Difference between revisions of "Henry Nicholls"
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
==Post 1854 Experiences== | ==Post 1854 Experiences== | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Obituary == | ||
+ | |||
+ | :Mr Henry Richard Nicholls, editor of the Hobart "Mercury," died in his 83rd year last week. Mr Nicholls was in the [[Eureka Stockade]], and had a brilliant literary career. <ref>''Sydney Globe'', 21 August 1912</ref> | ||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 23:03, 12 May 2013
Contents
Background
Henry Richard Nicholls was active with London Chartism. Nicholls was known both as a lecturer and poet before he emigrated in 1853 at the age of 23. He became assistant editor of the Gold Digger's Advocate, but unlike his editor, George Black, was an atheist. He is credited with introducing "a flavour of the cosmopolitan radical milieux" of London to the paper, with letters from the Italian republican Giuseppe Mazzini and Hungarian nationalist Lajo Kossuth running alongside Chartist poetry and editorials on republicanism and temperance. The paper failed in September 1854 and Nicholls moved to Ballarat, where he became a gold miner and correspondent for the Melbourne Argus. Nicholls died in 1912.[1]
Goldfields Involvement, 1854
Post 1854 Experiences
Obituary
- Mr Henry Richard Nicholls, editor of the Hobart "Mercury," died in his 83rd year last week. Mr Nicholls was in the Eureka Stockade, and had a brilliant literary career. [2]
See also
Further Reading
Corfield, J.,Wickham, D., & Gervasoni, C. The Eureka Encyclopaedia, Ballarat Heritage Services, 2004.
References
- ↑ http://www.chartists.net/Chartists-in-Australia.htm
- ↑ Sydney Globe, 21 August 1912
External links