla.
There was no doubt about the attack by Aborigines on the nearby farm of Rolles Biddle, a Quaker cousin of Samuel and Frederick White, associates of Herbert B. Hughes. Biddle was killed, along with Mrs Stubbs and shepherd James Fastins on 29 March 1842.

Search parties

Several months later, when Dutton's party did not arrive as expected, search parties were launched. The most immediate, setting out in September 1842, was a determined party of four young pastoralist volunteers comprising the brothers G.C. Hawker and J.C. Hawker, William Peter, and James Baker. Governor Grey considered that this volunteer party was too small and ordered police inspector Alexander Tolmer, plus four troopers, to accompany them, but the dogmatic Tolmer fell out with the independent 'gentlemen' and so returned to Adelaide, while the pastoralists not only continued on to Port Lincoln, but also chartered a vessel for a coastal search. Governor Grey then ordered the petulant Tolmer back into the search, but under the command of Edward John Eyre, supported by Thomas Burr. None of these searchers found any trace of the five men, although some of their cattle were later found wandering.
Dutton Bay near Port Lincoln, was named for him.

Family

Charles Christian Dutton was married to Ellen Dutton, née White,. Their children included:
His widow married again, in Port Lincoln on 3 September 1845, to Thomas Bond Hawson.
Sydney businessman John Alexander Dutton was also a brother. Another possible relation was Rose Ann Dutton. She married John Laurio Platt in Heligoland around 1815; they later moved to New South Wales in the Providence under Captain Herd, settling in Sandgate in 1822. Platt was a pioneer of the Patrick's Plains area near Singleton, New South Wales.
They were not immediately related to the well known family of Frederick Hansborough Dutton, founder of Anlaby Station in South Australia.

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