
This book gives us unique views of the life and struggles of an Australian woman in surmounting unbelievable hardships in remote and isolated parts of Queensland. We are taken into the small town of Gatton in rural Queensland in the early 1900's before the days of electricity and then to the city of Ipswich where my mother studied a college course in dress-making, millinery and cooking. We have views of the remote township of Burketown in the 1940's during the latter stages of World War II, and its connection to the outside world by a barely passable dirt track. Though this book covers the period of my mother's lifetime, it also includes her perception of Australia's origins from the time of Cook's voyage of 1768-1770, and her place, and that of other Australians of her generation, in historical developments that followed. The meticulous preparations for an expedition of 11 ships and hundreds of mistreated convicts to a largely unknown land in the South Seas have few parallels in history. Columbus commanded three ships and the Mayflower was a single ship. My mother shows sympathy for the plight of the brutally treated convicts of the penal colony but is proud of the new nation they helped create. She is saddened by the loss of 100,000 Australians in wars, in particular such conflicts as the Boer War and the Vietnam War, which were entirely unnecessary. While living at Burleigh Heads, Queensland she enjoyed the pristine landscape and could understand how sad it must have been for Aborigines forced out of that beautiful coastline. My mother was the daughter of Australian born parents of English, German and Welsh origins. Having family members with German surnames was a problem which she and many other Australians had to confront during and after World Wars I and II. After marrying my father whose family had empire loyalist sympathies, she skilfully avoided tensions which could have arisen. After living through hard times in rural Queensland at the beginning of the Twe
Page Count:
252
Publication Date:
2016-09-15
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