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The colonial days of Australia brought people from all walks of life to our shore - free settlers, convicts, deserters, public servant administrators and the unscrupulous - all for different reasons. After the tumultuous early decades, the colonies gradually developed their identities. Mainly through the establishment of sheep and cattle properties and the rich farmlands. Then came the gold rush which initially caused mayhem. Ordinary people left their employment and farms to seek their fortune. Many shops were deserted, police left their posts and even domestic servants went to try their…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
The colonial days of Australia brought people from all walks of life to our shore - free settlers, convicts, deserters, public servant administrators and the unscrupulous - all for different reasons. After the tumultuous early decades, the colonies gradually developed their identities. Mainly through the establishment of sheep and cattle properties and the rich farmlands. Then came the gold rush which initially caused mayhem. Ordinary people left their employment and farms to seek their fortune. Many shops were deserted, police left their posts and even domestic servants went to try their luck. A few found their fortune, but many came back poorer but wiser. Stability soon returned to the community.

Small towns and individuals came to the fore. Along all popular roads, about every twenty or so miles an inn or a store was erected. They began mainly as a shanty made of canvas, saplings and bark. Some survived and became established buildings, encouraging other enterprises to join them to start a village, and hence a town.

Of the individuals, the shearers were a major workforce in the mid 1800's. They started shearing in Queensland and worked their way south to Victoria and, after a break, headed north again for the following shearing season.

In those days, law and order was a problem, not only from the crime point of view, but also for judicial management control. The police forces had many incompetent constables while others were inadequately supervised in larger towns. Some were even ex-convicts. Justices of Peace were far and few between and there was an urgent need for magistrates in the country districts. The few magistrates that existed were mainly based in Melbourne. However, the law prevailed, the community benefited, and society remained stable and orderly.

This story is focused on two young immigrants - a coachbuilder and a lawyer, and their community contribution to the colony. One becomes a shearer/farmer and the other a magistrate/farmer. It is partly fiction, interwoven with true events. Primarily it is intended to be reminiscent of those exciting and heady colonial days.


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Autorenporträt
John P F Lynch has written several history, historical fiction books and a biography. Most books are in the Australian National Archives and in state libraries. The focus has been on colonial history in the 1850-1870 era, interrelated with an entertaining storyline. He has travelled extensively during his sixty-year career in aviation and has visited County Clare in Ireland and Cumbria in Northern England several times to research his books. John is a member of the Order of Australia, a Knight Hospitaller of the Order of St John of Jerusalem and a Fellow of the Royal Victorian Association of Honorary Justices. He is an ex-navy veteran and was the president of the Romsey/Lancefield RSL just on ten years. He is also a former president and secretary of the Romsey Football/Netball Club and a Life Member of both. He is a reserve member of the Macedon Ranges Legacy Group having served as a chairman of the group, board member of the Bendigo Club and long-standing Sergeant of Arms. His current main community involvement is as vice president of the Craigieburn War Memorial Remembrance Committee. He is now retired and lives with his wife in the Craigieburn Retirement Village in Victoria.