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Australian gold rushes

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The Australian gold rushes started in 1851 when prospector Edward Hargraves proclaimed his discovery of gold near Bathurst, New South Wales, at a site Hargraves called Ophir. Six months after gold was found in New South Wales, it was found in Victoria at Ballarat, and a short time later at Bendigo Creek. Gold was found all over Australia; it was discovered in Western Australia in the 1850s, in Queensland in 1853, in the Northern Territory in 1865, and at Beaconsfield, Tasmania in 1869. With the goldrush came a huge influx of immigrants, the continent's population increasing threefold from 430,000 in 1851 to 1.7 million in 1871.

With the gold rushes came the construction of the first railways and telegraph line, multiculturalism and racism, the Eureka Stockade and the end of penal transportation to the east coast of Australia.Then dredges were used in companies.

Discoveries of gold before the rushes

Prior to Hargrave's discovery, gold had been discovered in Australia by others including Reverend WB Clarke in 1841 with further finds in 1844. When Clarke reported his discovery to the New South Wales Governor George Gipps, Gipps asked Clarke to: "Put them away, Mr Clarke, or we shall all have our throats cut!" . Gold finds in a convict society were not welcomed at the time. Although the NSW and Victorian governments later rewarded Clarke for his contribution, his financial rewards didn't compare to those for Hargraves.

Other early gold finds in the colony were:

First License

The first license was issued in Victoria on September 21, 1851. The number of gold licenses issued in N.S.W. was 12,186, of which 2,094 were issued at the Ophir; 8,637 at the Turon; 1,009 at the Meroo and Louisa Creek; 41 at the Abercrombie; and 405 at Araluen, up to October 31, 1851. (Heaton, J.H. 1984, The Bedside Book of Colonial Doings, Angus and Robertson, Sydney, published in 1879 as Australian Dictionary of Dates containing the History of Australasia from 1542 to May, 1879, p.114)

Golden Horseshoes

Mr. Cameron, a storekeeper at the Woolshed, New El Dorado, (the first member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly returned for the Ovens), rode into Beechworth, Victoria, on a horse called Castor, (belonging to Mr. Brown, of Wagga, who was in Beechworth at the time), shod with golden shoes. The weight of each shoe was 7oz. 4dcwt. The shoes were on the horse for three days in 1856. (Heaton, J.H. 1984, The Bedside Book of Colonial Doings, Angus and Robertson, Sydney, published in 1879 as Australian Dictionary of Dates containing the History of Australasia from 1542 to May, 1879, p.118)

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