John Caesar | |
|---|---|
| Born | c. 1763 |
| Died | 15 February 1796(1796-02-15) (aged 32–33) Liberty Plains,Colony of New South Wales, Australia |
| Other names | Black Caesar |
| Children | Mary Anne Fisher Power |
| Convictions | Theft (1786) Theft (1789) |
| Criminal penalty | Transportation – 7 years Transportation – life |
John Caesar (c. 1763 – 15 February 1796), nicknamed "Black Caesar", was a convict and one of the first people from theAfrican continent to arrive in Australia. He is considered to be the first Australianbushranger.[a]
Born inMadagascar, he wasenslaved in the United States in the late 1770s. Caesar later moved to south England where he was tried in 1786 for stealing £12. His sentence wastransportation to theColony of New South Wales for seven years. In January 1788 he arrived inBotany Bay on theFirst Fleet convict shipAlexander. 15 months later Caesar was tried for stealing food and sentenced to transportation for life. He escaped into the bush but was caught two months later.
Caesar made another escape in 1789, but subsequently returned to the colony after being attacked by Aboriginals. He was sent to work onNorfolk Island, where he fathered a daughter with English-born convict Anne Power. He made a third escape in 1794. In late 1795, Caesar seriously wounded Aboriginal warriorPemulwuy during aBidjigal guerilla attack. Caesar made his fourth and final escape from custody in December. GovernorJohn Hunter offered a lavish reward for his capture. In February 1796, Caesar was shot and killed by ex-highwayman John Wimbow.
"John Caesar" was born circa 1763; his birth name is unknown.[7] Early newspaper reports stated that he was born in theWest Indies,[1][b] though contemporary historians have suggested thatMadagascar may have been his place of birth.[10] The name Caesar was common amongst slaves,[11] and it is likely he was given the name during hisenslavement inVirginia orSouth Carolina in the late 1770s.[12][4]Malagasy people were particularly prized in those areas.[4]
John Caesar was living in England by 1786. He may have fled to British lines seeking emancipation. It is also possible that his slave owner was a loyalist who returned to England following theAmerican Revolutionary War. In theBook of Negroes, a 1783 record ofBlack Loyalists departing North America, two young men aged fourteen and eighteen named Caesar are recorded travelling toSpithead in England.[4] HistorianCassandra Pybus believes that the fourteen-year-old, described as a "stout fellow", was John Caesar.[13] By 1786 he was a servant living in the parish of St Paul,Deptford.[14]
In early 1786, Caesar was charged with stealing £12 from a residence. Later that same year, on 13 March, he was tried atMaidstone, Kent for stealing another £12 from another residence.[4] His sentence wastransportation to thepenal colony ofNew South Wales for seven years,[14] and he was sent to the hulkCeres.[15] Caesar embarked on 6 January 1787 on the convict transport shipAlexander of theFirst Fleet,[14] as one of at least twelve black convicts.[4] In May 1787, his age was estimated as 23, and his occupation was listed as "servant or labourer".[16]

Alexander arrived inBotany Bay with the First Fleet on 19 January 1788.[14] Caesar was sent to work atGarden Island,[1] one of the harshest penal colonies in New South Wales.[4] He became known as "Black Caesar" and gained a reputation as a conscientious and hard worker.[18]
Convicts were persistently malnourished due to insufficient food provisions.[4] Garden Island was intended to provide fresh vegetables for the colony but attempts to grow food were mostly unsuccessful. The weekly allowance for convicts in 1790 was 1 kg of pork, 1.2 kg of flour and 1 kg of rice.[19] Caesar, being six feet tall and muscular, was constantly hungry and took to stealing food.[20] On 29 April 1789 he was tried for theft and sentenced to a second term of transportation, this time for life. Caesar took to the bush a fortnight later,[14] reportedly with rations, an iron pot, and amusket[21] (plus ammunition) stolen from marine Abraham Hand.[22] At this time, British administratorDavid Collins, the colony's Judge-Advocate,[23] called Caesar "an incorrigibly stubborn black".[24]
Caesar stole a brickmaking gang's rations on 26 May and was pursued to no avail.[22] On the night of 6 June he tried to steal food from the house of Zachariah Clark, the colony's assistantcommissary for stores, and was caught by convict William Saltmarsh.[22][25][26] Caesar was described by Collins after his first recapture as:
...so indifferent about meeting death, that he declared while in confinement, that if he should be hanged, he would create a laugh before he was turned off, by playing off some trick upon the executioner. Holding up such a mere animal as an example was not expected to have the proper or intended effect.[27]
Caesar was sent back to Garden Island to work in chains.[14] In addition to his rations, he was to be supplied with vegetables from the garden.[28] He showed good behaviour and was eventually allowed to work with his chains removed. On 22 December 1789, Caesar escaped in a stolen canoe[14] with a week's provisions. A few nights later, he stole an iron pot, a musket, and some ammunition.[29] Caesar sustained himself by stealing food from local Aboriginal people and robbing colonists' gardens.[14] However he struggled to survive when he lost his musket.[4] Caesar was speared by local Aboriginal people[14] on 30 January 1790.[30] It is possible he was a known thief amongst the Aboriginal community.[31] Caesar returned to camp the following day and surrendered to the authorities.[32][c] He attempted to clear his name by explaining that he had been wounded whilst trying to retake cattle that the Aboriginals had stolen from the colonists. The authorities were certain that Caesar had fabricated the story to avoid alashing. He was sent to hospital for his injuries.[33]
GovernorArthur Phillip pardoned Caesar for his previous infractions. In March, Caesar was sent toNorfolk Island on theSupply[34] to assist DrDennis Considen.[30] Norfolk Island was alabour camp notorious for its harsh punishments and poor living conditions.[35] Caesar was provided with some degree of independence—by 1 July 1791, he was supporting himself on a lot at Queenborough and he had been issued with a hog. In January 1792, Caesar was given one acre of land and was ordered to work three days per week.[36]
Caesar fathered a child with English-born convict Anne Power.[37][38] Anne was similarly tried at Maidstone a year after Caesar,[38] and had arrived in 1790 on theLady Juliana.[15] Their daughter Mary Anne was born on 4 March 1792.[39][15] Caesar left them both on Norfolk Island when he returned toPort Jackson on theKitty in 1793.[40] Caesar escaped briefly again in July 1794, and pillaged residences on the outskirts of town, but was captured shortly afterwards.[36] Despite being heavily punished, Caesar contemptuously declared that "all that would not make him better".[15]

Throughout the late 18th-century,Bidjigal warriorPemulwuy raided colonists as part of a largerguerilla war against the colony's establishment.[41] In late 1795, Caesar was part of a convict work party at Botany Bay that was attacked by Pemulwuy's warriors.[36] During the fighting, Caesar seriously wounded Pemulwuy by cracking his skull. It was initially believed that he had killed Pemulwuy, and thus Caesar was held in high esteem by the colonial authorities.[35]
Caesar escaped from custody for the final time in December 1795 and led a gang of fellow absconders in the Port Jackson area.[36] Colonists were warned against supplying him with ammunition.[15] On 29 January 1796, GovernorJohn Hunter offered the generous reward of five gallons ofspirits for Caesar's capture.[8][15][35] According to Collins:
Notwithstanding the reward that had been offered for apprehending black Caesar, he remained at large, and scarcely a morning arrived without a complaint being made to the magistrates of a loss of property supposed to have been occasioned by this man. In fact, every theft that was committed was ascribed to him; a cask of pork was stolen from the millhouse, the upper part of which was accessible, and, the sentinels who had the charge of that building being tried and acquitted, the theft was fixed upon Caesar, or some of the vagabonds who were in the woods, the number of whom at this time amounted to six or eight.[42]
Ex-highwayman John Wimbow and agriculturalistJames Ruse tracked Caesar down at Liberty Plains (present-dayStrathfield).[43][d] According to Collins,
[Wimbow and Ruse], allured by the reward, had been for some days in quest of [Caesar]. Finding his haunt, they concealed themselves all night at the edge of a brush which they perceived him enter at dusk. In the morning he came out, when, looking round him and seeing his danger, he presented his musket; but before he could pull the trigger Wimbow fired and shot him.[44]
Caesar was taken to the hut of Thomas Rose where a few hours later he died of his wounds[45] on 15 February.[36] Collins wrote, "Thus ended a man, who certainly, during his life, could never have been estimated at more than one remove above the brute, and who had given more trouble than any other convict in the settlement."[46]

Anne Power died on 25 March 1796 on Norfolk Island.[38] Their orphaned daughter Mary Anne was adopted by a woman named Hannah Fisher,[39] and was baptised as Mary Anne Fisher Power in 1806.[47] She left Norfolk Island forVan Diemen's Land in 1814.[39]
According toSantilla Chingaipe, "from the archives alone, it is difficult to get a sense of Caesar as a person". Most of the extant records of Caesar's life were written by colonial authorities and as such reflect the racism of the time.[28] David Collins stated that Caesar was "always reputed the hardest living convict in the colony... but in his intellects he did not very widely differ from a brute".[48] The historian Kimberly Cheek notes that Caesar's life-spanning journey across four continents (Africa–North America–Europe–Australia) reflects "the broad global experiences of some Africans in the eighteenth century".[35]
Caesar is considered to be the first Australianbushranger.[a] Bushrangers hold a prominent role in Australian national identity, as exemplified by the impact ofNed Kelly's legacy onAustralian culture. Since Australia's best-known bushrangers were white men of European descent, the fact that the country's earliest bushranger was a black man is considered particularly intriguing to historians.[13] Chingaipe suspects that Caesar's significance was forgotten because, as a black man, he did not fit into Australia's self-made cultural mythology.[49] Other black convicts-turned-bushrangers include theKhoisan Peter Haley,[50] the Jamaican William Buchanan and theBarbadian James Tierney.[51]
Caesar's death was illustrated byPercy Lindsay forTruth in 1934.[52]
Caesar appears as a character inThomas Keneally's 1987 novelThe Playmaker,[53] as well as inTimberlake Wertenbaker's 1988 stage adaptationOur Country's Good.[54]The Playmaker follows a group of colonists in 1789 who stage a comedic play; Caesar the "mad Madagascan" is depicted as a rapist in leg irons who rudely interrupts said play.[53]
Mohamed Osman portrayed Caesar in the 2021SBS docudramaOur African Roots. Written and produced by Zambian-Australian historian Santilla Chingaipe, the series aimed to reveal how black people had contributed to Australian national identity since the landing of the First Fleet.[49]