This book gives a lively account of the growth of the city of Hobart from its earliest days as a convict settlement to a metropolis with wide streets and fine buildings. It is the story both of the city and of the people who built the city, its saints and sinners, its rich and its poor: the Franklins, who inspired the cultural life of the town; Farrell, who could not keep out of gaol; Henry Propsting, the goose-stealer who made good through chapel and charitable society. The transformation of the convict settlement to Hobart, capital of the flourishing island state of Tasmania, is paralleled in the lives of its people. Their lives have proved false the old belief in an ineradicable strain of villainy in convict blood, incapable of redemptio...
The geological, biological, geomorphological and human history of Tasmania makes it highly varied sc...
The chapter explores the gap between the lived experience of Australia’s founding convict mothers an...
Considering the size of its population and cultural isolation, Tasmania has produced a singular num...
This is a study of the development of social institutions in the capital city of a colony which had ...
This scene is that of a business center in Hobart, Tasmania. Hobart is the capital and largest city ...
Historical account of the choice of Sullivan's Cove and the founding of Hobart. Also includes docume...
The name Tasmania, still more its former version, Van Diemen's Land, is inextricably linked in the ...
Photograph of Risdon House, first settlement, and 'old Government House' in 'The Hobart Circuit' new...
The history of the convict system in Van Diemen's Land records that transportation oficially ceased...
James Sprent's comprehensive survey of Hobart Town was carried out towards the end of an era of ra...
This study examines the social role of the Church within the Hobart community with particular refere...
Everyone knows Australia was once a penal colony, but few realise that New Zealand prisoners were se...
James Backhouse Walker's reminiscences of life in Hobart from the 1840s to the 1860s offering fascin...
On A Bright Hillside in Paradise is a novel set in north-west Tasmania in the 1870s when Christian B...
Tasmania’s convict sites have become a drawcard for visitors as the Tasmanian Gothic sensibility has...
The geological, biological, geomorphological and human history of Tasmania makes it highly varied sc...
The chapter explores the gap between the lived experience of Australia’s founding convict mothers an...
Considering the size of its population and cultural isolation, Tasmania has produced a singular num...
This is a study of the development of social institutions in the capital city of a colony which had ...
This scene is that of a business center in Hobart, Tasmania. Hobart is the capital and largest city ...
Historical account of the choice of Sullivan's Cove and the founding of Hobart. Also includes docume...
The name Tasmania, still more its former version, Van Diemen's Land, is inextricably linked in the ...
Photograph of Risdon House, first settlement, and 'old Government House' in 'The Hobart Circuit' new...
The history of the convict system in Van Diemen's Land records that transportation oficially ceased...
James Sprent's comprehensive survey of Hobart Town was carried out towards the end of an era of ra...
This study examines the social role of the Church within the Hobart community with particular refere...
Everyone knows Australia was once a penal colony, but few realise that New Zealand prisoners were se...
James Backhouse Walker's reminiscences of life in Hobart from the 1840s to the 1860s offering fascin...
On A Bright Hillside in Paradise is a novel set in north-west Tasmania in the 1870s when Christian B...
Tasmania’s convict sites have become a drawcard for visitors as the Tasmanian Gothic sensibility has...
The geological, biological, geomorphological and human history of Tasmania makes it highly varied sc...
The chapter explores the gap between the lived experience of Australia’s founding convict mothers an...
Considering the size of its population and cultural isolation, Tasmania has produced a singular num...