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A list, ordered by date of birth (and, if the date is either unspecified or repeated, ordered alphabetically by surname) of births in 1851 of Australian literary figures, authors of written works or literature-related individuals follows, including year of death. 12 January – Philip Holdsworth poet (died 1902) [6]
Melbourne Advertiser (1 January 1838 – 1851) The Melbourne Express (5 February 2001 – 10 September 2001) Melbourne Punch; Melbourne Star (1934) Melton Express; Mercury (Fitzroy) Moorabbin News; Mornington Standard; mX (free afternoon commuter newspaper) Newsday (30 September 1969 – 3 May 1970) North Melbourne Advertiser (1873–1894)
The newspaper was founded as an opposition to South Australia's first newspaper, the South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register, edited by George Stevenson. As private secretary to Governor John Hindmarsh (as well as holding a number of other government appointments) Stevenson espoused a strong party line in the pages of The Register .
It saw the start of the Australian gold rushes with significant gold discoveries in both New South Wales (near Bathurst) in February and Victoria in July. [1] As a result of the Gold Rushes, the European population of Victoria increased from 97,489 in 1851 to 538,628 in 1861 and the population of NSW increased from 197,265 in 1851 to 350,860 in ...
Colonial elections were held in South Australia on 21 February 1851. Only 16 of the 24 seats in the unicameral Legislative Council were popularly elected but was the first occurrence of voting franchise in the colony. The 1855 election was the second and last of this type.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "1851 in Australia" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
The Victorian-goldfields to Adelaide route was notable for the distance and amount of gold carried, almost a quarter of all gold, 1,520,578 ounces (43,110 kg), transported within Victoria during the gold rush (1851-1865). [8] The Gold Escort route started in the Bendigo area and then went west across the Pyrenees to the small settlement of Horsham.
Front page of the first issue titled as The Bathurst Free Press and Mining Journal, 28 May 1851.. The Bathurst Free Press and Mining Journal, also published as The Bathurst Free Press, Bathurst Times, Bathurst Argus, Bathurst Daily Argus, Western Times and Western Advocate, was a semiweekly English language broadsheet newspaper published in Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia.