In 1879 Lord Abbot Dom Salvado of New Norcia, a Benedictine abbey that also served as a mission for Aboriginal children, formed a cricket team to ‘civilise’ the Indigenous population. Despite having to walk 130 kilometres south to play matches in Perth, the team remained unbeaten. This work is based on a photograph of the so-called ‘Invincibles’. The two quotes reflect different colonial attitudes: in 1879 Salvado described the players as ‘these poor natives, so hideous to look at,’ while in 1924 anthropologist Daisy Bates claimed they were ‘treated as sportsmen and gentlemen’. At New Norcia, Indigenous children were separated from their families, forced into labour and stripped of their culture, all under the guise of assimilation. With this work, Julie Dowling reclaims the story of the mission’s cricket team as one of Indigenous pride, strength and resilience.