Jump to content

Carl Feilberg: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
AnomieBOT (talk | contribs)
m Dating maintenance tags: {{OR}}
shuffle, copyedit, style fixes
Line 67: Line 67:
The announcement of Feilberg's death triggered a quite unprecedented reaction in the contemporary press.<ref name=obitcourier/><ref name=obitmorley/><ref name=notesmems>Notes, memorials and other obituaries: ''Sydney Morning Herald'' 26 October 1887, p.10a; ''Argus'' (Melbourne) 26 October 1887, p7g & 8e; ''Age'' (Melbourne) 26 October 1887 p6; ''Mercury'' (Hobart, Tasmania) 29 October 1887, p3e-f; ''South Australian Advertiser'' 26 October 1887, p5a; ''Evening Observer'' (Brisbane) 25 October 1887; ''Boomerang'' 19 November 1887, p.13 (Eulogy by Francis Adams); ''Boomerang'' 3 December 1887 (drawing/portrait); ''Sydney Quarterly Magazine'' Vol IV, No 4, 1887, p379-80; ''Brisbane Telegraph'' 25 October 1887, p.5b.; ''Queenslander'' 29 October 1887; ''Wide Bay News'' 27 October 1887; ''Gympie Times'' 27 October 1887, p3c (John Flood); ''North Queensland Telegraph'' (Townsville) 26 October 1887; ''Queensland Figaro'' 29 October 1887, p687 (John Edgar Byrne).</ref> The coverage and wording of these articles by far exceeds those honouring the passing of any of his contemporary and in many cases more famous colleagues.{{efn|One only need to compare with the obituaries of contemporary Qld journalists such as G. Lukin, W. O'Carroll, C. H. Buzacott or W. H. Traill. (OR? citation?)}} His funeral at Brisbane's Toowong Cemetery was attended by a wide range of friends, journalists and several high-ranking politicians from both sides of Queensland politics, including the former Premier, Sir [[Thomas McIlwraith]].<ref>''Brisbane Courier'' 27 October 1887, p5d, Feilberg's funeral at Toowong Cemetery.</ref> A eulogy was authored by poet [[Francis Adams (writer)|Francis Adams]].<ref>''Boomerang'' 19 November 1887, p.13 (Eulogy by Francis Adams), see also obituaries in ''Wide Bay and Burnett News'' (Maryborough) 25 October 1887 (obituary); ''Brisbane Courier'' 27 October 1887, p5d (funeral); (Ørsted-Jensen, R.; ''The Right to Live: The Politics of Race...'').</ref>
The announcement of Feilberg's death triggered a quite unprecedented reaction in the contemporary press.<ref name=obitcourier/><ref name=obitmorley/><ref name=notesmems>Notes, memorials and other obituaries: ''Sydney Morning Herald'' 26 October 1887, p.10a; ''Argus'' (Melbourne) 26 October 1887, p7g & 8e; ''Age'' (Melbourne) 26 October 1887 p6; ''Mercury'' (Hobart, Tasmania) 29 October 1887, p3e-f; ''South Australian Advertiser'' 26 October 1887, p5a; ''Evening Observer'' (Brisbane) 25 October 1887; ''Boomerang'' 19 November 1887, p.13 (Eulogy by Francis Adams); ''Boomerang'' 3 December 1887 (drawing/portrait); ''Sydney Quarterly Magazine'' Vol IV, No 4, 1887, p379-80; ''Brisbane Telegraph'' 25 October 1887, p.5b.; ''Queenslander'' 29 October 1887; ''Wide Bay News'' 27 October 1887; ''Gympie Times'' 27 October 1887, p3c (John Flood); ''North Queensland Telegraph'' (Townsville) 26 October 1887; ''Queensland Figaro'' 29 October 1887, p687 (John Edgar Byrne).</ref> The coverage and wording of these articles by far exceeds those honouring the passing of any of his contemporary and in many cases more famous colleagues.{{efn|One only need to compare with the obituaries of contemporary Qld journalists such as G. Lukin, W. O'Carroll, C. H. Buzacott or W. H. Traill. (OR? citation?)}} His funeral at Brisbane's Toowong Cemetery was attended by a wide range of friends, journalists and several high-ranking politicians from both sides of Queensland politics, including the former Premier, Sir [[Thomas McIlwraith]].<ref>''Brisbane Courier'' 27 October 1887, p5d, Feilberg's funeral at Toowong Cemetery.</ref> A eulogy was authored by poet [[Francis Adams (writer)|Francis Adams]].<ref>''Boomerang'' 19 November 1887, p.13 (Eulogy by Francis Adams), see also obituaries in ''Wide Bay and Burnett News'' (Maryborough) 25 October 1887 (obituary); ''Brisbane Courier'' 27 October 1887, p5d (funeral); (Ørsted-Jensen, R.; ''The Right to Live: The Politics of Race...'').</ref>


Feilberg was arguably the most prominent political commentator and newspaper editor in Queensland in his time, but he was certainly equally well known in the other Australian colonies. His death in October 1887 was received with an amount of strongly worded obituaries and expressions of grief, which was to remain extraordinary as well as unprecedented for any Queensland journalist of his era.<ref name=obitcourier/><ref name=obitmorley/><ref name=notesmems/>{{efn| No contemporary Queensland journalist was honoured with this level of attention, in particular not anything as strong worded as these obituaries. Indeed hardly any contemporary Premier of Queensland received this level of contemporary attention.{{OR|date=November 2023}} }}
Feilberg was arguably the most prominent political commentator and newspaper editor in Queensland in his time, but he was certainly equally well known in the other Australian colonies. His death in October 1887 was received with an amount of strongly worded obituaries and expressions of grief, which was to remain extraordinary as well as unprecedented for any Queensland journalist of his era.<ref name=obitcourier/><ref name=obitmorley/><ref name=notesmems/>{{efn| No contemporary Queensland journalist was honoured with this level of attention, in particular not anything as strong worded as these obituaries. Indeed hardly any contemporary Premier of Queensland received this level of contemporary attention.{{OR}} }}


Yet it so happened that his most lasting legacy became the numerous articles he wrote dealing with the most painful issue of all – Queensland's frontier Indigenous policy, Native Police system, and what he continually argued was an urgent need for the government to reform and move to protect the fundamental rights of Indigenous people. An issue which was to remain unsolved, contested and a painful legacy that even his closest friends would prefer to forget rather than to remember.<ref>See above: 'Legacy of a Pamphlet'</ref>
His most lasting legacy became the numerous articles he wrote dealing with the most painful issue of all – Queensland's frontier Indigenous policy, Native Police system, and what he continually argued was an urgent need for the government to reform and move to protect the fundamental rights of Indigenous people.{{cn|date=November 2023}}

Feilberg is one of the most notable and frequently cited advocate of Indigenous human rights in the history of colonial Queensland.{{efn|Some may argue that [[Archibald Meston]] was as significant. Yet Meston only entered this cause when it became opportunistic to do so as the last genuine frontier had evaporated and some of his key political friends underwent a rather drastic change of attitude. Prior to the 1890s he was indeed known primarily as a man who frequently spoke about Aborigines he had personally shot in punitive expedition (more about Meston in Ørsted-Jensen: ''Frontier History Revisited'' (2011), p.141, and in general 112pp). Being a 'Queenslander' (Q., by all account, carrying the single largest pre-contact population of any state and territory of Australia)and a modern thinking and secular minded person some may even argue that Feilberg, although his name was almost completely forgotten, is by far more interesting and significant in this field than the mainly Tasmania operating humanitarian [[George Augustus Robinson]]. {{OR}}}} Almost all Indigenous policy critical articles, editorial comments and editorials printed in the ''[[Brisbane Courier]]'' and its weekly ''[[The Queenslander]]'' between 1874 and 1886 were authored by Feilberg. Additionally he conducted two lengthy campaigns, one in the ''Queensland Patriot'' in 1878{{efn|''Queensland Patriot'', 29 June – 23 July 1878. The campaign successfully aimed at the Police estimates which was tabled in parliament in July. The Premier (John Douglas), who was also the original instigator and part proprietor of the ''Patriot'', had not approved of this campaign and he clearly was furious when the issue was forced on him and the parliament. Yet this brief campaign, and the fact that he was willing to cross the very man who had employed him added to Feilberg's reputation amongst fellow journalist in particular.{{cn|date=November 2023}}}} and the other and most notable in the ''Queenslander'' in 1880,{{efn|The ''Queenslander'' (''Brisbane Courier'') campaign for Indigenous rights in 1880, remains the largest of its kind ever produced by a leading Australian newspaper. It lasted from March to December that year, and included a great number of more or less anonymously publicised letters from what clearly was a great number of leading frontier settlers of the day. It included a total of 9 articles, 12 editorials and a follow-up newspaper debate in which 37 settlers contributed with 48 letters.{{cn|date=November 2023}} }} both of them (but the latter, in particular), triggering significant public and parliamentary debates centred around the issue of the colony's [[Native Police Force]] and frontier Indigenous policy.{{cn|date=November 2023}}


===Legacy of a pamphlet===
===Legacy of a pamphlet===
Line 90: Line 92:
'Bobby' Byrne, or [[John Edgar Byrne]] (1842–1906), a Londoner turned bushman and pioneer during the Gulf country rush in the 1860s, later journalist and owner-editor of the ''[[Queensland Figaro and Punch]]'', simply stated, in the plain and rather understated style of a nineteenth-century Australian bushman (take note that he used first-name, highly unusual for this period):
'Bobby' Byrne, or [[John Edgar Byrne]] (1842–1906), a Londoner turned bushman and pioneer during the Gulf country rush in the 1860s, later journalist and owner-editor of the ''[[Queensland Figaro and Punch]]'', simply stated, in the plain and rather understated style of a nineteenth-century Australian bushman (take note that he used first-name, highly unusual for this period):


<blockquote>Carl was a mate of mine of some 16 years' standing. The Brisbane dailies supply full particulars of his life, and it is not for me to gush about his virtues. He was my mate, and I always found him 'white.'(*) I first met him in Maryborough, when he had just come back from the Barcoo, where he had been jackarooing. Some of the best yarns that ever appeared in Punch and Figaro I learned from Carl Feilberg...<ref>Queensland Figaro 29 October 1887 p.687</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>Carl was a mate of mine of some 16 years' standing. The Brisbane dailies supply full particulars of his life, and it is not for me to gush about his virtues. He was my mate, and I always found him "white."{{efn|For an Australian "bushman" to call another man "white" was the greatest honour in those days, equivalent of saying that he was something like a plain, genuine and upright man of the highest personal integrity. It was used even on black people at times, one example is the black Danish West Indian, turned Australian heavy weight boxer, [[Peter Jackson (boxer)]] (1861–1901) who was called a "real whiteman".<ref>{{cite book | chapter-url=http://adbonline.anu.edu.au/biogs/A090448b.htm | title=Australian Dictionary of Biography | chapter=Jackson, Peter (1861–1901) | publisher=National Centre of Biography, Australian National University }}</ref>}} I first met him in Maryborough, when he had just come back from the Barcoo, where he had been jackarooing. Some of the best yarns that ever appeared in Punch and Figaro I learned from Carl Feilberg...<ref>Queensland Figaro 29 October 1887 p.687</ref></blockquote>


==Works==
(*) For an Australian 'bushman' to call another man 'white' was the greatest honour in those days, equivalent of saying that he was something like a plain, genuine and upright man of the highest personal integrity. It was used even on black people at times, one example is the black Danish West Indian, turned Australian heavy weight boxer, [[Peter Jackson (boxer)]] (1861–1901) who was called a 'real whiteman'.<ref>{{cite book | chapter-url=http://adbonline.anu.edu.au/biogs/A090448b.htm | title=Australian Dictionary of Biography | chapter=Jackson, Peter (1861–1901) | publisher=National Centre of Biography, Australian National University }}</ref>
Feilberg's main strength was his work as a political commentator and leader-writer, for, among others, the ''[[Wide Bay and Burnett News]]'' (c. October 1870 to 1875), ''[[Cooktown Courier]]'' (from September 1876 to June 1877), the ''[[Queensland Patriot]]'' (from February 1878 to January 1879), ''[[The Brisbane Courier]]'' and its weekly the ''Queenslander'' (sporadically in the period 1875 – February 1878, intensively from January 1879– January 1881 & July 1883– September 1887) and ''[[Melbourne Argus]]'' (Brisbane correspondent from 1880 to 1882, sub-editor on amongst others the subject of Queensland & New Guinea from July 1882 – June 1883). He was the author behind the parliamentary column of the "Political Froth" by "the Abstainer" and the column "Specialities" in the ''Queenslander'' from January 1879 – to May 1882, and political commentaries such as "The future of North-Eastern Australia".<ref>The Victorian Review. Melbourne. vpl. 1, March 1880, pp.&nbsp;699–711.</ref>

===Journalism, fiction and other literary contributions===
Feilberg's main strength was his work as a political commentator and leader-writer for amongst others the ''[[Wide Bay and Burnett News]]'' (c. October 1870 to 1875, unfortunately no issues available from this period), ''[[Cooktown Courier]]'' (from September 1876 to June 1877), the ''[[Queensland Patriot]]'' (from February 1878 to January 1879), ''[[The Brisbane Courier]]'' and its weekly the ''Queenslander'' (sporadically in the period 1875 – February 1878, intensively from January 1879– January 1881 & July 1883– September 1887) and ''[[Melbourne Argus]]'' (Brisbane correspondent from 1880 to 1882, sub-editor on amongst others the subject of Queensland & New Guinea from July 1882 – June 1883). He was the author behind the parliamentary column of the 'Political Froth' by 'the Abstainer' and the column 'Specialities' in the ''Queenslander'' from January 1879 – to May 1882, and political commentaries such as 'The future of North-Eastern Australia'.<ref>The Victorian Review. Melbourne. vpl. 1, March 1880, pp.&nbsp;699–711.</ref>
Next to this and in his spare time Feilberg wrote fiction and several sketches among which was some often surprisingly naive and romantic short stories, and also a small adventure novel (''A Strange Exploring Trip'') which some contemporaries viewed as having a curious resemblance with Henry Rider Haggard's later ''King Solomon's Mines'' (from 1885), while it was probably inspired by Jonathan Swift's ''Gulliver's Travels'' (from 1726). He naturally used personal experiences in several of his stories from the outer Barcoo and early Rockhampton in the late 1860s, and from Cooktown and the Palmer gold field in the 1870s. His short-stories were exceedingly popular in his own time. The ''[[Illustrated Sydney News]]'' of December 1886 thus announced him as 'Mr Carl Feilberg, the inimitable story-teller of Queensland'. Some of these sketches and stories were signed 'CF' but several were not signed at all (his authorship was revealed in the writings by various contemporaries). Below is a representative sample:
In his spare time Feilberg wrote fiction and several sketches, romantic short stories, and also a small adventure novel, ''A Strange Exploring Trip'', which some contemporaries viewed as having a curious resemblance with [[Henry Rider Haggard]]'s later ''[[King Solomon's Mines]]'' (from 1885). He used personal experiences in several of his stories from the outer Barcoo and early Rockhampton in the late 1860s, and from Cooktown and the Palmer gold field in the 1870s. His short stories were very popular in his own time. Some of these sketches and stories were signed "CF", but several were not signed at all, his authorship being revealed in writings by various contemporaries.
* ‘Some Queensland Pioneers’ a series of ten articles by 'CF' (30 December 1882 to 30 June 1883) in ''[[The Australasian]]'' (weekly ''Melbourne Argus'').
These works include:
* 'A Strange Exploring Trip' – Chapter I-XVIII by 'Old Harry', a small serialised novel in the Saturday edition of the ''Brisbane Courier'' (and the ''Queenslander'') onwards from 15 April to 7 October 1876.
* "Some Queensland Pioneers", a series of ten articles by "CF" (30 December 1882 to 30 June 1883) in ''[[The Australasian]]'' (weekly ''Melbourne Argus'')
* 'To The Red Barcoo' by '* * *' ''Queenslander'' Supplement, 24 February 1877, pp.&nbsp;1d-4a.
* "A Strange Exploring Trip" – Chapter I-XVIII by "Old Harry", a small serialised novel in the Saturday edition of the ''Brisbane Courier'' (and the ''Queenslander'') onwards from 15 April to 7 October 1876.
* 'MiamiA Tale told by the Sea' by 'CF' ''Queenslander'' Christmas Supplement,' 22 December 1877, pp.&nbsp;10–11.
* 'Dividing Mates' by 'CF' ''Queenslander'' Christmas Supplement,' 14 December 1878.
* "To The Red Barcoo" by "* * *" ''Queenslander'' Supplement, 24 February 1877, pp.&nbsp;1d-4a.
* 'Jeannie' by 'CF' ''Queenslander'' Christmas Supplement,' 20 December 1879, pp.&nbsp;1–3.
* "Miami – A Tale told by the Sea" by "CF", ''Queenslander'' Christmas Supplement,' 22 December 1877, pp.&nbsp;10–11.
* 'Drift' by 'CF' ''Queenslander'' Christmas Supplement,' 25 December 1880, pp.&nbsp;10–12.
* "Dividing Mates" by "CF" ''Queenslander'' Christmas Supplement, 14 December 1878.
* 'Our Friend the Captain' by 'CF' – a story about a charming Central Queensland bushranger ''Queenslander'' 'Christmas Supplement' 19 December 1885, pp.&nbsp;7–8.
* "Jeannie" by "CF" ''Queenslander'' Christmas Supplement, 20 December 1879, pp.&nbsp;1–3.
* 'A Curl of a Woman's Hair' by 'Carl Feilberg', ''Illustrated Sydney News'', Christmas Edition, December 1886.
* "Drift" by "CF" ''Queenslander'' Christmas Supplement, 25 December 1880, pp.&nbsp;10–12.
* "Our Friend the Captain" by "CF"a story about a charming Central Queensland bushranger ''Queenslander'' "Christmas Supplement" 19 December 1885, pp.&nbsp;7–8.
* 'My Mate's Locket' by Carl A. Feilberg, about the life of a Danish migrant (fiction) is the only story actually printed in book-form, it appears in Turner, Charles (Illustrator): ''Australian Stories in Prose and Verse'', Melbourne (Cameron, Laing) 1882, 105 pages, ill., an anthology of fourteen stories by (cit.) 'leading Australian writers, viz Frank Morley, Henry Kendall, Marcus Clarke, N. Walter Swan, R. P. Whitworth, Donald Cameron, Carl A. Feilberg, Charles Turner, and Janet Carrol.
* "A Curl of a Woman"s Hair" by Carl Feilberg, ''Illustrated Sydney News'', Christmas Edition, December 1886.
* "My Mate"s Locket" by Carl A. Feilberg, about the life of a Danish migrant (fiction), the only story actually printed in book-form. It appears in Turner, Charles (illustrator): ''Australian Stories in Prose and Verse'', Melbourne (Cameron, Laing) 1882, 105 pages, ill., an anthology of fourteen stories by (cit.) "leading Australian writers, viz Frank Morley, Henry Kendall, Marcus Clarke, N. Walter Swan, R. P. Whitworth, Donald Cameron, Carl A. Feilberg, Charles Turner, and Janet Carrol."


A few stories, in some cases half finished, were later sold from Feilberg's estate and printed after his death in the radical journal the ''[[Queensland Boomerang]]'', they were:
A few stories, in some cases half finished, were later sold from Feilberg's estate and printed after his death in the radical journal the ''[[Queensland Boomerang]]'', they were:
* ‘Camp Fire Yarns’, 3 December 1887.
* "Camp Fire Yarns", 3 December 1887.
* ‘Attacked by the Blacks’, 17 December 1887.
* "Attacked by the Blacks", 17 December 1887.
* ‘The Evil Eye’, 24 December 1887 and 7 January 1888.
* "The Evil Eye", 24 December 1887 and 7 January 1888.
* ‘His Colonial Experience’, 4 February 1888 and 11 March 1888.
* "His Colonial Experience", 4 February 1888 and 11 March 1888.

Feilberg is one of the most notable and frequently cited advocate of Indigenous human rights in the history of colonial Queensland.{{efn|Some may argue that [[Archibald Meston]] was as significant. Yet Meston only entered this cause when it became opportunistic to do so as the last genuine frontier had evaporated and some of his key political friends underwent a rather drastic change of attitude. Prior to the 1890s he was indeed known primarily as a man who frequently spoke about Aborigines he had personally shot in punitive expedition (more about Meston in Ørsted-Jensen: ''Frontier History Revisited'' (2011), p.141, and in general 112pp). Being a 'Queenslander' (Q., by all account, carrying the single largest pre-contact population of any state and territory of Australia)and a modern thinking and secular minded person some may even argue that Feilberg, although his name was almost completely forgotten, is by far more interesting and significant in this field than the mainly Tasmania operating humanitarian [[George Augustus Robinson]]. {{OR|date=November 2023}}}} Almost all Indigenous policy critical articles, editorial comments and editorials printed in the ''[[Brisbane Courier]]'' and its weekly ''[[The Queenslander]]'' between 1874 and 1886 were authored by Feilberg. Additionally he conducted two lengthy campaigns, one in the ''Queensland Patriot'' in 1878{{efn|''Queensland Patriot'', 29 June – 23 July 1878. The campaign successfully aimed at the Police estimates which was tabled in parliament in July. The Premier (John Douglas), who was also the original instigator and part proprietor of the ''Patriot'', had not approved of this campaign and he clearly was furious when the issue was forced on him and the parliament. Yet this brief campaign, and the fact that he was willing to cross the very man who had employed him added to Feilberg's reputation amongst fellow journalist in particular.{{cn|date=November 2023}}}} and the other and most notable in the ''Queenslander'' in 1880,{{efn|The ''Queenslander'' (''Brisbane Courier'') campaign for Indigenous rights in 1880, remains the largest of its kind ever produced by a leading Australian newspaper. It lasted from March to December that year, and included a great number of more or less anonymously publicised letters from what clearly was a great number of leading frontier settlers of the day. It included a total of 9 articles, 12 editorials and a follow-up newspaper debate in which 37 settlers contributed with 48 letters.{{cn|date=November 2023}} }} both of them (but the latter, in particular), triggering significant public and parliamentary debates centred around the issue of the colony's [[Native Police Force]] and frontier Indigenous policy.{{cn|date=November 2023}}

Despite the response to his writings and numerous citations of his work, his name and personal history appears to have been "forgotten".


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 00:31, 4 November 2023

Carl Adolph Feilberg
refer to caption
Carl Feilberg (c. 1884
Born(1844-08-21)21 August 1844
Copenhagen, Denmark
Died25 October 1887(1887-10-25) (aged 43)
Resting placeToowong Cemetery, Brisbane
Other namesOld Harry; Carolus, C.F.; Carl Adolf Feilberg
Occupations
  • Journalist
  • newspaper propietor
  • newspaper editor
  • political commentator
Years active1870–1887
EmployerBrisbane Newspaper Co
Known forIndigenous Australian human-rights activism
SpouseClara Smith (married 1872)
Children5
Signature

Carl Adolph Feilberg (21 August 1844 – 25 October 1887), also spelt Carl Adolf Feilberg, was a Danish-born Australian journalist, newspaper editor, and general political commentator, who is today best known as an Australian Indigenous human-rights activist.

Early life and education

Carl Feilberg was born on 21 August 1844 in a small apartment at 1 Bredgade in Copenhagen, Denmark.[1] He was the first born and only son of Danish Royal Navy lieutenant Christen Schifter Feilberg and Louise Adelaide Feilberg, the daughter of a planter on the island of St. Croix in the then Danish West Indies. Following the early death of both parents, Feilberg was placed in foster care with Danish relatives, his aunt Louise Stegman (née Brummer) and her husband greengrocer Conrad Stegmann, at the time living in Edinburgh, Scotland. Feilberg received his formal education in Scotland, followed by a year at a college in Saint-Omer in France. After graduation he moved to Lincolnshire, England, and was then employed by shipping broker Lloyd's of London.[2][3]

Feilberg's second name was spelled Adolph in his birth record and on most contemporary publications for public use, but he frequently used "Adolf" as his personal signature.[a]

Move to Australia (1867)

Suffering from a serious case of tuberculosis Feilberg was advised to migrate to Australia where time spent in the dry interior might mitigate some of the symptoms and provide a chance for survival.[4] He arrived in Sydney from London on the Aberdeen vessel Sir John Lawrence on 18 June 1867 travelling onto Rockhampton carrying a 'letter of introduction' to the Scottish squatter Archibald Berdmore Buchanan. He then gained "colonial experience", working as a shepherd, store and book keeper predominantly at Buchanan's properties. The first six months at Cardbeign station in Springsure district, the remaining time in the Barcoo district on Greendale and possibly other stations in the central west.[5] The knowledge he gained in the outback including his experiences with the Native Police and the darker sides of the colony's frontier policies, would later influence his work as a journalist, political commentator, author.[6]

After being naturalised at Rockhampton Court House on 21 June 1870, Feilberg chose to settle in Maryborough, where in August 1870 he commenced a career in journalism. Initially assisting Ebenezer Thorne on his newly launched three-weekly Wide Bay and Burnett News.[7] In November 1870, after a series of libel cases and family issues, Thorne sold his share in the journal to Feilberg, who became the sole editor and proprietor.[8] Feilberg as editor supported the struggle for manhood suffrage, his success in breaking the press monopoly of William Henry Walsh.[9]

On 15 May 1872 he married Tasmanian-born Clara Smith at the Presbyterian Church in Maryborough.[10] She was the daughter of the engineer and proprietor of Kilkivan Mine, Walter Smith and Clara Susannah Smith. After leaving Maryborough he was employed by the Brisbane Courier as a political commentator, leader writer as the editor of its weekly, The Queenslander, from January 1879 to December 1880.[11]

The personal and political fallout following the campaign of the Queenslander in 1880 subsequently caused Feilberg to accept a position as sub-editor on the then leading Victorian journal the Argus in June 1882.[12] It was cautiously noted in the contemporary press that Feilberg "has had very definite political opinions, and, in labouring unremittingly to impress them upon the public mind, has suffered at various times from the misrepresentation and obloquy which every active politician is fated to encounter".[13] The background was a change in the proprietorship of the Brisbane Newspaper Company in late December 1880 which caused Feilberg to endure a year of being gradually relegated to steadily more subordinate positions on the journal. Later commenting privately on this experience he was naturally more upfront. Thus on 23 September 1882, in a private letter in reply to Sir Arthur Gordon, the former Governor and High Commissioner of the Western Pacific, Feilberg wrote: "I despair of doing much good for the blacks, and I have incurred enough personal ill-will myself by writing on their behalf during my residence in Queensland".[14] It has been said[by whom?] that he was politically exiled or finally decided to exile himself from Queensland at that time, and moved to Melbourne, Victoria.[15]

Career

Feilberg commenced his career in journalism as the owner-editor of the Wide Bay and Burnett News from November 1870 to about 1875, free-lance correspondent and occasional editorial writer for the Brisbane Courier and Queenslander and other journals, editor of the Cooktown Courier from September 1876 to June 1877, Hansard shorthand writer from July to October 1877, part proprietor and editor of the Queensland Patriot/Daily News from March 1878 to early January 1879. From there on he became the key political commentator and leader writer for the Brisbane Courier and editor of the Queenslander from January 1879 to December 1880, sub-editor on the Melbourne Argus from June 1882 to June 1883, editor-in-chief of the Brisbane Courier and its weekly the Queenslander from September 1883 to October 1887. Feilberg additionally wrote many short stories and sketches reflecting the life and dreams of many of his fellow colonists. His journalism covered a wide range of subjects amongst which parliamentary business, railway and settlement policy, finance and economic policy and Indigenous rights, took a prominent position. Beyond being additionally a harsh critic of the Kanaka trade (see below), he was an eager advocate for settlements in the interior and railway schemes supporting this, he questioned the uncontrolled Chinese immigration (during the great mining rush in the far north), and he was a strong advocate of laws to combat the threat to the environment of uncontrolled logging and deforestation and securing a policy of sustainable foresting. The Liberal Premier John Douglas (Queensland politician) appointed him as government envoy for New Guinea during the New Guinea gold-rush in early 1878, and New Guinea was later a frequent subject for his numerous editorials.

Carl Feilberg served several terms as president for Brisbane's famed literary Johnsonian Club.[16] Other chairmen over time were noted Queenslanders such as jurist Sir Samuel Griffith, politician John Douglas, poet James Brunton Stephens, and journalist William Senior the principal short hand writer also known as 'Red Spinner'. The latter three in particular were known to be close friends of Feilberg.

Human rights and Aboriginal people

Feilberg was the hitherto anonymous journalist, editor and author behind the Queenslander's newspaper campaign and pamphlet The Way We Civilise; Black and White; The Native Police (published in Brisbane, December 1880) characterised by Henry Reynolds as "...one of the most influential political tracts in Australian history..."[17]

Beyond his other work, Feilberg thus notably authored a great number of articles on the issue of human rights abuses towards islanders and Indigenous people in Queensland. The issue of the so-called Kanaka trade or Blackbirding – the use of Melanesian labour on Queensland sugar plantations – was high on his agenda from the late 1870 onwards; he and his journal were thus instrumental in bringing about the conviction of the Captain of the recruiting schooner Jason in 1871.

Feilberg's contribution to the history of colonial Queensland included editorials written for the Brisbane Courier from 1874 to 1878, and later in the Cooktown Courier during January to March 1877, and two newspaper campaigns strongly critical of Queensland's frontier Indigenous policies. The first of these campaigns was conducted in the independent liberal journal the Queensland Patriot prior to the police estimates for 1879 being tabled in the Legislative Assembly. The move was daring but ultimately unsuccessful although it triggered a parliamentary debate on 10 July 1878. Yet the blue-print for this small campaign was then reused, commissioned by the managing editor of the Brisbane Newspaper Company, Gresley Lukin (1840–1916), on a much larger scale in the leading Queensland journal the Brisbane Courier (now The Courier-Mail) two years later. In the nine months from during March to December 1880 Feilberg utilised its weekly, the Queenslander, as a platform to launch a series of powerfully worded editorials and articles demanding a Royal Commission and a change of policy. Yet again unsuccessful, he nonetheless managed to trigger two large parliamentary debates and the biggest public debate of its kind ever conducted by an Australian newspaper, on this subject.[citation needed]

It was parts of the latter debate which were reissued as a pamphlet in December 1880, entitled The Way We Civilise; Black and White; The Native Police.

Feilberg outlined some of his deeper feelings in an editorial printed in the Queenslander on 19 January 1878, saying amongst other things that the "...complacent blindness which induces the natives of Europe to regard their own customs and institutions as excellent above compare, and their adoption as a certain remedy and advantageous substitute for all other manners of living, even to the most simple and Arcadian, has served as excuse for enormities at the contemplation of which humanity revolts...".[18]

His opening lines to the campaign of the Queenslander on 1 May 1880, in his best known and most frequently cited editorial headed The Way We Civilise, it famously outlined Queensland's policy towards Aboriginal people in the following manner:

This, in plain language, is how we deal with the aborigines: On occupying new territory the aboriginal inhabitants are treated exactly in the same way as the wild beasts or birds the settlers may find there. Their lives and their property, the nets, canoes, and weapons which represent as much labour to them as the stock and buildings of the white settler, are held by the Europeans as being at their absolute disposal. Their goods are taken, their children forcibly stolen, their women carried away, entirely at the caprice of the white men. The least show of resistance is answered by a rifle bullet; in fact, the first introduction between blacks and whites is often marked by the unprovoked murder of some of the former – in order to make a commencement of the work of ‘civilising’ them.[19]

The memory of this crucial part of Feilberg's writings, however, was to remain victim to the 'veil of silence' which covered all issues related to the treatment of Indigenous people in the colonial era for the most part of a century. To the extent Feilberg's name was remembered at all, it was for his advocacy of some restrictions being put on Chinese immigration and for him being an early opponent of the Kanaka labour-trade; issues which were clearly viewed as more acceptable by early nineteenth-century Australian historians and record keepers. Yet Feilberg's commitment to human rights was hinted at in various ways by some of his obituary writers and close friends.

Later life, death and legacy

He "was never physically a robust man", as one obituary stated.[15] The illness that brought him to Australia in the first place remained dormant and the move to Melbourne proved fatal for him.[20] What started out as a cold was to revive his old ailment and he was quite ill by mid-1883. He gave in to an offer and returned to Brisbane in July to take on the position of editor-in-chief of the Brisbane Newspaper Company (Brisbane Courier and its weekly The Queenslander, now The Courier-Mail) in September same year. He remained fully active in this position until a few weeks before his death at his home 'Claraville' in Cordelia Street South Brisbane on 25 October 1887.

The announcement of Feilberg's death triggered a quite unprecedented reaction in the contemporary press.[3][2][21] The coverage and wording of these articles by far exceeds those honouring the passing of any of his contemporary and in many cases more famous colleagues.[b] His funeral at Brisbane's Toowong Cemetery was attended by a wide range of friends, journalists and several high-ranking politicians from both sides of Queensland politics, including the former Premier, Sir Thomas McIlwraith.[22] A eulogy was authored by poet Francis Adams.[23]

Feilberg was arguably the most prominent political commentator and newspaper editor in Queensland in his time, but he was certainly equally well known in the other Australian colonies. His death in October 1887 was received with an amount of strongly worded obituaries and expressions of grief, which was to remain extraordinary as well as unprecedented for any Queensland journalist of his era.[3][2][21][c]

His most lasting legacy became the numerous articles he wrote dealing with the most painful issue of all – Queensland's frontier Indigenous policy, Native Police system, and what he continually argued was an urgent need for the government to reform and move to protect the fundamental rights of Indigenous people.[citation needed]

Feilberg is one of the most notable and frequently cited advocate of Indigenous human rights in the history of colonial Queensland.[d] Almost all Indigenous policy critical articles, editorial comments and editorials printed in the Brisbane Courier and its weekly The Queenslander between 1874 and 1886 were authored by Feilberg. Additionally he conducted two lengthy campaigns, one in the Queensland Patriot in 1878[e] and the other and most notable in the Queenslander in 1880,[f] both of them (but the latter, in particular), triggering significant public and parliamentary debates centred around the issue of the colony's Native Police Force and frontier Indigenous policy.[citation needed]

Legacy of a pamphlet

The original front page of Carl Feilberg's pamphlet The Way We Civilise from 1880

Feilberg's 1880 pamphlet, The Way We Civilise, played a crucial behind the scene role in the British Government move to nullify Queensland's unilateral annexation of New Guinea in April 1883. It was actively used by Sir Arthur Gordon, the Aborigines Protection Society, and others, as evidence to persuade the British Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone and his Secretary of State for the Colonies, Lord Derby, that Queensland was utterly unfit for the task of ruling New Guinea.[24]

Feilberg's pamphlet and opponents of the views expressed in it are frequently cited in many books, articles, studies, and documentaries up to the present day.[g] The satirical title The Way We Civilise was eventually re-used in 1997 as a title for Rosalind Kidd's study on Queensland's institutionalised policy towards Aboriginal people from the 1880s onwards. Feilberg's pamphlet is equally cited in the highly profiled Bringing Them Home or 'stolen generation report' (1997), about Aboriginal children forcibly removed from their families to be brought up in institutions during the twentieth century, and in Ben Kiernan's Blood and Soil: A World History of Genocide and Extermination (2008).[h][citation needed]

Those who knew him

William Henry Traill, journalist and Feilberg's predecessor as editor of the Queenslander, who was later the editor of The Sydney Mail, owner-editor of the famed weekly magazine The Bulletin and a NSW politician, was the only one of Feilberg's friends who dared to mention Feilberg's feelings on the question of Indigenous rights (possibly because Traill was living in Sydney at the time), saying:

...if ever a man lived to falsify the popular idea of a "bohemian", he was the man. So far as bohemianism is supposed to comprehend a spirit of universal charity, of hatred of tyranny and cant, and of a most intense love for his profession, he was a thorough ‘bohemian’; but of the other side of the character, the reckless improvidence, dissipation, and contempt of respectability, he was as free as that great type, the ‘British Merchant of the old school.’ As a journalist he was an untiring worker, few newspapers in Australia have not been benefited by his pen, and few writers on all subjects were more appreciated by the public, he never wrote himself out, and his style was always fresh and free from any touch of respective sameness...Poor Feilberg! There were two subjects on which one could always rouse his righteous indignation – the treatment of the blacks, and the seizure of the Danish fleet by Nelson; his love of fair play was too strongly appealed to in both...[25]

Somewhat a political opponent, yet nonetheless a close personal friend, Walter John Morley (1848–1937) then the editor-in-chief of the Brisbane Evening Observer wrote about Feilberg that he was "...a man whom it was impossible to regard with indifference." Adding further that Feilberg, "in his working days", was

... one of the most voluminous and valued of Australian writers … There is hardly a newspaper of note in the Southern hemisphere for which he has not written … As a Press writer Mr. Feilberg was without a rival in the colony, and had few equals on the continent. His style was clear, crisp, and trenchant, and withal somewhat cynical; he could detect at once the weak spot of an argument, and understood thoroughly the worth of ridicule and the power of satire. His writings exhibit a perfect knowledge of the country, and of country life, and betray a sympathy with human nature for which those who saw only his other writings would never credit him. … His views were naturally extreme, for he was intense, as such men always are, and this extremeness, with the vigour of his enunciation, caused him to make many and bitter enemies. Probably there were few men in the colony more bitterly hated by political and social opponents, yet there was certainly no man more beloved by those whose privilege it was to know him intimately. For underneath all his cynicism and his apparent vindictiveness beat a heart that overflowed with all that makes humanity noble and good. He never saw distress without wishing to relieve it...[26]

Francis Adams (writer) poet and journalist, wrote in connection with Feilberg's funeral at Toowong cemetery in Brisbane in October 1887:

He was a soldier in the army of Letters and of light of whom his comrades can be proud. He fixed his eyes on the abiding truth of human life – on justice and on mercy, on trust and on love – and clung to them. He felt, as so many of us feel, that the old symbols see no new ones in the world of thought and feeling of his time. All honour to the brave heart that hopeless of the proof of justification, hopeless of the old support in life and of the old hope of reward in death, bated not one jot of belief in the beauty and necessity of the good, the noble, and true!...Not with sorrow only do we think of this man, of our dear dead comrade: no, but with the love for what he was, and with the pride for what he did, that rob death of its victory and make him that was brought low as one that is raised up.[27]

'Bobby' Byrne, or John Edgar Byrne (1842–1906), a Londoner turned bushman and pioneer during the Gulf country rush in the 1860s, later journalist and owner-editor of the Queensland Figaro and Punch, simply stated, in the plain and rather understated style of a nineteenth-century Australian bushman (take note that he used first-name, highly unusual for this period):

Carl was a mate of mine of some 16 years' standing. The Brisbane dailies supply full particulars of his life, and it is not for me to gush about his virtues. He was my mate, and I always found him "white."[i] I first met him in Maryborough, when he had just come back from the Barcoo, where he had been jackarooing. Some of the best yarns that ever appeared in Punch and Figaro I learned from Carl Feilberg...[29]

Works

Feilberg's main strength was his work as a political commentator and leader-writer, for, among others, the Wide Bay and Burnett News (c. October 1870 to 1875), Cooktown Courier (from September 1876 to June 1877), the Queensland Patriot (from February 1878 to January 1879), The Brisbane Courier and its weekly the Queenslander (sporadically in the period 1875 – February 1878, intensively from January 1879– January 1881 & July 1883– September 1887) and Melbourne Argus (Brisbane correspondent from 1880 to 1882, sub-editor on amongst others the subject of Queensland & New Guinea from July 1882 – June 1883). He was the author behind the parliamentary column of the "Political Froth" by "the Abstainer" and the column "Specialities" in the Queenslander from January 1879 – to May 1882, and political commentaries such as "The future of North-Eastern Australia".[30]

In his spare time Feilberg wrote fiction and several sketches, romantic short stories, and also a small adventure novel, A Strange Exploring Trip, which some contemporaries viewed as having a curious resemblance with Henry Rider Haggard's later King Solomon's Mines (from 1885). He used personal experiences in several of his stories from the outer Barcoo and early Rockhampton in the late 1860s, and from Cooktown and the Palmer gold field in the 1870s. His short stories were very popular in his own time. Some of these sketches and stories were signed "CF", but several were not signed at all, his authorship being revealed in writings by various contemporaries. These works include:

  • "Some Queensland Pioneers", a series of ten articles by "CF" (30 December 1882 to 30 June 1883) in The Australasian (weekly Melbourne Argus)
  • "A Strange Exploring Trip" – Chapter I-XVIII by "Old Harry", a small serialised novel in the Saturday edition of the Brisbane Courier (and the Queenslander) onwards from 15 April to 7 October 1876.
  • "To The Red Barcoo" by "* * *" Queenslander Supplement, 24 February 1877, pp. 1d-4a.
  • "Miami – A Tale told by the Sea" by "CF", Queenslander Christmas Supplement,' 22 December 1877, pp. 10–11.
  • "Dividing Mates" by "CF" Queenslander Christmas Supplement, 14 December 1878.
  • "Jeannie" by "CF" Queenslander Christmas Supplement, 20 December 1879, pp. 1–3.
  • "Drift" by "CF" Queenslander Christmas Supplement, 25 December 1880, pp. 10–12.
  • "Our Friend the Captain" by "CF" – a story about a charming Central Queensland bushranger Queenslander "Christmas Supplement" 19 December 1885, pp. 7–8.
  • "A Curl of a Woman"s Hair" by Carl Feilberg, Illustrated Sydney News, Christmas Edition, December 1886.
  • "My Mate"s Locket" by Carl A. Feilberg, about the life of a Danish migrant (fiction), the only story actually printed in book-form. It appears in Turner, Charles (illustrator): Australian Stories in Prose and Verse, Melbourne (Cameron, Laing) 1882, 105 pages, ill., an anthology of fourteen stories by (cit.) "leading Australian writers, viz Frank Morley, Henry Kendall, Marcus Clarke, N. Walter Swan, R. P. Whitworth, Donald Cameron, Carl A. Feilberg, Charles Turner, and Janet Carrol."

A few stories, in some cases half finished, were later sold from Feilberg's estate and printed after his death in the radical journal the Queensland Boomerang, they were:

  • "Camp Fire Yarns", 3 December 1887.
  • "Attacked by the Blacks", 17 December 1887.
  • "The Evil Eye", 24 December 1887 and 7 January 1888.
  • "His Colonial Experience", 4 February 1888 and 11 March 1888.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ See signature on this page and compare with his printed records. (Ph and f, v and w, ch and k, etc. were regarded as synonymous in many Germanic languages in this period, and people were generally not very particular about the spelling of names in the period prior to the 1890s.
  2. ^ One only need to compare with the obituaries of contemporary Qld journalists such as G. Lukin, W. O'Carroll, C. H. Buzacott or W. H. Traill. (OR? citation?)
  3. ^ No contemporary Queensland journalist was honoured with this level of attention, in particular not anything as strong worded as these obituaries. Indeed hardly any contemporary Premier of Queensland received this level of contemporary attention.[original research?]
  4. ^ Some may argue that Archibald Meston was as significant. Yet Meston only entered this cause when it became opportunistic to do so as the last genuine frontier had evaporated and some of his key political friends underwent a rather drastic change of attitude. Prior to the 1890s he was indeed known primarily as a man who frequently spoke about Aborigines he had personally shot in punitive expedition (more about Meston in Ørsted-Jensen: Frontier History Revisited (2011), p.141, and in general 112pp). Being a 'Queenslander' (Q., by all account, carrying the single largest pre-contact population of any state and territory of Australia)and a modern thinking and secular minded person some may even argue that Feilberg, although his name was almost completely forgotten, is by far more interesting and significant in this field than the mainly Tasmania operating humanitarian George Augustus Robinson. [original research?]
  5. ^ Queensland Patriot, 29 June – 23 July 1878. The campaign successfully aimed at the Police estimates which was tabled in parliament in July. The Premier (John Douglas), who was also the original instigator and part proprietor of the Patriot, had not approved of this campaign and he clearly was furious when the issue was forced on him and the parliament. Yet this brief campaign, and the fact that he was willing to cross the very man who had employed him added to Feilberg's reputation amongst fellow journalist in particular.[citation needed]
  6. ^ The Queenslander (Brisbane Courier) campaign for Indigenous rights in 1880, remains the largest of its kind ever produced by a leading Australian newspaper. It lasted from March to December that year, and included a great number of more or less anonymously publicised letters from what clearly was a great number of leading frontier settlers of the day. It included a total of 9 articles, 12 editorials and a follow-up newspaper debate in which 37 settlers contributed with 48 letters.[citation needed]
  7. ^ Often lengthy quotes and other references to Feilberg's work are found in books dealing generally with Queensland's colonial history, such as Ross Fitzgerald's From the Dreaming to 1915 (1982); William Ross Johnston's A Documentary History of Queensland (1988); and in a variety of studies, books, documentaries, and articles dealing generally with race relations in colonial Australia, including Henry Reynolds' The Other Side of the Frontier (1981); Sharman Stone's documentary Aborigines in White Australia (1974); and journalist Bruce Elder's Blood on the Wattle (1988). Studies dealing specifically with Queensland's race relations' history, such as Raymond Evans in Exclusion, Exploitation and Extermination (Brisbane 1975), the Reynolds-edited Race Relations in North Queensland (1978), Noel Loos' Invasion and Resistance (1982); and Pamela Lukin Watson's Frontier Lands & Pioneer Legends (1998). It was cited in Judith Wright's The Cry for the Dead (1981) and in Roslyn Poignant's Professional Savages (2004). Gordon Reid's That Unhappy Race, (Melbourne 2006), p. 115-16, 125–127, 230.
  8. ^ Many of these writers believed, wrongly as it is, that the author of the articles was Gresley Lukin, the then part proprietor of the Brisbane Newspaper Co., but Lukin was 'only' the part proprietor and 'managing editor' he wrote articles only on rare occasions and the de facto editor of the Courier at the time was in fact not Lukin but William Augustine O'Carroll. All of this was partly revealed by Henry Reynolds in This Whispering in Our Hearts (see above), and it is further detailed and substantiated by Ørsted-Jensen in The Right to Live: The Politics of Race and the Troubled Conscience of an Australian Journalist chapter one The Resurgence....[citation needed]
  9. ^ For an Australian "bushman" to call another man "white" was the greatest honour in those days, equivalent of saying that he was something like a plain, genuine and upright man of the highest personal integrity. It was used even on black people at times, one example is the black Danish West Indian, turned Australian heavy weight boxer, Peter Jackson (boxer) (1861–1901) who was called a "real whiteman".[28]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Minister book, Holmens Kirke, Copenhagen, 13 December 1844
  2. ^ a b c Evening Observer (Brisbane), 25 October 1887, Obituary by Walter John Morley.
  3. ^ a b c "The late Mr. C. A. Feilberg". The Brisbane Courier. Vol. XLIV, no. 9, 292. 26 October 1887. p. 5. Retrieved 4 November 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ Queenslander 22 November 1879, p652d-653a 'Life in the Bush' by 'CF';Wide Bay News 27 October 1887
  5. ^ North Queensland Telegraph (Townsville) 26 October 1887; Brisbane Courier 22 June 1926, p.2
  6. ^ The Way We Civilise; Black and White, The Native Police/articles from the Brisbane Courier/Queenslander March–Sept 1880, Brisbane 1880; see also bibliography below
  7. ^ Queenslander 11 June 1870, p.2&p.325; Queenslander 10 June 1870, p10c (Wide Bay News was Launched on 2 July 1870); See more in Feilberg's obituaries and BC 21 January 1871 (Public meeting at M'boro's Oddfellows Hall Wednesday evening 11 January 1971).
  8. ^ Maryborough Chronicle 9 March 1871, p2g (Feilberg testify in a libel case against the previous proprietor); other libel cases see:Libel against the Editor of the Wide Bay News: Maryborough Chronicle 10 September 1870 (Walsh allegedly defamed); Brisbane Courier 13 October 1870 (Libel), p.3e; Brisbane Courier 20 October 1870, p2c; Maryborough Chronicle 29 October 1870; Maryborough Chronicle 1 November 1870, p5f-g.; Brisbane Courier 5 November 1870, p5f.
  9. ^ Denis Cryle: The Press in Colonial Queensland, chapter 6 & 8, and p.124-27
  10. ^ Qld BDM 1872/C365
  11. ^ Browne, R.S.: A journalist's Memories (1927), p.57, 71,77, 167, 184, 259, 277, 283. Browne explains the period during which firstly Traill, then Feilberg and himself, functioned as 'The Abstainer' the anonymous writer of the political satirical column 'Political Froth'
  12. ^ Rockhampton Bulletin 30 May 1882, p2d;Brisbane Courier 5 June 1882, p2f; South Australian Advertiser 5 June 1882, p5f.
  13. ^ Queenslander 10 June 1882. p712 (reprint from Brisbane Courier Mon. 5 June 1882, p2g)
  14. ^ Anti-Slavery Society Papers S22, C135/107; See also Henry Reynolds This Whispering in our Hearts (Sydney 1998) p.260, 108–158
  15. ^ a b Wide Bay News 27 October 1887
  16. ^ "The Johnsonian Club: Its Birth and Downfall". Queensland Figaro and Punch. Queensland, Australia. 15 October 1887. p. 11 (The lady supplement to Queensland Figaro). Retrieved 21 April 2020 – via Trove.
  17. ^ Henry Reynolds, This Whispering in Our Hearts, 1998 p108; Reynolds, H.: An Indelible Stain?, 2001 chapter 7.
  18. ^ Queenslander 19 January 1878, editorial & Browne, R.S.: "A Journalist's Memories" p.55-59
  19. ^ "Queenslander" 1 May 1880 & Brisbane Courier, 8 May 1880, p.2e-f, editorial; The Way We Civilise; Black and White; The Native Police: A series of articles and letters Reprinted from the ‘Queenslander’ (Brisbane, December 1880); Rusden: History of Australia Vol 3 pp.146–56 & 235
  20. ^ Queenslander, Vol XXXII.-No. 630, Brisbane Saturday, 29 October 1887
  21. ^ a b Notes, memorials and other obituaries: Sydney Morning Herald 26 October 1887, p.10a; Argus (Melbourne) 26 October 1887, p7g & 8e; Age (Melbourne) 26 October 1887 p6; Mercury (Hobart, Tasmania) 29 October 1887, p3e-f; South Australian Advertiser 26 October 1887, p5a; Evening Observer (Brisbane) 25 October 1887; Boomerang 19 November 1887, p.13 (Eulogy by Francis Adams); Boomerang 3 December 1887 (drawing/portrait); Sydney Quarterly Magazine Vol IV, No 4, 1887, p379-80; Brisbane Telegraph 25 October 1887, p.5b.; Queenslander 29 October 1887; Wide Bay News 27 October 1887; Gympie Times 27 October 1887, p3c (John Flood); North Queensland Telegraph (Townsville) 26 October 1887; Queensland Figaro 29 October 1887, p687 (John Edgar Byrne).
  22. ^ Brisbane Courier 27 October 1887, p5d, Feilberg's funeral at Toowong Cemetery.
  23. ^ Boomerang 19 November 1887, p.13 (Eulogy by Francis Adams), see also obituaries in Wide Bay and Burnett News (Maryborough) 25 October 1887 (obituary); Brisbane Courier 27 October 1887, p5d (funeral); (Ørsted-Jensen, R.; The Right to Live: The Politics of Race...).
  24. ^ This Whispering in Our Hearts, Chapter 6: The Crusade of the Queenslander.
  25. ^ Sydney Quarterly Magazine Vol IV, no 4, 1887 page 379-80
  26. ^ Brisbane Evening Observer, Brisbane, Tuesday, 25 October 1887
  27. ^ Boomerang, Brisbane 19 November 1887, p.13
  28. ^ "Jackson, Peter (1861–1901)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  29. ^ Queensland Figaro 29 October 1887 p.687
  30. ^ The Victorian Review. Melbourne. vpl. 1, March 1880, pp. 699–711.

Sources

  • Browne, Reginald Spencer: A Journalist's Memories, Read Press, Brisbane 1927.
  • Cryle, Denis: The Press In Colonial Queensland: A Social and Political History 1845–1875, Brisbane 1995.
  • Davies, Alfred G.: Queensland's Pioneer Journals and Journalists, Historical Society of Queensland Journal (RHSQ) vol 3, No 4, 1936–47, p265-283.
  • Evans, Raymond: A History of Queensland, Cambridge 2007, 321 pages, ill.
  • Feilberg, Carl Adolph: Prize essay on Queensland: Queensland, its resources and prospects. Pamphlet published by National Association of Queensland, Brisbane 1879, 25 pages.
  • Feilberg, Carl Adolph: The Colony of Queensland, 24 pages essay written for the ‘Catalogue of the Queensland Court of the International Exhibition’, Melbourne 1880, enclosed statistics and a thorough description of the Queensland stand (Mitchell Library DSM/ 042/ P176).
  • Feilberg, Carl Adolph (anonymous): The Way We Civilise; Black and White; The Native Police: – A series of articles and letters reprinted from the ‘Queenslander’ (Brisbane, December 1880)
  • Mennell, Philip Dearman: The Dictionary of Australasian Biography, comprising notice of eminent colonists from the inauguration of responsible government down to the present time 1855–1892. London 1892.
  • Ørsted-Jensen: Robert: The Right To Live – The Politics of Race and the Troubled Conscience of an Australian Journalist Vol I-II (yet unpublished manuscript – main biographical reference).
  • Ørsted-Jensen: Robert: Frontier History Revisited: Colonial Queensland and the 'History War', Brisbane 2011, 284 pages, ill. ISBN 978-1-4663-8682-2
  • Reynolds, Henry: This Whispering In Our Hearts, Sydney 1998, chapter 6, The Crusade of the Queenslander.
  • Reynolds, Henry: This Whispering In Our Hearts Revisited, Sydney 2018, chapter 6, The Crusade of the Queenslander.
  • Reynolds, Henry: An Indelible Stain?, Sydney 2001, chapter 7, Dispersing the Blacks.
  • Rusden, G.W.: History of Australia, vol 1–3, second edition Melbourne 1897, Vol 3 pp. 146–56 & 235.
  • Thorne, Ebenezer: Queen Of The Colonies, or, Queensland as I knew it – by An Eight Years’ Resident, Publ. Sampson & Low London, 1876, 352 pages.

Further reading

  • Evans, R., Saunders, K. and Cronin, K.: Race Relations in Colonial Queensland: A History of Exclusion, Exploitation and Extermination, third edition Brisbane 1993 (first edition publ. Sydney, 1975), 456 pages, ill.
  • Reid, Gordon: A Nest of Hornets: The Massacre of the Fraser family at Hornet Bank Station, Central Queensland, 1857, and related events, Melbourne 1982, 235 pages ill. (notes, but not indexed).
  • Loos, Noel Anthony: Invasion And Resistance: Aboriginal-European Relations On The North Queensland Frontier 1861–1897, Canberra 1982, 323 pages, ill.
  • Wright, Judith Arundell: The Cry For The Dead, Melbourne 1981, 303 pages.
  • Stanner, Bill (William Edward Hanley): The Dreaming & other Essays, Melbourne 2009, 290 pages, a collection of Essays (which includes the 1968 Boyer lecture above) introduced by Robert Manne.