Jimmy James (tracker, died 1945)
Jimmy James (dob unknown - 24 December 1945 in Barmera) was an Aboriginal Australian who was best known as an Aboriginal tracker who helped the police track criminals and lost persons.[1]
Background[edit]
During the 1920s, James was a police tracker. He then left to live in his resort, Swan Reach. He helped the police in the Monash murder of 1938. He also found a little girl who had been lost for days in the Walkerie district.[1]
His last tracking was to find Mr Breeze who got lost in the Renmark surroundings, during which he caught a tuberculosis. He died in the Lady Weigall hospital in Barmera on 24 December 1945. He was buried in the Barmera Cemetery on 25 December 1945.[1]
Sergeant Ward of Barmera described James as a "black man with a white heart".[1]
Family[edit]
One of his unofficially adopted daughters, Lilian Disher, married another tracker named Jimmy James in 1947.[2]
References[edit]
- ^ a b c d Death of the aboriginal tracker Jimmy James, Trove.nla.gov.au, 3 January 1946 (accessed on 5 September 2019)
- ^ Jimmy James famed for his tracking feats with the South Australian police over 40 years, Adelaideaz.com (accessed on 5 September 2019)
- 1945 deaths
- Crime in South Australia
- 20th-century deaths from tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis deaths in Australia
- Infectious disease deaths in South Australia
- Australian Aboriginal trackers
- 20th-century Indigenous Australian people
- 20th-century Australian people
- Indigenous peoples of Australia stubs
- Australian crime biography stubs