He was born in Lancashire, England and was the second son of nine children of Edmund Atherton,[3] a yeoman farmer of Black Rod Farm, Wigan, Lancashire and his wife Esther, née Ainscough.[2]
Emigration to Australia
He arrived in Sydney, at the age of 7, during 1844 on the brig Briton with his parents and his 6 siblings; James, Alice, Rebecca, Edmund, Harry and Thomas. He had two further siblings, Esther and Richard, who were born in New South Wales.[2]
At the age of 20, he accompanied by his brother James, he over-landed sheep to the newly-opened Rockhampton district where his brother James settled, while he persuaded his father to sell the Armidale properties and join them. This second party of twenty-two persons, three horse teams, a bullock team, drays and stock was guided north by John Atherton. The journey took six months and all the agricultural implements were lost when crossing the flooded Fitzroy River (Queensland) at Yaamba, Queensland. His father settled at Mount Hedlow, whilst he settled in Bamoyea on Limestone Creek.[2]
Taking his bride to Woodland, near Emerald, Queensland he soon sold out and took up an adjoining property, which he named Corio.
Adventurous and courageous, the pattern of his life was already set. A noted authority on the habits and customs of the Aboriginal Australians and keenly interested in grazing land, he could not resist the lure of the unknown country to the north. He opened up the coast road to Yeppoon, Queensland with his brothers and in 1864 the road from Broadwater to Mackay, Queensland, living for a time at West Hill, between St Lawrence, Queensland and Mackay, Queensland.
Cattleman & Prospector
He found a market for his cattle by overlanding them to the Palmer River goldfield in 1873, repeating the feat when the Hodgkinson field opened in 1875. Unlike James Venture Mulligan and others, he was a cattleman first; past experiences had made him wary of mining ventures, but contrary to popular belief the ubiquitous prospecting dish attested to his interest. A brother-in-law was mining warden at Bendigo for some time. Atherton drove his Shorthorn herd north into the wilds once again, the party including his two sons aged 12 and 10, and took up Basalt Downs (Cashmere) on the headwaters of the Burdekin River, selling out after eighteen unprofitable months. Meanwhile he had explored over the ranges to the tableland country, where he finally settled at Emerald End on the banks of the Barron River, the long pilgrimage over. He remained on this property for thirty-seven years, visiting Cairns in 1877 and later shipping his cattle from Redbank, Queensland on the Cairns inlet. Many roads, including the Gillies Highway to the coast near Cairns, follow this noted pathfinder's trails and he also shortened considerably the existing road over the range from Atherton, Queensland to Herberton, Queensland. Many of his place names remain today.
Known as the 'Squire of Emerald End', he discovered tin while prospecting in 1879, joyfully naming the stream Tinaroo Creek, now the site of the storage dam for the irrigation areas of Mareeba-Dimbulah. Later he led a party to the great tin deposits known to him and thus Herberton, Queensland became established.[2]
Founder of Mareeba
He is acknowledged as the founder of Mareeba[2] and the headwaters of the Burdekin was named after him. Mareeba Shire Council erected a memorial to him on 17 August 1957.[4]
Early development of the Mareeba area
He was ingenuous man with a native tendency to call a spade a spade, he insisted that he 'saw little of either place', but the speed of the area's development was greatly aided by his efforts. Unlike others, mainly transient prospectors and cedar-hunters, he was undeterred by drought, flood and the loss of his stock through Aboriginal depredations. His fine homestead, built with Chinese labour,[5] withstood the great cyclone of 1878, and on the river flats he experimented with sugar cane and various crops. Noted for his hospitality, he erected the first building at Granite Creek in Mareeba, Queensland in 1880, his private generosity being severely overtaxed with the sudden augmentation of passing traffic.
Atherton Horses
Atherton's E.E.2 brand horses were famous throughout Australia, and in his enterprising way he also bred mules with the advent of the mines.[2]
Discovery of Mineral Wealth and Development of the Region
The discovery of minerals caused him much personal anxiety about the future of his homestead and land. Originally in the unsettled areas as a crown lands lessee before the Act of 1884, he was still agitating for completion of arrangements in 1895 and had lost faith in promises of the government. Neither the Lands nor Mines Departments accepted responsibility for the area until eventually, after enlisting the aid of various friends, his runs were acknowledged to be under the jurisdiction of the Department of Lands.
The arrival of the railway and the closeness of the township caused him to move his stock to Nyechum, Queensland.
Speewah Massacre
In around 1890, John Atherton was responsible for ordering the killing of Aboriginal men, women and children via an ambush at a river camp. This is known as the Speewah Massacre. The massacre was ordered in retaliation for killing a white settler, however those killed were not involved.[6]
The discovery of copper resulted in the growth of the Chillagoe township.
Lucy Julia Atherton (1867-unknown), who wrote his bibliography which was published in 1969[2]
Esther Annie Atherton (1869-1962)
Ada Mary Atherton (1871-unknown)
Kate Maud Atherton (1873-1951)
John Grainger Atherton (1875-unknown)
Mabel Alice Atherton (1877-1880)
Ernest Albert Atherton (1879-1954),[8] was elected to the Queensland parliament in 1929 as member for Chillagoe, and was Secretary for Mines from 1929 to 1932.
Later life
In later life he continued to dress like an overlander and was a colourful figure, carrying all his life a facial scar, the result of a stone tomahawk thrown from ambush. President of the Turf Club in 1908, he was also patron of the Mareeba District Mining, Pastoral, Agricultural and Industrial Association. He was a member of the Church of England throughout his life.
He died at his homestead on 16 May 1913 and was buried in the family cemetery at Emerald End, Mareeba.[9]
Legacy
His family papers collection[10] have been preserved by the State Library of Queensland. The collection consists of a journal dated 1884, correspondence, postcards, photographs, maps, sketches, invitations, share certificates, poems, etc... also correspondence from his sister Alice and other members of his family. There are a total of 107 letters, ranging from 1877 to 1896, mainly between members of the Atherton family, describing life and conditions on Emerald End Station. There is also some of his correspondence with Robert Philip, J. Byrnes and various officials of the Queensland Government regarding land in the Mareeba District.[11]
Australian Dictionary of Biography; National Centre of Biography (1969), Atherton, Lucy (ed.), Atherton, John (1837–1913, Australian National University, retrieved 12 September 2020
Bolton, Geoffrey Curgenven. A Thousand Miles Away : A History of North Queensland to 1920. Australian National University Press, 1963[13]
Votes and Proceedings (Legislative Assembly, Queensland), 1886, 2, 1113
John Atherton family letters, 1862-1958 (State Library of Queensland)