TY - BOOK AU - Keneally,Thomas TI - Australians T2 - Australians SN - 1741760984 (ebk) AV - DU110 .K46 U1 - 994 22 PY - 2009/// CY - Crows Nest, N.S.W. PB - Allen & Unwin KW - Aboriginal Australians KW - First contact with Europeans KW - Governors KW - New South Wales KW - History KW - Biography KW - Penal colonies KW - fast KW - Frontier and pioneer life KW - Gold mines and mining KW - Prisoners KW - Children of prisoners KW - Australians KW - ?́ƠBiography KW - Convict ships KW - Convicts KW - Australia KW - Anecdotes KW - Eureka Stockade, Ballarat, Vic., 1854 KW - Eureka Stockade (Ballarat, Vic.) KW - Victoria KW - Ballarat KW - Eureka Stockade KW - 1788-1900 KW - To 1788 KW - 1788-1851 KW - History (Australia) N1 - Fryer copy: Signed by author; Includes bibliographical references (pages 573-605) and index; Vol.2. -- 1. Old and new faces in a colonial society - 1860s to 1870s -- 2. Taking further shape - 1860s to 1870s -- 3. One hundred years complete - 1880s -- The last colonial decade - 1890s -- Seeking Federation, and having it - Late 1890s to 1914 -- The Great War -- War and Peace N2 - Thomas Keneally's "story begins by looking at European occupation through Aboriginal eyes as we move between the city slums and rural hovels of eighteenth century Britain and the shores of Port Jackson. We spend time on the low-roofed convict decks of transports, and we see the bewilderment of the Eora people as they see the first ships of turaga, or 'ghost people'. We follow the daily round of Bennelong and his wife Barangaroo, and the tribulations of warrior Windradyne. Convicts like Solomon Wiseman and John Wilson find their feet and even fortune, while Henry Parkes' arrival as a penniless immigrant gives few clues to the national statesman he was to become. We follow the treks of the Chinese diggers - the Celestials - to the goldfields, and revolutionaries like Italian Raffaello Carboni and black American John Joseph bring us the drama of the Eureka uprising. Were the first European mothers whores or matriarchs? Was the first generation of Australian children the luckiest or unluckiest on the planet? How did this often cruel and brutal penal experiment lead to a coherent civil society? To answer these and many more questions Tom Keneally has brought to life the high and the low, the convict and the free of early Australian society." -- Publisher ER -