http://www.eurekapedia.org/index.php?title=Abraham_Bryant&feed=atom&action=historyAbraham Bryant - Revision history2024-03-29T07:31:10ZRevision history for this page on the wikiMediaWiki 1.30.1http://www.eurekapedia.org/index.php?title=Abraham_Bryant&diff=5268&oldid=prevCgervaso: /* See Also */2013-07-20T02:46:34Z<p><span dir="auto"><span class="autocomment">See Also</span></span></p>
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</table>Cgervasohttp://www.eurekapedia.org/index.php?title=Abraham_Bryant&diff=5267&oldid=prevCgervaso: Created page with "==Background== He was one of the discoverers of the Lady Hotham Nugget at Dalton’s Flat, Ballarat on 8 September 1854. The nugget was 1177 ounces with 2640 ounces of smalle..."2013-07-20T02:46:19Z<p>Created page with "==Background== He was one of the discoverers of the Lady Hotham Nugget at Dalton’s Flat, Ballarat on 8 September 1854. The nugget was 1177 ounces with 2640 ounces of smalle..."</p>
<p><b>New page</b></p><div>==Background==<br />
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He was one of the discoverers of the Lady Hotham Nugget at Dalton’s Flat, Ballarat on 8 September 1854. The nugget was 1177 ounces with 2640 ounces of smaller nuggets. <ref>Wickham, D., Gervasoni, C. & Phillipson, W., ''Eureka Research Directory'', Ballarat Heritage Services, 1999.</ref><br />
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==Goldfields Involvement, 1854==<br />
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==Post 1854 Experiences==<br />
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== In the News ==<br />
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:BALLARAT. LADY HOTHAM NUGGET. 98lbs. 9ozs. SEPTEMBER 10TH. By favor of Mr [[George Noble]], I am enabled to anticipate Monday's post and inform you, that another Nugget 'has been found! The old Canadian is well nigh done, but it has, even in its death throes, shown of what metal it was made. On Friday evening this line produced a specimen, or nugget, weighing 98 lbs. 9 ozs. It is unnecessary to italicise the figures; they speak: for themselves. Yesterday afternoon, I proceeded to the claim from which this splendid nugget was taken, and in about half-an-hour saw 25 lbs. of gold washed from two small buckets of washing-stuff. The gold which has been taken from this claim in nuggets-alone, independent of washing-off, exceeds 200 lbs. With such facts staring the alarmists in the face, it is difficult to imagine how they can assert that our Ballarat field is falling off. The fact is, that in its palmiest days, overlooking the nugget, Ballarat never gave promise of such greatness as at the present moment. All the lines, Eureka, [[Red Hill]], [[Canadian]] and [[Gravel Pits]], are doing well; and ere long some of our escorts will show that the good old times of the jewellers' shops were but future tastes of what was to come. Eureka is said to be equal to the [[Red Hill]] in point of yield, and [[Red Hill]] to the [[Gravel Pits]], on which line the very reefers as paying from £1000, to £1500 a man. But of the nugget, it was found on [[Canadian]], mid-way between Dalton's Flat and [[Red Hill]]. As I before informed you, the old [[Canadian]] was being worked at both ends, the claim which has yielded the 98 lbs. 9 oz. nugget is one of those which was sunk ahead of the line after its junction with the red line was made out. The shaft to which I refer is 133 feet deep and the dip from which the nugget has been taken is about three feet lower. This claim had a vast quantity of water, as have had all those in the neighbourhood: but singular to say, while most of the claims around will not pay the expenses of sinking, this one has yielded the nugget, and a large quantity of small gold. The party has already nuggeted upwards of 200 lbs., and, unless one claim abutting, there is hardly an ounce obtainable around. The gold is generally large, from half an ounce to three and a half pounds, and in having any small gold differs from the immediate neighbourhood of all the other nuggets. The party has called this the " Lady Hotham Nugget," in honor of her Ladyship's visit to Ballarat. What a pity his Excellency's visit had not been a fortnight later, he would have have been there in time. Some time since you said that [[Melbourne]] and [[Geelong]], [[Bendigo]] and [[Ballarat]] respectively should he pitted against each other. Well now, let [[Bendigo]] just try, we are ready. If we had not an insolvent government this nugget might be bought and sent to the Paris exhibition and tell what Vic- toria really is. It is estimated that there is from seventy-five pounds to eighty pounds of pure gold, after deducting the quartz, making this specimen the second in point of value that has ever been found. As you will probably soon see the nugget, further description is unnecessary. Tne names of the lucky vagabonds are Hugh Macdonald, Glasgow; Wm. Cock, London; Edw. Cock, do.; Abm. Bryant, do.; Wm. Irwin, do.; Thos. Day, do. Amos Radcliff, Liverpool; Jas. Lyons do.; and, J. McPhillimy, Londonderry. The last named is brother of Mr McPhillimy, of the firm of McPhillimy and Baird, Geelong.<ref>Geelong Advertiser and Intelligencer, 12 September 1854.</ref><br />
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==See Also==<br />
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[[Abraham Bryant]]<br />
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[[Edward Cock]]<br />
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[[William Cock]]<br />
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[[Thomas Day]]<br />
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[[William Irwin]]<br />
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[[Jason Lyon]]<br />
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[[Hugh McDonald]]<br />
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[[Hugh McPhillimy]]<br />
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[[Amos Radcliff]]<br />
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==Further Reading==<br />
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Corfield, J.,Wickham, D., & Gervasoni, C. ''The Eureka Encyclopaedia'', Ballarat Heritage Services, 2004.<br />
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==References==<br />
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[[File:File name.jpg|500px|thumb|left|''Caption,'' Reference.]]</div>Cgervaso