fbpx
FBP InternationalFBP InternationalFBP International

History

Victoria

History

Victoria’s Aboriginal history and culture are an essential part of the State’s cultural identity. Aboriginal people have occupied Victoria for thousands of years and continue today as a proud and living culture. The Victorian Aboriginal community comprises several distinct communities across the StateState based on location, language and cultural groups, and extended family. Most regional organizations are based on traditional associations with the land that significantly predate Victoria’s European colonization.

Discovery of Gold

The word that gold had been discovered in Victoria in 1851 traveled across the world quickly. As letters and rumors circulated throughout the world, vast numbers of men started for Australia eager to make their fortune. Before the rush, it had been difficult to attract immigrants to Victoria, but now the price for single men was raised by one pound to get more women and family men to Australia. By the end of 1851, over 30 000 immigrants had arrived. They came from Britain, Europe, America, and China.

Between 1851 and 1861, Victoria grew from a new colony of 76 000 people to the largest and most prosperous with 540 000 people – 45 percent of the Australian population. At the end of the decade, Chinese people made up eight percent of Victoria’s population and formed over 20 percent of the goldfields population.

As a result of the gold rush, Melbourne became the financial center of Australia and New Zealand. Between 1901 and 1927, Melbourne was the capital of Australia, while Canberra was under construction. It was also the largest city in Australia at the time.

The colony and StateState of Victoria provided the impetus for Australia’s Commonwealth and the primary national life institutions. The pastoral wealth of Victoria, then the gold rush, the mercantile enterprises that followed created a society of remarkable capacity….The rapid advances of democracy made us a social laboratory. Victoria and Melbourne were the vanguards of the nation.” (Professor Stuart Macintyre, Inaugural Chair of the History Council)