Tracings: A new life in the colony of Victoria by Barry J Conn

Four brothers and a sister emigrated from Ireland to the Colony of Victoria between 1853 and 1858, They came as part of the gold rush, but not because of the lure of gold. They came to farm the new pastoral and agricultural estates. Life in Northern Ireland during the early 19th Century provided limited opportunities for families. After years of hard work as agricultural labourers on the large estates of the far-off colony, they became successful landowners. Their children were born as first-generation Victorians who continued in the traditional trades. However some embarked on new careers as novel opportunities became available after Federation.

Barry J Conn is a fourth generation Australian who grew up on a wheat and sheep farm at Wail, in the Wimmera district of western Victoria. He was briefly a mathematics and science secondary school teacher at the Horsham High School before becoming a botanist employed in Bulolo and Lae, Papua New Guinea, and then Melbourne and Sydney, Australia. He published many scientific papers, including the ‘Trees of Papua New Guinea’ (three volumes) and one children’s book, ‘My brother Neville is a pest.’ He retired as Principal Research Scientist from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney in 2015 and, together with his wife, now lives in rural Victoria.

Specifications:

Publisher: Greenhill Publishing

Year: 2024

Format: Paperback

Pages: 368pp

ISBN: 9781923333260

$50.00

3 in stock

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Description

Four brothers and a sister emigrated from Ireland to the Colony of Victoria between 1853 and 1858, They came as part of the gold rush, but not because of the lure of gold. They came to farm the new pastoral and agricultural estates. Life in Northern Ireland during the early 19th Century provided limited opportunities for families. After years of hard work as agricultural labourers on the large estates of the far-off colony, they became successful landowners. Their children were born as first-generation Victorians who continued in the traditional trades. However some embarked on new careers as novel opportunities became available after Federation.

Barry J Conn is a fourth generation Australian who grew up on a wheat and sheep farm at Wail, in the Wimmera district of western Victoria. He was briefly a mathematics and science secondary school teacher at the Horsham High School before becoming a botanist employed in Bulolo and Lae, Papua New Guinea, and then Melbourne and Sydney, Australia. He published many scientific papers, including the ‘Trees of Papua New Guinea’ (three volumes) and one children’s book, ‘My brother Neville is a pest.’ He retired as Principal Research Scientist from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney in 2015 and, together with his wife, now lives in rural Victoria.

Specifications:

Publisher: Greenhill Publishing

Year: 2024

Format: Paperback

Pages: 368pp

ISBN: 9781923333260

Additional information

Weight 0.945 kg
Dimensions 25.4 × 20.3 × 2.1 cm

Book Reviews Reviews

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