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Australian rural life - Did the bush barbarise its settlers? Major Essay close

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Australian rural life - Did the bush barbarise its settlers? Major Essay

Scholarly Paper (Advanced Seminar), 2005, 82 Pages
Author: Anonym
Subject: History - Non-German

Details

Category: Scholarly Paper (Advanced Seminar)
Year: 2005
Pages: 82
Grade: A
Bibliography: ~ 13  Entries
Language: English
Archive No.: V39602
ISBN (E-book): 978-3-638-38331-8

File size: 549 KB
Notes :
In Addition to my major essay (10 pages), I added my 3hour-Take Home Exam (mark: B, 4 pages) as well as extracts from very interesting and rare diaries of people who lived in 19th century Australia (nearly 70 pages). "(...)a really good piece of work. You had a good structured argument that you put forward with excellent use of evidence. The evidence was carefully documented” Dr. Charles Fahey, La Trobe University, Bendigo, May 2005.



Excerpt (computer-generated)

LA TROBE UNIVERSITY - BENDIGO
SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY AND EUROPEAN STUDIES
OUT WEST AND DOWN UNDER
2005

Major Essay:

Australian rural life
(Did the bush barbarise its settlers?)

 

 

 

List of contents

Introduction

Problems in selector’s lives

Role of the women

Family as the key

Freedom and happiness in the new land

Conclusion

 

Introduction

In my essay I argue about the question if the bush in rural Australia in the 19th century is barbarising its settlers. While I am answering this question I am trying to give a representative insight into the life of selectors in Victoria.

Based on the statements of Manning Clark1 and J.W. McCarty2 I will show that even though there were a lot of different problems which made life hard for selectors, there was indeed a new kind of freedom and even a “progress towards happiness” for the early settlers. Looking at different primary sources (including collected data from selectors in the parishes of Kalkee) I finally want to disagree with Manning Clark’s statement that the continent itself is barbarising people. To understand the circumstances of living and to support my opinion I will also write about the problems that early settlers were confronted with as well as about the role of women and family.

Problems in selector’s lives

Manning Clark starts his article “Bush Barbarians”3 with a focus on the squatters in Australia. This is also a good beginning for this essay and a first step to understand the circumstances under which selectors started their living in the bush. While M.Clark describes the difficulties of rich people when the first selectors started to cultivate the land4, one has to know that the first established industry in Australia was wool in 1830. But the frontier at this time was a frontier of rich people and large land holders who came to Australia with a lot of capital. They created their own “little Britain”. People often sold their land in Britain to get a greater amount in Australia. When the first selectors came to farm their own small properties they were often confronted with these large land holders. M.Clark even writes about a “war” between those squatters and selectors.5 Confronted with this situation there were nonetheless numerous people like Patrick Michael Fleming or Charles Fletcher6 who came over to Australia to find a better way of living.

Farmers often only could survive in the bush because of the hard work they were doing day after day. We can learn from William Craig’s diary that there was always a lot of work like fencing or harvesting throughout the year.7 Even on Christmas8 he went for water casks and did some shooting. According to the diary the early Australian settlers had to be in good physical condition to run their land. The settlers had to produce everything they needed more or less of on their own. Hard work was essential to survival.

Subsistence was necessary and William H.Hird, a farmer in Victoria in the late 19th century, shows us the difficulties of trading in this period.9 Even though he lived on good land where a creek and the Murray were near, he wrote about the bad conditions of trading cattle on the market. Out of 30 cattle, they could not sell one. While William complained about the dry weather that was responsible for the bad conditions to sell the animals, Thomas Hird had other problems with the dryness in the Australian South.

[....]


1: C.M.H. Clark, A History of Australia IV: The earth abideth for ever 1851-1888, Melbourne University press 1978, p. 218: “By 1880 it looked as though the ancient, uncouth continent would destroy all human endeavours to create a class of small property owners between the big men and their employees. Once again, as in the convict period, the bush had barbarised its would-be robbers and destroyers. In the cities belief in progress had not been diminished by the survival of barbarism in the bush.”

2: J.W.McCarty, The inland corridor, Department of Economic History, Monash University: “Reading Clark´s book has been a moving and disturbing experience; but his picture of rural Australia still repels me, and even strengthens my previous view of rural Australia. I still think of a story of industries, and building homes and raising families. There was, overall, a progress towards material welfare in a democratic society; and, I believe a progress towards `happiness`.”

3: C.M.H. Clark, A History of Australia IV: The earth abideth for ever 1851-1888, Melbourne University press 1978

4: C.M.H. Clark, A History of Australia IV: The earth abideth for ever 1851-1888, Melbourne University press 1978, p.165-168

5: C.M.H. Clark, A History of Australia IV: The earth abideth for ever 1851-1888, Melbourne University press 1978, p.168

6: Victoria and its Metropolis: past and present, p.6

7: William Craig, Diary, 1877

8: William Craig, Diary, 24 December 1877

9: Wiliam H.Hird, Letter to brother, sister and nice, Barkers Creek, Christmas Day 1877


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