Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

21
The Gold Rush

description

An overview of the Victorian gold rush of the 1850s and its impact on Australia

Transcript of Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Page 1: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

The Gold Rush

Page 2: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: earlier discoveries• Convicts found gold and were

‘flogged’• Authorities were worried about

a ‘rush’• ‘We’ll have our throats cut!’

Page 3: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold ‘Rush’

Page 4: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: around the worldOther ‘rushes’: • California ‘rush’ 1848-49• 1851 Victorian gold rush began• biggest of several Australian gold

rushes • many miners from Victoria later

travelled to join a gold rush in NZ

• this ‘rush’ kick-started New Zealand's economy

Page 5: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: VictoriaThe Victorian gold rush • was highly significant for the

development of Victoria and Melbourne

• This included political development economic development

Page 7: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: Ballarat buildings

Page 8: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: impactWith the Australian gold rushes came • construction

• first railways• first telegraph lines

• migrants other places and cultures (beginning of multicultural Australia)

• outbreaks of racism • the Eureka Stockade and changes to the

system for election of parliamentarians in Victoria (and later Australia) – vote for all adult males

• the end of transportation of convicts

Page 9: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: transport

• Many city people left for ‘the diggings’ • Establishment of rich country towns• Development of transport

Page 10: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: Chinese Miners

• Organised into groups, worked hard• Worked on mines others had left• Saved money, started businesses

Page 11: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: Many CulturesThe people who ‘rushed’ to the goldfields• Came from all over Australia• Came from all over the world, inclding

•Chinese• Irish•Russiona

Page 12: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush Chinese migrants

•2,000 buried at Beechworth Cemetery (in Victoria)

Page 13: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush Chinese migrants

• largest non-British group of migrants during this period

• in 1852 there was 400 Chinese immigrants

• in 1855 more than 4,000

Page 14: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: VictoriaThe Victorian gold rush • began just when Victoria became

independent• thousands of miners arrived quickly

•only 50 police and soldiers in colony•hard to find police – criminals and

misfits• Victorian government needed money• Victorian government controlled by rich

farmers•introduced system of licences for gold

diggers

Page 15: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Victorian Gold Rush: Licences

Mining Licences

• expensive• not everyone

found gold• police

harassment• series of events

led to unrest

Page 18: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: Eureka Stockade

EUREKA DECEMBER 3, 1854(Oil on Canvas) Artist: George Browning A.M. (1918-2000)

Page 19: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: Eureka Stockade

• many killed or arrested

• leaders found ‘not guilty’ by jury

EUREKA DECEMBER 3, 1854(Oil on Canvas) Artist: George Browning A.M. (1918-2000)

Page 20: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Gold Rush: Eureka Stockade

EUREKA DECEMBER 3, 1854(Oil on Canvas) Artist: George Browning A.M. (1918-2000)

Page 21: Gold Rush Australia Chinese Miners

Eureka Stockade: outcomes

• Change in the Victorian law about who could vote

• Leader Peter Lalor voted into Victorian parliament

• parliament awarded a pension of 4,000 pounds when he retired in 1887