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Battle at Eureka Stockade, Victoria, Australia, 1854
More on Eureka
From: anngeisler@hotmail.com
Date: Sat, 27 Nov 1999 17:19:34 +1000
There were many other issues surrounding the miners and the uprising.
After seeing the interest from my last posting, I thought I'd give a bit
more detail on the events that ultimately had the stockade erected. And
most importantly how the name Eureka came about.
After many complaints about the license issues, the troubles continued.
The miners accused the government of allowing the owner of the Eureka
hotel, James Bentley, to go free after he and his bouncers killed a
drunken miner, James Scobie, on 6 Oct 1854 outside the hotel. The angry
miners wanted justice, so they took the law into their own hands on 17
Oct, burning down Bentley's Hotel. The miners then formed the Ballarat
reform league on 11 Nov at Bakery hill, electing a seven man committee
to represent them in their negotiations with the government over Bentley
and the licensing fees. eventually the government agreed to try
Bentley, who was sentenced for manslaughter, but the Government also
imprisoned three miners for burning down the Hotel.
The miners were infuriated.
Their representatives visited the Gov, but they refused to release the
three miners, and sent more troopers to the gold fields to maintain
order. So on 29 Nov 1854, the miners burnt their licenses and hoisted a
flag of their own - The Eureka flag - Declaring they would govern
themselves. The gold Commissioner ordered a spot check of licenses the
next day and tried to round up those who had burnt their licenses. The
miners refused to go. He read the riot act. The miners decided to fight
it out.
Swearing allegiance to their new flag, symbolizing the southern
cross in the night sky.
This was when the stockade was built.
I love the stories about these miners. They were men from all over the
world who united together. They made a difference.
Annie
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From: anngeisler@hotmail.com
Date: 24 November 1999
The discovery of Gold in Victoria had a dramatic affect on
Victoria.
(Victoria is a small state at the bottom of Australia.)
In 1853
there were about 60,000 diggers, plus their families, on the
Gold-fields, of these about 23,000 were at Bendigo. In June 1853 an
Anti-Gold Licence Association was formed at Bendigo to give voice to
the diggers' many grievances about their conditions and centred on the
30 shilling a month licence fee they had to pay. A petition was drawn
up articulating grievances and the need for an improved law and order,
such as the right to vote and the right to buy land. The petition was
signed by over 30,000 diggers and was brought to Melbourne and presented
to Lieutenant-Governor C.J. La Trobe on Aug 1853. After the failure to
be heard through peaceful means, diggers elected a small group to lead
them into their fight. An Irish Gold digger by the name of Peter Lalor
was the leader. On Dec 2nd 1854, Lalor ordered a stockade to be built to
serve as a fort for their defence, and called for muskets, pistols and
any other weapons they could muster. Once the Stockade was completed,
the rebel miners assembled in side. Lalor asked them to repeat the
Eureka Oath:
We swear by the southern cross to stand truly by each other
and fight to defend our rights and liberties. Amen!
The miners waited for the inevitable attack.
The miners weren't trained for fighting, many miners left their stockade
on the Sabbath to go to church. The English Government troops not only
struck on the Sabbath, but at 3am, taking the 120 remaining miners by
surprise, killing 22 and wounding 12 others - including Peter Lalor.
They took 100 prisoners and captured the stockade in 20min's.
Although Lalor's miners lost the battle, they eventually got the reforms
they fought for. Miners were given licences for one pound a year. They
were also given the right to vote, and finally miners who were in prison
for treason were freed.
The miners also helped introduce reforms in government. because so many
were from Europe or America, where conditions were better, they refused
to live in a post convict society where Government was by the
dictatorship of a British Governor. The miners helped native born
Australians along the road to democratic reforms.
There is so much more that the miners did for the Australian folk. Even
though they didn't own land or come from hight society, they changed so
much for the Aussie battler.
I am proud to add that, My GG Grandfather Robert Sinclair was a gold
miner in that area at the time of the uprising. This name is on the
voting register in 1856. The first freedom vote for Australia. To vote
that year, one had to have a miners licence, hold land ownership or have
a trade.
Keep Smiling
Annie
Last changed: 99/11/27 13:21:47
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