Lecture 7 - Chinese-Aboriginal Families of Northwest Queensland: A Focus on Archival Resources
Date: Thursday, 2 December 2021
Time: 4pm-5pm (Sydney time)
Following Federation, Chinese-Aboriginal families in Queensland laboured under numerous legislative frameworks including the Aboriginals Protection and Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act (1897) which could be construed as designed to discourage the existence of these families. Simultaneously Indigenous and Alien in their own Country, Aboriginal women either legally married to or in long-term relationships with Chinese men, were subjected to scrutiny by the local police engaged in their diverse legislative roles. The ambiguous status of these women led to widespread confusion by those in authority of how they should be treated resulting in unequal application of the law. For example, under the War Precautions (Alien Registration) Regulations 1916, only some Aboriginal women and their Queensland-born children were registered with the Chinese husbands. Other families were either ignored or referred to higher authorities by the local Protectors. This intense surveillance generated a trail of correspondence some of which is preserved in the Queensland State Archives and the National Archives of Australia.
This presentation follows several families as they negotiate the legislation and the individuals charged with mediating their relationships and way of life. It will also focus on the research methodology undertaken and highlight the existence of record sets which will be of interest to the descendants of Chinese-Aboriginal families from across Northern Australia.
Dr Hilda Maclean is an alumna of the University of Queensland. When she was attached to the University of Queensland Culture
Chinese Australian History
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Catch up Online: 2022 Chinese Australian History Online Seminar Series 3
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Catch up Online: 2021 Chinese Australian History Online Seminar Series 2
- Lecture 7 - Chinese-Aboriginal Families of Northwest Queensland: A Focus on Archival Resources
- Lecture 6- Sojourners or Settlers? Early Chinese Migrants to Australia: A Case Study of Tasmania
- Lecture 5 -Chinese Merchants in the Northern Territory and Formations of White Australia
- Lecture 4 - Chinese Opera in Australia - Not Just Chinese
- Lecture 3 - A History of the Chinese Youth League in Australia from its inception until the Liberation of China in 1949 by Dr Drew Cottle
- Lecture 2 - The 1912 “Chinese Revolution at Atherton” by Professor Darryl Low Choy
- Lecture 1 - From Family Story to Australia’s Story: Tim Watts in Conversation with Stephen FitzGerald
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Catch up Online: 2020 Chinese Australian History Online Seminar Series 1