Blood Gold: Native Police, Bushrangers, and Law and Order on the Goldfields

Blood Gold: Native Police, Bushrangers, and Law and Order on the Goldfields

by Marji Hill
Blood Gold: Native Police, Bushrangers, and Law and Order on the Goldfields

Blood Gold: Native Police, Bushrangers, and Law and Order on the Goldfields

by Marji Hill

Paperback

$29.99 
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Overview

Gold! Hidden Stories of Australia's Past, Book 5

Gold discoveries in Australia created an unprecedented population explosion and with it came crime and lawlessness.

In Blood Gold Marji Hill, author of more than 70 publications, tells:

- About law and order on the goldfields.

- How gold was a target for theft.

- How the Native Police were used to enforce law and order.

- How with the expanding frontier the Native Police were used to "disperse" First Nations people from their lands to make way for colonisation.

- How the Native Police were a symbol of white colonial attitudes towards First Nations people.

- About Australia's first Chinese bushranger, and

- Stories of some female bushrangers.

If you relish the uncovering of hidden stories, iconic episodes or truth-telling to do with Australia's past, then this beautifully illustrated book and the others in the series are for you.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780645483482
Publisher: Prison Tree Press
Publication date: 08/26/2022
Series: Gold! Hidden Stories of Australia's Past , #5
Pages: 136
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.35(d)

About the Author

Marji Hill, artist and author, is a highly respected international author as well as a seasoned business executive, researcher, and coach. She fostered the spirit of reconciliation in all her writings since she was Research Fellow in Education at the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies in Canberra. Marji has produced more than seventy (70) books mostly on Australia's First Nations people. Her publications include the bibliography Black Australia and in 1989 she was Project Coordinator for Australian Aboriginal Culture the official Australian Government publication on First Nations people. In 1988 Six Australian Battlefields, which she co-authored with Al Grassby, was published by Angus and Robertson and a decade later with Allen & Unwin. Her nine-volume encyclopaedia, Macmillan Encyclopaedia of Australia's Aboriginal Peoples was published in 2000. In 2009 she published The Apology: Saying Sorry To The Stolen Generations. Marji's recent publications extend to self-improvement and self-help with publications like Staying Young Growing Old and Inspired by Country, an art book. Painting has been a lifetime passion for Marji. Her formal art training took place in the 1980s at the ANU School of Art & Design. She has had eight solo exhibitions and she has participated in various group shows. One of her paintings was included in the 2004-2005 Art Gallery of Ballarat's Travelling Exhibition Eureka Revisited: the Contest of Memories. Other paintings were commissioned by the Citigold Corporation. Jupiter's Lucky Strike celebrates the discovery of gold by First Nations boy, Jupiter Mosman in 1871 at Charters Towers in North Queensland. Another, a portrait of Jupiter Mosman, resides in the World Theatre in Charters Towers. Marji's paintings are held in many private collections both in Australia and overseas and she is represented in the Art Gallery of Ballarat and the Australian Catholic University collections. Marji has travelled extensively both within Australia and internationally, working as a consultant, doing speaking engagements, motivating people, and developing her art career. She resides on Queensland's Gold Coast where she pursues her interests in writing, painting, mentoring, publishing, and internet marketing.
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