1868 in Australia explained
The following lists events that happened during 1868 in Australia.
Incumbents
Governors
Governors of the Australian colonies
Premiers
Premiers of the Australian colonies
Events
- 10 January – The last convict ship to Western Australia, the Hougoumont, arrives in Western Australia. This brought the end of penal transportation to Australia.[2]
- February–May – A series of atrocities in retaliation to the killing of a police officer, a police assistant, and a local workman result in the deaths of between 15 and 150 Aboriginal people around Flying Foam Passage on Murujuga (Burrup Peninsula) in Western Australia. These atrocities are later referred to as the Flying Foam Massacre.
- 5 March – The Queensland Parliament passes the Polynesian Labourers Act to regulate the employment of Pacific Islanders recruited through blackbirding.[3] [4]
- 12 March – Henry James O'Farrell fires a revolver into the back of Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh (second son of Queen Victoria) while the latter is picnicking in the beachfront suburb of Clontarf. It was Australia's first attempted political assassination. O'Farrell first claimed that he was acting under instruction from Melbourne Fenians but later retracted the claims. He had problems with alcoholism and mental illness.
Economy
Sport
Births
Deaths
- 21 April – Henry James O'Farrell, attempted assassin (born in Ireland) (b. 1833)
- 10 June – Charles Harpur, poet (b. 1813)
- 21 July – William Bland, New South Wales politician and medical practitioner (born in the United Kingdom) (b. 1789)
Notes and References
- Although formally appointed Governor, Pine never actually came to Western Australia to take up his post; the role was filled by an administrator, Lieutenant Colonel John Bruce.
- Book: Australia through Time. Random House Australia. 2009. 9781741668865. 16th. North Sydney NSW.
- News: Polynesian Laborers Act 1868 . Queensland Government Gazette . IX . 47 . 4 March 1868 . 217 . 2021-01-09 . Text Queensland . 18 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210718075442/https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/data/UQ_218064/Queensland_Gov_Gazette_1868_v9.pdf?Expires=1626594967&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJKNBJ4MJBJNC6NLQ&Signature=Zu7TdvIKaF723zMTUcKEBvsDDsnt3CDFi02H67FROAC9uVLo8YzGvFYE9jc8sP14i0JR61P3NfTT3UI2fIjdA-h~foLRirkdsPXkDerX3ULTSz3ul5ssub6svZ~oEbibNmndz2btv0onIp90NfACtMwBEvlfVnnRHSX8GLfEvLkqa473fpVgfH6VwH4o4qpbyB7eN-YwZruCgZpqbBZFBlcDVldKc~ZKPaeIx1ITpXxPE8m4ru8Ft5RwrNa327XGXnhKvmlSxD0ZA-H~OK23dfSnPiCZpHpCU2L2k1kMxwoTmeZJ48bXG-UvTlFKzdzFx~3HdJNJnkaqaZzCefPafQ__ . live .
- News: 16 March 1868. Intercolonial news: Queensland. LVII. 2. The Sydney Morning Herald. 9304. New South Wales, Australia. 9 January 2021. Trove. 18 July 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210718075334/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/13159407. live.