The Mowla Bluff massacre was an incident involving the murder of a number of Indigenous Australians at Geegully Creek, near Mowla Bluff, in the Kimberley region of Western Australia in 1916.
Responding to the brutality of the white station manager, some local men gave him a beating.
In reprisal, an armed mob which included officials and residents rounded up a large number of Aboriginal men, women and children who were then shot.
A belated police investigation into the events took place in 1918, after two survivors were found with the bullets still within their bodies.
[2] In 2000 a memorial plaque was erected in Geegully Creek, Mowla Bluff, to commemorate the victims of the massacre.