Difference between revisions of "Melbourne"

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[[File:clare20160081-0082-wiki.jpg|800px|thumb|right|''Special Constables Poster''<br />Courtesy Ballarat Heritage Services.]]
 
[[File:clare20160081-0082-wiki.jpg|800px|thumb|right|''Special Constables Poster''<br />Courtesy Ballarat Heritage Services.]]
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[[File:SLV- H141396-wiki.jpeg|505px|thumb|right|''To the Right Worshipful the Mayor of Melbourne... [from] the undersigned Inhabitants of Melbourne considering the Unsettled State of a portion of the Diggings, and the necessity measures for the Better PROTECTION OF THE CITY, and upholding the cause of Law and Order, hereby request your Worship to convene A PUBLIC MEETING...'' John Ferres, Government Printer, 05 December 1854. State Library of Victoria Collection (H141396).]]
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[[File:GILL ST - Convivial diggers in Melbourne - 1967.118-wiki.jpg|1000px|thumb|right|Samuel Thomas Gill, ''Convivial Diggers in Melbourne,'' c1852, watercolour and gum arabic on paper. <br>Art Gallery of Ballarat, gift of Mr. Tony Hamilton and Miss. S.E. Hamilton, 1967.]]
  
 
Melbourne is the capital city of Victoria, Australia.
 
Melbourne is the capital city of Victoria, Australia.
  
After the Eureka Stockade rumours of an attack on Melbourne resulted in special constables being sworn in.
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After the [[Eureka Stockade]] rumours of an attack on Melbourne resulted in special constables being sworn in.
  
:Was Melbourne in Peril?— Those were days of leisurely news-carrying. The Stockade was taken by assault at daybreak on Sunday, December 3, 1854, and the news reached Melbourne just too late to appear in the morning papers on Monday. For a day or two before it hac been rumoured that an army of infuriated diggers was about to descend on the capital. All troops available had been sent to Bal larat, and the leading shopkeepers cla moured for the enrolment of a rifle bri gade and the swearing-in of all respectable people as special constables. lt was a great chance for The Age, then just established. This democratic infant declared that the civil war was 'not against the Crown but against the pollutions and abomi nations covered by its sanction." Ad ditional troops were brought in from Tasmania; and, with the news of the complete crumpling up of the Stockade and of the rebel movement, a quick reaction set in. Strong anti-Government speeches were made at a great meeting where the Cathedral now stands-by some of the city's most representative men. Then came on the trials for high treason.<ref>Adelaide Registrer, 29 March 1913.</ref>  
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:Was Melbourne in Peril?— Those were days of leisurely news-carrying. The Stockade was taken by assault at daybreak on Sunday, December 3, 1854, and the news reached Melbourne just too late to appear in the morning papers on Monday. For a day or two before it hac been rumoured that an army of infuriated diggers was about to descend on the capital. All troops available had been sent to Ballarat, and the leading shopkeepers cla moured for the enrolment of a rifle bri gade and the swearing-in of all respectable people as special constables. lt was a great chance for The Age, then just established. This democratic infant declared that the civil war was 'not against the Crown but against the pollutions and abomi nations covered by its sanction." Ad ditional troops were brought in from Tasmania; and, with the news of the complete crumpling up of the Stockade and of the rebel movement, a quick reaction set in. Strong anti-Government speeches were made at a great meeting where the Cathedral now stands-by some of the city's most representative men. Then came on the trials for high treason.<ref>Adelaide Registrer, 29 March 1913.</ref>  
  
 
== Names Associated with Living in Melbourne ==
 
== Names Associated with Living in Melbourne ==
  
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[[John Moore]] - Sir [[John O'Shannessy]] - [[James T. Smith]]
  
 
== Also See ==
 
== Also See ==
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[[James T. Smith]]
 
[[James T. Smith]]
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Latest revision as of 23:12, 24 April 2018

Special Constables Poster
Courtesy Ballarat Heritage Services.
To the Right Worshipful the Mayor of Melbourne... [from] the undersigned Inhabitants of Melbourne considering the Unsettled State of a portion of the Diggings, and the necessity measures for the Better PROTECTION OF THE CITY, and upholding the cause of Law and Order, hereby request your Worship to convene A PUBLIC MEETING... John Ferres, Government Printer, 05 December 1854. State Library of Victoria Collection (H141396).
Samuel Thomas Gill, Convivial Diggers in Melbourne, c1852, watercolour and gum arabic on paper.
Art Gallery of Ballarat, gift of Mr. Tony Hamilton and Miss. S.E. Hamilton, 1967.

Melbourne is the capital city of Victoria, Australia.

After the Eureka Stockade rumours of an attack on Melbourne resulted in special constables being sworn in.


Was Melbourne in Peril?— Those were days of leisurely news-carrying. The Stockade was taken by assault at daybreak on Sunday, December 3, 1854, and the news reached Melbourne just too late to appear in the morning papers on Monday. For a day or two before it hac been rumoured that an army of infuriated diggers was about to descend on the capital. All troops available had been sent to Ballarat, and the leading shopkeepers cla moured for the enrolment of a rifle bri gade and the swearing-in of all respectable people as special constables. lt was a great chance for The Age, then just established. This democratic infant declared that the civil war was 'not against the Crown but against the pollutions and abomi nations covered by its sanction." Ad ditional troops were brought in from Tasmania; and, with the news of the complete crumpling up of the Stockade and of the rebel movement, a quick reaction set in. Strong anti-Government speeches were made at a great meeting where the Cathedral now stands-by some of the city's most representative men. Then came on the trials for high treason.[1]

Names Associated with Living in Melbourne

John Moore - Sir John O'Shannessy - James T. Smith

Also See

Abodes

Cemeteries

John Moore

James T. Smith



  1. Adelaide Registrer, 29 March 1913.