Nicholas Paget Bayly JrAge: 651814–1879
- Name
- Nicholas Paget Bayly Jr
- Given names
- Nicholas Paget
- Surname
- Bayly
- Name suffix
- Jr
Birth | 14 September 1814 45 30 Penrith, New South Wales, Australia Address: "Bayly Park" |
Death of a paternal grandfather | 1814
paternal grandfather -
Nicholas Bayly
|
Birth of a brother | 18 October 1815 (Age 13 months) Penrith, New South Wales, Australia
younger brother -
Charles Luke Bayly
|
Australian History | 1817 (Age 2) Note: John Oxley charts the Lachlan River Note: Australia's first bank, the Bank of New South Wales, opens in Macquarie Place, Sydney (it became Westpac in 1982). Note: Governor Lachlan Macquarie petitioned the British Admiralty to use the name 'Australia' instead of 'New Holland' |
Birth of a sister | 19 February 1818 (Age 3)
younger sister -
Ellen Bayly
|
Australian History | 1818 (Age 3) Note: Oxley charts the Macquarie River. |
Death of a sister | 9 January 1819 (Age 4)
younger sister -
Ellen Bayly
|
Birth of a sister | 5 May 1820 (Age 5)
younger sister -
Sarah Ellen Maria Bayly
|
Death of a mother | 13 June 1820 (Age 5) Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia
mother -
Sarah Laycock
|
Death of a father | 16 May 1823 (Age 8) Penrith, New South Wales, Australia
father -
Nicholas Paget Bayly Sr
|
Death of a maternal grandfather | 7 November 1823 (Age 9) Pitt St, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
maternal grandfather -
Thomas Laycock II
|
Marriage of a sister | Augusta Bayly - View family 4 December 1823 (Age 9)
brother-in-law -
Andrew Allen
elder sister -
Augusta Bayly
|
Marriage of a sister | Frances Bayly - View family 1 January 1824 (Age 9) Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia
brother-in-law -
Captain John Bolinbroke Brooke
elder sister -
Frances Bayly
|
Death of a sister | 5 September 1824 (Age 9) Trichinopoly, India
elder sister -
Frances Bayly
|
Australian History | 1824 (Age 9) Note: A penal colony is founded at Moreton Bay, now the city of Brisbane. Note: Bathurst and Melville Islands are annexed. Note: Permission granted to change the name of the continent from 'New Holland' to 'Australia' Note: 1824-25 - Hume and Hovell expedition travels overland to Port Phillip Bay, discovers Murray River |
Australian History | 1825 (Age 10) Note: New South Wales western border is extended to 129 degrees E. Van Diemen's Land is proclaimed. |
Australian History | 1828 (Age 13) Note: Charles Sturt charts the Darling River. |
Australian History | 1829 (Age 14) Note: The whole of Australia is claimed as British territory. The settlement of Perth is founded. Swan River Colony is declared by Charles Fremantle for Britain. |
Marriage of a brother | Henry Bayly - View family 18 November 1830 (Age 16) Castlereagh, New South Wales, Australia
elder brother -
Henry Bayly
sister-in-law -
Hannah Anne Lawson
|
Australian History | 1830 (Age 15) Note: Sturt arrives at Goolwa, having charted the Murray River. |
Death of a maternal grandmother | 1831 (Age 16)
maternal grandmother -
Hannah Pearson
|
Australian History | 1831 (Age 16) Note: Sydney Herald (later to become The Sydney Morning Herald) first published. |
Australian History | 1832 (Age 17) Note: Swan River Colony has its name changed to Western Australia. |
Australian History | 1833 (Age 18) Note: The penal settlement of Port Arthur is founded in Van Diemen's Land. |
Australian History | 1835 (Age 20) Note: John Batman and John Pascoe Fawkner establish a settlement at Port Phillip, now the city of Melbourne. Note: William Wentworth establishes Australian Patriotic Association (Australia's first political party) to demand democracy for New South Wales. |
Australian History | 1836 (Age 21) Note: Province of South Australia proclaimed with its western border at 132 degrees E. |
Australian History | 1838 (Age 23) Note: First Prussian settlers arrive in South Australia; the largest group on non-British migrants in Australia at the time. |
Australian History | 1839 (Age 24) Note: Paul Edmund Strzelecki becomes first European to ascend and name Australia's highest peak, Mount Kosciuszko. |
Marriage | Ellen Dickinson - View family 20 May 1840 (Age 25) Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia Address: St. Johns Church |
Death of a sister | 30 May 1840 (Age 25) Calcutta, India
elder sister -
Caroline Bayly
|
Occupation | Pastoralist of "Havilah" 1840 (Age 25)
Note:
To run his flock in 1840 Bayly bought a 14,000-acre (5667 ha) property at Mudgee later known as Havi…
To run his flock in 1840 Bayly bought a 14,000-acre (5667 ha) property at Mudgee later known as Havilah, which in biblical phraseology means 'the land of gold'. This is said to have emanated from the exclamations of a clergyman panning for gold while picnicking on the property. Bayly set about building a quality stud, buying 1000 ewes of George III flock lineage from Lawson and 2500 from George Cox of Burrundulla. The element of barter in many transactions is reflected in his purchase of a favourite ram, Old Billy, from Lue stud in 1860 for '£20 and a good horse'. For some reason, and despite being on the foundation committee of the Mudgee Pastoral and Agricultural Association in 1846, Bayly disliked entering exhibitions and shows; but he won several prizes, reflecting the high standing of his stud, for a report of the Sydney International Sheep and Wine Show of 1879 shows that P. J. Osborne's winning merinos were 'the Bayly blood' and 'what appear to be pure Baylys', a fitting tribute. Some experts claim that Bayly's strange decision in the 1870s to cull out ewes with a black tip to the staple resulted in a significant decrease in the weight of fleece produced; this was rectified when H. C. White bought the estate in 1881. In the controversy which arose in the 1860s over the comparative merits of Mudgee and Victorian wools Bayly challenged the Victorians to decide the issue by the prices obtained on the London market for 1866-67 and won by realizing 31½d. a lb. to the Victorian average of 29d. a lb.
In 1859 Bayly was among the local justices of the peace (a position he held for over thirty years) who wanted to resign because they objected to a new appointment to their ranks. He was widely respected and active in community affairs: inaugural councillor of the shire of Mudgee in 1843, foundation alderman of the break-away Cudgegong municipality in 1860 and on the committee for establishing a public hospital in 1863. With the respect went a sternness as a local columnist wrote in 1877:
When Bayly, N.P. his ears doth prick
At what the 'Purfession' doth say
He makes them and their talk tall
Feel mean, and kind o'small
Doth blunt-spoken Bayly, old Nick.
The total extent of his holdings is not clear but as late as February 1877 Bayly selected four blocks totalling 200 acres (81 ha) on the Gulgong goldfield under volunteer land orders (said to be worth £135 each) as the land was open for selection under section 14 of the Lands Act of 1861. On 28 May 1840 he married Ellen Dickenson at Prospect, New South Wales, Australia; they had one son and one daughter. On 25 January 1848 at Mudgee he married Sarah Amelia Blackman; they had three daughters and one son. After an apoplectic fit he died on 2 October 1879 and was buried in the Church of England cemetery, Mudgee. His probate was sworn at nearly £40,000, apart from his real estate. He had been a warden and trustee of St John the Baptist Church, but in 1863 had given £500 for building a Wesleyan church. A monument is on the Mudgee-Lue road opposite the entrance to Havilah, and a memorial window is in the Church of England, Mudgee.
Select Bibliography
Mudgee Independent, 15 Feb, 5, 12 Apr 1877; Sydney Morning Herald, 1, 3, 4 Nov 1879; G. H. F. Cox, History of Mudgee (State Library of New South Wales, Australia).
Author: J. L. Stewart
Print Publication Details: J. L. Stewart, 'Bayly, Nicholas Paget (1814 - 1879)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 3, Melbourne University Press, 1969, pp 121-122. |
Australian History | 1840 (Age 25) Note: Australia's first municipal authority, the City of Adelaide, is established, followed by Sydney City Council. |
Birth of a son #1 | 14 March 1841 (Age 26) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia
son -
Alfred Bayly
|
Australian History | 1841 (Age 26) Note: New Zealand is proclaimed as a separate colony, no longer part of New South Wales. |
Marriage of a brother | Major George Bayly - View family 21 July 1842 (Age 27) Port Louis, Maurritius
elder brother -
Major George Bayly
sister-in-law -
Eliza Sophia Savage
|
Birth of a daughter #2 | 9 December 1842 (Age 28)
daughter -
Ellen Sophia Bayly
|
Australian History | 1842 (Age 27) Note: Copper is discovered at Kapunda in South Australia. |
Marriage of a brother | Charles Luke Bayly - View family 11 January 1843 (Age 28) Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia
younger brother -
Charles Luke Bayly
sister-in-law -
Henrietta Sophia Browne
|
Australian History | 1843 (Age 28) Note: Australia's first parliamentary elections held for the New South Wales Legislative Council (though voting rights are restricted to males of certain wealth or property). |
Marriage of a brother | Edward Bayly - View family 16 March 1844 (Age 29) St Johns Church, Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia
elder brother -
Edward Bayly
sister-in-law -
Jane Isabella Middleton
|
Death of a wife | 4 October 1844 (Age 30) Prospect, New South Wales, Australia
wife -
Ellen Dickinson
|
Australian History | 1845 (Age 30) Note: The ship Cataraqui is wrecked off King Island in Bass Strait. It is Australia's worst civil maritime disaster, with 406 lives lost. Note: Copper is discovered at Burra in South Australia. |
Marriage | Sarah Amelia Blackman - View family 25 January 1848 (Age 33) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Address: St Johns |
Birth of a daughter #3 | 8 February 1849 (Age 34) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia
daughter -
Sarah Bayly
|
Australian History | 1850 (Age 35) Note: Western Australia becomes a penal colony. Note: Australian Colonies Government Act [1850] grants representative constitutions to New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania, colonies set about writing constitutions which produced democratically progressive parliaments Note: Australia's first university, the University of Sydney, is founded. |
Australian History | 1851 (Age 36) Note: Victoria separates from New South Wales. Note: The Victorian gold rush starts when gold is found at Summerhill Creek and Ballarat. Note: Forest Creek Monster Meeting of miners at Chewton near Castlemaine |
Death of a sister | 8 August 1853 (Age 38) New South Wales, Australia
younger sister -
Sarah Ellen Maria Bayly
|
Australian History | 1853 (Age 38) Note: Bendigo Petition and Red Ribbon Rebellion at Bendigo |
Australian History | 1854 (Age 39) Note: The Eureka Stockade |
Australian History | 1855 (Age 40) Note: The transportation of convicts to Norfolk Island ceases. Note: All men over 21 years of age obtain the right to vote in South Australia. |
Birth of a daughter #4 | 29 January 1856 (Age 41) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia
daughter -
Fannie Caroline Paget Bayly
|
Australian History | 1856 (Age 41) Note: Van Diemen's Land name changed to Tasmania. |
Australian History | 1857 (Age 42) Note: Victorian Committee reported that a 'federal union' would be in the interests of all the growing colonies. However, there was not enough interest in or enthusiasm for taking positive steps towards bringing the colonies together. Note: Victorian men achieve the right to vote. |
Australian History | 1858 (Age 43) Note: Sydney and Melbourne linked by electric telegraph. Note: New South Wales men achieve the right to vote. |
Australian History | 1859 (Age 44) Note: SS Admella wrecked off south-east coast of South Australia with the loss of 89 lives. Note: Australian rules football codified, Melbourne Football Club founded Note: Queensland separates from New South Wales with its western border at 141 degrees E. |
Birth of a son #5 | 23 December 1860 (Age 46) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia
son -
Nicholas Paget Bayly
|
Death of a sister | 26 December 1860 (Age 46) Premier Terrace, William Street, Woolloomooloo, New South Wales, Australia
elder sister -
Augusta Bayly
|
Australian History | 1860 (Age 45) Note: John McDouall Stuart reaches the centre of the continent. South Australian border changed from 132 degrees E to 129 degrees E. |
Australian History | 1861 (Age 46) Note: The ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition occurs. Note: skiing in Australia introduced by Norwegians in the Snowy Mountains goldrush town of Kiandra |
Australian History | 1862 (Age 47) Note: Stuart reaches Port Darwin, founding a settlement there. Queensland's western border is moved to 139 degrees E. |
Birth of a daughter #6 | 21 March 1863 (Age 48) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia
daughter -
Adelaide Mary Loiuse Bayly
|
Death of a brother | 18 October 1863 (Age 49) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia
elder brother -
Henry Bayly
|
Burial of a brother | 20 October 1863 (Age 49) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia
elder brother -
Henry Bayly
|
Australian History | 1863 (Age 48) Note: South Australia takes control of the Northern Territory which was part of the colony of New South Wales. |
Death of a brother | 11 September 1865 (Age 50) Woolwich, London, England
elder brother -
Major George Bayly
|
Death of a brother | 30 November 1866 (Age 52) Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia
younger brother -
Charles Luke Bayly
|
Australian History | 1867 (Age 52) Note: Gold is discovered at Gympie, Queensland. Note: Saint Mary MacKillop founds Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart. |
Australian History | 1868 (Age 53) Note: The transportation of convicts to Western Australia ceases. |
Australian History | 1869 (Age 54) Note: Children of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent are removed from their families by Australian and State government agencies. |
Marriage of a daughter | Sarah Bayly - View family 12 June 1872 (Age 57) St Johns Church, Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia
son-in-law -
George Gipps Deas Thomson
daughter -
Sarah Bayly
|
Australian History | 1872 (Age 57) Note: Overland Telegraph Line linking Darwin and Adelaide opens. |
Death of a brother | 4 October 1873 (Age 59) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia
elder brother -
Edward Bayly
|
Australian History | 1873 (Age 58) Note: Uluru is first sighted by Europeans, and named Ayers Rock. |
Australian History | 1875 (Age 60) Note: SS Gothenburg strikes Old Reef off North Queensland and sinks with the loss of approximately 102 lives. Note: Adelaide Steamship Company is formed. |
Marriage of a daughter | Fannie Caroline Paget Bayly - View family January 1878 (Age 63) Newtown, New South Wales, Australia
son-in-law -
Henry Alfred Skinner
daughter -
Fannie Caroline Paget Bayly
|
Australian History | 1878 (Age 63) Note: First horse-drawn trams in Australia commenced operations in Adelaide. |
Australian History | 1879 (Age 64) Note: The first congress of trade unions is held. |
Death | 2 October 1879 (Age 65) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Address: "Havilah" |
Family with parents - View family |
father |
Nicholas Paget Bayly Sr
Birth 3 September 1769 20 Anglesey, Wales Death 16 May 1823 (Age 53) Penrith, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
14 years mother |
Sarah Laycock
Birth 19 November 1783 27 25 Dorset, England Death 13 June 1820 (Age 36) Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
Marriage: 19 November 1801 — Homebush, New South Wales, Australia |
|
15 months #1 elder sister |
Frances Bayly
Birth 17 February 1803 33 19 New South Wales, Australia Death 5 September 1824 (Age 21) Trichinopoly, India Loading...
|
3 years #2 elder brother |
Henry Bayly
Birth 1806 36 22 Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Death 18 October 1863 (Age 57) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
7 months #3 elder brother |
Major George Bayly
Birth 4 August 1806 36 22 Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia Death 11 September 1865 (Age 59) Woolwich, London, England Loading...
|
21 months #4 elder sister |
Augusta Bayly
Birth 17 May 1808 38 24 New South Wales, Australia Death 26 December 1860 (Age 52) Premier Terrace, William Street, Woolloomooloo, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
3 years #5 elder sister |
Caroline Bayly
Birth 5 December 1810 41 27 New South Wales, Australia Death 30 May 1840 (Age 29) Calcutta, India Loading...
|
2 years #6 elder brother |
Edward Bayly
Birth 7 December 1812 43 29 New South Wales, Australia Death 4 October 1873 (Age 60) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
21 months #7 himself |
Nicholas Paget Bayly Jr
Birth 14 September 1814 45 30 Penrith, New South Wales, Australia Death 2 October 1879 (Age 65) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
13 months #8 younger brother |
Charles Luke Bayly
Birth 18 October 1815 46 31 Penrith, New South Wales, Australia Death 30 November 1866 (Age 51) Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
2 years #9 younger sister |
Ellen Bayly
Birth 19 February 1818 48 34 Death 9 January 1819 (Age 10 months) Loading...
|
2 years #10 younger sister |
Sarah Ellen Maria Bayly
Birth 5 May 1820 50 36 Death 8 August 1853 (Age 33) New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
Family with Ellen Dickinson - View family |
himself |
Nicholas Paget Bayly Jr
Birth 14 September 1814 45 30 Penrith, New South Wales, Australia Death 2 October 1879 (Age 65) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
wife |
Ellen Dickinson
Death 4 October 1844 Prospect, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
Marriage: 20 May 1840 — Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia |
|
10 months #1 son |
Alfred Bayly
Birth 14 March 1841 26 Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Death 18 December 1902 (Age 61) Loading...
|
21 months #2 daughter |
Ellen Sophia Bayly
Birth 9 December 1842 28 Death yes Loading...
|
Family with Sarah Amelia Blackman - View family |
himself |
Nicholas Paget Bayly Jr
Birth 14 September 1814 45 30 Penrith, New South Wales, Australia Death 2 October 1879 (Age 65) Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
wife |
Sarah Amelia Blackman
Death 30 August 1909 "Linden", Cavendish Street, Stanmore, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
Marriage: 25 January 1848 — Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia |
|
1 year #1 daughter |
Sarah Bayly
Birth 8 February 1849 34 Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Death yes Loading...
|
7 years #2 daughter |
Fannie Caroline Paget Bayly
Birth 29 January 1856 41 Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Death yes Loading...
|
5 years #3 son |
Nicholas Paget Bayly
Birth 23 December 1860 46 Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Death 6 July 1883 (Age 22) Liverpool, England Loading...
|
2 years #4 daughter |
Adelaide Mary Loiuse Bayly
Birth 21 March 1863 48 Mudgee, New South Wales, Australia Death 26 July 1930 (Age 67) Sydney, New South Wales, Australia Loading...
|
Nicholas Paget Bayly Jr has 7 first cousins recorded
Father's family (0)
Mother's family (7)
Parents Thomas Laycock III + Isabella Bunker
Parents Thomas Laycock III + Margaret Connell
Parents Thomas Matcham Pitt + Elizabeth Laycock
Australian History | John Oxley charts the Lachlan River |
Australian History | Oxley charts the Macquarie River. |
Australian History | A penal colony is founded at Moreton Bay, now the city of Brisbane. |
Australian History | New South Wales western border is extended to 129 degrees E. Van Diemen's Land is proclaimed. |
Australian History | Charles Sturt charts the Darling River. |
Australian History | The whole of Australia is claimed as British territory. The settlement of Perth is founded. Swan River Colony is declared by Charles Fremantle for Britain. |
Australian History | Sturt arrives at Goolwa, having charted the Murray River. |
Australian History | Sydney Herald (later to become The Sydney Morning Herald) first published. |
Australian History | Swan River Colony has its name changed to Western Australia. |
Australian History | The penal settlement of Port Arthur is founded in Van Diemen's Land. |
Australian History | John Batman and John Pascoe Fawkner establish a settlement at Port Phillip, now the city of Melbourne. |
Australian History | Province of South Australia proclaimed with its western border at 132 degrees E. |
Australian History | First Prussian settlers arrive in South Australia; the largest group on non-British migrants in Australia at the time. |
Australian History | Paul Edmund Strzelecki becomes first European to ascend and name Australia's highest peak, Mount Kosciuszko. |
Occupation | To run his flock in 1840 Bayly bought a 14,000-acre (5667 ha) property at Mudgee later known as Havilah, which in biblical phraseology means 'the land of gold'. This is said to have emanated from the exclamations of a clergyman panning for gold while picnicking on the property. Bayly set about building a quality stud, buying 1000 ewes of George III flock lineage from Lawson and 2500 from George Cox of Burrundulla. The element of barter in many transactions is reflected in his purchase of a favourite ram, Old Billy, from Lue stud in 1860 for '£20 and a good horse'. For some reason, and despite being on the foundation committee of the Mudgee Pastoral and Agricultural Association in 1846, Bayly disliked entering exhibitions and shows; but he won several prizes, reflecting the high standing of his stud, for a report of the Sydney International Sheep and Wine Show of 1879 shows that P. J. Osborne's winning merinos were 'the Bayly blood' and 'what appear to be pure Baylys', a fitting tribute. Some experts claim that Bayly's strange decision in the 1870s to cull out ewes with a black tip to the staple resulted in a significant decrease in the weight of fleece produced; this was rectified when H. C. White bought the estate in 1881. In the controversy which arose in the 1860s over the comparative merits of Mudgee and Victorian wools Bayly challenged the Victorians to decide the issue by the prices obtained on the London market for 1866-67 and won by realizing 31½d. a lb. to the Victorian average of 29d. a lb.
In 1859 Bayly was among the local justices of the peace (a position he held for over thirty years) who wanted to resign because they objected to a new appointment to their ranks. He was widely respected and active in community affairs: inaugural councillor of the shire of Mudgee in 1843, foundation alderman of the break-away Cudgegong municipality in 1860 and on the committee for establishing a public hospital in 1863. With the respect went a sternness as a local columnist wrote in 1877:
When Bayly, N.P. his ears doth prick
At what the 'Purfession' doth say
He makes them and their talk tall
Feel mean, and kind o'small
Doth blunt-spoken Bayly, old Nick.
The total extent of his holdings is not clear but as late as February 1877 Bayly selected four blocks totalling 200 acres (81 ha) on the Gulgong goldfield under volunteer land orders (said to be worth £135 each) as the land was open for selection under section 14 of the Lands Act of 1861. On 28 May 1840 he married Ellen Dickenson at Prospect, New South Wales, Australia; they had one son and one daughter. On 25 January 1848 at Mudgee he married Sarah Amelia Blackman; they had three daughters and one son. After an apoplectic fit he died on 2 October 1879 and was buried in the Church of England cemetery, Mudgee. His probate was sworn at nearly £40,000, apart from his real estate. He had been a warden and trustee of St John the Baptist Church, but in 1863 had given £500 for building a Wesleyan church. A monument is on the Mudgee-Lue road opposite the entrance to Havilah, and a memorial window is in the Church of England, Mudgee.
Select Bibliography
Mudgee Independent, 15 Feb, 5, 12 Apr 1877; Sydney Morning Herald, 1, 3, 4 Nov 1879; G. H. F. Cox, History of Mudgee (State Library of New South Wales, Australia).
Author: J. L. Stewart
Print Publication Details: J. L. Stewart, 'Bayly, Nicholas Paget (1814 - 1879)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 3, Melbourne University Press, 1969, pp 121-122. |
Australian History | Australia's first municipal authority, the City of Adelaide, is established, followed by Sydney City Council. |
Australian History | New Zealand is proclaimed as a separate colony, no longer part of New South Wales. |
Australian History | Copper is discovered at Kapunda in South Australia. |
Australian History | Australia's first parliamentary elections held for the New South Wales Legislative Council (though voting rights are restricted to males of certain wealth or property). |
Australian History | The ship Cataraqui is wrecked off King Island in Bass Strait. It is Australia's worst civil maritime disaster, with 406 lives lost. |
Australian History | Western Australia becomes a penal colony. |
Australian History | Victoria separates from New South Wales. |
Australian History | Bendigo Petition and Red Ribbon Rebellion at Bendigo |
Australian History | The Eureka Stockade |
Australian History | The transportation of convicts to Norfolk Island ceases. |
Australian History | Van Diemen's Land name changed to Tasmania. |
Australian History | Victorian Committee reported that a 'federal union' would be in the interests of all the growing colonies. However, there was not enough interest in or enthusiasm for taking positive steps towards bringing the colonies together. |
Australian History | Sydney and Melbourne linked by electric telegraph. |
Australian History | SS Admella wrecked off south-east coast of South Australia with the loss of 89 lives. |
Australian History | John McDouall Stuart reaches the centre of the continent. South Australian border changed from 132 degrees E to 129 degrees E. |
Australian History | The ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition occurs. |
Australian History | Stuart reaches Port Darwin, founding a settlement there. Queensland's western border is moved to 139 degrees E. |
Australian History | South Australia takes control of the Northern Territory which was part of the colony of New South Wales. |
Australian History | Gold is discovered at Gympie, Queensland. |
Australian History | The transportation of convicts to Western Australia ceases. |
Australian History | Children of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent are removed from their families by Australian and State government agencies. |
Australian History | Overland Telegraph Line linking Darwin and Adelaide opens. |
Australian History | Uluru is first sighted by Europeans, and named Ayers Rock. |
Australian History | SS Gothenburg strikes Old Reef off North Queensland and sinks with the loss of approximately 102 lives. |
Australian History | First horse-drawn trams in Australia commenced operations in Adelaide. |
Australian History | The first congress of trade unions is held. |