
These brothers grew up revering their great-uncle Bill. Then the full story came out
Malcolm McKinnon remembers poking around under Great-Uncle Bill's big old house in Brisbane while the adults were having afternoon tea. Once he found a pile of rusty old chains. Some had big loops, one was a breastplate of some kind. He thought they looked strange.
Malcolm's brother Ross, 62, also remembers seeing the chains under Bill's old Queenslander. 'They were too big to be handcuffs,' Ross says, 'but as kids we didn't think about it any more than that.'
The boys grew up hearing about how Bill had been a famous police officer on the frontier in the Northern Territory.
'Bill was seen in the family as a bit of a legend,' Malcolm, now 69, says. 'He was involved in the Petrov affair, he was active during Cyclone Tracy, he was the last cop who rode a camel.'
Much later, they realised there was another side to the story.
The chains had been for capturing and imprisoning Aboriginal people. By the neck.
A fuller picture of Constable Bill McKinnon's policing career has emerged – and it has been confronting, revelatory and life-changing for Malcolm, Ross and their youngest brother, Alistair.
In 1934 McKinnon shot and killed an Aboriginal man named Yukun at Uluru. He told an inquiry it was accidental and he was exonerated but almost 80 years later it emerged – via the discovery of his diary – that he had indeed 'fired to hit' Yukun.
He is not the only one to have concealed his actions from scrutiny. Guardian Australia has uncovered the diary of a Western Australian colonist called Major Logue who used a Masonic code to write about the killings of at least 19 Aboriginal people around Geraldton between 1851 and 1853.
These exploits were written about by the colonists themselves, which makes it difficult for descendants and their extended families to dismiss them. Yet some still have concerns about publicising these records. Logue's diaries are being prepared for publication but the historian who has worked on them told Guardian Australia the coded entries are being deliberately left out, according to the preference of the direct descendant who holds the originals.
Sign up: AU Breaking News email
'To protect the person who holds the diaries we felt it was … expedient, perhaps, to not have that in writing. Everyone knows they did it,' Nan Broad says. 'But there's nothing in writing, and we prefer nothing to be in writing.'
Theona Councillor, who says she and Naaguja Yamatji families represent the 'other side of the shield', believes truth has a way of making itself known.
'Truth will always uncover itself,' she says. 'It wants to come out. And that blood needs to be heard. That blood is calling out, the blood of my people.
'It happened 170 years ago but it feels like yesterday for me. And the way that people are hiding their records, it feels like yesterday for them too, by the sounds of it.'
Truth is vital for healing, she says, to allow Naaguja Yamatji and settler descendants to come together for the first time as equals and confront their bloody history with honesty.
Only then can the scales of denial begin to fall. 'Go back to the beginning, and be brave,' she says. 'We are not a nation of weaklings. We can handle the truth.'
In 2018 Guardian Australia's series documenting the frontier violence of Australia's colonial past, The Killing Times, revealed a confronting picture of the scale of the massacres – and the involvement of government forces in an overwhelming number of them. As part of that series we brought together families grappling with their 'side' of that history, some of them meeting for the first time.
The Descendants builds on that foundation. Families from over Australia are coming to terms in different ways with the real-life challenges of truth telling. For them, this work is real, personal and local. There are no guidelines. Uncovering the truth comes with the risk of family estrangement. It can lead to denial and indifference. It can also be a liberation.
Some descendants of perpetrator families are challenging what they call 'colonial silence'.
In Geraldton Bruce Baskerville, a historian and descendant of the Criddle family who took part in the Bootenal massacre of 1854, talks about accepting that he has an ancestor who was a 'cog in the machinery of imperial governance' – and that he has materially benefited from the dispossession of others.
'I know that I'm a beneficiary of all of that,' he says. 'My life, all the food I've ever eaten, that's been grown here, the education that I had, all of that's all been paid for, from that. That's how that wealth was created.'
George Criddle, who has spent years working between colonist and Yamatji families to break the silence, says settler families have to 'unlearn' their understanding of history: 'There's a lot of entrenched ideas about who tells the story, and there's a lot of white families who believe they are the storytellers, and that their side of the truth is the right side.'
Prof Mark McKenna, another historian, spent years investigating the shooting of Yukun for his book Return to Uluru.
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
Yukun endured further indignity after death. The 1935 board of inquiry exhumed his remains and took them to Adelaide.
Prompted by McKenna's book, a forensic search was made for them but only Yukun's skull could be located, in the South Australian Museum, in 2019. He was laid to rest in a deep, narrow grave in 2022. A small cross marks the spot near the Mutitjulu waterhole.
Ross, Alistair and Alistair's wife, Ruth, went to Uluru for the repatriation. They stood quietly to one side of the ceremony, unsure how they'd be received. But they were welcomed, literally embraced. It felt like a family funeral.
'It was a privilege to be there,' Ross says.
The brothers have met in Melbourne on a blustery winter day to talk about their family legacy.
Alistair says their parents would have been proud of them for representing the McKinnons. Their parents believed in the importance of public service, of doing right by others.
'It was incredibly enriching,' Alistair says. To other families who might be fearing facing up to the actions of their ancestors, he says: 'Embrace it. Do it.'
'The experience was so life-changing, and when we saw how much it meant to the families on the other side … we left welcomed, and it was so important to them, for us to be involved.'
Ross says he's not convinced by the argument that men like his uncle Bill were 'of their time'.
'These people did not live by the standards of their time either,' he says. 'The actions at Uluru were not a one-off. They were known for being cruel. They knew what they were doing was wrong.'
McKenna says facing the truth of colonisation means understanding it still having real effects on Aboriginal people today.
'It's not something that's in the distant colonial past. It's not something that is separated from us by time or by flesh or by country. It's present now, and I think that's still something that non-Indigenous Australians struggle to understand.'
In the case of Yukun, it led to his remains finally being found and laid to rest.
McKenna recalls looking at the 'shelves and shelves of boxes' of Indigenous human remains 'which literally tower over you' at the South Australian Museum.
'To see Yukun's remains [there] and then to watch them come back to country, and see hundreds of people gathered there at Mutitjulu – it's not history,' he says. 'It's understanding that First Nations people have to live with this today, the consequences of colonisation and the consequences of all of the racist policies that have been mounted against them over the years.'
Councillor says Aboriginal people are waiting for others to put down their 'comfortable untruth' and reckon with what happened.
'Answer that blood properly,' she says. 'Give my ancestors that time, that place, that voice that needs to be. You can't just brush over a quick sorry and then it's finished. It's just the beginning of a reconciliation.'
Indigenous Australians can call 13YARN on 13 92 76 for information and crisis support; or call Lifeline on 13 11 14, Mensline on 1300 789 978 or Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636
Lorena Allam is a professor at the Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous research at the University of Technology Sydney
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
5 hours ago
- Telegraph
Dan Sheehan handed four-match ban for dangerous clear-out on Tom Lynagh that went unpunished
Dan Sheehan, the British and Irish Lions hooker, has been banned for four matches after a dangerous clear-out on Australia fly-half Tom Lynagh that went unpunished by the officials during the third Test. According to a press release issued on Monday morning by World Rugby, Sheehan did not accept that foul play had occurred nor that the offence warranted a citing. This extended his eventual ban, though it will be reduced by a week if the 27-year-old completes World Rugby's coaching intervention programme, widely known as 'tackle school'. Sheehan, who appeared to hit Lynagh in the head with his elbow during the first half of the Lions' 22-12 loss on Saturday, was collared with charging into a ruck or a maul and a panel found his actions to be reckless. Tom Lynagh flattened by elbow to the head. #AUSvBIL — Jobson Growthe (@electricBAU) August 2, 2025 The committee also found that he made head contact with Lynagh, who subsequently left the field and did not return, and that Sheehan's actions 'amounted to a high degree of danger and that no mitigation applied'. There was minimal reaction to the clear-out from any players at the time, with Lynagh even staying on the field long enough to kick a penalty goal, which might have spared Sheehan from greater scrutiny. Michael Lynagh, the former Wallabies fly-half and father of Tom, has used his X account to repost several questions of how the officials missed Sheehan's actions at the time. One of them derided the situation as 'utterly insane'. Another, from Jack Quigley, said: 'So, just to be clear: This TMO will stop the game to check literally EVERYTHING except Dan Sheehan's hit that took Lynagh out. What are we doing here.' Had referee Nika Amushakeli been alerted to Sheehan's actions, it is highly likely that a card would have resulted. Even though 20-minute red cards were in play during the series, allowing teams to replace the offending player after that amount of time, the bunker official would have had scope to send off Sheehan permanently. Sheehan will now miss Leinster's pre-season game against Cardiff as well as their first two matches of the United Rugby Championship campaign against Stormers and Sharks. Provided that he completes World Rugby's coaching intervention programme, he will be available to face Munster on October 18.


The Guardian
5 hours ago
- The Guardian
Traditional owners call for diaries of WA settler who killed Aboriginal people to be released in full
Warning: This article contains historical records that use racist and offensive language, and descriptions of events that will be distressing to some readers The Naaguja Yamatji elder Derek Councillor has heard accounts of Major Logue passed down for generations. He would ride up on his horse shooting Aboriginal people on sight. 'He wouldn't ask questions – he'd just shoot and kill,' Councillor tells Guardian Australia. 'When people used to see him riding up to wherever they were, a lot of people were scared and would run away, they wouldn't [want] to be where he was.' The stories of a feared man once whispered about in communities around Geraldton, 400km north of Perth, have been confirmed by the man's own hand, 123 years after his death. Logue – Major is his given name, not a military rank – went on to become one of Western Australia's earliest parliamentarians. He kept a diary from 1850 to his death in 1900, a version of which is being prepared for publication. But those behind the forthcoming book have decided to omit information relating to the killings. Councillor and other traditional owners are demanding that the diary be published in full. Amid handwritten diary entries that document 50 years of daily life are chilling accounts of the killing of local Yamatji people. Writing in a code called pigpen, also known as Freemason's cipher, Logue described the murders of at least 19 Yamatji people between 1851 and 1853. The coded entries, critically by Guardian Australia as part of the Descendants series, record a number of attacks on Yamatji by Logue and others – some where he was directly responsible, others recording attacks made by his neighbours. Some of the dead, who appear in earlier pages of the diary as helping the settlers, are listed by name. A version of his diaries is being prepared for publication by a small press publisher in WA which focuses on colonial diaries and historical texts and includes books about Aboriginal Australians. The publisher's latest booklist, published in July 2025, includes descriptions of historical works using outdated and racist terms, including one use of 'nigger', titles that repeatedly refer to Aboriginal people as 'savages' and in one title 'clapped out gins'. A local historian, Nan Broad, who has worked on the diaries for six years and prepared them for publication, tells Guardian Australia that she had translated the coded sections and knows that they describe the murders of Aboriginal people. 'It's a bit hard to single that poor fellow out just because he wrote a diary – that's a bit underhanded,' she says. 'To protect the person who holds the diaries we felt it was … expedient, perhaps, to not have that in writing. Everyone knows they did it.' Broad says Logue's actions on the frontier were well known locally but the nation is not yet ready to understand its often bloody and brutal past. 'I am very distressed by that situation,' she says. 'But we are too close to it at the moment. 'In Australia we are too close to the colonisation, confrontation and the history that went on. It's not old history yet to be looked at dispassionately.' Frontier killings and massacres were widespread from the arrival of the first white settlers to Australia in 1788. An eight-year project by the University of Newcastle documented hundreds of massacres and frontier killings. That project, published in conjunction with Guardian Australia, found that 10,657 people were killed in at least 438 colonial frontier massacres. Councillor says the full extent of the Logue diaries, including the coded sections of past deeds, must be published to heal and acknowledge the truth. 'They should be published in full,' he says. 'We Yamatji people, we don't half-tell a story. We tell the story fully. If he did do all these killings and it's in his diaries, it should be published that he did do it.' Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion There are 11 coded diary entries between 1851 and 1853 that describe shooting and killing Aboriginal people; witnessing others doing the shooting; going on a 'campaign' to kill natives; and later riding over the 'battlefield' and seeing the bodies of those he killed lying dead or 'hastily buried'. The diaries do not contain mention of the 1954 Bootenal massacre, in which 30 Naaguja men, women and children were recorded as killed by a group of settlers led by the local police deputy superintendent, John Nicol Drummond, Logue's brother-in-law. The Naaguja say the actual number killed was in the hundreds. Scans of the diaries have been available on microfilm at the Battye library in Perth since the 1950s. But publisher Hesperian Press and a descendant of Logue who holds the original diaries have declined to publish the coded sections in the version being prepared for sale. Broad says she supports their decision. Hesperian Press's owner, Peter Bridge, did not respond to questions about Yamatji concerns, but in an earlier statement to Guardian Australia said the coded sections of Logue's diaries were 'in unique characters' and 'are not omitted – they are simply unprintable'. He added that the location of the omitted passages would be indicated in the published book; that the printed edition of the Logue diaries would make 'no attempt to deceive, suppress or editorialise' and that Hesperian Press was publishing a primary document 'faithfully and unflinchingly, as is our usual method'. 'If your concern is that the code may conceal politically potent material – I suggest that you take that up with Logue himself, who is, unfortunately, unavailable for an interview,' he said. 'We publish the diaries because they are historical documents, not a moral confession.' Councillor says the diary 'just confirms what we as Yamatji people have said'. 'We weren't lying when we told these stories,' he said 'This actually proves it. 'The stories of those people that were involved in those massacres and the people that died, they can rest easy now because their story's been told. 'They'll be able to finally settle, instead of being tormented and their soul not resting. They will finally rest in peace.' Indigenous Australians can call 13YARN on 13 92 76 for information and crisis support; or call Lifeline on 13 11 14, Mensline on 1300 789 978 or Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636 Lorena Allam is a professor at the Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous research at the University of Technology Sydney


Daily Mail
5 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Disturbing moment cop is filmed pushing over a woman from behind - as it is revealed what allegedly sparked the response
A uniformed police officer has been filmed pushing a woman in the back, who then appeared to hit her head on a metal bollard. The incident unfolded outside a school on Majara Street in Bungendore, 40km east of Canberra, about 2.50pm on July 22. Officers were called after a boy had allegedly threatened another boy and then thrown a rock through a woman's car window, smashing it. The woman got out of her damaged car before she was threatened and chased by a 15-year-old boy and a 32-year-old woman known to him, police allege. The boy was then arrested which prompted the 32-year-old woman to get aggressive towards officers, who warned her about her alleged behaviour at the time. As officers bundled the boy into a police car, the 32-year-old woman allegedly went back to the car owner and threatened her again. A senior constable then returned and intervened. Footage recorded at the the scene showed an officer approaching the woman as she argued before he pushed her. The officer then told her to get up and hauled her back from the roadside as she appeared to writhe in pain. The NSW Police Force told Daily Mail Australia it is aware of the footage. 'Police are reviewing footage circulating on social media about an incident involving a NSW Police officer on Majara Street, Bungendore, about 2.50pm, on Tuesday 22 July 2025,' a spokeswoman said. Police said a boy and a woman were taken to Queanbeyan Police Station and charged over the alleged incident. The boy was charged with stalk or intimidate intending fear of physical harm, contravening prohibition or restriction of an apprehended violence order (AVO), and destroy or damage property. He was granted conditional bail, to appear at a children's court on August, 11, 2025. The woman was charged with hindering or resisting a police officer in the execution of duty, and two counts of stalk or intimidate intending fear of physical harm. She was also granted conditional bail to appear in Queanbeyan Local Court on August 11, 2025.