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Surviving Sydney Cove

Surviving Sydney Cove
Author: Goldie Alexander
Publisher: Scholastic Australia
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2010-08-01
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 1925063984

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Lizzie Harvey, a convict transported to Sydney Cove, is starved and overworked. She has to fetch water, mend clothes, please her master, care for his china-doll daughter and tiptoe around his moody soldier son. She can barely find time to dream about the way things used to be, let alone write in her diary. But write she must. It is her only hope of reaching out to the home she has left behind, all those thousands of miles across the sea.


John of Sydney Cove

John of Sydney Cove
Author: Doris Chadwick
Publisher:
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2020-05
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
ISBN: 9781922348067

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This is the story of a new country-of the days when Captain Arthur Phillip was made first Governor of New South Wales and began to build the town of Sydney, It is a sequel to 'John of the Sirius', wherein John traveled with his family to Botany Bay. John plays his part in founding the new colony: he explores the backwoods with Governor Phillip to find fresh water, and helps to build a home for Mamma and Papa and a 'cubby' for his sister Sue. He and Sue, too, help Mamma to sow seeds in the garden so that later they shall have fresh fruit and vegetables. He catches a baby 'hopping animal', makes friends with the First Australians, and finds again his friend with the cheeky grin. Many of the incidents in this story really did happen-the others might well have happened to a boy like John.


Sydney's Aboriginal Past

Sydney's Aboriginal Past
Author: Val Attenbrow
Publisher: UNSW Press
Total Pages: 242
Release: 2010
Genre: History
ISBN: 1742231160

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Revealing the diversity of Aboriginal life in the Sydney region, this study examines a variety of source documents that discuss not only Aboriginal life before colonization in 1788 but also the early years of first contact. This is the only work to explore the minutiae of Sydney Aboriginal daily life, detailing the food they ate; the tools, weapons, and equipment they used; and the beliefs, ceremonial life, and rituals they practiced. This updated edition has been revised to include recent discoveries and the analyses of the past seven years, adding yet more value to this 2004 winner of the John Mulvaney award for best archaeology book from the Australian Archaeological Association. The inclusion of a special supplement that details the important sites in the Sydney region and how to access them makes the book especially appealing to those interested in visiting the sites.


Sydney Cove

Sydney Cove
Author: John Cobley (of Sydney.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 406
Release: 1965
Genre:
ISBN:

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Camp Cove

Camp Cove
Author: Rodney McRae
Publisher: Heretic Books
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1998
Genre: Gay men
ISBN: 9780854492763

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Gay Sydneysiders are well-known for their beauty--here captured so successfully by Australian photographer Rod McRae. His models are everyday guys such as waiters, lawyers, office workers, garage mechanics, teachers and students. All share in Sydney's sunshine lifestyle, resulting in an image where body tone is as important as individuality. They pose amongst the rocks of Camp Cove, or in McRae's own imaginary world, where computer technology helps the artist produce a striking series of contemporary gay icons.--www.smarter.com.


Historic Sydney

Historic Sydney
Author: Susanna De Vries
Publisher: Boolarong Press
Total Pages: 9
Release: 2014-01-13
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1922109932

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This well-researched handsome book has become an Australian classic. Everyone with an interest in Sydney’s history should possess a copy. Painting, drawings and engravings by some of Australia’s finest artists record the establishment of the convict settlement. Through vivid text and colourful paintings we are transported back to the first hundred years of Old Sydney Town and watch it turn into a beautiful harbour city. Unlike the earliest days of London, Paris or New York, Sydney’s founding years were recorded in watercolours and drawings by trained naval and military artists, which makes this book fascinating and unique. Its pages reveal aspects of Sydney’s daily life and development with cricket matches and picnic parties in the Domain, sailing races on the harbour, the paddocks of Paddington Village and the workers’ cottages of Balmain. The book is an important record of Sydney suburbs, colonial mansions, convict cottages and part of the city that have been destroyed as well as areas that have been restored and are part of Australia’s heritage. The 120 paintings and sketches in the book bring to life the unique past of a city that has now evolved into a cosmopolitan capital and Olympic venue.


Scallywags of Sydney Cove

Scallywags of Sydney Cove
Author: Frank Clune
Publisher: Angus & Robertson
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1968
Genre: History
ISBN:

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Includes George Barrington; Margaret Catchpole; William Edwards; Sir Henry Browne Hayes; Joseph Holt; Jorgen Jorgensen; Alexander Loo Kaye; Major Semple Lisle; Simeon Lord; James Hardy Vaux.


The Sydney Wars

The Sydney Wars
Author: Stephen Gapps
Publisher: NewSouth
Total Pages: 235
Release: 2018-05-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1742244246

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The Sydney Wars tells the history of military engagements between Europeans and Aboriginal Australians – described as ‘this constant sort of war’ by one early colonist – around the greater Sydney region. Telling the story of the first years of colonial Sydney in a new and original way, this provocative book is the first detailed account of the warfare that occurred across the Sydney region from the arrival of a British expedition in 1788 to the last recorded conflict in the area in 1817. The Sydney Wars sheds new light on how British and Aboriginal forces developed military tactics and how the violence played out. Analysing the paramilitary roles of settlers and convicts and the militia defensive systems that were deployed, it shows that white settlers lived in fear, while Indigenous people fought back as their land and resources were taken away. Stephen Gapps details the violent conflict that formed part of a long period of colonial strategic efforts to secure the Sydney basin and, in time, the rest of the continent. ‘A powerful and cogent contribution to one of the most contentious aspects of Australian history: the war between British settlers and the First Nations. The fine detailed research will mean that we will have to radically reassess our understanding of the history of the first thirty years of settlement.’ —Henry Reynolds


26 Views of the Starburst World

26 Views of the Starburst World
Author: Ross Gibson
Publisher: UWA Publishing
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2012
Genre: Aboriginal Australians
ISBN: 9781742582979

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Ross Gibson continues his speculative brilliance with this work on the astronomer and colonist William Dawes, using his notebooks as source material. It is an intellectual adventure around the tensions and pleasures of language and meaning, particularly Dawes' encounters under the southern stars, sharing ideas with a small group of Indigenous people from around Sydney Harbour. Dawes called his collaborators 'the Eora'. They told him it was their word for 'people', and it might have been the first thing they watched him write down. These were the years when Britain seized the Eora country, leading eventually to the establishment of the modern nation of Australia. Fragmentary, poetic and intriguing, Gibson describes, ponders and interprets the pages of Dawes' notebooks, which are reproduced throughout.