Gold Rush In Australia

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Good morning Miss. Pimm and boys today I’m going to talk to you about the Gold rush at Ballarat and how it has shaped Australia to how it is today.
The discovery of gold at the Ballarat gold fields
The Victorian gold rush also known as the Australian gold rush because it was the first major gold rush of Australia. Towards the end of August 1851, James Reagan and John Dunlop discovered the richest goldfield the world has ever seen in a place that is now the city of Ballarat. John Dunlop and James Regan discover the first few ounces of gold while panning near Canadian Creek. By the end of September 1851 there were about 10,000 people digging for gold near Ballarat. By 1852, the news had spread to England, Europe, China and America, and …show more content…

On December 3, 1854, it was the site of a conflict between gold miners, or diggers, and the government in Ballarat, Victoria. The conflict, also known as the Eureka Rebellion, is the most celebrated uprising in Australian history. The rebellion came about because the goldfield workers (known as 'diggers') opposed the government miners' licences. The licences were a simple way for the government to tax the diggers. Licence fees had to be paid regardless of whether a digger's claim resulted in any gold. Less successful diggers found it difficult to pay their licence …show more content…

But with the gold rush, a lot of people rushed into Australia and made it their home. For example, within 10 years of 1851, more immigrants arrived in Australia than the total number of convicts sent to Australia over the previous 70 years. In fact, many have observed that the discovery of gold in Victoria accelerated the end to the transportation of prisoners to Australia. This followed from the reasoning that sending convicts to Australia was not a punishment now; rather it was the ticket to a gold-digging fortune.

With the coming of more immigrants, and the economic activity that came with so much of gold being produced, cities in Victoria and even in other parts of Australia prospered.

Conclusion how it indeed changed Australia forever.
Australia's incredible gold rushes of the mid- to late-1800s produced tremendous wealth and ensured the financial survival of the struggling Australian colonies. They also tripled the country's small population, and started the democratic ideas that led to the establishment of the nation of Australia. It was a monumental turning point in Australia's history not just the gold rush in Victoria but the ones around Australia also that helped shape how Australia is

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