The Colony: A history of early Sydney

Front Cover
Allen & Unwin, 2009 - History - 721 pages
The Colony is the story of the marvellously contrary, endlessly energetic early years of Sydney. It is an intimate account of the transformation of a campsite in a beautiful cove to the town that later became Australia's largest and best-known city.

From the sparkling beaches to the foothills of the Blue Mountains, Grace Karskens skilfully reveals how landscape shaped the lives of the original Aboriginal inhabitants and newcomers alike. She traces the ways in which relationships between the colonial authorities and ordinary men and women broke with old patterns, and the ways that settler and Aboriginal histories became entwined. She uncovers the ties between the burgeoning township and its rural hinterland expanding along the river systems of the Cumberland Plain.

This is a landmark account of the birthplace of modern Australia, and a fascinating and richly textured narrative of people and place.

'This is a spellbinding saga of the beginnings of modern Australia. The Colony is a stunning achievement. It will change the way you feel about Australian history.' - Professor Tom Griffiths, Australian National University
 

Contents

Introduction
1
The Sydney environment
19
2 Encounters in Eora country
32
3 The Camp the canvas
61
Public farms and common lands
83
5 Seeding and breeding
98
6 Views from Flagstaff Hill
158
The Macquaries in Sydney
189
12 Taking possession
386
13 War on the Cumberland Plain
448
14 Aftermath
517
Epilogue
540
Abbreviations
550
Notes
551
Illustrations
612
Bibliography
622

8 The face of the country
233
9 Nefarious geographies
280
Women and country
310
11 Soft colony
351
Index
663
Back flap
679
Back cover
680
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About the author (2009)

Grace Karskens teaches Australian History at the University of New South Wales. Her groundbreaking book The Rocks: Life in Early Sydney won the 1998 NSW Premier's Award for Local and Regional History and established the author as a leading historian of colonial Australia. As Project Historian for the world-renowned Cumberland-Gloucester Streets Archaeological Project (1994-1999) she combined history and archaeology to explore the lost world of the Rocks neighbourhoods in her book Inside the Rocks. She has also written local histories and is a regular contributor to journals on topics ranging from convicts to museums to grave-robbers.

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