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GSQ Blog→Categories Chinese immigration

Category Archives: Chinese immigration

Tracing Chinese Ancestors (cont’d from 16/1/2017)

GSQ Blog Posted on January 22, 2017 by Geraldine LeeJanuary 22, 2017

In 21st Century Australia, discrimination based on race, creed, gender or sexual preference, age or physical capability is prohibited by law. Most of us regard this as progress, as evidence of Australia’s commitment to basic human rights, an acknowledgement of the cultural benefits of tolerance and diversity. In colonial Australia, British assumptions about race – the inferiority of the Oriental, the inability of ‘whites’ to labour in the searing heat of the tropics – gave way to an economic imperative: populate or … Continue reading

Posted in 1870's gold rush, Chinese ancestry, Chinese immigration | Tagged GSQ, NAA, QSA, SLQ

Tracing Chinese Ancestors

GSQ Blog Posted on January 14, 2017 by Geraldine LeeJanuary 24, 2017

The story of Chinese immigrants is the story of every Australian, whether the journey was in the 19th or 20th or 21st Century, a voyage of three months or 20 hours by jet – the differences are of degree only. Chinese immigration to Australia was rare before the mid 1800s when gold was discovered in Victoria. Thousands of Chinese responded to the lure of mountains of gold awaiting anyone willing to work long hours panning and digging and living a … Continue reading

Posted in Chinese ancestry, Chinese immigration

R.I.P. Sam Foo

GSQ Blog Posted on June 28, 2016 by GSQ AdminJune 28, 2016

A few weeks after the discovery of gold in north Queensland in 1873, Chinese began arriving from the played-out Victorian goldfields. New Chinese immigrants arrived at the port of Cooktown at a rate of one thousand a month, most from the Pearl River region of Canton. By the end of 1874, almost one-half the population of Palmer River, inland from Cooktown, was Chinese; by 1875 the Chinese population of Palmer River swelled to more than 15,000; by 1877 Chinese outnumbered … Continue reading

Posted in 1870's gold rush, Chinese immigration, Cobb & Co. Coach, Maytown (Palmerville), Palmer Goldfield, Uncategorised, White Australia policy

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