James Brown (Australian pastoralist)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/James_Brown_(Australian_pastoralist) an entity of type: Thing

جيمس براون (بالإنجليزية: James Brown)‏ هو رعي الغنم أسترالي، ولد في 1819 في فايف (اسكتلندا) في المملكة المتحدة، وتوفي في 7 فبراير 1890. rdf:langString
James Brown (c. 1819 – 7 February 1890) was a Scottish-born mass murderer and pastoralist of the South East of South Australia responsible for the Avenue Range Station massacre of between nine and eleven Aboriginal Australians. He was never convicted, despite the magistrate who committed him for trial observing that there was "little question of the butchery or the butcher". The Aboriginal Witnesses Act specified that a court could not base a conviction of a white man on the testimony of an Aboriginal witness alone. After his death, his widow Jessie Brown pursued several philanthropic ventures in his name. Two charitable institutions — the Kalyra Consumption Sanitorium at Belair and Estcourt House, near Grange were founded in his memory, and out of the proceeds of his estate. rdf:langString
rdf:langString جيمس براون (رعي الغنم)
rdf:langString James Brown (Australian pastoralist)
rdf:langString James Brown
rdf:langString James Brown
xsd:integer 43226942
xsd:integer 1101022263
xsd:double -36.93018
xsd:double 140.116663
rdf:langString Location of Avenue Range Station within South Australia
xsd:gMonthDay --02-07
rdf:langString Mass murder, Avenue Range Station massacre
rdf:langString left
rdf:langString Jessie Brown
xsd:integer 200
rdf:langString جيمس براون (بالإنجليزية: James Brown)‏ هو رعي الغنم أسترالي، ولد في 1819 في فايف (اسكتلندا) في المملكة المتحدة، وتوفي في 7 فبراير 1890.
rdf:langString James Brown (c. 1819 – 7 February 1890) was a Scottish-born mass murderer and pastoralist of the South East of South Australia responsible for the Avenue Range Station massacre of between nine and eleven Aboriginal Australians. He was never convicted, despite the magistrate who committed him for trial observing that there was "little question of the butchery or the butcher". The Aboriginal Witnesses Act specified that a court could not base a conviction of a white man on the testimony of an Aboriginal witness alone. After his death, his widow Jessie Brown pursued several philanthropic ventures in his name. Two charitable institutions — the Kalyra Consumption Sanitorium at Belair and Estcourt House, near Grange were founded in his memory, and out of the proceeds of his estate.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12966
xsd:gYear 1819
xsd:gYear 1890

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