Vandemonians: The Repressed History of Colonial Victoria |
By: Janet McCalman
From award-winning author and historian Janet McCalman the engrossing tale of Tasmanian convict settlers in colonial Victoria It was meant to be 'Victoria the Free' uncontaminated by the Convict Stain. Yet they came in their tens of thousands as soon as they were cut free or able to bolt.
More than half of all those transported to Van Diemen's Land as convicts would one day settle or spend time in Victoria. There they were demonised as Vandemonians. Some could never go straight; a few were the luckiest of gold diggers; a handful founded families with distinguished descendants. Most slipped into obscurity. Burdened by their pasts and their shame their lives as free men and women even within their own families were forever shrouded in secrets and lies.
Only now are we discovering their stories and Victoria's place in the nation's convict history. As Janet McCalman examines this transported population of men women and children from the cradle to the grave we can see them not just as prisoners but as children young people workers mothers fathers and colonists. From the author of Struggletown and Journeyings this rich study of the lives of unwilling colonisers is an original and confronting new history of our convict past-the repressed history of colonial Victoria.
About Author: Janet McCalman
Janet McCalman is known for her award-winning books Struggletown Journeyings and Sex and Suffering all published by MUP. She co-edited with Emma Dawson What Happens Next- Reconstructing Australia after Covid-19' in 2020. For over twenty years she taught and researched interdisciplinary history at the University of Melbourne. In 2018 she was made a Companion of the Order of Australia.
Buy Online
Vandemonians
The Repressed History of Colonial Victoria
By: Janet McCalman
booktopia.com.au
ISBN: 9780522877533
Number Of Pages: 352
Published: 28th September 2021
Do you have a Tasmanian convict in the family? You're not alone
When Arthur Calwell was immigration minister in the 1940s he would tell a story he heard from his mother about his grandfather Michael McLoughlin.
He said that McLoughlin was an Irishman who "jumped ship" to settle in Victoria in 1847.
Calwell who later became federal opposition leader admitted he had found no records to prove this.
In fact McLoughlin was a convict. Michael's great-grandson Garry McLoughlin discovered that in 1843 Michael was sentenced to 10 years in Van Diemen's Land - which changed its name to Tasmania in 1856 - for stealing a gun in rural Ireland.
If Calwell from Melbourne never knew this he wasn't alone. In her new book Vandemonians: The repressed history of colonial Victoria University of Melbourne emeritus professor Janet McCalman estimates 30000 Tasmanian ex-convicts came to Victoria. One of them was bushranger Ned Kelly's Irish father John "Red" Kelly transported in 1841 for stealing two pigs.
The book tells how they covered up their pasts to avoid shame and discrimination. "Vandemonian" was a slur used across Victoria against anyone suspected of being an "old lag" or "from the other side".
It was feared they would contaminate respectable society. Professor McCalman said ex-convicts would have been "terrified" of being exposed so they omitted from records or didn't tell children they had even been to Tasmania.
She found that many convicts were "doomed" by early trauma.
Ellen Miles a destitute former brothel keeper was charged with vagrancy in Little Lonsdale Street in 1896.
In 1839 she had been convicted in London of passing a counterfeit coin. She was 11 years old had been in custody 30 times and her mother was dead. Ellen's father wanted her transported so he wouldn't have to support her.
Professor McCalman said most convicts didn't reoffend and blended into society. Irishwoman Mary Fennelly transported for theft in Liverpool in 1840 married a pastoralist and later skins dealer Jesse Fairchild in Melbourne in 1849 and on her 1907 death left a huge estate worth £30 including a St Kilda terrace house.
Her obituary said she had travelled to Europe 14 times.
James Blackburn a civil engineer architect and surveyor was transported in 1833 for cheque forgery in London.
In Van Diemen's Land he designed buildings and a bridge moved to Melbourne in 1849 and designed the city's water supply.
The book based on six years of research involving 60 volunteers traces passengers from 126 convict ships and their descendants.
Garry McLoughlin 80 of Armadale was a researcher on the project. Like Arthur Calwell he hadn't found Michael McLoughlin in shipping records until Professor McCalman suggested he try convict records.
Garry said he and other relatives were surprised and sceptical at having a convict in the family.
But Michael's personal details and signatures of Michael's both as a farmer in Kyneton Victoria and in Irish court documents matched. "I'm quite certain about it now" Garry says.
But he says Michael could have been innocent - the witness to the firearm theft was a 14-year-old boy and the local clergy gentry and the crime victim supported Michael's court appeals.
Source: By Carolyn Webb | theage.com.au
October 24 2021
Buy Online
Vandemonians
The Repressed History of Colonial Victoria
By: Janet McCalman
booktopia.com.au
ISBN: 9780522877533
Number Of Pages: 352
Published: 28th September 2021
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