Synopsis
Another England by Edwin Carton Booth depicts Victoria, Australia as a second England, where English habits, institutions, and spirit take root in a distant southern land. Booth surveys life in Victoria from its early colonial foundation through the gold rushes, detailing the settlers’ struggles, the convicts, the emergence of free settlement, and the social, political, and economic engines that shaped the youthful colony. The book contrasts the climate and abundance of resources with the English problem of perpetual pauperism, arguing that Victoria offers homes and work for English emigrants who bring labor and discipline. It covers population growth, land policy (the Port Philip separation, the 1840s-1860s Land Acts, the Miner’s Right), railways and roads, the role of newspapers, and the role of immigrants including Chinese. It also records the violent episodes—digger uprisings at Ballarat and Bendigo, the Burke and Wills expedition, and the reform movements that culminate in responsible government. Across chapters on towns like Melbourne, Ballarat, Bendigo, and Maryborough, the work blends travelogue and political economy to present a portrait of an emerging, English-like society in the antipodes.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.