Read The Forgotten Rebels of Eureka Online

Authors: Clare Wright

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The Forgotten Rebels of Eureka (75 page)

10
Blainey makes the point about the strategic benefit of this single hour of darkness for an advancing army in his essay ‘Eureka: Why Hotham Decided to Swoop'.

11
An incident in an 1873 riot in Clunes, a mining town close to Ballarat, demonstrates that women did expose their breasts in times of conflict. William Spence, a miner turned union organiser, tells the story of the riot by striking miners and their families in his 1909 memoir,
Australia's Awakening
:

Nearby was a heap of road metal, and arming herself with a few stones, a sturdy North of Ireland woman, without shoes or stockings, mounted the barricade as the coaches drew up. As she did she called out to the other women, saying: ‘Come on, you Cousin Jinnies, bring me the stones and I will fire them'. The sergeant in charge of the police presented his carbine at the woman and ordered her to desist. Her answer was to bare her breast and say to him: ‘Shoot away, and be damned to ye, better be shot than starved to death.'

12
Despatch from Thomas to Hotham, VPRS 1085/08.

13
The observations of Charles Schulze are drawn from his eyewitness account, held by the National Library of Australia. Schulze called the cry of Joe!
A kind of Masonic password.

14
Anne Diamond, evidence to Gold Fields Commission of Enquiry.

15
Geelong Advertiser
, 25 January 1855.

16
Geelong Advertiser
, 6 December 1854.

17
PROV VPRS 1189.101 c55/11.052.

18
Charles Evans' diary.

19
Geelong Advertiser
, 6 December 1854.

20
PROV VPRS 1189/240 54/J14453.

21
Story recounted in Laurel Johnson,
Women of Eureka
.

22
‘Grandma hid miner under her skirt at Eureka',
Ballarat News
, 15 June 1983.

23
William Withers says James McGill met Sarah Hanmer at The Springs.

24
The observation is noted by Charles Evans.

25
The deposition of Henry Powell was reprinted in the
Argus
, 15 December 1854.

26
PROV VPRS 5527/P, unit 2, item 9.

27
Evidence of Thomas Millan and John Doherty, state trials, reported in GA 28 Feb 1855.

28
PROV VPRS 1189.101 c55/11.052.

29
The incident is recounted in R. S. Ross's 1914 account,
Eureka: Freedom's Fight of '54.
Ross was a socialist journalist and trade union organiser, born in Sydney in 1873.

30
PROV VPRS 1189/204.

31
PROV VPRS 1189/240 54/J14433.

32
The story was recounted to R. S. Ross.

33
Geelong Advertiser
, 6 December 1854.

34
Martha Clendinning ended up with a piece of the flag. She said it was a gift from Dr Carr. It was among her papers donated to the State Library of Victoria.

35
PROV VPRS 1085/08.

36
PROV VPRS 1189/94.

CONCLUSION: A DAY AT THE RACES

1
The Gold Fields Commission of Enquiry was first instigated in late October 1854 with the purpose of sending men of high standing to the goldfields to hear and enquire into complaints against officials, particularly seeking out instances of corruption or maladministration. Instructions were issued to the chairman, Westgarth, on 16 November and commissioners named. However, no paperwork appointing members was signed and sealed by the governor until 7 December, after events in Ballarat precipitated government action.

2
Thatcher Papers. Thatcher's misogyny is only surpassed by his anti-Semitism.

3
Thatcher's Colonial Songster,
7.

4
Desertions were recorded in the Victorian
Government Gazette
.

5
Quoted in Neil Smith,
Soldiers Bleed Too
, 21.

6
PROV VPRS 5527/P/2/9. This is Richards' sworn deposition at the state trials. Anastasia's words have been quoted differently in many secondary sources.

7
Geelong Advertiser
, 28 February 1855.

8
The bill was passed by the Victorian Legislative Council in 1854, leading some historians to argue that the Eureka Stockade played no part in bringing democracy to Australia. This is a view to which J. B. Humffray was himself partial. In 1884 he declared that it was a romantic nonsense to claim, as some did, that the Victorian Constitution was
cradled in the Eureka Stockade
. The constitution, he corrected, was drawn up by La Trobe and passed by the old Legislative Council, so that it was
already nursed, weaned and full grown
by December 1854. According to Humffray, it was a
complete delusion
to think that the Eureka Stockade riots had anything to do with the current Victorian Constitution. (
Ballarat Star,
29 July 1884.) It was not a popular view. Geoffrey Blainey was to attract a similar level of public hostility when he proffered much the same thesis in
The Rush That Never Ended
in 1963.

9
PROV VPRS 1189/244, M55/735.

10
Geelong Advertiser
, 3 December 1855.

11
Hobart Courier
, 11 December 1855.

12
The extracts of Lady Hotham's diary are held in the Hotham Papers at Hull University in England. Lady Hotham transcribed these few pages of her diary, plus scores of condolence letters she received from individuals and associations in Victoria, into one neat volume in her precise and elegant hand.

13
Isene Goldberg,
Queen of Hearts
, 280.

14
Melbourne Punch
, 28 February, 1856, 27.

15
Ballarat Times
, 8 September 1856.

16
Argus,
5 February 1856.

17
Quoted in Charles Fahey, Heather Holst, Sara Martin and Alan Mayne, ‘A Miner's Right: Making Homes and Communities on the Victorian Goldfields', in Alan Mayne (ed.),
Eureka: Reappraising an Australian Legend
, API Network Books, Perth, 2006, 202. Fahey et al. have interpreted the miner's right as the most important instrument in the social transformations that occurred in the wake of the gold rush.

18
For examples of miner's rights held by women, see George McArthur Collection, Special Collections, Baillieu Library, University of Melbourne.

19
Ballarat Times
, 12 September 1856.

SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY

A NOTE ON SOURCES

This bibliography contains the primary and secondary sources that most influenced my research and thinking in the writing of this book over the course of a decade. It is by no means an exhaustive list of published and unpublished material on the subject of the Eureka Stockade or the Victorian gold rushes.

The full references for material cited in-text and in the endnotes can be found here.

Note that the Public Record Office of Victoria (PROV) holds an extensive collection of archives related to the management and regulation of the Victorian goldfields in general and the Eureka Stockade in particular. Individual accession records for material cited in this book can be found in the endnotes.

PROV series most useful to this study are as follows:

VPRS 30
Office of the Crown Solicitor, Criminal Trial Briefs
VPRS 937
Victoria Police, Inward Registered Correspondence
VPRS 1085
Governor's Office, Duplicate Despatches from the Governor to the Secretary of State
VPRS 1189
Colonial Secretary's Office, Inward Registered Correspondence
VPRS 3219
Colonial Secretary's Office, Outward Registered Correspondence
VPRS 3253
Legislative Assembly, Original Papers Tabled in the Legislative Assembly
VPRS 4066
Governor's Office, Inward Correspondence
VPRS 5527
Attorney-General's Department, Eureka Stockade—Historical Collection
VPRS 7601
Licensing Courts, Licensing Register—Metropolitan
VPRS 11878
Legislative Assembly, Select Committee Records, Sessional Arrangement
VPRS 1288
Department of Crown Lands and Survey, Index to Applications Registers, All Districts, Section 42, Land Act 1865
VPRS 12882
Resident Commissioner for Crown Lands at the Goldfields Ballarat Inwards and Outwards Correspondence Regarding the Ballarat Riots
VPRS 289
Ballarat Courts, Court Records (includes Petty Sessions Registers 1854–1962)
VPRS 1011
Outward Correspondence Books
VPRS 61
Denominational School Board, Inward Registered Correspondence
VPRS 24
Registrar-General's Department, Inquest Deposition Files

PRIMARY SOURCES

(Vic), Maryborough.
Records, 1851–1902
, 1851–1902. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, MS 10943.

Adams, Bethuel.
Diary of Bethuel H. Adams
, 1853. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, H15970.

Adams, David, ed.
The Letters of Rachel Henning
. Ringwood, Vic.: Penguin, 1988.

Anderson, Robert.
Robert Anderson Diary
, 1851–56. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, MS 8492.

Andrews, Silas.
A True Story of Early Victorian Days from a Diary Written by Silus Andrews
, 1852–57. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, MS 10943.

Anon.
Craig's Royal Hotel, Ballarat
. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, MS 01/111.

Archer, William Henry.
Archer Papers
, 1854. University of Melbourne Archives, 64/10.

Austin, Anna.
Letter to Lizzy
, 1856. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, MS 10514.

Barrett, James.
Letter to Sister Betsy
, 1854. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, AJCP M866.

Batey, Isaac.
Isaac Batey Reminiscences
, 1910. Royal Historical Society of Victoria, MS 000035.

Belinfante, Solomon.
Ship Diary
, 1854. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, PA 98/76.

Bentley Murder Trial: Transcript of Evidence
. 1854. Royal Historical Society of Victoria, MS 15327 MS 000283 (Carr).

Birchall, Lucy.
Papers
, 1855. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, MS 9328.

Bogg, Henry.
Letters to Mother
, 1854. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, PA 99/68.

Boldrewood, Rolf.
The Miner's Right: A Tale of the Australian Goldfields
. 1973 edn, Sydney: Sydney University Press, 1890.

Bond, John James.
The Diary of J. J. Bond
, 1853–54. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, AJCP M724.

Bonwick, James.
Australian Gold Digger's Monthly Magazine and Colonial Family Visitor
. 8 vols Melbourne:
Argus
Office, 1852.

—–—.
Notes of a Gold Digger and Gold Digger's Guide.
Melbourne, 1852.

Boynton, Alpheus.
Diary of Alpheus Boynton
, 1852–56. Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, ML MSS 1058.

Bridges, Walter.
The Travels of Walter Bridges
, c. 1856. Central Highlands Library (Ballarat).

Bristow, Mary.
Aunt Spencer's Diary
, 1854. Royal Historical Society of Victoria, MS 23801.

Brothers, Lazarus.
Lazarus Brothers' General Almanac for 1866
. Melbourne, 1866.

Brown, H.
Letter to Sister
, 1854. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, MS 12255.

Bushman, A.
Sidney's Australian Hand-Book: How to Settle and Succeed in Australia
. London, 1848.

Caffyn, Mrs Mannington. ‘Victims of Circe.' In
Coo-Ee: Tales of Australian Life by Australian Ladies
, edited by Mrs Patchett Martin. London: Richard Edward King, 1891.

Caldwell, Robert.
The Gold Era of Victoria: Being the Present and Future of the Colony in Its Commercial, Statistical and Social Aspects
. London: Orr and Co, 1855.

Calwell, Davis.
Calwell Family Letters
, 1853–55. Royal Historical Society of Victoria, MS 000476.

Cannon, Michael, ed.
The Victorian Goldfields 1852–3: An Original Album by S.T. Gill
. Melbourne: State Library of Victoria, 1982.

Capper, John.
Phillips' Emigrants' Guide to Australia
. Liverpool: George Phillip and Son, 1855.

Carboni, Raffaello.
The Eureka Stockade
. Edited by Geoffrey Serle. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1855.

—–—.
Letter to W. Archer
, 1854. Royal Historical Society of Victoria, MS 000315.

Chisholm.
Chisholm Family Letters
, 1854–75. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, MS 10512.

Chisholm, Caroline.
Caroline Chisholm
, 1854. Royal Historical Society of Victoria, MS 000422.

Clacy, Mrs Charles.
A Lady's Visit to the Gold Diggings of Australia in 1852–53: Written on the Spot
. London: Hurst and Blackett, 1853.

—–—.
Lights and Shadows of Australian Life
. London: Hurst and Blackett, 1854.

Clancy, Patricia and Allen, Jeanne.
The French Consul's Wife: Memoirs of Céleste de Chabrillan in Gold-Rush Australia
. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1998.

Clark, Seth Rudolphus.
Seth Rudolphus Clark Diary
, 1852–58. State Library of Victoria, Australian Manuscripts Collection, MS 10436.

Cleland, Robert Glass.
Apron Full of Gold: The Letters of Mary Jane Megquier from San Francisco, 1849–56
. California: Huntington Library, 1949.

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