Australia did not exist before 26 January 1788 - Part 2: Establishing the Settlement. (Rev. 2024)
Part 2: Establishing the settlement (Revised Feb. 2024)
Once Captain Arthur Phillip had chosen Sydney Cove in Port Jackson for the place of British settlement, he did not delay ordering the First Fleet to remove there. He arrived in the Sirius before the rest of the fleet on the evening of 25 January 1788. The next morning, on the 26th, he rowed ashore and with his contingent of men carried out the fundamental act of establishing a new nation. The formal acts would follow on 7 February. These are described in detail at the same time demonstrating in philosophical and historical terms the legitimacy of the act of establishment.
Text for the presentation can be found here:
http://www.gerardcharleswilson.com/australia-did-not-exist-before-26-january-1788/
My essay, Edmund Burke on What it Means to be a People, should be read with my two-part presentation, Australia did not exist before 26 January 1788.
http://www.gerardcharleswilson.com/edmund-burke-on-what-it-means-to-be-people/
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Australia did not exist before 26 January 1788 - Part 1: The Voyage Out (Revised 2024)
Part 1: The Voyage Out
This claim sounds absurd until one considers what a nation is. I unpack the concept of nation in two parts. Part 1 provides a brief account of the expeditions that searched for the mythical Land of the South and the eventual discovery of a continental mass below New Guinea and the Indonesian islands. It was Captain James Cook’s crucial voyages of discovery (1769-70) that gave definitive form to the continental mass and the islands close by. After the British government decided to establish a settlement on the continent now named New Holland, a fleet of 11 ships set sail for Botany Bay in what Cook had named New South Wales. Captain Arthur Phillip, the First Fleet's Leader, rejected Botany Bay as a place suitable for settlement. After some reconnoitring, he chose a cove in Port Jackson. Part 2 describes the process of settlement.
Text for the presentation can be found here:
http://www.gerardcharleswilson.com/australia-did-not-exist-before-26-january-1788/
My essay, 'Edmund Burke on What it Means to be a People', should be read with my two-part presentation, Australia did not exist before 26 January 1788.
http://www.gerardcharleswilson.com/edmund-burke-on-what-it-means-to-be-people/
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Seeking the Ancestors: A Father and Son Road Trip Episode 6
AUSTRALIA'S COLONIAL HISTORY - BUILDING A NATION
Episode 6 of A FATHER AND SON ROAD TRIP – SEEKING THE ANCESTORS is the final episode. Gerard and Roger visit Tallawang, ‘17 Miles from Gulgong’, where James Patrick and Mary Jane Wilson established their farm in 1878. Tallawang was a new settlement. Their story was like that of thousands of second-generation Australians who wanted to establish themselves in a nation just on one hundred years old. Like all ‘selectors,’ they committed themselves to long hours of backbreaking work, often just to stay alive. But their work and endurance were the backbone of the new nation called Australia. Without these ordinary, determined, self-sacrificing people, Australia would not have become the successful nation it is. James Patrick and Mary Jane were the son and daughter of convict fathers from London and Manchester and free-settler mothers from Wiltshire.
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A Tour of Mornington, its Beaches, and History (Revised)
This video is the first of a series about places in Australia and their social history, or occasions and celebrations that are typically Australian. The focus will be on the social environment. This first video is about Mornington, a popular bay suburb on the Mornington Peninsula, about 44 miles or 70 kilometres southwest of Melbourne city. Besides displaying Mornington as a vibrant modern resort town, I show where the great explorer Matthew Flinders came ashore in Port Phillip Bay in 1802. Flinders was the first European to walk along the shores of the bay and the first to take survey readings from Snapper Point.
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Christmas and New Year Celebrations in Australia 2023
The Wilson family again recorded their Christmas and New Year celebrations. This time it is for 2023 going into 2024. We think it is a typically Aussie celebration with a little adjustment to the normal. We exchange presents on New Year's Day.
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A rough, rainy Manly Ferry trip across Sydney Harbour
One of my favorite trips in Sydney is taking the ferry at Circular Quay to Manly. One of the main features is that it mostly follows the course the First Fleet took when it entered Port Jackson to settle in Sydney Cove. This trip was unexpectedly rough.
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Seeking the Ancestors: A Father and Son Road Trip Episode 5
AUSTRALIA'S COLONIAL HISTORY - BUILDING A NATION
Episode 4 of Seeking the Ancestors followed Michael and Elizabeth Jones from Michael’s successful wool production business on their Combara property to Musswellbrook where their expectations of rising further were reasonable. But tragedy and poor judgement thwarted them. Episode 5 tracks James Joseph Wilson from his success on his Budgeon run to his end. There was no premature death for James Joseph. He lived to old age, but he had to suffer family loss and he made some fatal (in one case mad) decisions. We will see what those decisions were and how they affected his life.
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Introduction to Edmund Burke Channel (revised)
This video is the introduction to The Edmund Burke Society (Australia) section of my channel. I have a master’s degree in philosophy. My thesis was Natural Law Conservatism: The Epistemological Foundations of the Political Philosophy of Edmund Burke. I will present papers analyzing and explicating Edmund Burke’s thought as well as commenting on political events from a Burkean perspective. Burke’s thought is as relevant to modern politics as it was to Great Britain in the 18th century. I will also show how Edmund Burke’s thought influences my non-fiction and fiction writing. More widely I will discuss Conservatism as a political philosophy and Burke's influence in it. The banner is of St Stephen’s Chapel, sometimes called the Royal Chapel of St Stephen, in the old Palace of Westminster. St Stephen’s Chapel served as the chamber of the House of Commons of Great Britain from 1547 to 1834. Edmund Burke was one of its most illustrious members.
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Seeking the Ancestors: A Father and Son Road Trip Episode 4
AUSTRALIA'S COLONIAL HISTORY - BUILDING A NATION
In this episode, having arrived in the Coonamble district at the end of episode 3, Gerard and Roger go in search of the Combara and Budgeon properties where Michael Jones and James Joseph Wilson ran their sheep farms. They had no trouble finding the properties. But better still, they had the great fortune to meet by chance along the road, Wayne, the farm manager of the present Budgeon property. He invited them to view Budgeon’s present farming activity. The visit, which they videoed, gave them a good insight into the lives and experience of the Wilson and Jones farming families. They then followed Michael Jones and his family to Muswellbrook, 230 miles or 370 kms southeast towards the New South Wales coast. Michael had planned to settle in Muswellbrook and further his business interests, but tragedy awaited him and his wife Elizabeth. Episode 5 will be about how James Joseph Wilson fared after he left Budgeon in 1859.
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Seeking the ancestors: A Father and Son Road Trip Episode 1 (Revised April 2023)
AUSTRALIA'S COLONIAL HISTORY - BUILDING A NATION
This is the first episode of a series of videos (6) showing Gerard Charles Wilson and his son Roger on a trip in search of the places the Wilson and Jones ancestors lived and worked in. This first episode begins at Botany Bay where Captain Cook and the First Fleet landed, before going to Sydney Cove where convict James Joseph Wilson arrived in 1827 and Michael Henry Jones in 1829. We then follow James Joseph and Michael to their first assignments west of Sydney at Bringelly and Richmond. Episode 2 will follow them to the Rylstone area and the farms where they worked and found their wives.
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Woolworths' Treachery Betrayal
In early January 2024, the news broke that the Woolworths Group had got rid of their Australia Day merchandise (flags, caps, towels, and so on). They would no longer sell anything to do with Australia Day. The decision was clearly ideological. Woolworths management had joined the woke elites who supported the Aboriginal activists. This was in the face of the crushing defeat the activists suffered in the referendum to authorize what in reality was a separate Aboriginal state. Outrage thundered across Australia. Woolworths remained unrepentant. In this video, I show on the basis of the information on Woolworths’ corporate website, that the Woolworths’ Group is fully committed to the wokish agenda. The outrage of the ordinary Australian was justified.
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Introduction to Gerard Charles Wilson's channel (updated Oct 2023)
This channel presents my intellectual and creative activities. It is about my books, fiction and non-fiction, and the processes of writing and publishing. It presents my videos on Australian history and society. In fiction, I write in the genre of the Catholic novel. I will discuss what my novels are about and what a Catholic novel is compared to general fiction. Among writers of the Catholic novel are Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, and J.R.R. Tolkien. My non-fiction books are about political and social issues in the context of Australian events but as they relate to a universal conservative position. I will comment on developments in the Catholic Church, in the wake of the Second Vatican Council, from a political rather than theological view. The channel also presents my abiding deep interest in Edmund Burke. I have a master’s degree in philosophy, my thesis on Edmund Burke. I offer presentations on aspects of Edmund Burke’s political philosophy. My presentation of Burke's political philosophy will inform my comments on specific events.
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Seeking the Ancestors: A Father and Son Road Trip Episode 3
Episode 3 Gerard and Roger find Dabee and Bogee Farms. Both are modern working farms, situated in the most beautiful natural surroundings. It takes their breath away when they reflect that James Joseph Wilson, Michael Henry Jones, and Elizabeth and Jane Harris (their great-grandparents x2, x3) came together on Dabee farm. Gerard presents the history of the Harris family before they set off for the Coonamble district where Michael and James Josephs ran their farms, Combara and Budgeon respectively. Episodes 4 will reveal the sad circumstances of Michael Jones’s tragic end. Episode 5 will follow James Joseph’s life after leaving Budgeon.
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Seeking the Ancestors: A Father and Son Road Trip - Episode 2
Gerard and Roger continue their road trip in search of their ancestors. Their first call is Hartley Village, near Lithgow, over the Blue Mountains. Hartley is an 1840s colonial village frozen in time. They film the 1830s courthouse, Farm Inn, Shamrock Inn, and St Bernard's Church before proceeding to Bathurst to learn more about James Joseph Wilson. From Bathurst they continue over the hills to Kandos in the Rylstone district. They overnight at the Railway Hotel. The Railway Hotel was comfortable but there was something unusual about it. Roger has a bit of fun with its unusualness. They go in search of Dabee Farm where James Joseph and Michael Jones worked. They film the farms and surrounds, and Gerard does his presentations. But Gerard is not sure they have the right place. They proceed to Rylstone where they visit Cottage Museum, the headquarters of Rylstone Historical Society. Shirley Tunnicliff, president of Rylstone Historical Society, welcomes them and confirms they had videoed the wrong farm. She explains where Dabee Farm is. Despite the mistake, Gerard and Roger filmed the lush farmland where their ancestors first settled after arriving in Australia. It was a thrill to be on the sacred land of their ancestors. Episode 3 will continue the story about Dabee and Bogee Farms before they drive to Coonamble where Michael Jones and James Joseph ran their own holdings. Combara and Budgeon, a little south of Coonamble, will be Episode 4.
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Red Hill Show 2023 - Mornington Peninsula, Victoria
The Red Hill Horticultural Society was formed in 1896 and it put on a show later the same year. Flowers, vegetables, fruit, farm produce, and art were among the displays. Exhibitors and spectators came not only to exhibit and stare but also to see who was producing what on the Mornington Peninsula. The Red Hill Show had its start on 29 March 1922. It was a huge success, people coming from as far away as Melbourne, 50 miles distant from Red Hill. The show is still a huge success but the original agricultural purpose has partly given way to activities for kids, a wonderful offering of national foods, and stalls for various social purposes. This video shows the excitement and pleasure enjoyed at the Red Hill Show 2023.
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Key Concepts in Edmund Burke's political philosophy
I explain some of the most important ideas and concepts in Burke's thought by references to his work, including to some of the best-known quotations.
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