Students' Notebook,
Governor Macquarie The
Argus, Melbourne 22 December 1956 |
Students' Notebook -
Governor Macquarie was a forward-looking man. He was concerned with
what the little colony would become in the future. His ideas on this subject were quite clear. He didn't
believe that gentleman settlers with large properties were for the good of
the colony. He wanted to settle ex-convicts on the land. These
people, he felt, and their descendants would make real peasant proprietors
and become devoted to the land of their adoption. He made certain conditions about land holding. When
land was granted to a man it could not be transferred for at least five
years. Some of it at least should be cleared and a reasonable part
cultivated. These ideas were simpler to state than to enforce. When
free settlers came, with letters from the British government, ordering him to
give them land in proportion to their capital. Macquarie found himself in
difficulties. What is now Burwood - a
Sydney suburb - along the eastern bound ary of the
Parramatta road north ward to include Concord and Rhodes,
was divided into lots varying from 80 to 120 acres for free settlers after
1793. In 1804, Macarthur was promised 10,000 acres, and other men of capital from two to 3,000. The stage was set for a twofold development - that of graziers raising sheep and cattle on large holdings, and
smallholders raising crops. Governor Macquarie was an active man. He personally
visited much of the colony and encourage
exploration. Lawson, Blaxland, Wentworth
crossed the Blue Mountains (1813) and William Cox cut the road to Bathurst. Evans and Oxley explored the western slopes and
discovered the Liverpool plains. By 1820, the colony had extended its frontiers 300
miles north to south, and 400 east to west. No mean achievement, considering'
the difficulties: of the early days. Australia has reason to be proud of the efforts of its
early pioneers. They were men fit to be compared with any in any other land
at any other time. They faced unknown dangers and overcame immense
obstacles. Their work and its importance is not
always sufficiently recognised. The names of Hamilton Hume, who explored the country
around Razorback, and Throsby, who discovered the Goulburn plains, can be
added to those already mentioned. These men opened up a new land for the benefit of the
future. |