Governor Phillip and three others, upon hearing…
September 1790 CE
When the boat arrives at Manly Cove, the natives are found busily consuming on a whale.
Governor Phillip steps out unarmed and accompanied by one seaman, Lieutenant Waterhouse.
Phillip calls out for Bennelong and discourses for some time at the pleasure of seeing his old acquaintance.
Gifts are traded between them and continue for more than half an hour until a native armed with a spear comes forward and stops at a distance of twenty to thirty yards from the party.
Phillip extends his hand and calls to him, advancing at the same time.
However, as the governor comes nearer to the native it only seems to terrify him further, and subsequently fixes his lance in his throwing-stick and aims it at him.
Phillip thinks to retreat would be more dangerous than to advance, so he calls out "Weeree Weeree" (bad; you are doing wrong).
His words fall on deaf ears and the native fires his lance, striking the governor on his right shoulder, as the native immediately retreats into the woods.
Instant confusion on both sides takes place as spears are thrown in all directions, and Phillip's party retreats to the boat.
On board the vessel, a seaman fires his musket into the natives but it is not known if any were killed.
Apprehension for the safety of the party takes place and Lieutenant Long and a detachment of marines are immediately sent to escort them back in case a native ambush were to finish the party off.
Upon arriving at Manly Cove, they are greeted by three natives who say that the man who had wounded the governor belongs to a tribe from the Broken Bay area and that they highly condemn what he had done.
It will later be discovered that an Aborigine named Wileemarin had been responsible for the attack and the motivations for doing so were from the great number of British who had settled the tribe's former territories.
Governor Phillip survives his wounds and orders that there were to be no retaliatory attacks made against the natives, arguing that it had just been a mistake.