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Change in Australia Our Shared Past

Change in Australia Our Shared Past. Symbols Symbols are pictures or patterns that represent something. Australia has many symbols that represent aspects of our national personality. This symbol is Australian Flag

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Change in Australia Our Shared Past

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  1. Change in Australia Our Shared Past

  2. Symbols Symbols are pictures or patterns that represent something. Australia has many symbols that represent aspects of our national personality This symbol is Australian Flag It has in it a Union Jack and 5 star of the southern cross and a commonwealth star. It was created like this to symbolize the link with Great Britain and it also represents Australians federal system because of 7 states. This symbol is the Boxing Kangaroo Flag It has in it a gold boxing kangaroo and a green background. It was created like this to symbolize the successful 1983 challenge to the American Cup and in sporting events. This symbol is the Australian coat of arms. It has in it an Emu and a Kangaroo and it also has golden wattle blossom and a shield and commonwealth star. It was created to symbolize Australian wildlife and Australian nature all the states. And the shield representing all the states This symbol is the Eureka Flag It has in it the southern cross and a blue background and 5 stars. The 5 stars was created like this to symbolize the constellation. And the southern cross to represent the Australian geographical position in the world and people fighting (the miners and the government because they were charging to much.) This symbol is the Australian made symbol It has in it a yellow kangaroo and green background It was created like this to symbolize because it’s the colour of the golden wattle blossom. This symbol is Aboriginal Flag It has in it black half and a red half and a yellow disk. It was created like this to symbolize (black) the black skin. (red) red earth and the red ochre. (disk) the sun.

  3. One state’s emblems in detail

  4. bushrangers By Oliver Maher, Mia Masendycz, Ria Mooney and Sebastian Pfeiffer

  5. Bushrangers are criminals from the 1800’s they robbed travelers, banks and shops.Some bushrangers killed people during robberies. They were escaped convicts who needed to rob and were a common problem. WHAT ARE bushrangers?

  6. Who were the important people? Ned Kelly was one of the most famous Australian bushrangers in the world. He was so important because he was one of the most known bushrangers in Australia.

  7. WHEN WERE BUSHRANGERS AROUND? Bushrangers were mostly around in the 1800’s they were also around in the late 1770’s and 1920’s.

  8. How did bushrangers change Australia? • Bushrangers changed Australia by making us think of what they they have done for many years and how we look at life. bushrangers like Ned Kelly and Black Caeser fought for what they believed in.

  9. How bushrangers attacked people

  10. By: Jale Sezai Jamie Hartnett James Gilson Matilda Ohrt Jack Chester

  11. Contents • 3. Introduction • 4. When did it happen? • 5. What was happening? • 6. Who where the important people? • 7. How did it change? • 8. Other Info • 9. Bibliography

  12. Introduction • The top source of gold for over 100 years has been in the Witwatersrand in the basin of South Africa also known as the rand.

  13. When Did It Happen? • The first Gold was found by Europeans after they crossed the Blue mountains in 1823. The governors of NSW did not want gold to be found. Mc Brien Strzelecki in 1839. He also said all the gold that was found was the governments property.

  14. What Was Happening? In the Australian gold rush in a certain area people found lots of gold like Ballarat and Melbourne. During the Gold Rush people were dieing from polluted water and diseases that were caught by others.

  15. Who Where The Important People? Charles Hotham He was the governor at the time. He wasn’t a bad fellow but he made a few bad decisions that put the miners off side. Edward Hargraves He claimed he alone discovered the first Gold Rush in Australia. Most of us know there were several other people that were involved in the first discovery. Peter Lalor He was to become the leader of the protesting miners and, in turn, their political reprehensive in Victoria.

  16. How Did It Change? • While some people where made rich by gold rushes, many diggers returned empty handed to the schools, offices, farms and blacksmith shops that they had abandoned months before. However many found that although they had not found there fortune, life was better than it was in the past. Different cultures also came to Australia for the Gold Rush.

  17. Other Info • In the gold rush the diggers ate very simple meals. Breakfast, lunch and dinner were all the same meat, bread and tea. This graph represents the population in Australia when the gold rush happened.

  18. Bibliography • Miners and Farmers by Kieran Hosty • The Golden Years By Michel Dugan • Eureka You Made It Peter Lalor By Brian Mackness • Daily Life On The Goldfields By Kimberley Webber • The Gold Rushes By Barrie Sheppard • The Golden Years 2 By David Morrissey

  19. suffrage By: Josh Calwell Finn O’Callaghan Sahel Mardani And Savant Ridge-Cooke

  20. What is Suffrage? Suffrage means the right for women to vote for our leader.

  21. The petition was first started in 1891 and was shown to the government and it had approximately 30,000 signatures and was approximately 260 metres long and 200mm weighed. The people who made the petition on November 1891 It took a lot of years for the government to answer and they eventually told them in 1908 that women were aloud to vote that was when suffrage started. When did suffrage start? The Petition

  22. Some Important People At the Corowa convention John Quick announced that he believed not just men should be able to vote. Maybanke Anderson was the head of the women hood suffrage league witch was a group of people who believed suffrage should happen.

  23. How did Suffrage Change Australia? Suffrage made voting more fair and Australia was one of the first if not the first country to have suffrage and that made other countries to do it aswell.

  24. Bibliography Federation- Changing Australia by Anna Ciddor, Federation by John and Jennifer Barwick and we also used a website called 1891 women's petition.

  25. BY JACK, MATT SARAH &GRETA.

  26. EXPLORERS • Explorers are people who travel all over the world and discover things that other people haven’t discovered before. Some famous explorers are Captain Cook, Bass and Flinders, Burke and Wills, Willem Jansz.

  27. When did exploration happen Exploration happened at lots of different times these are a few: • Abel Tasman 1644 –On the 24th Nov he discovered Tasmania. • Willem Jansz 1606 – He was the first person to sight Australia. • James Cook 1770 – He claimed Australia for Britain. • Bass and Flinders 1799- They confirmed that Australia was separate from Tasmania or Van Deimen’s Land.

  28. What was happening? When people where exploring some were going by sea (discovering Australia) like Captain James Cook who claimed Australia for Britain, Willem Jansz who was the first European to see Australia and Bass and Flinders who discovered Bass Strait. Others were going by land (mapping Australia) like Burke and Wills who mapped Australia, John McDowell Stuart who raced against Burke and Wills to what is now Queensland.

  29. The important people Captain James Cook This is a map of captain James Cook’s three voyages. The red one is the one where he discovered Australia. James Cook was one of the first people to land on Australia after that European people started inhabiting Australia. He was one of the best known explorers but that doesn't mean he was the first one to land. He was meant to only go to Tahiti to observe the position of Venus but he was sent secret instructions to claim Australia for Britain.

  30. The important people Burke and Wills Burke and Wills were racing over the continent to be the first people to go from the south to north of Australia. They mapped Australia. Everybody apart from 1 person on the expedition died. John King only survived because he was taken in and cared for by Aborigines.

  31. The Important People • Willem Jansz On the map in the background only one side of Australia is complete this is because only one side was mapped at the time Willem Jansz was the first person to sight Australia if he hadn't sighted Australia we wouldn’t be here and people would still think there was a great south continent here. he sailed to Australia in his yacht Ducfen or “Little Dove”

  32. Did it change Australia Yes it did! If people didn’t explore we wouldn’t be here and maps would probably look like this:

  33. Bibliography • www.wikipedia.com • The deserts and beyond-Australian exploration after 1840 by John &Jennifer Barwick. • Explorers by Robert Hillman. • Australian Explorers by Robert Coupe.

  34. Timeline • 1600’s-1800’s- Exploration of Australia • 1606- Willem Jansz was the first European to see Australia • 1644-Abel Tasman discovered Tasmania • 1770- Captain Cook claims Australia for Britain • 1770’s- First Bushrangers • 1787- First boat left from England • 1788- First fleet arrived in botany bay • 1799- Bass and Flinders discover Bass strait • 1800’s- Bushrangers around • 1823- Gold was first found in Australia • 1851-1861- Gold rush • 1908- People signed the petition so women could vote • 1920’s- Last bushranger • November 1891- Women got to vote for our leader

  35. We are culturally diverse! There are many groups that make up the rich mix of Australian culture. http://museumvictoria.com.au/origins/ http://www.immi.gov.au/media/fact-sheets/04fifty.htm Iranians in Australia Iran is in the Middle East next to Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Jordan, Turkey and Azerbaijan. Few Iranians settled in Victoria in the nineteenth century, with only 7 recorded in the 1891 census. When the leader in Iran changed in 1979 there was a quick increase in the number of Iranians settling in Victoria. Iranian people bought slow, guitar music, and different styles of dress to Australia. Girls wear long sleeves and long dresses and head-scarves because of their religion which is Islam. If you believe in Islam, you are a Muslim. Chinese in Australia China is a country in Asia with neighboring countries of India and Mongolia. Chinese people first came to Australia hoping to find gold in the 1850’s. Most of the migrants came from the Pearl river Delta region. Chinese also came because the government changed the policy in 1973. The policy they changed was restricting the migration for non-Europeans. Chinese have brought new languages and traditions to Australia like the Annual Moon Festival and Chinese new Year. They have bought new exercises like Tai-Chi. In China Town, located in Little Burke St Melbourne, they have lots of Chinese restaurants and some foods they have brought are rice, dumplings, rice cakes, noodles and oyster and soy sauces.

  36. We are culturally diverse- continued! Ukrainians in Australia Ukraine is a country in Eastern Europe. It is next to Russia and Poland. In 1948 the first Ukrainians came to Australia as refugees and later in 1954 they came as immigrants. They usually wear a sarojka. It is like a shirt, but has a criss-cross and swirl pattern on the cuffs, collars and edges. Ukrainians eat food like Borsht. Borsht is a red soup made with vegetables including beetroot. Ukrainians have many different musical instruments such as a bandora. A bandora is like a guitar with a round end. Japanese in Australia Japan is a country island in Asia next to China. They first came to Australia in 1880and 1890. by 1891 only 30 had come to Australia. In 2001 a total of 4,675 Japanese to Australia. Japanese came to Australia because the white Australian policy had ended but some decided to stay in Japan because of the war they had had. Some things Japan has brought out to Australia are food such as Sushi, Nuto, Soba Noodles and many more. They also brought out lots of different electronic and vehicle companies such as Nintendo, Panasonic, Sony Mitsubishi and Yamaha. The clothes they brought are made of flowery, shiny materials. The art that they brought includes ink painting and calligraphy which is the Japanese writing characters. Lebanese in Australia Lebanon is a small country in the Middle East bordered by Syria, Israel and the Mediterranean Sea. The first Lebanese migrants started coming to Australia in the 1800’s They came because they thought they were going to new York- so the first wave was an accident! The biggest wave was after the 1975 civil war. A civil war is when people of the same country fight each other. A celebration Lebanese people have brought to Australia is Independence Day. It is celebrated on 22nd of November and remembers when Lebanon became an independent nation. The Lebanese people have brought delicious food to Australia, including lots of kebab shops.

  37. Leaders I am…John Brumby Things I have done that show I am a leader are…. As Premier, John Brumby leads a Labor Government which has, since 1999, rebuilt Victoria’s infrastructure and services while maintaining strong budget surpluses and managing a vibrant, growing economy.  I am…Kevin Rudd Things I have done that show I am a leader areWhen Goss left office in 1995, Rudd became Senior China Consultant to the company KPMG Australia where he worked while running for office. He lost in the 1996 election but won two years later in 1998. In 2001 he was appointed Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs. Although he continued to oppose the United States war in Iraq, he continued to support the Australian-American alliance. His work made him a favorite to run for party leader, but Kevin Rudd rejected the idea, choosing to support another member instead.…. I am…Catherine Helen Spence Things I have done that show I am a leader are…. I maintained necessity of a democratic Constitution such as we hoped would evolve from the combined efforts of the ablest men in the Australian States was a just system of representation; and it was as the advocate of effective voting that I took my stand. that the fundamental who am I? I am…Edmund Barton Things I have done that show I am a leader are…. In March 1891 Barton proposed his blueprint for Federation at the National Australasian Convention. He argued that an elected senate composed of State representatives would effectively balance the powers between the States and a Federal government. who am I more about me Who am I? Who am I?

  38. Leaders I am…Captain Arthur Phillp Things I have done to show I am a leader are… Phillip was educated at the school of the Greenwich Hospital and at the age of 13 was apprenticed to the merchant navy. Phillip joined the Royal Navy at fifteen, and saw action at the outbreak of the Seven Years' Warin the Mediterranean at the Battle of Minorca in 1756. In 1762 he was promoted to Lieutenant, but was placed on half pay when the Seven Years War ended in 1763. During this period he married, and farmed in Lyndhurst, Hampshire. I am…David Unaipon Things I have done that show I am a leader are…. David Unaipon was the first Aboriginal person in Australia someone else by the name of William Ramsay Smith published it without David Unaipon’s permission to write and publish a book. His two most famous books are Aboriginal Legends (1927) and Native Legends (1929). He also wrote another book called Myths and Legends of the Australian Aboriginals in 1930, but, or his name on it. I am…Robert Menzies Things I have done that show I am a leader are…. In 1944 he helped start the Liberal Party, which in terms of winning elections, has been the most successful party in federal politics. He presided over Australia's longest period of prosperity and rising living standards this century. Who am I? who am I ? Who am I?

  39. Laws in AustraliaWe are lucky in Australia to have a government that makes good laws • Law 1: No Drink Driving. This is a good law because it keeps people safe. If you drive when your drunk you’ll crash. • Law 2: No Smuggling Drugs. This is a good law because it keeps people safe from drugs. • Law 3: No Sexual Harassment. This is a good law because it keeps people safe from the people that make them feel uncomfortable. • Law 4: No Murder This a good la because it keeps people safe from people on the streets.

  40. Rules and Laws 2Rules and laws are quite similar, but have some important differences. This Venn diagram shows these similarities and differences. They both should be obeyed

  41. Sovereign Hill We learned that they used these things called night sticks to bash people. We learned that sweets were boiled in those days. We learned that they had a stricter system. e.g. If you wore a hat in side the boys would get the cane and the girls would get the ruler. We learned that the bowling balls they used in the olden days had no holes in them.

  42. Websites-here are some other useful websites you might use • http://www.itsanhonour.gov.au/symbols/index.cfm • http://www.australia-migration.com/page/History/238 • http://museumvictoria.com.au/discoverycentre/websites-mini/immigration-timeline/ • http://www.pm.gov.au/australia/symbols/symbols.cfm • http://www.pm.gov.au/australia/symbols/icons.cfm • http://museumvictoria.com.au/federation/ • http://webtech.kennesaw.edu/jcheek3/australia.htm not made in australia, but some good links

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