European Australians Explained

Group:European Australians
Pop:More than 54.7% of the population (2021 census)[1]
English Australians: 8,385,928
Irish Australians: 2,410,833
Scottish Australians: 2,176,777
Italian Australians: 1,108,364
German Australians: 1,026,138
Greek Australians: 424,744
Dutch Australians: 381,948
Polish Australians: 209,281
Maltese Australians: 198,989
Croatian Australians: 164,362
Welsh Australians: 156,108
French Australians: 148,927
Spanish Australians: 128,693
Macedonian Australians: 111,352
Serbian Australians: 94,997
Regions:All states and territories of Australia
Languages:Predominantly Australian English
ItalianGermanGreekDutchOther European languages[2] [3]
Religions:Predominantly Christianity

European Australians are citizens or residents of Australia whose ancestry originates from the peoples of Europe. They form the largest panethnic group in the country.[4] At the 2021 census, the number of ancestry responses categorised within European ancestral groups as a proportion of the total population amounted to more than 57.2% (46% North-West European and 11.2% Southern and Eastern European).[1] It is impossible to quantify the precise proportion of the population with European ancestry. For instance, many census recipients nominated two European ancestries, tending towards an overcount. Conversely, 29.9% of census recipients nominated "Australian" ancestry (categorised within the Oceanian ancestry group, although most of them are likely to be of Anglo-Celtic or European ancestry), tending towards an undercount.

Since the early 19th century, people of European descent have formed the majority of the population in Australia. Historically, European immigrants had great influence over Australian culture and society, which results in the perception of Australia as a European-derived country.[5] [6]

The majority of European Australians are of British IslesEnglish, Irish, Scottish, or Welsh – ancestral origin. While not an official ancestral classification, they are often referred to as Anglo-Celtic Australians. Other significant ancestries include Italian, German, Greek, Dutch, European New Zealanders, Polish, Maltese, and Scandinavian.[7] [8]

Classification

The Australian Bureau of Statistics and Australian Census does not collect data based on race. Instead, it collects information on distinct ancestries, of which census respondents can select up to two. For the purposes of aggregating data, the Australian Bureau of Statistics in its Australian Standard Classification of Cultural and Ethnic Groups (ASCCEG) has grouped certain ancestries into certain categories, including the following two broad European groupings:

While officially part of the North-West European classification, Australians of English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh or Cornish ancestral origins are often informally referred to as Anglo-Celtic Australians.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics has stated that most people nominating "Australian" ancestry have at least partial Anglo-Celtic European ancestry, although they are officially categorised as part of the Oceanian group.

History

Early sightings by Europeans

The first records of European mariners sailing into 'Australian' waters occurs around 1606, and includes their observations of the land known as Terra Australis Incognita (unknown southern land). The first ship and crew to chart the Australian coast and meet with Aboriginal people was the Duyfken captained by Dutchman, Willem Janszoon.

Between 1606 and 1770, an estimated 54 European ships from a range of nations made contact. Many of these were merchant ships from the Dutch East Indies Company and included the ships of Abel Tasman. Tasman charted parts of the north, west and south coasts of Australia which was then known as New Holland.

Seebaer van Nieuwelant (born 27 July 1623), son of Willemtgen and Willem Janszoon, was born south of Dirk Hartog Island, in present-day Western Australia. Nieuwelant was the First white child born in Australia.

In 1770, Englishman Lieutenant James Cook charted the Australian east coast in his ship HM Barque Endeavour. Cook wrote that he claimed the east coast for King George III of Great Britain on 22 August 1770 when standing on Possession Island off the west coast of Cape York Peninsula, naming eastern Australia "New South Wales'. The coast of Australia, featuring Tasmania as a separate island, was mapped in detail by the English mariners and navigators Bass and Flinders, and the French mariner, Baudin. A nearly completed map of the coastline was published by Flinders in 1814.

This period of European exploration is reflected in the names of landmarks such as the Torres Strait, Arnhem Land, Dampier Sound, Tasmania, the Furneaux Islands, Cape Frecinyet and La Perouse. French expeditions between 1790 and the 1830s, led by D'Entrecasteaux, Baudin, and Furneaux, were recorded by the naturalists Labillardière and Péron.

Luis Vaez de Torres from Spain was also one of the first Europeans to explore Australia.[9]

First settlement by Europeans

The British Crown Colony of New South Wales started with the establishment of a settlement at Sydney Cove by Captain Arthur Phillip on 26 January 1788.[10] This date later became Australia's national day, Australia Day. These land masses included the current islands of New Zealand, which was administered as part of New South Wales until it became a separate colony in 1841.[11] Van Diemen's Land, now known as Tasmania, was first settled in 1803.

British and Irish settlers

The first European Australians came from United Kingdom and Ireland.[12] [13]

The First white child born in New South Wales was Rebecca Small (22 September 1789 – 30 January 1883), was born in Port Jackson, the eldest daughter of John Small[14] a boatswain in the First Fleet which arrived at Botany Bay in January 1788.

The First white child born in Victoria was William James Hobart Thorne (25 November 1803[15] – 2 July 1872) was born at Port Phillip, in what was still part of New South Wales but became Victoria

Other British settlements followed, at various points around the continent, most of them unsuccessful. In 1824, a penal colony was established near the mouth of the Brisbane River (the basis of the later colony of Queensland). In 1826, a British military camp was established in Western Australia at King George Sound, to discourage French colonisation. (The camp formed the basis of the later town of Albany.) In 1829, the Swan River Colony and its capital of Perth were founded on the west coast proper and also assumed control of King George Sound. Initially a free colony, Western Australia later accepted British convicts, because of an acute labour shortage.

The British Colonial Office in 1835 issued the Proclamation of Governor Bourke, implementing the legal doctrine of terra nullius upon which British settlement was based, reinforcing the notion that the land belonged to no one prior to the British Crown taking possession of it and quashing earlier treaties with Aboriginal peoples, such as that signed by John Batman. Its publication meant that from then, all people found occupying land without the authority of the government would be considered illegal trespassers.[16]

Separate colonies were created from parts of New South Wales: South Australia in 1836, New Zealand in 1840, Victoria in 1851, and Queensland in 1859. The Northern Territory was founded in 1863 as part of South Australia. The transportation of convicts to Australia was phased out between 1840 and 1868.

The European population grew from 0.3 percent of the population of the continent at 1800 to 58.6 percent at 1850.[17] In 1868, the population of European Australians was 1,539,552.[18]

Massive areas of land were cleared for agriculture and various other purposes, in addition to the obvious impacts this early clearing of land had on the ecology of particular regions, it severely affected indigenous Australians, by reducing the resources they relied on for food, shelter and other essentials. This progressively forced them into smaller areas and reduced their numbers as the majority died of newly introduced diseases and lack of resources. Indigenous resistance against the settlers was widespread, and prolonged fighting between 1788 and the 1930s led to the deaths of at least 20,000 Indigenous people and between 2,000 and 2,500 Europeans.[19]

Irish formed about 25 per cent of the European Australian population in the nineteenth century.[13] Germans formed the largest non-British community for most of the 19th century.[20]

In 1971, nine out of the top ten birthplace groups were from European countries and accounted for 77.2% of all people born overseas. People from the United Kingdom still form the largest group. However, their number as a proportion of the total overseas-born population has declined, falling from 40.6% (1,046,356) in 1971 to 17.7% (1,078,064) in 2016.[21]

After World War II

Following World War II, the Australian government instigated a massive program of European immigration.[22] After narrowly preventing a Japanese invasion and suffering attacks on Australian soil for the first time, it was seen that the country must "populate or perish". Prior to WWII, Australia had viewed itself as largely of British and Irish ancestry but after WWII the success of the United States and the reason for its success, that is largely the creation of a European diaspora, could not be ignored by Australia. Immigration brought traditional migrants from the United Kingdom along with, for the first time, large numbers of southern and central Europeans, as well as Eastern European Australians. A booming Australian economy stood in sharp contrast to war-ravaged Europe, and newly arrived migrants found employment in government-assisted programs such as the Snowy Mountains Scheme. Two million immigrants arrived between 1948 and 1975, many from Robert Menzies' newly founded Liberal Party of Australia dominated much of the immediate post-war era, defeating the Australian Labor Party government of Ben Chifley in 1949. Menzies oversaw the post-war expansion and became the country's longest-serving leader. Manufacturing industry, previously playing a minor part in an economy dominated by primary production, greatly expanded. Since the 1970s and the abolition of the White Australia policy from Asia and other parts of the world, Australia's demography, culture and image of itself has been radically transformed.

In 1987, the vast majority of European Australians were descendants either of Anglo-Irish-Scots who arrived after 1850, or of Greeks, Italians, Hungarians, South Slavs, Poles and Germans who emigrated after 1945.[23]

Demographics

Notably, Australia does not collect statistics on the racial origins of its residents, instead collecting data at each five-yearly census on distinct ancestries, of which each census respondent may choose up to two.[24] At the 2021 census, the number of ancestry responses categorised within European ancestral groups as a proportion of the total population amounted to 57.2% (including 46% North-West European and 11.2% Southern and Eastern European).[1] It is impossible to quantify the precise proportion of the population with European ancestry. For instance, many census recipients nominated two European ancestries, tending towards an overcount. Conversely, 29.9% of census recipients nominated "Australian" ancestry (categorised within the Oceanian ancestry group although the Australian Bureau of Statistics has stated that most of them are likely to have at least partial Anglo-Celtic European ancestry), tending towards an undercount.

At the 2021 census, the most commonly nominated European ancestries were as set out in the following table.[1]

Persons nominating European Australian Ancestries in 2021
AncestryPopulation
English Australian8,385,928
Irish Australian2,410,833
Scottish Australian2,176,777
Italian Australian1,108,364
German Australian1,026,138
Greek Australian424,744
Dutch Australian381,948
Polish Australian209,281
Maltese Australian198,989
Croatian Australian164,362
Welsh Australian156,108
French Australian148,927
Spanish Australian128,693
Macedonian Australian111,352
Serbian Australian94,997

Historical demographics

Australia enumerated its population by race between 1911 and 1966, by racial-origin in 1971 and 1976, and by self-declared ancestry since 1986.[25] From 1986 onwards, only estimates can be obtained from ancestry. The 1991 and 1996 census did not include a question on ancestry.[26]

The following table shows the proportion of Australian residents nominating European race or ancestry at various points in history.

Year% of pop.
1911 98.8[27]
1921 99.0[28]
1933 99.2
1947 99.3[29]
1954 99.0[30]
1961 99.4
1966 98.7
1976 96.22[31] [32]
1987 93.0[33]
1999 88.2[34]
2016 76.0[35] [36]
2021 57.2[37]

Ancestral origins

The following table shows the numbers of Australians claiming various European ancestries at selected national census historical intervals.

Ancestral
origins
1986 / %2001 / %2006 / % 2011 / %2016 change 2011-16
Albanian11,31313,1420.1%15,907
Australian3,402,40721.8%6,739,59435.9%7,371,82337.1%7,098,48633.0%7,298,243+2.81%
Austrian41,49042,3410.2%44,411
Basque5410.0%6120.0%
Belarusian1,5600.0%1,6640.0%
Belgian8,8960.0%10,0220.0%11,968
Bosnian18,4630.1%20,2470.1%23,630
British5,6810.0%6,2620.0%9,385
Bulgarian4,8980.0%5,4360.0%6,766
Catalan1120.0%1710.0%
Channel Islander1,1600.0%1,1270.0%
Croatian118,0490.6%126,2700.6%133,268
Cypriot10,722 0.0%22,6800.1%
Czech21,1940.1%22,7720.1%24,475
Danish50,4140.3%54,0260.3%59,293+9.75%
Dutch310,082335,4931.6%339,549+1.21%
English[38] 6,607,22842.4%6,358,88033.9%6,283,64731.6%7,238,53333.7%[39] -36.1%[40] 7,852,224+8.48%
Estonian8,2340.0%8,5510.0%9,580+12.03%|-| Finnish|||||20,987|0.1%|22,420|0.1%|24,144|+7.69%
French98,333110,3990.5%135,382+22.63%|-| French Canadian|||||1,686|0.0%|1,836|0.0%|||-| German|||||811,543||898,674|4.2%|982,226|+9.3%
Gibraltarian1840.0%1770.0%
Greek365,1501.8%378,2701.8%397,431+5.07%
Hungarian67,6230.3%69,1600.3%73,614+6.44%
Icelandic7590.0%9290.0%1,088+17.12%|-| Irish|902,679|5.8%|1,919,727|10.2%|1,803,736|9.1%|2,087,758 |9.7%-10.4%[41] |2,388,058|+14.38%|-| Italian|||||852,421||916,121|4.3%|1,000,006|+9.16%|-| Latvian|||||20,061|0.1%|20,124|0.1%|20,509|+1.91%|-| Lithuanian|||||13,275|0.1%|13,594|0.1%|16,295| +19.87%|-| Luxembourg|||||167|0.0%|212|0.0%|236|+11.32%|-| Macedonian|||||83,983||93,570|0.4%|98,441||-| Maltese |||||153,802||163,990|0.8%|175,555| +7.05%|-| Moldovan |||||231|0.0%|374|0.0%|||-| Montenegrin|||||1,168|0.0%|1,554|0.0%|||-| Norwegian|||||20,442|0.1%|23,037|0.1%|26,258| +13.98%|-| Polish|||||163,802|0.8%|170,354|0.8%|183,974| +8%|-| Portuguese|||||41,226|0.2%|46,519|0.2%|61,885| +33.03%|-| Romanian|||||18,325|0.1%|20,998|0.1%|24,558||-| Russian|||||67,056||74,317|0.3%|85,657|+15.26%|-| Scottish|740,522|4.7%|540,046|2.9%|1,501,200|7.6%[42] |1,792,622|8.3%|2,023,470| +12.88%|-| Serbian|||||95,362||69,544|0.3%|73,901||-| Slovak|||||8,504|0.0%|10,053|0.0%|46,186||-| Slovene|||||16,085|0.1%|17,150|0.1%|||-| Spanish|||||84,327||92,952|0.4%|119,956||-| Swedish|||||30,378||34,029|0.2%|40,214| +18.18%|-| Swiss|||||26,512|0.1%|28,947|0.1%|31,567| +9.05%|-| Ukrainian|||||37,584|0.2%|38,791|0.2%|||-| Welsh|no data|no data|84,246|no data|113,244|0.6%|125,597|0.6%|144,582| +15.12%|-| European |||||9,037||12,504|0.1%|||- class="sortbottom"! Total!!!!!!!!!!|-|colspan="15" style="text-align:left;" | Source:1986,[43] 2016[44] |}

European born population

The following table shows the proportions of European-born and British Isles-born residents at various points in history.

European-born population in Australia
YearEuropean-born
% of overseas-born
United Kingdom
/ Ireland
% of overseas-born
1861 671,049 92.8%
1891 901,618 90.3%
1901 753,832 88.5%79.2% [45]
1911 664,671 88.3% 78.0% [46] [47] [48]
1921 744,429 89.1% 80.2%
1933 807,358 89.7% 78.9%
1947 651,606 87.8% 72.7%
1954 1,155,06490.3%51.6%
1961 1,596,212 90.2%42.6% [49]
1966 1,893,511 88.9%42.6% [50]
1971 2,196,478 85.7%42.2%
1976 2,210,817 81.3%
1981 2,232,718 75.0% 41.1%
1986 2,221,80268.4%34.7%
1991 2,300,773 62.4% 31.17%
1996 2,217,00956.7% 28.7%[51] [52]
2001 2,136,052 52.0%
2006 2,077,90747.1%[53]
2011 2,131,053 40.3% 20.8% [54] [55]
20162,088,867 33.9%

Political involvement

Colonial period

As the earliest colonists of Australia, settlers from England and their descendants often held positions of power and made or helped make laws often because many had been involved in government back in England. In the original six separate British self-governing colonies of Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, and Western Australia agreed to unite and form the Commonwealth of Australia, establishing a system of federalism in Australia.

National founders

The lineage of most of the national founders was British (especially English) such as:

  • Sir Henry Parkes is often regarded as the "Father of Federation" in Australia. During the late 19th century, he was the strongest proponent for a federation of Australian territories. Parkes died before Australia federated, and was never able to see his plan come to fruition.[56]

Various other founders of Australia have also been unofficially recognised:

Culture

European-Australian culture is integral to the culture of Australia. The culture of Australia is essentially a Western culture influenced by the unique geography of the Australian continent, the diverse input of Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and other Oceanian people, the British colonisation of Australia that began in 1788, and the various waves of multi-ethnic migration that followed.[60] As the English were always the largest element among the settlers, their cultural influence was naturally greater than that of the Irish, Welsh or Scots. Evidence of a significant Anglo-Celtic heritage includes the predominance of the English language, the common law, the Westminster system of government, Christianity (Anglicanism) as the once dominant religion, and the popularity of sports such as cricket and rugby; all of which are part of the heritage that has shaped modern Australia.[61] Australian culture has diverged significantly since British settlement.

Several states and territories had their origins as penal colonies, with the first British convicts arriving at Sydney Cove in 1788. Stories of outlaws like the bushranger Ned Kelly have endured in Australian music, cinema and literature. The Australian gold rushes from the 1850s brought wealth as well as new social tensions to Australia, including the miners' Eureka Stockade rebellion. The colonies established elected parliaments and rights for workers and women before most other Western nations.[62]

Language

Australian English is a major variety of the English language and is used throughout Australia. Although English has no official status in the Constitution, Australian English is the country's de facto official language and is the first language of the majority of the population.

Australian English began to diverge from British English after the founding of the colony of New South Wales in 1788 and was recognised as being different from British English by 1820. It arose from the intermingling of early settlers from a great variety of mutually intelligible dialectal regions of the British Isles and quickly developed into a distinct variety of English.[63] Australian English differs from other varieties of English in vocabulary, accent, pronunciation, register, grammar and spelling.

The earliest form of Australian English was first spoken by the children of the colonists born into the colony of New South Wales. This first generation of children created a new dialect that was to become the language of the nation. The Australian-born children in the new colony were exposed to a wide range of dialects from all over the British Isles, in particular from Ireland and South East England.[64]

The native-born children of the colony created the new dialect from the speech they heard around them, and with it expressed mateship. Even when new settlers arrived, this new dialect was strong enough to blunt other patterns of speech.

A quarter of the convicts were Irish. Many had been arrested in Ireland, and some in Great Britain. Many, if not most, of the Irish convicts spoke either no English at all, or spoke it poorly and rarely. There were other significant populations of convicts from non-English speaking part of Britain, such as the Scottish Highlands and Wales.

The most commonly spoken European languages other than English in Australia are Italian, Greek and German.

Music

Another area of cultural influence are Australian Patriotic songs:

Architecture

The Sydney Opera House was formally opened on 20 October 1973, by Queen Elizabeth II.[67] After a gestation beginning with Utzon's 1957 selection as winner of an international design competition. The government of New South Wales, led by the premier, Joseph Cahill, authorised work to begin in 1958 with Utzon directing construction. The government's decision to build Utzon's design is often overshadowed by circumstances that followed, including cost and scheduling overruns as well as the architect's ultimate resignation.[68]

Australia has three architectural listings on UNESCO's World Heritage list: Australian Convict Sites (comprising a collection of separate sites around Australia, including Hyde Park Barracks in Sydney, Port Arthur in Tasmania, and Fremantle Prison in Western Australia); the Sydney Opera House; and the Royal Exhibition Building in Melbourne. Contemporary Australian architecture includes a number of other iconic structures, including the Harbour Bridge in Sydney and Parliament House, Canberra. Significant architects who have worked in Australia include Governor Lachlan Macquarie's colonial architect, Francis Greenway; the ecclesiastical architect William Wardell; the designer of Canberra's layout, Walter Burley Griffin; the modernist Harry Seidler; and Jørn Utzon, designer of the Sydney Opera House. The National Trust of Australia is a non-governmental organisation charged with protecting Australia's built heritage.

Prime Ministers

See main article: List of Prime Ministers of Australia.

, there have been 31 Prime Ministers of Australia. The ancestors of all these Prime Ministers have all been European and Anglo-Celtic (English, Scottish, Northern Irish, Welsh, or Irish). Some ancestors of four Prime Minister's did not emigrate from Britain or Ireland: some of the ancestors of Chris Watson were German (his father was German Chilean), some of the ancestors of Malcolm Fraser were European Jews, some of Tony Abbott's ancestors were Dutch migrants (one of his grandparents), and Anthony Albanese's ancestors on his father's side were Italians.

1st Edmund Barton (English)

2nd Alfred Deakin (English, Welsh)

3rd Chris Watson (German, English)

4th George Reid (Scottish)

5th Andrew Fisher (Scottish)

6th Joseph Cook (English, Irish)

7th Billy Hughes (Welsh)

8th Stanley Bruce (Ulster Scottish, Irish)

9th James Scullin (Irish)

10th Joseph Lyons (Irish)

11th Earle Page (English, Scottish)

12th Robert Menzies (Scottish, Cornish)

13th Arthur Fadden (Irish, Northern Irish)

14th John Curtin (Irish)

15th Frank Forde (Irish)

16th Ben Chifley (Irish)

17th Harold Holt (English, Irish, German)

18th John McEwen (Ulster Scottish, English, Irish)

19th John Gorton (English, Irish, German)

20th William McMahon (Irish, English)

21st Gough Whitlam (English, Scottish)

22nd Malcolm Fraser (Scottish, English-Jewish)

23rd Bob Hawke (Cornish)

24th Paul Keating (Irish, English)

25th John Howard (English, Scottish, Irish)

26th Kevin Rudd (English, Irish)

27th Julia Gillard (English, Irish, Welsh, Scottish)

28th Tony Abbott (English, Welsh, Dutch)

29th Malcolm Turnbull (English, Scottish)

30th Scott Morrison (Scottish, English, Irish)

31st Anthony Albanese (Irish, Italian)

Breakdown

The following is a breakdown of the ethnic origins of Australians based on a 2018 study that used data from the 2016 census.[69]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Australian Bureau of Statistics : Census of Population and Housing: Cultural diversity data summary, 2021. XLSX. Abs.gov.au. 26 July 2022.
  2. Web site: 4102.0 - Australian Social Trends, 2014. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 18 March 2014. 21 August 2016.
  3. Web site: 2071.0 - Reflecting a Nation: Stories from the 2011 Census, 2012–2013. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 2012-06-21. 21 August 2016.
  4. Web site: paa2012. 2021-08-31. paa2012.princeton.edu.
  5. Book: Don. Grant . Seal. Graham . Australia in the World: Perceptions and Possibilities : Papers from the "Outside Images of Australia" Conference, Perth, 1992 . 1994 . Black Swan Press, Curtin University of Technology . 978-0-646-16487-8 . 365 .
  6. Kerry . Brown . Oz's Reorientation . . 24 . 13 June 2013 . 24 December 2015 .
  7. Web site: Glenn - The Census Expert . What's your ancestry? . blog.id.com.au . 15 November 2012. 24 December 2015.
  8. Web site: Main Features - Main Features . . 2019-04-18 . Abs.gov.au . en-AU . 2019-11-10 .
  9. Web site: Australia's European History.
  10. Asche. Wendy. Trigger. David. Native Title Research in Australian Anthropology. Anthropological Forum. 21. 3. 2011. 219–232. 0066-4677. 10.1080/00664677.2011.617674. 145616055.
  11. For example, the UK New South Wales Judicature Act of 1823 made specific provision for administration of land in New Zealand, by the New South Wales Courts, stating: "And be it further enacted that the said supreme courts in New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land respectively shall and may inquire of hear and determine all treasons, piracies, felonies, robberies, murders, sexual conspiracies and other offences of what nature or kind soever committed or that shall be committed upon the sea or in any haven river creek or place where the admiral or admirals have power authority or jurisdiction or committed or that shall be committed in the islands of New Zealand".
  12. Book: Wesley, Michael. Michael Wesley. Leo Suryadinata. Leo Suryadinata. Nationalism and Globalization: East and West. https://books.google.com/books?id=F9LxMx9ThRgC&pg=PA176. 2000. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. 978-981-230-073-7. 176. 7. Nationalism and Globalization in Australia. The early European Australians were not only Protestant English and Welsh convicts, but also Scots and Catholic Irish....
  13. Fritz. Clemens. From Plato to Aristotle—Investigating Early Australian English. Australian Journal of Linguistics. 24. 1. 2004. 57–97. 0726-8602. 10.1080/0726860032000203218 . 57202825.
  14. News: Personal . . 41 . 3042 . New South Wales, Australia . 1 May 1928 . 27 September 2019 . 2 . National Library of Australia.
  15. News: The Late Robert Thorne . . LIV . 6,116 . Tasmania, Australia . 27 September 1889 . 2 November 2019 . 2 . National Library of Australia.
  16. Web site: Governor Bourke's 1835 Proclamation of Terra Nullius. Migration Heritage Centre of New South Wales. 2011. 24 December 2015.
  17. Book: Harris, P. M. G.. The History of Human Populations: Migration, urbanization, and structural change. 15 February 2017. 2003. Greenwood Publishing Group. 978-0-275-97191-5. 444.
  18. Book: Mallett, Ashley Alexander. Ashley Mallett. The Black Lords of Summer: The Story of the 1868 Aboriginal Tour of England and Beyond. 2002. University of Queensland Press. 978-0-7022-3262-6. 110.
  19. Book: Grey, Jeffrey. Jeffrey Grey. A Military History of Australia. https://books.google.com/books?id=RF4a1rm0an8C&pg=PA28. 20 February 2017. 3rd. 2008. Cambridge University Press. 978-1-139-46828-2. 28–40. 2. The Military and the Frontier, 1788–1901.
  20. Book: Leitner, Gerhard. Australia's Many Voices: Australian English--the National Language. 2004. Walter de Gruyter. 978-3-11-018194-4. 79–80.
  21. http://www.aph.gov.au/binaries/library/pubs/bn/sp/migrationpopulation.pdf Top 10 countries of birth for the overseas‐born population since 1901
  22. Book: Primary Australian History: Book E. 9781741266887. 2008. R.I.C. Publications.
  23. Book: Dixson, Miriam. Miriam Dixson. The Imaginary Australian: Anglo-Celts and Identity, 1788 to the Present. 1999. UNSW Press. 978-0-86840-665-7. 113.
  24. Web site: 4713.0 – Population Characteristics, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians . Australian Bureau of Statistics . 4 May 2010.
  25. Web site: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples and the Census After the 1967 Referendum. Abs.gov.au. 5 July 2011. 3 February 2016.
  26. Web site: Fact sheet Ancestry. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 28 June 2022.
  27. Web site: Pocket Compendium of Australian Statistics Volumes 20-24. 1934 . 27 June 2022.
  28. Web site: 4. AUSTRALIA MALES, FEMALES and PERSONS classified according to RACE: Censuses, 1921 to 1947.. Census of the Commonwealth of Australia 1947, Part XV - Race. 829. 30 June 1947. 3 February 2016.
  29. Web site: Official Year Book of the Commonwealth of Australia No. 37 1946 and 1947. 27 June 2022.
  30. Web site: No. I.-Population, by Race (a): Australia, Censuses, 1933 to 1966. Census of Population and Housing 1966, Commonwealth of Australia. 11. 30 June 1966. 3 February 2016.
  31. Web site: CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING, 30 JUNE 1976 COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA TABLE 7 POPULATION BY RACIAL ORIGIN. 2. 27 June 2022.
  32. Total population of 13,548,448 with an ethnic European population of 12,037,152
  33. Web site: A Century of Population Change in Australia . Australian Bureau of Statistics . 25 January 2001 . 3 December 2023.
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